Monday Jun 08, 2009

In the Trenches: Caveat Lector. Let the reader beware

Posted by David Harris
Comments: 45
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Say you're a newspaper editor.

You have articles and analyses that merit inclusion in the next day's edition.

They include: "At Least 56 Killed as Islamist Groups Fight Over a Somali Town," from Reuters; "New Focus on Settlements," a news analysis from your Jerusalem correspondent; "Iran Has Centrifuge Capacity for Nuclear Arms," based on a new report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); and "US Charges Ex-State Department Official and Wife With Spying for Cuba."

Do any of the four warrant front-page placement? If so, above the fold, where they are sure to be noticed, or below, where they are less certain to catch the eye? If not, where should they be placed?
 
Should any have accompanying photos, which help draw attention and stimulate reaction?

And how many column inches should each piece get, as space is always at a premium?
 
None of this is an exact science. It's about human judgment. And different editors will take into account different factors before making decisions. But let's be clear. Those decisions can have far-reaching consequences.
 
They tell readers what are deemed the most consequential stories of the day. In doing so, at times they reflect national priorities; at other times, they seek to create them. They shape outlook. They affect moods.
 
I don't pretend to be an impartial reader, any more than any other reader is. I bring with me my interests and biases. There are certain stories I read with more care than others. At the same time, I've always sought to understand the enormous challenge a serious newspaper faces in presenting the news.

All that said, I read the June 6th issue of the New York Times with particular interest. In just one edition, it triggered many vexing questions.
 
The four pieces mentioned above were all in the paper's news section.
 
But the only one that made it to the front page - and above the fold - was the news analysis on settlements.

Moreover, it was the only one with an accompanying photo, and a sizable one at that - ten inches by six inches.
 
And to complete the Triple Crown, it had far more column inches than any of the others.
 
The analysis itself covered thirty column inches, whereas the Somali carnage, at the top of page five, got fourteen inches of text; the Iran nuclear story, at the bottom of page six, eighteen inches; and the Cuba spy revelation, at the top of page eleven, twenty inches.
 
If the deadly battles had been reported not from Mogadishu but, say, Gaza or the West Bank and had involved Israeli troops, would the story have been on the front page, accompanied by photos? No doubt. The record amply proves the point.
 
But then again, the sad truth is that Muslim-on-Muslim violence doesn't always have the same media appeal. This neglect inevitably diminishes the intrinsic value of the human lives lost.
 
More, we are often told, is "expected" of Israel, hence its greater newsworthiness, as if it could successfully wage battle by the Marquess of Queensberry rules alone while its adversaries embrace gutter methods.
 
And if there had been a spying charge involving Israel, would a place have been found on the front page?
 
In this case, a Justice Department official called the accused American spies' activity for Cuba, over a span of three decades, "incredibly serious," yet it didn't make the cut for top billing.
 
Of course, had it been Israel, we would have been told, it involved a friendly country acting in an unfriendly way, hence its heightened media appeal. Yet, without for a single moment justifying espionage by any friendly country, surely the danger to American security is far greater still when a hostile country gets access to our national security secrets.
 
But the biggest puzzle in the June 6th issue was the treatment of the Iran issue.
 
Yes, the Israeli settlements issue is now on the table, front and center. Yes, the Obama Administration has made clear its aim to put a halt to all Israeli settlement-building. Yes, this is a source of bilateral friction. All true.
 
Still, in the scheme of things, I'd say the Iranian news easily trumped the paper's now nearly daily treatment of the settlements issue.
 
Consider these stunning excerpts from the account on Iran: 

  • Atomic inspectors reported Friday that the country [Iran] has sped up its production of nuclear fuel and increased its number of installed centrifuges to 7,200 - more than enough, weapons experts said, to make fuel for up to two nuclear weapons a year, if the country decided to use its facilities for that purpose."
  • The total number of centrifuges "represents an increase of 30 percent in the total number of installed centrifuges since a February report."
  • The IAEA report "noted that Iran is refusing not only to let inspectors visit a heavy-water reactor that Teheran has under construction, but also to let them verify design information about the sprawling project, as the agency's statutes require."
  • And it said that "Teheran had refused to give access to 'relevant Iranian authorities' who could address allegations surrounding Iran's research on the design of nuclear warheads," meaning that the IAEA "will not be in a position to provide credible assurance about nuclear materials and activities."

In other words, Iran is expanding its enrichment capacity on President Obama's watch and - despite recent US overtures to Teheran - reaching the capability to produce sufficient fuel for nuclear weapons.

In my book, that's the stuff of a banner headline - and the stepped-up public discussion that accompanies it.

After all, on the scale of Middle East foreign policy challenges, I'd argue that the Iranian nuclear issue easily comes out on top. And I'd be in good company. Not only would Israel agree, but so would many Arab nations who are no less frightened about the prospect of a nuclear Iran and its dire implications for the region.
 
So why didn't the Iranian story make the front page, but instead was relegated to the bottom of page six, while the settlements analysis got pride of place in the paper's most highly-prized real estate - the upper right-hand quadrant of the front page? Has the world become so accustomed to Iran's nuclear advances that they don't even warrant sustained high-profile treatment in the media?
 
It's worth asking the Times.

Oh, and while you're at it, you might raise one other matter.
 
In an article on the Lebanese elections in the same edition, the reporter notes: 'If Hezbollah and its allies win a majority for the first time - and the race is likely to be very close - there will be concern in Washington and Tel Aviv."

Hmm, last time I looked, Washington was America's capital and Jerusalem was Israel's.

Sloppy reporting and editing, or deliberate decision?

Either way, caveat lector. Let the reader beware.

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1  |   Jerry, New York, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Great piece Harris. I have watched with great frustration as the New York Times continues their anti-Israel agenda. This piece should be widely circulated.
2  |   Daniel, Monday Jun 08, 2009
If Jerusalem is Israel's capital city (and I believe it is), you would hardly know it from the June 7th coverage of its liberation in JPost. Hardly a mention. Okay, I lnow that the liberation is celebrated on a different day on the Jewish calendar, but there was minimal mention on 22 Iyyar as well. And yet, the liberation in 1967 was G-d fulfilling his prophetic words to Israel, and that prophetic fulfillment is the highest authority that makes Jerusalem the undisputed capital of Israel. I don't understand why this isn't shouted from rooftops, in newspapers, and in the international arena.
3  |   M. Knutsen, Norway, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Sir, I think you forget two issues for explaining the emphasis on the Isreli settlement question. The primary factor is that for the first time, there is a open and direct conflict between the US and Israel, a conflict in wich the Israeli government is basically telling the US to go to hell. That is news. The second is that you, along with the rest of Israeli punditry, seem to lack an understanding of how bad the Gaza-operation looked from abroad. It caused Israel to loose all moral standing.
4  |   Ben Ami, Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday Jun 08, 2009
I'm surprised that you're surprised, David. The New York Times, like all printed newspapers, is struggling to survive. If it is not managed as a business, it will go out of business. So tell me David, which of the four stories you mentioned, if on page 1 above the fold, would sell more copies? I think you know the answer. It is, after all called the NEW YORK times, and its home city is home to the largest Jewish population of any city in the world. (Unless, David, you are naive enough to believe that the news media is about integrity and principle.) The NYT is not the worst of the bunch.
5  |   Joanne, Manhattan NY, Monday Jun 08, 2009
This is a great piece! I received it from a list-serve of old college friends that I usually do not bother checking. I am happy I did!
6  |   Ken Berwitz, United States, Monday Jun 08, 2009
To M. Knutsen: -The US and Israel have been in conflict before. Even great friends have disputes. Obviously you are unaware of this easily-checkable fact -Israel's disagreement with the US is not telling the US to go to hell. But it is a way for someone who is against Israel to grossly exaggerate. That would be you. -If one of Norway's neighbors was committed to its destruction and fired thousands of rockets and mortars at its civilian population , would Norway worry more about how its response looked to others, or more about the response itself? Welcome to Israel's world.
7  |   Larry, Massachusetts, Monday Jun 08, 2009
M. Knutsen's second point shows the same problem as the NY Times. Assuming that his issue re Gaza had to do with disproportionality (a point with which I vehemently disagree), that is no reason to therefore exercise disproportionality in reporting on Israel versus other news stories, as you correctly pointed out the the New York Times is prone to do.
8  |   Bernie Dishler, Phils, USA, Monday Jun 08, 2009
The Times did it again, today. A pretty certain Hezbollah election loss in Lebanon was buried in the International section(my digital version does not give the page). This is astounding news, because everyone predicted that the pro-Western parties would be swamped by the Iran backed Hezbollah. I almost felt the Times was sorry that it was going this way.
9  |   Stuart Zimmer, New York, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Your article on the myopic view of the New York Times war "right on." However, it should not surprise you or your readers that the Times newspaper, along with other elements of the media and the Obama Administration are practicing "Jihad" against Israel and its people. Sadly, Jews in the new world paradigm are always expendable. I think we have seen this element of rising anti-Semitism in the world far too often.
10  |   howard popper Phoenix, AZ, Monday Jun 08, 2009
David Harris complains about the NYTimes policy of headline placement. Mr. Harris, instead of writing your objections in the Jerusalem Post, why don't you challenge Jews to stop reading the Times which has been against Israel since before 1947 and has consistenltly supported policies consistent with the White Paper of the1930s and against the Balfour Declaration?
11  |   K. Ohana USA, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Intelligent people, who think, know that Israel was right to defend herself. If rockets were launched across the boarder by the 10K in any country in the world, including Norway, that country would retaliate. The anti-Israel newspapers and Editors seem to make it their business to depict Israel as losing its moral credibility, by publishing and broadcasting false information. IÂ’d like to be convinced the USA would do nothing if rockets were being launched from Cuba or Mexico into the US. Would we lose our moral standing by a counter attack? Gaza was warned and warned, the world did nothing.
12  |   Bill, Toronto, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Well stated. For some reason, the media has an obsession with demonizing Israel for every issue, while letting the world's genocides and atrocities sit on the back burner. Call it anti-semitism or double standard, but I truly find it apaling. I regularly read Harris's letters in major newspapers adressing this hypocracy.
13  |   Luis Landau - Washington, DC, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Thank Heaven for David Harris! But it is not only the New York Times that manages the news in a way to present Israel in a negative light. The Washington Post is just as bad.
14  |   Tim Chicago, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Good point about Iran's capabilities but as for the settlement story, we do expect more from Israel. They are a state and our ally. Hamas is a gang of thugs. You can't reason with thugs. Israel gets $5 billion of our tax $ a year, all spent on weapons. US tank shells killed a doctor's 3 daughters in Gaza and it was my tax $ that paid for the white phosphorus Israel used on civilians. Now they're stonewalling Human Rights Watch and UN investigators. Meanwhile Netanyahu refuses a 2-state solution and illegal settlements are growing. I say no more US $ to Israel until they get serious about peace.
15  |   Vadim, Monday Jun 08, 2009
I would like to answer to Mr. Knutsen's (#3) remark regarding our "lack an understanding of how bad the Gaza-operation looked from abroad" How did the crackdown on Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka looked from abroad? It began simultaneously with operation in Gaza, lasted several months and resulted in a greater number of killed and displaced. And in the end the Tamils, who fought for their cause for several decades, will apparently never gain independence. I can give more examples. But why these two operations look so different? The answer to this question is given in the article by Mr. Harris.
16  |   Wayne, USA, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Here's a note on the issue of Jerusalem as Israel's capitol. Israel's occupation of East Jerusalem is now four decades old. For starters, I suggest that Israel cease its occupation and its crimes against humanity.
17  |   Louisa, Israel, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Thank you for this article based on logic. It is amazing that we still search for justice and logic in the same world that only 60 years ago allowed a holocaust to happen. The same world (even though it claims to be different) is reading the news today, and the Times delivers what they want to read. Mr. Knusen from Norway will justify the Times agenda, b/c he is one of those readers. People think that if they read something, that's the truth, and naturally they will chose to read what they want the truth to be.
18  |   David Naor, Herzliya, Israel, Monday Jun 08, 2009
M. Knutsen, Norway (#3): You should get yourself a copy of Ephraim Kishon's "So Sorry we won!" and read the chapter "How Israel forfeited world sympathy". It was written 50 years ago and is as relevant today as it was then. The point is that between your views of 'moral standing' and our survival, we chose our survival. ...So sorry.
19  |   M. Geclewicz, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Another great piece! Thank you, Mr. Harris
20  |   Jesse , Hashmonaiim, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Re: #3 The Gaza operation looked bad only to people who believe CNN without looking at the facts themselves. I challenge anyone to show me a nation that could launch an operation that size in a populated zone with that few civilian casualties - even according to Hamas the number is under one thousand.For 23 days of heavy fighting that can only mean that Israel was incredibly restrained and careful - and they got no appreciation for it. We should have just carpet bombed the bastards - that's what the US would have done(and don't tell me we could just keep ignoring missiles - you try it).
21  |   Greg, Washington DC, Monday Jun 08, 2009
Excellent analysis of NYT coverage. The reality is no one should be surprised. Still it is worth pointing out the bias -- it's longstanding
22  |   Greg in Washington, Monday Jun 08, 2009
It's always great to get opinions from Norway -- that great arbiter of conflicts. Heck of a job in Oslo, btw... lol. As to your point: the reason the Gaza-operation "looked bad" from abroad is because of the very bias in the press that Mr. Harris is pointing out.
23  |   aaron levy, Monday Jun 08, 2009
David Harris must keep up his excellent articles to show the world the NYT hyprocrisy in their coverage of Israel. NYT Strves now for sensational, anti-semitic reporting rather than impartiality in their coverage.
24  |   John Felstiner, Stanford, CA, Monday Jun 08, 2009
An excellent piece, which ought to be a NYT Op-Ed -- despite the rather blinkered view of the previous comment.
25  |   H. Weiss, Chicago, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
An excellent article. But this situation has been characteristic of the NY Times' coverage of the Middle East for several years now. And while the Times is not alone, it should know better. But of course the paper is desperate to be part of the trendy view, even if that means forgetting the lessons about terrorism of the past two decades, including those learned in their own backyard.
26  |   Robert Halasz, USA, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
Congratulations, excellent journalism , it is sure and sad, that New York Times does not have to courage to respond to your points.
27  |   L Milnes, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
David, no worries. You can now decide to save your money and buy the newspaper. Then you have the privilege of making up page one any way you choose. The way press revenues are sinking, it will soon be possible. Newspaper revenues plunged 28.3% in the first quarter of 2009, and no improvement is in sight. (Stats: www.mediapost.com and look up artricle 107210). As for M Knutsen's comment on how the Gaza operation looked from abroad, yes, it's true it got a bad press, but where was the pro-Israel point of view? The pro-Nazi viewpoint has been out there unchallenged.
28  |   Marla Perlman Pittsburgh PA, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette also slants Isreali news, All photos of Arab suffering makes the front page. Articles or photos of Israeli suffering land on page 6 or not at all. I once asked the editor about this at a public forum and he said that everyone presumes the P-G is pro-Israel so they need to show they are even handed and fair.
29  |   S.L.Schwartz, Chicago, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
This is the reason that I have long ago given up on the NY Times--its journalistic quality is severely impaired by its own bias!
30  |   Sue NJ, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
You didn't post my comment I guess I can't add.
31  |   R. Diamant, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
If President Obama wants to help moderate beleagured Arabs, or set the NY Times priorities straight, he ought to be encouraged to stress the importance of immediately dealing putting an end to Iran's nuclear threat. People try to placate terrorists when they feel no one in power is going to protect them from death and destruction.
32  |   Louisa, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
I'd like to respond to Tim from Chicago: Please understand that the USA doesn't do any favors to Israel. Whatever it does, is calculated for its own good, and not for the sake of morality. It does not abandon Israel B/C it needs Israel to do the tough work that America cannot. BTW, the US kills many innocent people in its wars - that should concern you, too. Israel is a sovereign country, and it will do what is good for Israel and no democratic county should dictate its policies to another. If America decides to abandon Israel, it will not be the end of Israel. America is not G-d.
33  |   brad, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
Mr Knutsen, Please don't be arrogant enough to speak for the entire community abroad. I am abroad, and many of us can see the hypocrisy quite clearly. You as one Norwegian do not speak for all our opinions regarding Cast Lead. Many of us wondered how it can be that they waited so long. Australia would react immediately if someone lobbed rockets at our country just once. Let alone for years. But I guess I don't live in Eurabia like you do. It's coming for you and the rest of Scandinavia, see what the people abroad think when you have to protect your people from muslim extremists.
34  |   M. Knutsen, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
Ah, the echo chamber. Vadim: "How did the crackdown on Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka looked from abroad?" It looked like an old fashioned bloody massacre, a fight to the death. So, does that justify anything? And y`all can keep patting yourself on the back if it pleases you, but the truth is that if you do a cost-benefit analyzis of Cast Lead, Israel was left with a huge loss in soft power. Combine this with the election of the openly racist Lieberman, and the claims of being "the most moral in the world", and your PR department seems to have quite a job ahead.
35  |   Peter Sammut. Southampton UK, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
Oh Mr Knutsen really, any one can see in you the latent hatred against Israel and the Jews. To call Lieberman an "openly rascist" shows your bigotry and antisemitism. Still I take comfort from your open stupidity and lack of logic. No normal mind would express the feelings which is in yours, you are abnormal and I feel sorry for you. Israel should never apologise to the likes of yourself for defending herself and winning. I hope you survive living in your Eurabia.
36  |   Vadim, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
M. Knutsen, the question was not about what Israel have achieved, but rather why Gaza conflict was all over the news, whereas Sri Lanka was somewhere on the back pages. Why there were demonstrations in front of Israeli embassies, but not in front of those of Sri Lanka. Why there was a UN resolution about Gaza, but not one about Tamils. Why there is an inquiry into "alleged war crimes in Gaza", but not into those in Sri Lanka. You preferred not to answer the argument that I made, but to come up with a bunch of unrelated accusations. I see it as an admission of your defeat.
37  |   corrine indiana, Tuesday Jun 09, 2009
I as an American see the antisemitism in our media. The majority of the American people are merely puppets on strings to what ever views they want us to take by their biased pieces. As a Christian, this is prophecy unfolding before our eyes. Most Christians who speak on prophecy agree that America is not in the last day scenerio. Could it be because America and its leaders seem to be turning its back on Isreal, and therefore bringing forth a curse on our land? I hope Isreal does what it needs to do to protect itself despite what leaders advise! God Bless his chosen people!!
38  |   Bob, Maryland, Wednesday Jun 10, 2009
At the New York Times, there is no real separation between news and editorial content. They clearly feel that the normal rules of journalistic ethics do not apply to them. They are above such petty concerns. But, in the realm of finances, how the mighty have fallen!
39  |   Jan, Australia, Wednesday Jun 10, 2009
Mr David Harris has succinctly explained how media works. A half truth is a whole lie, as emphasis is always a tool to persuade. Of interest from prophecy is the lack of interest in Iran and Somalia! Iran is also called Persia and Somalia corresponds roughly to ancient Ethiopia, a great power of antiquity... a modern threat to world trade and named in the Bible as a latter day force. While the New York Times relegates them to unimportant, according to prophecy, they will affect the world, even New York, far more than a few Jews settling in Samaria. 'Caveat lector' indeed.
40  |   Jinny- los angeles, Wednesday Jun 10, 2009
the NYT deserves to die a slow and torturous death, and it is. Good article
41  |   M. Knutsen, Oslo, Wednesday Jun 10, 2009
Vadim: Fair enough question. My answer would be twofold: a) At least in my country there were huge demonstration against the Sri Lankans, it got smashed up at one point. B, Israel has a somewhat special position because you are nearly a member of NATO, and a close ally. The hellfires you use were partly made in my country. That makes it a bit more personal. In addition, the nature of Gaza, sitting on the mediteranean coast yet not being allowed contact with the rest of the world is too blatant a symbol of injustice to ignore.Sammut: Not everyone is anti-semite who disagrees w. Israel.
42  |   AHMAD EL SAHIRI, OSLO, Friday Jun 12, 2009
Mr. Knutsen, As a Muslim Arab, living in Europe and watching my "brothers" taking over Europe (where I came years ago for freedom), I have only one things to tell you. WRITE WRITE WRITE all your ideas and opinions now, (no matter how biased and infantile they are) ,while you are still a free man. Very soon, when Europe will succumb to the sharia law and the luck of freedom of speech, you will not be able to write what to think. I, IN THE MEANTIME AM TRYING TO ENJOY EVERY MINUTE OF MY FREEDOM. Ahmad
43  |   Geoff, Washington, DC, Thursday Jun 18, 2009
David, Are you insinuating that the New York Times is anti-Semitic and pro-Arab/Muslim? Laughable, but, if so, say it. I have extensive experience in ME affairs and to this day can't understand why some argue (or clearly insinuate) that simply because an opinion does not coincide with right-wing Israeli policies, it is anti-Semitic; and similarly, if an opinion conflicts with right-wing Israeli policies, it must be pro-Arab or pro-Muslim, for example. Truly ludicrous.
44  |   ISAAC, Tuesday Aug 25, 2009
Mr Harris writes quite well as do a number of other writers regarding Israel and the Arab nationsof the Middle East. The Stark reality is as long as the Arab Muslim world uses violence as method to achieve solutions to their issues internal or external there can be no resolve toward peaceful co existence. Their leaders no existent connection with their people's welfare and theri leaders desire to control and rule with total control thru violence. THe fact that they fight amongst each other to be the Man in control makes imppposible to get a resolve of peaceful co existence in the region.
45  |   frederick sargent, Sunday Nov 01, 2009
Hang in there and keep fighting. I am ret army and was born the same year as modernday Israel. I have always supported her. Long live Israel! You are too young to be put out to pasture. I think this is a great article.
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In the Trenches American Jewish Committee (AJC) Executive Director David Harris assesses challenges to Jewish security worldwide.

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Susan North NJ: David Harris is one of the most respected opinion makers on the US/Israeli scene. If only his columns & books were required reading on college campuses! American Jews are often self centered losing site of the fact that their behavior affects the outcome of events. The fraudulent "rabbis", the self hating Coen brothers and the Jewish financial thieves are taking us all down. Mr Harris cannot save us from them although god knows he tries.
Carmen Matussek, Germany: Happy Birthday! You don`t look like you were 60. Despite all these right-wing-left-wing-middle-wing-attacks keep writing and keep your refreshing pride. You deserve applause and at least our very best wishes and congrats. All the best!
Mirla G. Raz: Excellent piece in every respect.