Category: “Our” Media

  • Koran Abuse: Flushing out the Truth

    Government and military investigations into detainee-alleged Koran abuse have occurred previous to the Newsweek debacle, and again afterwards with a focus on the controversial tale of a the holy book of Islam being flushed down a Guantanamo Bay toilet.

    Preliminary findings have been released and the score to date: mishandlings 5, flushings 0.

    Brigadier General Jay Hood, the military commander at Guantanamo Bay, says U.S. officials have substantiated five cases of mishandling of the Koran by the military, but found no credible evidence that a Koran was placed in a toilet and flushed.

    […]

    “First off, I would like to you know that we have found no credible evidence that a member of the joint task force at Guantanamo Bay ever flushed a Koran down a toilet. We did identify 13 incidents of alleged mishandling of the Koran by joint task force personnel. Ten of those were by a guard, and three by interrogators.”

    He said only five of the 13 instances involved what could be broadly described as mishandling of the Koran. In two cases, he said, the guards were punished.

    Note that we currently are investigating, have previously investigated and have even previously punished our own.

    General Hood said the initial inquiry has also identified 15 instances in which detainees mishandled or inappropriately treated a Koran. One of these incidents was the specific example of a detainee who ripped pages out of his own Koran.

    Note also that the detainees have the lead in mishandling their own holy book.

    Now, how about the specific charge of the Newsweek blunder?

    Earlier this month, Newsweek magazine published an article that said a soon-to-be-released military investigation had found that interrogators at Guantanamo had placed a Koran in a toilet and flushed it down to upset detainees under interrogation. The report was followed by widespread protests throughout the Muslim world. Demonstrations in Afghanistan and Pakistan turned violent and at least 15 people lost their lives.

    Newsweek later retracted the story and said it was based on one government source who now said he could not be sure the military investigation had confirmed the Koran desecration.

    […]

    General Hood said that during the military inquiry into mistreatment of the Koran, investigators questioned the inmate who had told FBI investigators the Koran had been placed in a toilet. The inmate retracted his initial allegations. “We had a very good conversation with him where he said, no, that he wasn’t beaten or abused but that he had heard rumors that other detainees were. We then proceeded to ask him about any incidences where he had seen the Koran defiled, desecrated or mishandled and he allowed as how he hadn’t, but he had heard that guards at some other point in time had done this,” he said.

    The media has repeatedly shown a willingness to print unsubstantiated detainee allegations. One scumbag echoed hearsay. Newsweek combined that with shoddy journalism and it just snowballed from there into riots and deaths.

    General Hood went on to promise details of the specific mishandlings will be made available when the investigation is complete and that policies Koran handling will be reviewed as needed.

    Meanwhile, a confirmed abuse of the Koran, a flushing at that, can be found here, courtesy of Dr. Rusty Shackleford of Jawa Report fame.

  • The American Media Problem(s)

    There is certainly something amiss in the “American” mainstream media. Even at least one media insider, Carole Simpson, just might realize it.

    America, we’ve got a problem. Actually, two problems. One is the news media’s loss of credibility because some news organizations have reported stories that are wrong or fabricated. Their BAD.

    That contributes to the other problem: the public’s disdain for the news and the people who provide it. Too many Americans believe we are all too liberal and we slant the news. They think we deserve no respect.

    Do not go quietly into that good night of recognition, Carole. Go whining.

    Look at how reporters and camera people are portrayed on television and in the movies. It makes me crazy. Typically, we’re seen as a gang of pushing, shouting, obnoxious people, waving microphones and note pads, trying desperately to get a quote or a picture. The police, politicians, business leaders, and celebrities – in these fictional dramas – routinely refer to the press as “vultures.” Characters are always trying to hide things from the media. But you know what that means? They are really trying to hide it from you, from the public.

    Yeah, sure, you’re portrayed badly and we lose. How about you’re deservedly portrayed badly based on your general behaviour? How about we lose, not from your portrayal but from your behaviour?

    How about we get to the meat of your “epiphany” of sorts?

    But it doesn’t help our credibility at all when, in the space of a few months, two major news organizations have had to admit to the whole world that they screwed up. They reported stories that were wrong. They had to retract them and apologize.

    Most recently, Newsweek magazine had to retract a clause in a short story. The magazine said government investigators looking into interrogation abuses at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba have confirmed that interrogators, in an attempt to rattle suspects, flushed a Koran down a toilet.

    An unnamed government source told Newsweek reporters this happened at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, where the detainees are mostly Muslims and those in charge are Americans. You should know that the Koran is to Muslims what the Bible is to Christians, or the Torah is to Jews. It is considered holy, and the word of God.

    The story about alleged American desecration of its holy book was too much for many in the Muslim world. Part of one sentence in a short story in a weekly newsmagazine was used to stir up riots in countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and Indonesia. Sixteen people died.

    As silly kids we used to chant: “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” Maybe we need to rethink that little ditty.

    Newsweek’s words were deadly and further tarnished America’s image in the Middle East.

    Then there’s CBS News. Weeks before the 2004 election, Dan Rather reported on “60 Minutes II” that his news team had obtained documents proving President Bush got preferential treatment during the Vietnam War and did not fulfill his National Guard obligation.

    The story was attacked immediately. Rather repeatedly defended it as accurate, while his CBS bosses launched an internal investigation. The report was based on memos that some critics called forgeries, and kinder critics described as “impossible to authenticate.” CBS News was wrong. The result? It didn’t kill any people; it just killed the careers of Dan Rather and three highly respected veteran CBS producers.

    Trust me, there is no legitimate question they were forgeries.

    In her closing, it is evident that Carole Simpson really doesn’t get it.

    We believe it is our duty to the American people. Yet the distrust is out there and growing every year.

    A University of Connecticut poll found this month that 60 percent of Americans say the “media in general” do a fair or poor job reporting information accurately. Only 39 percent think the media do an excellent or good job. Twenty years ago, these ratings were much better. But 20 years ago there weren’t so many 24-hour news channels, news by Internet and cell phone, and independent bloggers, who can say anything they want without retribution.

    Every profession has some bad apples and they are usually found out and thrown out. They don’t spoil the whole barrel. Every news organization I know is trying harder than ever to regain credibility and public confidence.

    This country was founded by men who believed a free press was so important to democracy, they gave it protection under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

    Just because once in a rare while some organization gets something wrong, the American public cannot just dismiss the news media altogether. While many avoid us when they don’t want to tell the truth, our job is to hang in there and dig it out sooner or later. But we need to get the truth out. Not for us. For you.

    The problems currently facing the American mainstream media do not hang on a few errors. Rather, they hang on a mindset. That mindset is why the two errors that Ms. Simpson wrote about actually occurred. Those two stories could be rushed to print without adequate research just had to be true because they just made sense to the worldviews of the journalists involved, journalistic standards be damned. That is also shown in the media’s willingness to circle their wagons around Newsweek, augmenting their side of the controversy with story upon story of Quran abuse based solely upon allegations of detainees. Need I remind anyone that it wasn’t a detainee or a journalist that began the Abu Ghraib investigations but was, instead, the reporting of a wrong by a soldier? The words of a politically-motivated detainee have no reason to be automatically believed, but that apparently is the standard of proof so many of Ms. Simpson’s colleagues are willing to use in their publishing.

    The problem is not a desire to get the story out there, but rather what story the media wishes to get out there.

    Greyhawk at the Mudville Gazette points us to a Los Angeles Times piece whining about the difficulty of getting pictures of wounded and killed American soldiers into print. As expected, he addresses this story wonderfully, but I’d like to tie the disgusting piece into this post. Even within its whining hit piece, the Times shows strong anecdotal evidence of common Americans who question the media’s desire to flaunt Americans suffering during wartime.

    Publishing such photos grabs readers’ attention, but not always in ways that news executives like. When the Star-Ledger and several other papers ran the Babbitt photo in November, their editors were lashed by some readers — who called them cruel, insensitive, even unpatriotic.

    Deirdre Sargent, whose husband was deployed to Iraq, e-mailed editors of the News Tribune of Tacoma, Wash., that the photo left her “shaking and in tears for hours.” She added: “It was tacky, unprofessional and completely unnecessary.”

    Babbitt’s mother, Kathy Hernandez, expressed ambivalent sentiments. “That is not an image you want to see like that,” said Hernandez, still shedding tears of fury and sadness six months after her son’s death. “Your kid is lying like that and there is no way you can get there to help them.”

    I’m not advocating government intervention into our media.

    Not at freakin’ all.

    However, I am asking those at the Times and other members of the media to question themselves. Are you an American first, covering what is truly best for America? Are you sure, as America doesn’t seem to think so, judging by your declining readership. Are you being honest to your trade? Apparently not, judging by recent major gaffes. Are you covering a war-time situation in an honest manner, or are you letting your worldviews guide your publishing judgement against our military efforts? My guess is the latter, as you seem almost bloodthirsty to show American suffering but seem to lack a similar driving desire to portray progress. Please feel free to counter that guess with a study of the frequency of published photos of suffering American soldiers over any six-month period of World War II.

    Oh yeah, Ms. Simpson, you have no idea of the depths of the problems of the American media.

  • Newsweek Retracts Quran Abuse Story

    Yesterday, Newsweek backed off its hit piece aimed at the military and the Bush administration. Today, they completely retracted it. Tomorrow, the resulting riot victims will still be dead and the tarnished U.S. image will still be stained.

    Newsweek magazine has retracted a story that said U.S. interrogators desecrated the Qur’an to get inmates at Guantanamo Bay to talk – a report that led to anti-American riots in which at least 17 people died.

    “Based on what we know now, we are retracting our original story that an internal military investigation had uncovered Qur’an abuse at Guantanamo Bay,” the magazine’s editor, Mark Whitaker, said late Monday.

    […]

    The report sparked the biggest outpouring of anti-American sentiment in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

    At least 17 people have been killed over the past week as protests turned into violent clashes with police.

    The May 9 article said American interrogators were placing copies of the Qur’an on toilets to rattle suspects, and in one case “flushed a holy book down the toilet.”

    Guess what? Yeah, the damage is already done. This retraction is meaningless where it counts, the Islamic world. Chad at In the Bullpen points to a story showing Islamic clerics ain’t buying what Newsweek is now selling, and then goes on to explain why the retraction has no traction.

    Again this comes not only from a group already believing the United States is in a war against Islam, something the MSM and several Left-leaning politicians and pundits advance ‘unwittingly’, but it also comes from people that only have the slightest clue of what a free press is. The lack of understanding that Newsweek is not controlled by the government is partially responsible for the same non-believing that a retraction was not pushed by the Bush Administration.

    Chad goes on to show how the radical clerics have historically used such opportunities to their advantage.

    Meanwhile, Phil at Shades of Gray agrees the piece was a political hit and repercussions will continue.

    What to make of this? First, it seems that (once again) our highly reliable media has screwed up. Second, it seems that (once again) it has screwed up in a way that is, to say the least, unhelpful for the ongoing war on terror. Finally, it seems that (once again) this may blow over too quickly.

    […]

    Thanks to this slap-dash journalism, we can expect even more bad blood between the US and her allies and groups within the Middle East and the like, as this story will no doubt enter into the great domain of the urban legend – sure, the story is wrong, but expect to hear various Middle Eastern sources to cite this non-incident as yet another example of the US’s evil.

    Newsweek opened it’s own Pandora’s Box, and now we all have to wait and see how much of a butcher’s bill is to be extracted.

  • Newsweek Backs off Quran Desecration Story

    In a seeming rush to besmirch our anti-terror efforts, Newsweek published a little tidbit that sparked riots, resulted in deaths and wreaked havoc on our efforts in multiple Islamic countries. Does it matter now if the story is either the result of very poor journalism or possibly completely wrong?

    Newsweek magazine backed away Sunday from a report that U.S. interrogators desecrated copies of the Quran while questioning prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay naval base — an account blamed for sparking violent riots in Afghanistan.

    At least 15 people were killed and dozens injured last week when thousands of demonstrators marched in Afghanistan and other parts of the Muslim world, officials and eyewitnesses said.

    The Pentagon said last week it was unable to corroborate any case in which interrogators at the U.S. Naval Station in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, defiled the Muslim holy book, as Newsweek reported in its May 9 issue.

    “Top administration officials have promised to continue looking into the charges, and so will we,” Newsweek Editor Mark Whitaker wrote in the magazine’s May 23 issue, out Sunday.

    “But we regret that we got any part of our story wrong, and extend our sympathies to victims of the violence and to the U.S. soldiers caught in its midst.”

    Pentagon spokesman Larry DiRita blamed Newsweek’s report for the unrest in Muslim countries.

    “People are dying. They are burning American flags. Our forces are in danger,” he told CNN.

    We are a nation at war with troops engaged in the field. Why are the mainstream media so eager to endanger lives and undermine any progress? Even with a shred of truth to the story, it should have been axed or, at the very least, shelved until it could be thoroughly investigated and possible ramifications of publishing could be considered. The fine folk at Newsweek now needlessly have blood on their hands, earned by their desire to run a hit on the American military and their lagging journalistic professionalism.

    Others blogging on the matter:
    Outside the Beltway
    Michelle Malkin
    The Mudville Gazette
    Blackfive
    The Jawa Report, here and here
    Captain’s Quarters
    Power Line, here and here
    INDC Journal keeps it short and sweet here

  • When the Journalists Become the News

    Here’s a news flash — a good number of them aren’t on our side, or even just neutrally out to get a story.

    CBS Stringer Arrested in Iraq

    A CBS stringer has been arrested as a suspected insurgent, U.S. military officials said Friday.

    The video cameraman was wounded during a firefight in northeastern Mosul between U.S. troops and insurgents Tuesday.

    U.S. military officials said the man’s camera held footage of a number of roadside bomb attacks against American troops, and they believe he was tipped off to those attacks.

    A U.S. military statement said troops believe the man “poses an imperative threat to coalition forces” and that he “will be processed as any other security detainee.”

    Greyhawk at the Mudville Gazette has been on this story since it first broke this afternoon, including a number of updates from several sources showing the morphing media coverage of the incident.

    According to CBS when he was shot he was a “cameraman employed by CBS News” shot “while working” – when he was arrested he was “A cameraman carrying CBS press credentials.”

    Wow.

    Chad at In the Bullpen chimes in with his two cents.

    While journalists have every right to roam the country-side of Iraq looking for stories, doing so without an extensive bodyguard escort or through embedding with the enemy who are firing upon U.S. soldiers has proven time and time again to be rather foolish.

    Are the journalists actually embedding with the terrorists? Dr. Rusty Shackleford at the Jawa Report thinks a couple of the recently-named Pulitzer winners prove it.

    Everyone Is Looking At the Wrong Pulitzer Prize Photos

    The Washington Times does a half-ass job of questioning the Pulitzer Prize in this editorial. The article raises important questions, but like most of the blogosphere and those in conservative circles, they examine a single photo.

    But there were 20 photos in the series. As we have been arguing from the beginning, what is troubling is the totality of the story those photos show. The story those photos tell is of an empowered insurgency, demoralized U.S. troops, and American brutality.

    Several of the photos are disgusting, such as the one in question which shows the execution of Iraqi election officials and another which shows the residents of Fallujah celebrating the murder of American civilians as their charred bodies hang from a bridge, but it may be the case that these photos were taken by Iraqi photojournalists who were anonymously tipped off or who just happened to be at the right place at the right time.

    We have also noted in the past that the photo in question is not nearly as damning as two others which clearly indicate something like ’embedding’ with the isurgency is (or was) going on with AP stringers in Iraq.

    Go look — the photos make a pretty persuasive case that not only were the photogs with the insurgents but also were quite willing to try to capture those trying to kill Americans in a brave or noble light.

    Perhaps, with all this, today wasn’t the best day for journalists to push their luck with the U.S. military. But they did anyway.

    Journalists Seek Info on 2003 Iraq Deaths

    The International Federation of Journalists on Friday urged U.S. officials to provide credible evidence American troops did not intentionally kill two television cameramen at a Baghdad hotel in 2003.

    The two were killed April 8, 2003, when an American tank fired at the Palestine Hotel, where scores of journalists were based during the U.S. invasion of Iraq. U.S. officials insist the soldiers believed they were being shot at when they opened fire.

    Jose Couso, cameraman for Spanish television network Telecinco, and Taras Protsyuk, Ukrainian TV cameraman for Reuters, were killed by the U.S. tank.

    But critics say the journalists were targeted by U.S. troops moving in on Baghdad, and the IFJ said Friday a report on the killings was a “whitewash.”

    In a letter to President Bush, IFJ General Secretary Aidan White wrote, “the United States stands accused of failing to meet its obligations to deliver justice and fair treatment to the victims of violence by its own soldiers.”

    Following the Palestine incident, then-U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said American troops opened fire after drawing hostile fire from the hotel. He said a U.S. review of the incident found the of force was justified.

    Here’s a little tip for y’all journalists in a warzone: weapon fire may be fairly easy to see through a tank’s thermal sights, but press credentials are not.