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Politics and Press

The interaction of the press and politics; public diplomacy, and daily absurdities.

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Press

Christopher Hitchens on I.F. Stone

October 12, 2006 By Jeff

I.F. Stone was one of the truly great American journalists of the 20th century. He was resolutely independent, admitted his biases, but went where the documents, his instincts for the truth and the interviews took him. He refused to spend time at press conferences where people would lie to him, and did not read press releases so he could lazily reprint them. He did what few working journalists do today – he dug into the research and thought about things. Then he wrote about them. Over the years he embarrassed leaders, politicians and other journalists and got labeled a fellow-traveler for his efforts. He was fearless, honest, sometimes wrong, but mostly right.

Christopher Hitchens may be the perfect reviewer of Stones’ work and biography and he does a wonderful job of it in the current Vanity Fair. I have to believe that the good “fit” here of reviewer and subject is not accidental. Both are independent thinkers, wonderful writers, ideologically committed, and Hitchens could be talking about himself when he writes that “Izzy could be as interesting when he was ‘wrong’ as when he was ‘right'”. Which is to say that it is possible to read Hitchens when disagreeing with him and still feel to have been forced to think.

But more important is the value of the independent voice, the willingness to take on the establishment, the absolute commitment to personal integrity, and the unwillingness to suck up to power that Stone personified. Stone is often vilified by what Hitchens refers to as the “crackpot Ann Coulterish right, of his having been on the K.B. G. payroll”.

Hitchens’ response to that kind of crackpot, on-the-sleeve stupidity is that he “…once had the honor of being the I.F. Stone fellow at Berkeley (where [Stone’s] old typewriter is enclosed in a glass case: probably the most hagiography he could have stood), and [he]
told [his] students to read him and reread him to get an idea of the relationship between clean and muscular prose and moral and intellectual honesty.”

Hitchens’ piece is available on the Vanity Fair website.

Filed Under: Press

When North Korea Falls

October 11, 2006 By Jeff

Thanks to our Kiwi correspondent for alerting us to the above titled article in the October Atlantic Monthly by Robert Kaplan.

Kaplan is always interesting writing about soldiers and soldiering and his insights into the military provide a particular prism through which to view the situation in North Korea. Note that it is titled “When” North Korea Falls, not “If” North Korea Falls. He is persuasive in concluding that the winner when N. Korea falls will likely be China and that the U.S.’s influence in the region will be diminished. The article provides some fresh insight into a situation which seems burdened in the press with relatively unsophisticated – even jingoistic – perspectives. Read it at the Atlantic Monthly’s website.

Filed Under: North Korea, Press, U.S. Foreign Policy

Christine Amanpour:The Press in War in 2006

October 10, 2006 By Jeff

A recent interview with Christine Amanpour describes the challenges of reporting in Iraq in 2006. The challenges come from two directions: the Bush administration constantly calling reality into question and the insurgents threatening death on reporters. The interview appeared on the website for Campus Progress and was carried out at Harvard. An interesting discussion by one of our best journalists.

Filed Under: Iraq, Politics, Press

Chechen War Reporter Found Dead

October 9, 2006 By Jeff

Our Kiwi correspondent forwards this story that is at the heart of the relationship of politics and the press in Russia:
As the url for this blog suggests, the focus here is often the intersection of policy and journalism. In some parts of the world that intersection too frequently produces carnage. This is surely case with the murder of Anna Politkovskaya, the woman who the head of Russia’s journalism union has “described as the conscience of the country’s journalism.” It seems appropriate to draw readers’ attention to this report from the NY Times on her life and death.

Anne Applebaum has published a remembrance and an analysis of the situation for independent journalists in Russia for Slate. It is not pretty, but is worth reading to remind us of the courage that many journalists have and the price that some of them pay. And we are certainly not talking about Bill O’Reilly.

Filed Under: Politics, Press, Terrorism

The Press and Rep. Foley

October 3, 2006 By Jeff

There has been much breast beating on the Congressman Foley-Senate page scandal.  Certainly if revenge is best served cold, the Democrats have their due with this one.  The party of the moral majority, the party of family values, the party committed to erasing the horror of the Lewinsky affair in the Oval Office has within it people of shabby morals.  Shocking??  Of course not.  The issue in all of this is not that there are sinners (or at least one sinner) in the GOP.  The issue is the utter hypocrisy of the likes of Foley, and House Speaker Hastert and the gullibility of voters who believe in living saints who are self-beatified.

As for the press, it is pretty predictable. The Wall Street Journal – which went apoplectic about the Oval Office affair  – commented that, ” in today’s  politically correct culture, it’s easy to  understand how senior Republicans might well have decided they had no grounds doubt Mr. Foley merely because he was gay and a little too friendly in emails”  Is that bizarre or what?

Much of the mainstream press reports it in terms of its relationship to the coming elections, while at least one Dumbbell Radio loony compared Foley’s misuse of words with the Pope’s recent comments on Islam.

So we have this bizarre firestorm over a serious misdemeanor of a whacked out Congressman while thousands die in the War Without End in Iraq, Afghanistan has its largest poppy crop in history, a leading Republican Senator recommends inviting the Taliban into the Afghan government, Hezbollah continues to grow in strength in Lebanon, the U.S. middle class is disappearing downward, not upward, hope for peace in the Middle East has largely disappeared, and Bush et al just might be plotting an idiotic military adventure in Iran.  And oh yeah, North Korea – that’s the country that actually HAS nuclear weapons, is preparing to test one. President Bush (aka Skippy) is touring the country raising money so we can re-elect the buffoons who have put us where we are. In Stupidistan.

Filed Under: Politics, Press

Sex, Hockey and the Global Crisis

October 2, 2006 By Mackenzie Brothers

The first round ballots are in and it’s beginning to look very much as if Michael Ignatieff will be chosen leader of the Liberal Party of Canada at their convention in December, and would then be a very good bet to be the next Prime Minister of Canada. Ignatieff would be a most interesting opponent in any bilateral discussions with the US at a time in which the two countries are drifting apart faster than the Greenland icebergs are racing away from their former home. The alienation of its neighbours could be one of the more long-lasting results of the increasingly incomprehensible actions of a government in Washington that seems intent on separating itself from the rules of behaviour adhered to by its (former?) allies. Ignatieff would surely be the most experienced and knowledgeable expert on global affairs – he ran the appropriate institute at Harvard before making a run at Canadian politics – to be in a position to do something about it. And his discussion with Bush and his extraordinarily lightweight advisors might be a painful revelation about why North America can no longer be understood – as Europeans tend to do – as one big place called Amerika.

In order for that to happen, some very Canadian obstacles will have to be overcome. Hockey has popped up, as it always seems to do, in the strangest places. The Toronto Globe and Mail, which had run a very flattering lengthy piece on Ignatieff, ran a much less effusive piece on his main rival and former roommate at the U. of Toronto, Rhodes scholar Bob Rae, who is certainly no dummy, but hardly looks like a jock. He came in a miserable third in the Ontario delegation voting, no doubt because he had once been the socialist premier of Ontario when it got into serious financial problems. The article was highlighted by a photo of a comic-looking Rae in full hockey regalia skating for the Ontario legiskater team. The hockey photos of candidate Ken Dryden, who is given only an outside chance of being prime minister but a very good chance of being Minister of Sports, do not look comical. In fact in the week before the vote, the Montreal Canadiens announced that Dryden’s jersey, along with Quebec icon Serge Savard’s, would be retired and raised to the rafters of the coliseum in Montreal. Guess who gets the Quebec hockey vote. Ignatieff’s announcement that he enjoyed nothing more than having a beer and watching Hockey Night in Canada was met with some skepticism. And to top it off, Belinda Stronach, a top candidate who decided not to run, was identified in a divorce suit by the wife of Maple Leaf tough guy Ti Domi as the other woman who led poor Ti astray. Since Belinda had been married to Norwegian gold-medal speed-skater Olof Johann Koss, she might have given Dryden a run for his money as most experienced candidate on the ice.

Filed Under: Politics, Press

The Americanization of Canadian Media

October 2, 2006 By Jeff

The role of the Canadian press in the Maher Arar fiasco presents some interesting parallels to the Judith Miller run-up to Iraq reporting fiasco. Miller, at the time a NY Times correspondent, was used by anonymous administration sources to publish deceptive information intended to aid in the selling of the Iraq War. While it was never clear how much she actually believed of what she wrote the consequences are obvious and the damage has been done.

The Arar fiasco, as reported in today’s NY Times business section, included CTV’s (Canada’s largest private TV network) main nightly news show broadcasting that information from ”senior government officials in various departments” showed that Mr. Arar had given Syrian officials information about Al Qaeda and terrorist cells in Canada.

Juliet O’Neill published a 1,500-word, front-page article in The Ottawa Citizen under the headline ”Canada’s Dossier on Maher Arar.”  Her article cited leaked documents and a ”security source.” They revealed, the report said, that the Canadian police had ”caught Mr. Arar in their sights while investigating the activities of members of an alleged Al Qaeda logistical support group in Ottawa.”

The NY Times reports that ”although the leaks have now been shown to be completely false, Scott Anderson, The Citizen’s editor in chief, said last week that he had no regrets about publishing the report. ”Just the opposite. The story stands up completely,” he said.”

Anderson’s response is absurd.  The issue here is the laziness of reporters who will run with anyone’s garbage for a front-page scoop and the weakness of editors who refuse to push their reporters to do the hard work of serious journalism. Leaks from anonymous sources may be a necessary journalist tool but their use requires the hard work needed to verify them before destroying someone’s reputation or helping to start a war.

Filed Under: Press, Terrorism

Bush: Relying On Relics

October 2, 2006 By John

Lord knows George W. has made his share of mistakes [and then some]: he has branded regimes as members of an “Axis of Evil” [which is similar to the damaging invective Chavez used in his UN speech, in which he called Bush a sulfur-smelling Devil]; he invaded Iraq when it posed no threat to the US while he diverted resources from Afghanistan [thereby losing two conflicts at once]; he continues to conflate 9/11 with Saddam Hussein; he relies on corporate polluters to make voluntary pro-environmental decisions [that one is a doozy]; he reserves tax reductions only for those who already make more than enough; and he relies on oil exploration to the exclusion of oil conservation [and then accuses us of being “addicted to oil”!!] – the list goes on and on. In fact, it’s difficult to identify one good call Bush has made. Give that man a set of facts and he’ll reach the wrong conclusion. It’s amazing and predictable – there should be some way of betting on it. At least then, we could win our bets, providing some consolation, as the Nation slides deeper down the tube.
Part of the fault [dear Brutus] lies in the advisors Bush selects. Fingers point to Cheney and Rumsfeld often enough as the originators and/or implementers of major pieces of the Bush Mess. These two old pros began their White House careers back in the 1970s with Nixon and Ford. The Cheney-Rumsfeld “cabal” is not new. They were with Nixon when Vietnam was still raging. The idea of “appeasing” that enemy was never considered back then and the idea of “appeasing” the enemy in Iraq doesn’t get much traction with these two today. What a surprise. Another little surprise, highlighted in Bob Woodward’s new book, is the involvement of another “blast from the past” in the Bush Mess. It’s Henry A. Kissinger! One of the architects of Vietnam. He of Cambodian Bombing fame. Supporter of Pinochet and the murderous regimes in South America of that period. His quote on Iraq, taken from the Washington Post, is straight out of the 1970s, “Victory over the insurgency is the only meaningful exit strategy.” That’s a strategy he followed for years on Vietnam – and you know where that got us. Lord, save us.
On a related aspect of Bush’s reliance on these “oldies but goodies,” Christopher Hitchens, a writer on current events [much more than a pundit] has written wonderfully and extensively on the “crimes” of Henry Kissinger. But Hitchens has also written extensively on the evils of Saddam Hussein and radical Islam. Hitchens was an impressive leftist writer in days gone by. Today he is a Bush supporter. So also today, Hitchens finds himself allied with Kissinger on the problems of Iraq and Islam. Now there is a set of strange bedfellows.

Filed Under: Politics, Press

Press and Politics: A Synergy of Sorts

September 26, 2006 By Jeff

A friend from New Zealand with considerable experience in American politics and a very good analytical sense points out to me that the Bush response to the NY Times and Washington Post reports on the National Intelligence Estimate is an indication of the power of the press in the best sense. Bush was forced to respond and respond he – sort of – did. Bush and his gang have managed the press for over five years and the press is finally and belatedly finding some courage and integrity. I don’t mean Fox News or the ilk, but serious press. No more Judith Miller; no more weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, no more sexed-up intelligence shoved on the American people by a complacent press to support a war based on bullshit. One can hope…

So what we have is Bush being forced to declassify “portions” of the NIE – that is, those portions that might provide some slim support for his theses on the war in Iraq. Obviously the best thing would be to release the entire report – he will not do that – too much political damage. End of the day I have to ask – Is there a room in the Smithsonian for the last supporter of the Iraq Fiasco? An exhibit with Rummy holding hands with General Westmoreland — Bush on his knees praying to the God of hopeless causes– Cheney swimming in Halliburton’s dough. Scenes from our American hell.

Filed Under: Iraq, Politics, Press

Brain Dead at the White House

September 26, 2006 By Jeff

Ok– the NY Times and Washington Post have reported on the NIE report that our Iraq fiasco has increased the terrorist threat; the President’s response is a typical moronic babble to the effect that we should not have been provided this information and that he would release – selectively – further information that would make it plain as can be that our Iraq fiasco was a wonderful adventure – as long as your kid wasn’t one of the ones giving it up for a pile of Texas bullshit. I understand that the press thinks it needs to treat this crap seriously – I just wonder why?

Skippy has consistently lied about everything connected to Iraq and the press was complicit in this (see Judith Miller et alia) It is actually not clear why he did it – was it his Daddy’s failure in 1991 to finish it off and a Freudian need to one-up him? Was it the Israel lobby that moved him? The direct voices from God? Wolfkowitz’s nutty obsession with Iraq? Cheney’s desire to set up a profit machine for Halliburton?

There is really no good reason for it and the puzzle remains because Skippy seems to actually believe what his speechwriters have written. What seems clear is that we have a president who does not enjoy good mental health. He avoids reality, believes he speaks personally with God, sends young Americans to death on a series of known lies, has destroyed the reputation of Colin Powell a former American hero, supports the most incompetent Defense Secretary in the country’s history, and has the audacity to go on TV and claim that everyone around him is naive. If only we knew what he knows. It is past time for America to embrace sanity.

Filed Under: Iraq, Press, Terrorism

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