By George Neumayr on 5.17.05 @ 12:08AM
Evan Thomas accepts the Rather Prize for his riotous newsweekly.
The mainstream media often denounce conservative criticism of
Islam as "inflammatory." Then they make sure it is inflammatory by
broadcasting the criticism in tabloid form to the ends of the earth
so that Muslims will be properly inflamed. A few years ago, for
example, Jerry Falwell's critique of Islam as a violent religion
was beamed to the Muslim world by media outlets very deeply
concerned about Muslim-Christian concord, and bloody riots
followed. Falwell had provoked the riots, the media piously
reported even as they happily stoked them.
The oh-so-irenic media seem to delight in inflaming Muslims by
letting them know what America has said or done that should inflame
them. The media express anger that George Bush has "alienated" the
Muslim world while they simultaneously distort what Bush has done
in the war on terrorism so as to guarantee that alienation.
This is a very cynical game, and it has caught up with at least
one publication now, Newsweek. Its editors, expecting to
spend this week castigating the Bush administration for causing
discord in the Muslim world by permitting anti-Islamic abuse at its
Guantanamo Bay detention facilities, had to admit that their false
report about U.S. military interrogators' desecration of the Koran
sparked rioting across the Middle East. But like Dan Rather,
Newsweek is allowing itself an array of defenses it would
never extend to the conservatives it covers.
Newsweek editor Evan Thomas, in his post-mortem on the debacle this week, "How a Fire
Broke Out," dusts off a defense Dan Rather tried, which we can call
the-subject-whom-we-were-smearing-didn't-correct-us defense.
Remember Rather's crack research team assumed that the Bush White
House's mute response to its preview of the forged National Guard
documents was confirmation of their validity. Evan Thomas, using
this new species of journalistic accuracy testing, writes a bit
peevishly that Newsweek had "provided a draft of the
NEWSWEEK PERISCOPE item to a Senior Defense official, asking, 'Is
this accurate or not?'" Thomas writes that the official was
"silent" on the portion of the item alleging that Guantanamo Bay
interrogators had flushed a copy of the Koran down a toilet. This
is Newsweek's way of saying: hey, don't get mad at us, we
showed due diligence.
See, this too can be blamed on the Bush administration. It turns
out that the Bush administration does a very sloppy job of editing
smear jobs of it that the media generously allow it to examine
before publication. The Bush administration could have saved Rather
from himself by saying, "Dan, you are going forward with a
forgery." But it just callously let him use it. And now that the
administration didn't save Newsweek from itself by editing
its previewed Periscope item about how their interrogators flush
the Koran down toilets at Guantanamo Bay it looks like this
callousness has hardened into habit.
EVAN THOMAS ROLLS OUT another defense, one often seen after a
publication has been caught out in a disastrous story that it first
tried to present as an exclusive, and that is the
we-didn't-publish-this-false-story-first defense. Journalistic
scoops that turn out badly suddenly aren't scoops anymore but just
previously reported information. Here's Thomas: "Newsweek
was not the first to report allegations of desecrating the Qur'an.
As early as last spring and summer, similar reports from released
detainees started surfacing in British and Russian news reports,
and in the Arab news agency Al-Jazeera; claims by other released
detainees have been covered in other media since then."
In other words, the Muslims should have rioted earlier? Or maybe
Newsweek is saying that last week's rioting was
opportunistic, the work of fanatical Muslims eagerly looking for
Western offenses as a pretext for violence? The latter explanation
would bring Newsweek dangerously close to a position its
multicultural sensitivities forbid: a refusal to excuse Islamic
violence as a legitimate reaction to Western criticism or
practice.
That's not a position the media allow just anyone to take. If
Jerry Falwell says that Islam contains an element of violence in it
and Muslims validate that critique by rioting, the media blame the
riots on Falwell and absolve the rioters of responsibility. But if
an obviously enlightened person like Salman Rushdie or publication
like Newsweek are the provokers, the media don't show
quite the same level of sympathy for Muslim rioters.
Evan Thomas, signaling that Newsweek (despite its
editor's mea culpa) considers the riots an inexcusable, irrational
response to its report, writes that "extremist agitators are at
least partly to blame." So don't expect next week on
Newsweek 's who's up, who's down Periscope chart, an up
arrow for militant Islam.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Religion, Islam, Military, Russia, Oil