Apr 2, 2024
When
The Washington Post revealed Friday afternoon that “the Biden administration in
recent days quietly authorized the transfer of billions of dollars in bombs and
fighter jets to Israel,” a lot of people cared. Readers of the story posted
more than 10,000 comments on its webpage. A leading progressive site for
breaking news, Common Dreams, quickly followed up with coverage under a
headline that began with the word “obscene.”
A reader holds up a copy of a satirical paper, “The New York War Crimes, ” mocking The New York Times’ biased coverage of the Gaza genocide, on March 14, 2024 in New York City.(Photo: Nicki Kattoura/X)
Responses on social media were
swift and strong; a tweet about the Post scoop from our team at RootsAction
received more than 600,000 views.
But
at The New York Times—the nation’s purported newspaper of record—one day after
another went by as the editors determined that the story about the massive new
transfer of weaponry to Israel wasn’t worth reporting on at all. Yet it was
solid. A Reuters dispatch said that two sources “confirmed” the Post’s report.
By
omission, The New York Times gave a boost to a process of normalizing the
slaughter in Gaza, as if shipping vast quantities of 2,000-pound bombs for use
to take the lives of Palestinian civilians is unremarkable and unnewsworthy.
Just another day at the genocide office.
The
intentional failure of the Times to report the profoundly important news of the
huge new shipments of armaments was a tacit signal that the flagrant
willingness of Uncle Sam to talk out of both sides of his mouth—assisting with
further carnage on a soul-corrupting scale—was no big deal.
At
the end of the weekend, I sent an email to the Times managing editor Carolyn
Ryan and asked why the newspaper wasn’t covering the story at all. She passed
my question along to the Times public-relations manager, who provided only a
non-answer on Monday night. Here it is in full: “The New York Times has
invested more than any other U.S. newspaper over the past decade to help
readers understand the complexities of the Israel-Hamas conflict. We continue
to report on events as they develop, both in the region, internationally, and
within the U.S. government.”
The
complete evasion, laced with self-puffery, reflected the arrogance of media
power from the single most influential and far-reaching news outlet in the
United States. Rather than amplify the crucial story into the nation’s media
echo chamber, the Times opted to quash it.
The
saying that “justice delayed is justice denied” has a parallel for news media
and war—journalism delayed is journalism denied. The refusal of the Times to
cover the story after it broke was journalistic malpractice, helping to make it
little more than a fleeting one-day story instead of the subject of focused
national discourse that it should have been.
The
Post article had laid bare, at a pivotal historic moment, a lethal
contradiction within the behavior of top U.S. government official—directly
aiding and abetting Israel’s methodical killing of civilians in Gaza while
spouting facile platitudes about them.
In
its lead sentence, the piece said that the White House had okayed the new
shipments of bombs and jets “despite Washington’s concerns about an anticipated
military offensive in southern Gaza that could threaten the lives of hundreds
of thousands of Palestinian civilians.” The juxtaposition showed just how phony
“Washington’s concerns” actually are.
“The
new arms packages include more than 1,800 MK84 2,000-pound bombs and 500 MK82
500-pound bombs, according to Pentagon and State Department officials familiar
with the matter,” the Post reported. “The 2,000-pound bombs have been linked to
previous mass-casualty events throughout Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.”
The
piece quoted an unidentified White House official who, in effect, underscored
that all the talk of President Joe Biden’s supposed distress about the ongoing
massacres of civilians in Gaza has been a cruel exercise in PR smoke-blowing:
“We have continued to support Israel’s right to defend itself. Conditioning aid
has not been our policy.”
Translation:
We continue to support, with massive military aid, Israel’s prerogative to keep
slaughtering Palestinian civilians.
If
the Times editors need to grasp just how significantly horrific the 2,000-pound
bombs now en route to Israel really are, they could read some reporting from
their own newspaper. In December, it described those bombs as “one of the most
destructive munitions in Western military arsenals”—a weapon that “unleashes a
blast wave and metal fragments thousands of feet in every direction.” Back
then, the Times indicated that “Israel used these munitions in the area it
designated safe for civilians at least 200 times,” and those 2,000-pound bombs
were “a pervasive threat to civilians seeking safety across south Gaza.”
It’s
a safe bet that the new transfer of 2,000-pound bombs to Israel would seem more
newsworthy to the editors of The New York Times if the lives of their loved ones
were at stake.
No comments:
Post a Comment