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JUNE 18, 2008
MCCLELLAN BOTTOM
LINE: REPORTERS WERE PATSIES – by Peter Hart
Former White House
press secretary Scott McClellan sparked a political firestorm by
criticizing the Bush White House with the release of his new book "What
Happened." But the reaction from many in the elite media to McClellan’s
accusations that reporters were "deferential, complicit enablers" who
failed to challenge the White House case for the Iraq War demonstrates
that the White House is not the only institution that resents being held
accountable.
NBC anchor Brian
Williams and ABC anchor Charles Gibson defended the media’s performance
in the lead up to the war by explaining that journalists did not have
sufficient access to the inspectors--a poor excuse, given that the
inspections process was well-documented by the United Nations and by
independent reporters.
On NBC, Gibson
offered a more direct defense of the media: "You know, you go back to
the Powell speech. There was a lot of skepticism raised about that. I
can remember getting in trouble with administration officials because of
asking questions that they didn't feel comfortable with. I think the
questions were asked. There was just a drumbeat of support from the
administration, and it is not our job to debate them."
Actually, as FAIR
pointed out at the time, the overall coverage of Powell’s speech at the
UN was overwhelmingly credulous, despite the fact that there was plenty
of information on the record that questioned his claims. And Gibson's
objection to the idea that the media should "debate" the White House is
a straw man; the real issue is how badly the media covered the very
active debate that was going on before the war.
A FAIR study of
network news coverage of that period (1/30/03-2/12/03) found a
remarkable tilt towards the White House's side, despite the fact that a
majority of the
US public favored
more time for diplomacy and inspections. Of the U.S. guests who appeared
as sources on the evening news on ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS, a striking 75
percent (199) were either current or former government or military
officials. Only one of the official
U.S.
sources-- Sen. Edward Kennedy (D.-Mass.)--expressed skepticism or
opposition to the war. The study also found that of all 393 sources,
only three (less than 1 percent) were identified with organized protests
or anti-war groups.
On CNN (5/28/08),
Wolf Blitzer also offered up a defense of his network's reporting:
“We raised the
important questions. I can't tell you how many times we had Scott Ritter
and Hans Blix and Mohammed ElBaradei, from the International Atomic
Energy Agency, on my shows, and a lot of the other shows on CNN, where
they suggested, you know what, they don't see the evidence about the
weapons of mass destruction. They're not convinced.”
Yet CNN's treatment
of former weapons inspector Scott Ritter hardly provides evidence to
back up Blitzer's depiction of CNN as a strong, independent news source.
CNN news executive Eason
Jordan stated on air:
“Well, Scott Ritter's chameleon-like behavior has really bewildered a
lot of people.... U.S. officials no longer give Scott Ritter much
credibility.” When Paula Zahn interviewed Ritter, she suggested he was
in league with Saddam Hussein: "People out there are accusing you of
drinking Saddam’s Kool-Aid."
Even MSNBC host Chris
Matthews--who had greeted Bush’s Mission Accomplished speech by gushing
that “We're proud of our president” and referring to Bush as a
“hero”—offered a self-serving recollection of his program Hardball’s
work in telling “the two-part story of how the Iraq war was sold under
the false pretense that Saddam Hussein posed a nuclear threat to the
United States.”
In response to the
former White House press secretary’s public criticisms, many journalists
seemed to express bewilderment, if not contempt, at McClellan's switch
from water-carrier to whistleblower. Current CNN reporter Ed Henry
asked:
"So, you do have to
wonder... just who is the real Scott McClellan, the one who was
constantly pushing back on the media back then, and doing a lot of the
White House talking points, or the one who now thinks that those talking
points were not true?"
Posing the question
at all seems to suggest an unfamiliarity with what press secretaries do,
which is repeat their bosses' talking points, true or not. The fact that
some reporters seem confused by this is a significant concern—-evidence
that this White House, or any other, will have little trouble misleading
the corporate press.
--
Peter Hart is an
analyst with the media watch group FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In
Reporting). FAIR is the New York City-based, national media watch group
that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship. For
more information, visit:
www.fair.org. -- A photo
of Peter Hart is available CLICK HERE
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