Avoiding Joseph Wilson's Liberal Bent - October 6, 2003
Times Watch for October 6, 2003
Avoiding Joseph Wilson's Liberal Bent
Former African ambassador Joseph Wilson stands at the
center of the controversy over who in the White House told journalist Robert
Novak that Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, worked for the CIA. Reporter Lynette
Clemetson's interview with Wilson for her Sunday story, "Adviser to Bush's
Father Redefines Himself as Wary Whistle-Blower," soft-pedals Wilson's liberal
political stance.
Clemetson also makes an
inaccurate statement about Wilson, who the Bush administration sent to Niger on
a fact-finding mission: "First he challenged the administration's claim, put
forth by the president in the State of the Union address, that Saddam Hussein
sought uranium ore from Niger to build nuclear weapons." As Times Watch
has said before,
Bush didn't mention Niger in his State of the Union address.
She continues: "Republican
leaders have portrayed Mr. Wilson as a partisan Democrat with an agenda. 'Joe
Wilson is not an apolitical person himself,' said Ed Gillespie, chairman of the
Republican National Committee. 'He's someone who feels passionately about
politics.'"
(But that's not all
Gillespie said. Gillespie in full, as reported by Richard Stevenson and Eric
Lichtblau in the October 2 Times: "Joe Wilson is not an apolitical person
himself. He's someone who feels passionately about politics, is a supporter of
John Kerry's campaign, a maxed-out contributor, and wants to endorse him given
the opportunity. He has spoken to a Win Without War rally, one of the most
radical anti-Bush groups out there.")
Clemetson immediately
follows the truncated Gillespie quote with this: "But Mr. Wilson-the last
American diplomat to meet with Saddam Hussein-is not so convenient a foil. A
registered Democrat who is supporting Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts in his
bid to win the presidency, Mr. Wilson said he voted twice for the first
President Bush.Those who have known and worked with Mr. Wilson say his partisan
ties have never been easily discernible. 'I had no idea what party he was in,"
said Peter Teeley, 63, who served as press secretary to the senior Mr. Bush in
his years as vice president. 'When he was in Baghdad he was recognized, and
rightly so, as someone with a lot of courage. There was a lot of admiration for
Joe and a lot of respect for the way he carried out his duties for the president
and for the United States.' Susan Rice, assistant secretary of state for African
affairs in the Clinton administration, said of Wilson: 'The guy played very much
down the middle of the road politically.'"
Clemetson fails to mention
Wilson's penning in February of an anti-war opinion for the far-left Nation
magazine, which has never been mistaken for a "middle-of-the-road" publication.
Clemetson fawns over the
erudite, lyric-quoting Wilson: "Mr. Wilson's personal style is alternately
straightforward and laid-back. One moment he is holding forth eruditely about
what he called the current administration's 'penchant for unilateralism,' and
its mistake in taking what he called the 'highest risk, lowest reward option of
invasion, conquest and occupation.' The next moment he is rocked back in his
chair, referencing Jimmy Buffett and the need to 'change latitudes and change
attitudes,' to win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people, or criticizing the
way the Bush administration 'dissed' the Europeans in the prelude to the war."
For the rest of Clemetson's interview with Joe
Wilson,
click here.
CIA
|
Lynette Clemetson
|
Iraq War
|
Niger
|
Joseph Wilson
Republican
Win In California = Bad News for Bush?
Could a Republican win in California be bad news for Bush? Reporter Adam
Nagourney thinks so. In Monday's "Schwarzenegger Win Could Have Downside for
Bush," Nagourney, who usually deals with the presidential campaign, talks to a
Bush adviser about the suspiciously-timed Schwarzenegger scandals: "The adviser
said that with the passage of time, voters outside California would forget the
tales of Mr. Schwarzenegger's behavior toward women that have dominated the news
here. But that may be less the case in California. In fact, The Los Angeles
Times reported on its front page Sunday that four more women had come forward to
say Mr. Schwarzenegger had fondled, spanked or touched them without their
consent-bringing the number, by the newspaper's count, to 15. Both Democrats
and Republicans said they saw little reason to expect such reports to cease if
Mr. Schwarzenegger becomes governor."
Two other
Times stories on Monday give additional space to the
allegations of womanizing, as well as the charge that Schwarzenegger was
quoted
"admiring Hitler." The Times' aggressive pursuit of Schwarzenegger scandals
certainly marks a philosophy shift on allegations of personal misbehavior since
the days of Democrat Bill Clinton.
(Note: David Kirkpatrick's
Saturday story on Schwarzenegger's Hitler comments clarifies the actor's
"admiration" of Hitler by quoting a corrected transcript of Schwarzenegger's
comments. The corrected transcript shows the comments in a significantly less
incendiary light: "I admired Hitler for instance because he came from being a
little man with almost no formal education, up to power. And I admire him for
being such a good public speaker and for his way of getting to the people and so
on. But I didn't admire him for what he did with it. It is very hard to say who
I admired and who are my heroes. And I admired basically people who are powerful
people, like Kennedy. Who people listen to and just wait until he comes out with
telling them what to do. People like that I admire a lot.")
For the rest of Nagourney on
Schwarzenegger,
click here.
California |
Adam Nagourney
|
Recall |
Scandals |
Arnold
Schwarzenegger |
Women
The
Times' Favorite Republican
Friday's front-pager by Todd Purdum and Janet
Elder, "Poll Shows Drop in Confidence On Bush Skill in Handling Crises-Country
on the Wrong Track, According to a Solid Majority." The Times story on the poll
portrays the findings as wall-to-wall bad news for Bush, which may explain why
it made the front page.
The story includes three
person-on-the-street interviews, including the Times' favorite kind of
interviewee, an anti-war Republican, and the only one identified as Republican:
"Mary Preble, 46, a registered nurse and a Republican in Sugar Land, Tex., said:
'I don't feel George W. Bush has a grasp on what the public is really interested
in.' She added: 'I wasn't happy about the invasion in Iraq. We shouldn't have
attacked before anything was proven. There seem to be no nuclear weapons. Right
now he is trying to rally everyone around to the cause and give money to rebuild
Iraq. But why should other countries kick in cash when he didn't wait until the
U.N. said we're behind you? The other countries don't believe he has the
leadership skills he should have.'"
Purdum and Elder conclude
their dispatch with words from another interviewee, who praises the Democrats
with a faint damn for just caring too much about too many things: "The
Democrats' plan is never as clear as the Republicans' because the Republicans
focus on the very narrow goal of laissez-faire government and capitalism. The
Democrats try to incorporate a broader base of social issues."
For the rest of the Times on Bush's poll numbers,
click here.
Campaign 2004 |
Janet Elder |
Todd Purdum |
Polls
Ignoring
Gun Control Failure, Here and Abroad
Lizette Alvarez files an interesting story from
Manchester on British police adopting American-style rules of "zero tolerance"
to combat the rise in violent and gun-related crime. But the story leaves out an
important angle: The utter failure of gun control.
Alvarez writes in Friday's
Times: "Although overall crime has dropped slightly in recent years, Britain's
major cities have seen an alarming jump in gun-related and violent crime. Gang
warfare, drive-by shootings, crack dealing and the like, crimes that once were
the exclusive staples of American urban street life, have encroached on everyday
life here. Assaults, robberies and carjackings have grown steadily. Guns are no
longer a rarity. While the aggregate numbers pale next to America's, gun crime
in England and Wales rose by 35 percent in 2002 and has nearly doubled since
1997. In the year 2001-2002, guns were involved in 9,974 crimes."
She could have pointed out
what even the liberal Observer (the Guardian's Sunday paper) notes in its
latest edition-that gun-related crimes have soared since Britain banned
private ownership of handguns in 1997 (the very year gun crime began rising).
Observer reporter Tony
Thompson writes: "Handgun crime has soared past levels last seen before the
Dunblane massacre of 1996 and the ban on ownership of handguns introduced the
year after Thomas Hamilton, an amateur shooting enthusiast, shot dead 16
schoolchildren, their teacher and himself in the Perthshire town. It was hoped
the measure would reduce the number of handguns available to criminals. Now
handgun crime is at its highest since 1993." Then again, such an admission would
work against the Times
gun-control agenda
here at home.
For the rest of Alvarez's story on rising crime in
Britain,
click here.
Lizette Alvarez |
Britain |
Crime |
Gun Control
Blair
Cleared, But Times Still Suspicious
Reporting on a book by Blair's former foreign
secretary, Robin Cook (who resigned in protest over Blair's support of the Iraq
War), reporter Warren Hoge commits another incomplete telling of British Prime
Minister Tony Blair's "dodgy dossier" controversy.
Hoge writes for Monday's
Times: "The failure to find unconventional weapons and the public suspicions,
aired during six weeks of hearings this summer, that the government doctored
intelligence to win support for an unpopular war have caused Mr. Blair's
popularity to slump to its lowest point since he came to power in 1997."
As Times Watch
has previously noted
regarding another Hoge story, those suspicions of intelligence manipulation rest
on a BBC report from reporter Andrew Gilligan that has itself been discredited.
Hoge again fails to mention that Blairs government was cleared by Parliament's
Intelligence and Security Committee on the charge of manipulating intelligence.
For the rest of Hoge on Blair,
click here.
Tony Blair |
Andrew Gilligan |
Iraq War
|
Warren Hoge
Better
Late Than Never
From Monday's Corrections section
(last item):
"An article in The Times Magazine on Sept. 22, 1974, about the movie actor
Charles Bronson, who died on Aug. 30 this year, misstated his military record.
Publicity material asserting that Mr. Bronson had been a B-29 gunner in World
War II, called into doubt by the article, was indeed correct. (The magazine
error came to light after it was repeated in an obituary on Sept. 2 and in some
late editions on Sept. 1. The more recent error was corrected in this space on
Sept. 18.)"
Charles Bronson |
Corrections |
Movies |
Obituaries