Rather to Kerry: Angry at Attacks from Vietnam-Avoiding Bush? --7/23/2004
2. Jennings Nearly Brings Kerry to Tears, Brokaw Sticks to Policy
3. Reporters Over-Simplify Commission Finding on Iraq-al-Qaeda Ties
4. 9/11 Commission Report Chides Media for Inattention to Terrorism
Rather to Kerry: Angry at Attacks from Dan Rather prompted John Kerry to expound on how he's angry at President Bush for criticizing his Vietnam service while Bush avoided the war. On Thursday's CBS Evening News, in a second installment of his Wednesday interview, Rather asked Kerry: "Have you ever had any anger about President Bush, who spent his time during the Vietnam War in the National Guard, running, in effect, a campaign that does its best to diminish your service in Vietnam?" Kerry replied, "Yup, I have been," and went on to confirm it "grates a little bit" and is "irritating." When Rather inquired if Kerry thought he had made and "mistakes" in his anti-war efforts, Kerry cited "some language that I used," but Rather and CBS again failed, as they did back in April, to inform viewers of what Kerry said in 1971 when he asserted that soldiers in Vietnam were regularly committing "atrocities."
Rather set up his July 22 CBS Evening News segment: "Democratic presidential candidate, Senator John Kerry, said today that while, quote, 'this is not the time for politics, the 9/11 report does show that intelligence reforms are lagging and long overdue.' He said U.S. intelligence is hampered by what he called an ongoing war within the administration, but he did not single out President Bush for blame. In our interview yesterday, Senator Kerry said he wants to run a positive campaign but is perfectly willing to be critical of himself." For the online version, with video: www.cbsnews.com
Back in April, CyberAlert recounted how CBS avoiding reporting what Kerry said at an April 22, 1971 Senate hearing. As James Taranto relayed in his March 1 "Best of the Web" report for OpinionJournal.com:
Human Events has posted a PDF of a transcript of Kerry's portion of that April 22, 1971 hearing: www.humaneventsonline.com
For more on CBS's avoidance of what Kerry said in 1971, see these two late April CyberAlerts: www.mediaresearch.org www.mediaresearch.org
Jennings Nearly Brings Kerry to Tears, ABC's Peter Jennings caught up with Dan Rather and Tom Brokaw, who had interviewed John Kerry on Wednesday, and sat down with Kerry on Thursday. In an excerpt played on Thursday's World News Tonight, Jennings' questions ranged from Kerry's speaking style to his defense of his position on abortion to how his late parents will miss their son's "moment in the sun," a point which caused Kerry to choke up. NBC's Tom Brokaw, meanwhile, delivered a second installment of his Wednesday session with Kerry and, as he did in the excerpt run the night before, Brokaw focused on policy questions about, for instance, whether Kerry disagrees with putting Iran in the "Axis of Evil." Brokaw also made Kerry respond to a supporter's incendiary attack on Bush and Republicans: "When Julian Bond, who's the head of the NAACP, said the other day that the Republican Party's idea of equality is flying the American flag and what he called the 'swastika of the Confederate flag' side by side, did that make it more difficult for you to attract so-called NASCAR dads and other swing voters in America?" Jennings told Kerry that "Jesse Jackson said this morning you need 'some shoutin' to do'" and pressed him on his abortion position: "If you believe that life begins at conception, is even a first trimester abortion not murder?" Jennings also raised whether "there is too much violence and too much sex in American entertainment" and asked if he'd use his "moral leadership with your Hollywood friends in order to reduce it?" Jennings caught up with Kerry in Detroit where he spoke Thursday to the Urban League. The MRC's Brad Wilmouth, based on ABC's posting of the interview, put together what July 22 World News Tonight viewers saw.
Jennings set up the segment: "Senator John Kerry, the Democratic challenger to President Bush, was here in Detroit today to deliver a speech at the annual conference of the National Urban League. It is one of the nation's largest organizations dedicated to advancing civil rights as well as economic equality for African-Americans. It is certainly an important constituency for any Democratic candidate. After he talked to the convention, Senator Kerry talked to us." Jennings provided a segue: "The Senator has always supported a woman's right to have an abortion, but he also agrees with the central premise of the anti-abortion movement -- that life begins at conception."
Back to the taped interview, Kerry explained: "My personal belief about what happens in the fertilization process as a human being is first formed and created, and that's when life begins. Something begins to happen. There's a transformation. There's an evolution. And within weeks, you look and see the development of it, but that's not a person yet, and it's certainly not what somebody, in my judgment, ought to have the government of the United States intervening in." Jennings promised more interview excerpts would air during ABC's convention coverage next week. For the ABCNews.com posting of the transcript of the entire interview: abcnews.go.com Over on Thursday's NBC Nightly News, viewers saw the second installment of Brokaw's Wednesday session with Kerry. Brokaw set it up: "As has been reported earlier, the 9/11 Commission identified Iran to a much greater degree than Iraq as a passageway for al-Qaeda operatives. In my interview with Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry last night, I asked about Iran and also about the tone of the campaign, specifically the comments of Julian Bond, the head of the NAACP."
Brokaw to Kerry in the interview taped in Boston: "There's strong evidence that Iran is in pursuit of a nuclear weapon at some stage. There's also strong evidence that it's now meddling in Iraq. So was President Bush wrong to characterize it as part of the 'axis of evil'? Iran?"
The July 22 CyberAlert recounted the CBS and NBC Kerry interview segments shown on Wednesday night: Dan Rather and Tom Brokaw were fairly tough with John Kerry in excerpts of taped interviews with him run on their Wednesday night newscasts, with Rather prompting him to react to Bush campaign attacks on him and raising process questions about Ralph Nader while Brokaw offered the more substantively serious questions of the two. Brokaw wondered whether there has also been a "failure of the United States Senate as well in its oversight of those agencies, the FBI and the CIA?" and he countered a bit of Kerry mantra on Iraq: "I've talked to a lot of European leaders and officials at the United Nations. Their resistance to getting involved is firm and deep, and it doesn't have to do just with George Bush." CBS's on- screen plug: "Candid Kerry." Rather teased: "John Kerry blasts President Bush's handling of the war in Iraq and the war on terror." Rather prompted Kerry to describe himself "in three to five words." Kerry asserted: "Incredibly loyal. A fighter. Passionate. Caring." See: www.mediaresearch.org
Reporters Over-Simplify Commission Finding
At the 9/11 Commission press conference on Thursday, Stephen Hayes of the Weekly Standard noted how the 9/11 Commission changed its language from the staff report's statement of "no collaborative relationship" between Iraq and al-Qaeda the final report's characterization of "no collaborative operational relationship with regard to the attacks on the United States." Chairman Tom Kean confirmed that "there was no question in our minds that there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda." Nonetheless, some prominent media figures distorted the Commission's finding. Neither ABC's World News Tonight nor the NBC Nightly News brought up the Iraq-al-Qaeda issue, but on the CBS Evening News, Jim Stewart ran through how the commission "debunked some 9/11 myths," including how "the commission said emphatically that although Iraq may have once offered bin Laden safe haven, it found no connection between Saddam Hussein, al-Qaeda and 9/11." Talk about shooting down a red herring, the Bush administration never claimed Saddam Hussein had a role in the 9/11 attacks. Stewart proceeded to run this clip from Kean as the press conference: "We found no relationship whatever between Iraq and the attack on 9/11. That just doesn't exist."
But that soundbite came at the very end of a much more complex answer. At about 12:12pm EDT, in a portion of the press conference broadcast live by CNN and MSNBC, but not the "right-wing" FNC which was showing John Kerry's address to the Urban League, Stephen Hayes of The Weekly Standard rose and asked:
Tom Kean responded: "Well, there was no question in our minds that there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda. At one point, there was thought maybe even al-Qaeda would find sanctuary in Iraq. And there were conversations that went on over a number of years, sometimes successful, sometimes unsuccessfully. While we don't know about weapons collaboration, particularly chemical collaboration, there was a suspicion in the Clinton administration that when they fired that bomb at that factory, that if in fact, there were chemicals there, they may have come from Iraq. So there was a relationship. Vice Chairman Lee Hamilton, who last month scolded the press for mis-reporting on the subject, added: "In further response, I think there's a very large distinction between evidence of conversations that might have occurred between Iraq and al-Qaeda, on the one hand, and an emerging strategy or emerging assistance -- concrete -- on the other. And what we do not have, as the Chairman said, is any evidence of a concrete collaborative operational agreement. Conversations, yes, but nothing concrete." Fuller rundowns of the assertions from Stewart and Lauer:
-- CBS Evening News, July 22. Jim Stewart, the MRC's Brad Wilmouth noticed, asserted: "The Commission also debunked some 9/11 myths. There was no special treatment for a plane carrying Saudi nationals back home after 9/11, no Saudi royal money went to the hijackers, and to the embarrassment of the White House, the commission said emphatically that although Iraq may have once offered bin Laden safe haven, it found no connection between Saddam Hussein, al-Qaeda and 9/11."
On Thursday's Today, the MRC's Geoff Dickens observed, Matt Lauer told Tim Russert: "One of the Bush administration's stated reasons for going to war with Iraq, Tim, was the connection between Iraq and al Qaeda. This report says they have not found that connection but they do talk about Iran and Iran perhaps providing passage for many members of al Qaeda. So how is that fact going to influence future U.S. policy?" The Weekly Standard today posted an article which runs through the ties as listed in several recent reports and investigations. For, "Yes, There Is a Connection: The 9/11 Commission confirms Iraq-al Qaeda ties," by Daniel McKivergan, see: www.weeklystandard.com For Stephen Hayes' article in the July 26 edition of The Weekly Standard, on what the Senate Intelligence Committee report determined about the links: www.weeklystandard.com
9/11 Commission Report Chides Media for Don't count on seeing much about this in the media anytime soon: Editor & Publisher noticed that the 9/11 Commission report is critical of the news media's inattention to terrorism before the 9/11 attacks. The report zeroed in on a New York Times article in April 1999 which "sought to debunk claims that Bin Laden was a terrorist leader, with the headline 'U.S. Hard Put to Find Proof Bin Laden Directed Attacks.'" An excerpt from the article, "Report Hits Media Coverage of Terrorism Before 9/11," by Charles Geraci, which posted Thursday afternoon on the Editor & Publisher Web site and which the MRC's Jessica Anderson noticed was plugged for a while by the DrudgeReport.com: ....The very end of a chapter titled "Foresight -- And Hindsight," reads, "Between May 2001 and September 11, there was very little in newspapers or on television to heighten anyone's concern about terrorism. Front-page stories touching on the subject dealt with the windup of trials dealing with the East Africa embassy bombings and [Ahmed] Ressam. All this reportage looked backward, describing problems satisfactorily resolved. Back-page notices told of tightened security at embassies and military installations abroad and government cautions against travel to the Arabian Peninsula. All the rest was secret." The commission also, at one point, appears to castigate the media in general. It says that terrorism, specifically Osama Bin Laden and al Qaeda, was not an important issue in the 2000 presidential campaign, and the media "called little attention to it" at the time. At another point, on page 359, it describes how Jordan arrested 16 terrorists planning bombings in that country, including two U.S. citizens, but the news "only made page 13 of The New York Times." In another brief shot at that paper, the report observes: "It is hard now to recapture the conventional wisdom before 9/11. For example, a New York Times article in April 1999 sought to debunk claims that Bin Laden was a terrorist leader, with the headline 'U.S. Hard Put to Find Proof Bin Laden Directed Attacks.'" The commission also offered an interesting media-related insight regarding pressures on the CIA. In its evaluation of the intelligence agency, the commission reports that starting in the 1990s, the CIA found it had to move more quickly, in response to, and then reflecting, "the culture of the newsroom. During the 1990s, the rise of round-the-clock news shows and the Internet reinforced pressure on analysts to pass along fresh reports to policymakers at an even-faster pace, trying to add context or supplement what their customers were receiving from the media." This led to weaknesses "in all-source and strategic analysis." In other specific notes, the commission found that after a leak to The Washington Times in 1998, al Qaeda's senior leadership almost immediately stopped a particular method of communication, which made it increasingly difficult to intercept Bin Laden's conversations.... END of Excerpt For the posting in full: www.editorandpublisher.com # Coming next week: Twice-daily CyberAlerts documenting coverage of the Democratic convention. -- Brent Baker
|