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Partisan Editing at Herald Tribune

The International Herald Tribune alters NY Times copy to make Israel look worse to their European readership.

   Captured Israeli soldiers Swaid Omar, Avraham Binjamin and Adi Avitan

As the Israeli-Hezbullah prisoner exchange develops this week, HonestReporting subscribers are encouraged to visit our online weblog ― www.mediabackspin.com ― for media critiques, essential background information, and links to important articles on the exchange that you might otherwise have missed.

 

PARTISAN EDITING AT HERALD TRIBUNE

HonestReporting has long held that media misrepresentation of the Mideast conflict is one of the primary sources of anti-Israel and anti-Jewish attitudes worldwide. The latest disturbing indication: An Italian newspaper poll found that one-third of Europeans feel Jews should "stop playing 'Holocaust victim' games," and nearly half of Europeans believe that "Jews are different" and have "a particular relationship with money." In all European countries, anti-Semitic sentiment was positively correlated with anti-Israel sentiment.

While ongoing vilification of Israel in European media is part of the problem, veteran journalist Evelyn Gordon has discovered yet another disturbing development: The deliberate tilting of previously balanced articles by one prominent European newspaper ― the International Herald Tribune. In an article in today's Jerusalem Post, reprinted below, Gordon finds that the Herald Tribune has altered at least two New York Times articles on the Israeli-Arab conflict in an effort to make Israel look worse to the Herald Tribune's mostly European readers. (We've added links to the original NY Times and Herald Tribune articles, so subscribers can verify Gordon's statements.)

As Edited by...'The Herald Tribune'

Evelyn Gordon  
January 27, 2004

Anyone puzzled by the vast difference between European and American attitudes toward Israel ought to spend some time comparing two newspapers: The New York Times and the Paris-based International Herald Tribune.

That may seem like an odd statement, since the IHT is owned by the Times and most of its articles are Times reprints ― or at least, so the reader would assume, as they are credited to the Times and appear under Times reporters' bylines.

But it turns out that IHT editors often "improve" the Times copy a bit. The adjustments are minor in terms of the amount of text changed, yet sufficient to give the reader a completely different understanding of events.

I discovered this only last month, having never before thought to compare an IHT article to its Times original. What sparked the discovery was a piece in the IHT's December 27-28 edition, entitled "Israeli tactics assure future bombings, Palestinians assert" and credited to the Times. The article's main thrust was that the Israel Defense Forces believes its two-pronged anti-terror campaign ― construction of the separation fence and frequent raids aimed at arresting terrorists and destroying bomb-making facilities ― has significantly reduced the number of successful attacks.

But the article also claimed that the December 25 bombing at the Geha Junction ended a three-month period that "seemed to be a sort of unofficial cease-fire. In that time, Palestinian radical groups carried out no suicide bombings."

This struck me as outrageous, since a cease-fire implies that no attacks were attempted ― whereas, according to IDF statistics, there were no fewer than 22 attempted suicide bombings during that time, all foiled by Israel's security forces. But when I checked the article on the Times Web site in preparation for an angry letter to that paper, I discovered the following:

  • The Times never referred to this period as a cease-fire.
  • The Times explicitly mentioned that "numerous terror attempts" had been made during this period and were thwarted by Israel; that entire paragraph was cut from the IHT piece.
  • The Times did not say that Palestinians "carried out no suicide bombings," giving the false impression that they attempted none; it merely said, correctly, that no bombings took place.

    Moreover, the Times article carried a very different ― and far more accurate ― headline:

    "Bombing after lull: Israel still believes the worst is over."

    The result is that the average Times reader came away with the following impression: Israel's military activity produced three months in which no Israelis were killed, despite "numerous terror attempts." This activity is thus saving Israeli lives, and therefore potentially justifiable.

    But the IHT reader received the opposite impression: Neither the fence nor the raids were justified, since there was an "unofficial cease-fire" and Palestinians were not committing attacks in any case. Moreover, since no attempts took place during this period, Israel's activity did not save a single life.

    In short, rather than preventing bombings, Israel is, as the IHT headline asserts, "assuring future bombings" by persecuting the Palestinians for no reason.

    The IHT later published a letter from me on this subject, but again with crucial distortions. One sentence was cut altogether: "The version of the article that appeared in The New York Times did mention that 'numerous' attempted attacks were thwarted during this period and did not refer to it as a 'cease-fire.'"

    Another sentence ― "according to Israeli army statistics, Palestinians attempted to carry out 22 suicide bombings during this time" ― was replaced by "according to one count, Palestinians attempted to carry out more than 20 suicide bombings during this time."

    Thus the IHT cut both of the sources I cited for my assertion that attacks were attempted ― the Times and the IDF ― and substituted an unsourced "according to one count." That leaves the reader with the impression that I have no source ― I cannot even say according to whose count ― and my assertion is therefore not credible.

    Since this episode, I have discovered that the IHT often subtly alters Times copy to make its readers dislike Israel more.

    On January 2, for instance, the Times ran an article stating that in 1973, the Nixon administration considered invading three Arab countries "if the [oil] embargo, imposed by Arab nations in retaliation for America's support for Israel in the 1973 Middle East war, did not end." The IHT altered this to state that Nixon planned to invade "if tensions between Israel and its Arab neighbors continued to escalate after the October 1973 Middle East War or if the oil embargo did not abate."

    Moreover, the IHT erased the statement ― repeated twice in the Times article ― that the embargo was due to America's wartime support for Israel, substituting the statement that it was imposed "to try to pressure the United States and other Western countries to force Israel to withdraw from Arab land."

    Thus the Times reader concludes that Nixon was angered by an Arab action, the embargo, which was retaliation for an American action ― wartime support for an ally. Israel was clearly involved, but this was primarily an Arab-American dispute.

    The IHT reader, in contrast, concludes that Nixon's main concern was not the Arab action, but "tensions between Israel and its Arab neighbors"; the embargo gets only second billing. Moreover, the embargo was aimed not at American policy, but at a mysterious Israeli seizure of Arab land whose background ― the fact that it was captured in a defensive war ― is never explained. In short, the entire crisis was Israel's fault.

    Very few people know more about Israel than what they learn from the media. It is therefore not surprising that readers fed on a diet of such subtle distortions view Israel as the villain.

    Unfortunately, in Europe the IHT's behavior is the norm rather than the exception.



  • ――――

    Comments to International Herald Tribune: letters@iht.com

    Thank you for your ongoing involvement in the battle against media bias.

    HonestReporting.com


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