Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Amanpour's Troubling Journalism

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Amanpour's Troubling Journalism

    AMANPOUR'S TROUBLING JOURNALISM

    Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America
    Oct 5 2007

    Known for parachuting in to cover the latest global hotspot, CNN's
    Christiane Amanpour is one of the most famous journalists in the
    world. But there have long been questions about her habit of skewing
    coverage to suit her own political biases. A particularly egregious
    example of her rush to judgement about one side in a violent conflict
    was noted by Stephen Kinzer of the New York Times (Oct. 9, 1994).

    Kinzer quoted a colleague's description of Amanpour as she reported on
    a terrorist bombing in the marketplace of the Balkan town of Markale:
    She was sitting in Belgrade when that marketplace massacre happened,
    and she went on the air to say that the Serbs had probably done it.

    There was no way she could have known that. She was assuming an
    omniscience which no journalist has.

    As it happened in the Markale case, later investigation indicated Serbs
    could not have perpetrated this particular attack. They, however, were
    the designated bad actor in Amanpour's story-line and sometimes, it
    seems, the facts are immaterial. Despite such unprofessional conduct,
    the CNN star has frequently been called upon to expound publicly on
    journalism, which she deems a high calling whose practitioners serve
    the truth. As she explained to the Montreal Gazette:

    I really do believe that journalists are motivated by, first of all,
    a commitment to the truth, and seeking the truth. But I also think
    we're motivated by a sense of fairness. At the bottom of our hearts,
    I think we're people who are fair. (July 18, 2007)

    Amanpour said much the same at an earlier California appearance,
    asserting:

    "You're either for that [truth] or you're in the propaganda business,"
    she said. "Our objective is the truth, as close to it as we can
    get. We don't want to be assailed by ideology, partisan politics or
    the monopoly of one party." (Pasadena Civic Center, Feb. 15, 2006)

    Yet, a review of her reporting over the years in Bosnia, Iraq, Israel
    and the Palestinian territories suggests the hollowness of such lofty
    claims and underscores her preference for advocacy journalism in
    which she pushes her own personal definitions of fairness and truth,
    instead of presenting information objectively.

    Amanpour's biased rendition of Arab-Israeli issues reached a new low in
    her recent three-part series, "God's Warriors" in which she frequently
    equated Muslim and Jewish extremism, failing to distinguish the vast
    difference in scale of and support for violence in the respective
    faiths. In the lead-up to the August 2007 broadcast of "God's
    Warriors," she expressed a variation on this distorted perspective,
    saying: "If I was queen of the world? I would do everything I could
    to bring rapprochement between the Palestinians and the Israelis in
    the case of Islamic and Jewish extremism." (Guardian, Aug. 19, 2007)
    Her partisanship for the Arab view is apparent too in sympathetic
    statements about Palestinian goals.

    But then you go to Israel-Palestine and you have a group of people,
    the Palestinians, with a legitimate grievance who are trying to throw
    off occupation and who are trying to win a state using illegitimate
    means, which are the suicide bombings. (Larry King show, CNN, Aug.

    20, 2007) Commenting on the outbreak of violence between Hamas and
    Fatah in Gaza in June 2007, Amanpour blamed Israel and the West:
    What happened was then the U.S., Europe, Israel basically punished
    Hamas and the Palestinians because of Hamas policy and squeezed them
    and created this real division between Hamas and the PA, which has
    exploded now. (CNN, June 15, 2007) Continuing on a similar vein, she
    conjectured ...we found very clearly that the people were not voting
    for Hamas for any religious or militant views or reasons, but rather
    because they had become fed up with what they call the institutional
    corruption of Fatah and the ineffectiveness of Fatah. In other words,
    over all these years, about 10 years, really, since the Oslo Peace
    Accords, Fatah had not yet been able to get with the Israelis an
    accord to have an independent state. (CNN, June 15, 2007) Yet, many
    Palestinians clearly share Hamas' militant worldview and religious
    ideology. Moreover, Amanpour betrayed her own muddled logic when she
    explained why Fatah did not garner enough votes. If, as she claimed,
    Palestinians were voting against Fatah for failing to get an accord
    with Israel, then voting for Hamas would not offer a better path to
    an agreement. Furthermore, the institutional corruption that drove
    Palestinians away from Fatah involved theft of the Palestinian
    Authority treasury by Fatah officials, a matter only tangentially
    related to the peace process.

    Amanpour further claims the Palestinian Authority was "unable to get a
    deal with Israel" and blames Israel for not keeping promises, although
    she doesn't specify which ones. While admitting the Palestinians too
    didn't keep their promises, she continues to shift the onus onto the
    Israelis and the U.S.

    So Palestinians were fed up and they thought maybe they would try
    something new. But of course, after Hamas was elected, because the
    West and Israel doesn't recognize Hamas, doesn't approve of its --
    of its militants, wants it to recognize Israel, wants it to renounce
    terrorism, wants it to keep to all the agreements that the previous
    Palestinian governments had made with Israel, the West and Israel
    basically cut off Hamas and cut off all those people in Gaza. (CNN,
    June 15, 2007) In fact, the West increased donations to the Palestinian
    people in 2006 after the election of Hamas, more than doubling the
    amount of the previous year. The aid was redirected to the office of
    Palestinian President Abbas so that Hamas could not make use of it.

    While Amanpour repeatedly exonerates the Palestinians of responsibility
    for the conflict or for their own problems, she blames the
    Palestinian-Israeli conflict for unrelated Middle East strife.

    Commenting upon the anger and violence in Iraq, Amanpour opined:
    "They see what's going on in Israel and Palestine" (CNN, April 1,
    2003). Amanpour offers no explanation as to how the Shiite-Sunni
    conflict or the U.S. and British invasion, the obvious immediate causes
    of anger and violence in Iraq, are related to the Israeli-Palestinian
    conflict.

    She also adopts the Palestinian narrative with respect to refugees.

    In a program entitled "Passage to Hope" (CNN, June 20, 2007), dedicated
    to World Refugee Day, Amanpour described how: Palestinians have become
    almost permanent refugees while they're waiting for their own homeland
    since the end of World War II. There are more than 4 million who are
    outside the Palestinian territory and have pretty much no hope of
    ever going back.

    Amanpour neglected to tell her audience that the Palestinians rejected
    their first-ever offer of a state in 1947, and then rejected an
    independent state again in 2000-2001 and she failed to clarify that
    these Palestinians are not waiting to return to "Palestinian territory"
    but are demanding land and property in Israel itself.

    Advocacy Journalism in Yugoslavia Amanpour's willingness to abandon
    objectivity had earlier been evident in her reporting on the violent
    break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. She stepped unabashedly out of
    her role as a reporter when she publicly challenged President Bill
    Clinton in May 1994 to take action in response to Serbian actions in
    Bosnia. Many critics charged that her coverage painted a distorted
    and oversimplified picture by consistently portraying the Serbians as
    the only malefactors, when in fact both sides - Bosnian Muslims and
    Serbians - engaged in atrocities against civilians. In an interview
    with the Guardian, she explained,

    It drives me crazy when this neutrality thing comes up. Objectivity,
    that great journalistic buzz-word, means giving all sides a fair
    hearing - not treating all sides the same -particularly when all sides
    are not the same. When you're neutral in a situation like Bosnia, you
    are an accomplice - an accomplice to genocide."(Guardian, July 6, 1996)

    In a speech she gave at the University of Michigan, Amanpour
    proclaimed,

    When our world leaders wanted to shrug away and call it a terrible
    civil war for which all sides were equally guilty, we said, "No."

    Genocide against Muslims in Europe was being committed and this had
    to be stopped. (April 29, 2006)

    In actuality, the Bosnian war was not a one-sided slaughter like
    those perpetrated against Jews, Cambodians, Armenians or Tutsis. Both
    sides were victimized in the war. An accounting of the war by the
    Sarajevo-based non-governmental Research and Documentation Center
    determined that the death toll had been grossly exaggerated. The
    research, funded by the U.S., the UN and numerous international
    foundations, determined that 97,207 people were killed during the
    Bosnian war. Of those, about 60 percent were soldiers and 40 percent
    civilians. Some 65 percent of those killed were Bosnian Muslims,
    followed by 25 percent Serbs and more than 8 percent Croats.

    Bosnian Muslim Jihadi While Bosnian Serb leaders responsible for the
    massacre of several thousand Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica, in July
    1995, were charged with committing genocide for that specific atrocity,
    the International Court of Justice at the Hague (ICJ) eventually
    acquitted Serbia of committing genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovinia in
    February, 2007. Amanpour, however, paints the war with a broad brush,
    describing it simply as a genocide against Muslims.

    As noted, the New York Times' Stephen Kinzer reported that Amanpour
    fingered the Serbs as being responsible for the Markale bombing,
    but Serbian writer Stella Jatras recounted several years later in a
    Washington Times Op-Ed:

    the fact that a UN classified report concluded that Bosnian Muslim
    forces had committed the Markale marketplace massacre seems of no
    consequence to Ms. Amanpour. Christiane Amanpour has yet to inform
    her viewers of this fact, but continues to allow them to believe the
    massacre was a Serbian atrocity...("Odd alliance at State, CNN?" March
    14, 1999)

    Commentator or Reporter in Iraq?

    More recently, Amanpour's advocacy journalism has been on display in
    her editorializing about the Iraq war. She castigated former British
    Prime Minister Tony Blair for his support of the war, stating:
    It is true that after the Iraq War and the subsequent debacle that
    has become the Iraq War, Prime Minister Blair had suffered a lot of
    slings and arrows. And many would say rightly.(CNN, June 15, 2007)

    As the specter of conflict with Iran grows, Amanpour increasingly
    equates U.S. or Israeli stances with those of the theocratic regime.

    She, in effect, mocks fears of a nuclear-armed Iran, claiming the West
    has made that nation a "bogeyman": There's no doubt that President
    Ahmadinejad of Iran is provocative and confrontational, and taking
    Iran's foreign policy, at least on a public way, in a much different
    direction than it has been in the past.On the other hand, it's also
    common practice right now by the U.S. and its allies to blame Iran,
    like the bogeyman, for everything going on in the Middle East. (CNN,
    June 15, 2007) An Authority on All Topics

    Amanpour's self-ascribed moral authority is reflected in other aspects
    of her work. She even fashions herself an expert on international
    law where it suits her story.

    As Monica Hakimi noted in an article titled, "The media as participants
    in the international legal process,"appearing in the Duke Journal of
    Comparative & International Law (Jan. 1, 2006):

    Although when the media apply the law it is usually by communicating
    the analyses of other actors, the media sometimes attempt to apply
    the law themselves. In some cases, the media may cultivate journalists
    who purport to have the expertise to apply international legal norms
    to particular fact patterns.

    Hakimi singles out Amanpour, writing in her footnotes:

    For example, Christiane Amanpour of CNN and Fareed Zakaria of Newsweek
    have earned reputations for international legal analysis. In this
    sense, Amanpour and Zakaria may be distinguished from, for example,
    Linda Greenhouse of the New York Times because Amanpour and Zakaria
    may themselves apply the law, whereas Greenhouse communicates the
    law as applied by a more conventional actor - the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Despite the fact that Amanpour serves as CNN's chief foreign
    correspondent, and not its chief legal commentator, she built a central
    portion of "God's Jewish Warriors" around her contention that Jewish
    settlements in the West Bank are illegal. In strikingly manipulative
    fashion, she advocated one side of the argument, relying solely on
    sources who agreed with her and ignoring those who didn't.

    The arguments and historical documents that support the legality
    of Jewish settlements, arguments put forth by international legal
    scholars, received no mention at all.

    The fact that Amanpour is a celebrated figure in journalism while
    openly rejecting objectivity in favor of advocacy - as evident
    in her "God's Warriors" series - is a troubling commentary on the
    profession. Her brand of bias should be shunned, not admired, however
    lavish her paycheck from CNN.

    http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_context=3& amp;x_outlet=14&x_article=1370

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X