Media Analysis

The mainstream U.S. media is hiding key truths in its coverage of Iran’s retaliatory attack

The assertion that Israel is trying to provoke a wider regional conflict appeared nowhere in the mainstream media coverage of Iran’s retaliatory strike.

Mainstream U.S. media coverage of Iran’s retaliation for Israel’s April 1 attack on an Iranian embassy building in Damascus was poor, but could have been worse. Six months of widespread media criticism may be having a modest impact. And there was a welcome surprise on cable news. CNN naturally rousted Wolf Blitzer last night to anchor its coverage, with predictable pro-Israel results, but over at MSNBC Ayman Mohyeldin simultaneously hosted his regularly scheduled two-hour report —  which was a model of fairness and insight, providing genuine journalism. 

Let’s start by examining the lead story in this morning’s New York Times print edition, which will almost certainly be the longest account that more Americans will see than any other. In fairness, the Times sub-headline does say that Iran’s air attack was “Avenging Embassy Bombing in Syria” — and repeats the retaliation angle in the lead sentence. But the article then waits until paragraph 10 to point out that one of the Iranian targets was an Israeli air force base in the Negev desert. Only in paragraph 14 do we learn that Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, which launched the drones and missiles, claimed that they had aimed at “military targets.” 

Until then, the Times report implied that the 200 drones and missiles had been launched indiscriminately, and that Israel’s air defense was actually protecting populated areas like Jerusalem’s Old City. Of course, Iran could be lying, but you still are supposed to tell your readers what they said, and then report at length on what the actual evidence shows.

Even worse, though, was that the Times waited until paragraphs 19 and 20 to report that Iran’s mission to the U.N. said that the “standoff with Israel could end if it [Israel] did not attack in response.” What’s more, the Times print report did not say that Joe Biden told Benjamin Netanyahu during their half-hour phone conversation last night that Israel should not retaliate after Iran’s air assault, even though Israel’s press promptly reported Biden’s warning. The Times had plenty of time to include it in today’s article.

By this morning, the Times print report had mysteriously disappeared from its online edition. You can only find it by searching the facsimile edition of today’s paper. This may be only a mistake. But it may also be the paper’s effort to hide the flood of online comments last night from readers, which overwhelmingly blistered Israel. One of the observations voted most popular by readers read:

“The fact that Israel’s reckless military actions could potentially drag the United States into a needlessly costly war is ridiculous.”

This assertion that Israel, particularly the beleaguered Benjamin Netanyahu, is trying to provoke a wider conflict for his own selfish reasons, appeared nowhere in the Times print article. Nor did other U.S. media report it. Not National Public Radio. Not the Washington Post either. 

Instead, you could turn to Haaretz, and its military correspondent, Amos Harel, for a reminder that Benjamin Netanyahu tried to instigate a U.S. attack against Iran even long before his own political future came to depend on it. Harel wrote today: “It is safe to assume that Biden fears Netanyahu may try to drag the U.S. into an attack against Iran and thus realize his long-standing dream of having the Americans do the job of eliminating Iran’s nuclear program.”

Meanwhile, at MSNBC last night, host Ayman Mohyeldin was raising the Netanyahu angle, along with a range of other views. His guests included Mideast experts like Hooman Majd and Rami Khouri, who had informed and articulate things to say. But he also interviewed prominent Israelis, former ambassadors Alon Pinkas and even Michael Oren, who was once Netanyahu’s envoy to the U.S. and is a passionate supporter of the Israeli right-wing. Both Pinkas and Oren got to present their points of view. 

Nothing of the kind over at CNN. The network interrupted its usual programming and brought in Wolf Blitzer, who trotted out the usual pro-Israel guests. At one stage he piped up when someone mentioned Iranian drones: “Those are what the Israelis call ‘killer drones.’” Back in the 1970s, Blitzer worked for two publications linked to AIPAC, the powerful pro-Israel lobby. It seems clear that Blitzer still today carries baggage.

Finally, there’s one more example of mainstream media bias that can’t be ignored. All the U.S. newspapers and TV networks routinely characterize Hizbollah in Lebanon, and Hamas in Palestine, as Iran’s “proxies.” The word is misleading and leaves the false impression that Iran created and nurtured these movements for its own expansionist aims. 

The truth is much different. Hizbollah emerged in Lebanon in the 1980s, after Israel’s violent invasion of that nation, which included the 1982 massacres at the Saabra and Shatila refugee camps of as many as 3500 men, women, and children. Christian Lebanese militiamen slaughtered the defenseless victims, while the Israeli army stood outside the camps and looked the other way. The murdered were Palestinians and Lebanese Shia Muslims, so it’s understandable afterward that Lebanese Shia would form an organization for self-defense.

Iran did not create Hamas either. In the 1990s, hopes for the two-state solution receded, as hundreds of thousands of Israelis continued to illegally settle in/colonize the occupied West Bank. Palestinians came to regard the Palestinian Authority as a toothless, corrupt entity. Hamas started to grow. 

So, in fact, Hizbollah and Hamas actually exist partly because of Israel. Calling them Iran’s “proxies” — instead of “allies” — covers up Israel’s responsibility.

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Tom Friedman’s rant against Iran in the latest NYT is disgraceful even by his standards:

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/14/opinion/israel-iran-attack.html

However, nine of the top ten readers’ picks put the blame for Iran’s attack firmly on Israel’s initial aggression.

Well……

The potential handcuffing of U.S. policy has not gone unnoticed in Washington. A report by NBC News on the morning after Iran’s strikes quoted three individuals close to Joe Biden as saying that the president “privately expressed concern that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to drag Washington into a broader conflict.”…. Israel’s decision to attack Iran’s consulate building, where it killed a number of top officials from the elite Quds Force, itself was unlikely to have happened without Netanyahu’s belief that he could count on U.S. support no matter what Israel does.From Netanyahu’s perspective, once the current war ends, he is likely to face serious political and legal problems inside Israel. Expanding the conflict to a regional one could delay his day of reckoning — or even change his personal fortunes entirely….Biden will have to confront the contradictions of a policy of embracing Israel and enabling its most extreme tendencies, while at the same time trying to do what is best for the U.S.

https://theintercept.com/2024/04/14/israel-iran-drag-us-war-netanyahu-biden/

Here’s NBC coverage:

President Joe Biden, who has publicly reinforced his administration’s “ironclad” commitment to Israel’s defense, has privately expressed concern that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to drag Washington into a broader conflict, according to three people familiar with his comments.  

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/israel-iran-attack-escalation-war-fears-drones-missiles-rcna147739

It’s straight up Orwellian the way US media keeps using the term “Iranian-backed” and “Iranian proxies” to describe Hezbollah, Syria, Hamas, the Houthis and everyone and anyone else that responds to Israel’s violations of territorial sovereignty, targeted assassinations, crimes against humanity, and outright acts of war

Yet, despite every single chest-pounding claim and act of “ironclad” US support, military aid, weapons, technologies, intelligence, and billions of dollars per year is never viewed, considered, or reported using the same terminology.

If our media was honest they run headlines like, ‘US-backed IDF special forces raid West Bank hospital dressed as doctors and EMTs’. ‘US proxy, Israel, attacks and destroys Iranian embassy in Syria with US supplied F-15s’. ‘US proxy forces stand by and oversee US-armed Settler progrom agains5 Palestinians in Huwara’. ‘US-backed Israeli Air Force targets three WCK aid convoys in Gaza using US drones and US missiles’. ‘US-backed Israelis illegally claim 1,500 acres of land in the Occupied Jordan River Valley as state land.’

No. not even once do any articles make mention of US complicity in anything that Israel does.

If Houthi rebels use even a single bullet made in or supplied by Iran, the media goes out of its way to try and conflate that with a direct order from the Ayatollah himself. Israel drops the equivalent of two nuclear bombs worth of US made, supplied, and financed 2,000lb ordinance on Gaza in one week fired from US made, supplied, and financed warplanes, while parking two US Navy carrier groups off shore and while personally working day and night to get another 15 billion dollars in direct military aid to IDF troops who have spent 6 months slaughtering men, women and children by the thousands and the silence in the reporting of this US backing and complicity is deafening!

Thanks for reporting on NYT’s coverage so I don’t have to read it. I’ve largely quit reading it since October 7. I still read WaPo, albeit with reservations. On the other hand, I’ve started reading the Guardian, Al Jazeera, and other sources, including Haaretz. It irritates me at bit that I need to read an Israeli publication to understand events that the US is very much involved with. Mondoweiss is as essential as ever.

It may turn out that scuttling the nuclear deal with Iran was the worst thing Trump did. And that is a very high bar.
The Iranians must realize that if they aren’t going to have regime change inflicted on them, they’d better get a bomb.