Media Analysis

From reading the NY Times you would think Gaza’s polio outbreak was just a natural disaster

Unfortunately, the New York Times is easily the most important U.S. media outlet covering Palestine. So it’s time for another up-to-date dissection of ongoing Times bias.

Unfortunately, the New York Times is easily the most important U.S. media outlet covering Israel/Palestine, and its influence continues to grow. Regional American newspapers stagnate or shrink, and they have long since closed their reporting bureaus in the Mideast. U.S. cable news timidly continues to follow the Times’s lead, with the honorable exceptions of journalists like Ayman Mohyeldin and Ali Velshi at MSNBC. 

So it’s time for another up-to-date dissection of ongoing Times bias. Let’s start with the outbreak of polio in Gaza, in this August 30 report. It begins:

War and disease have been cruelly intertwined for as long as humans have confronted one another on the battlefield, and in the Gaza Strip, polio is now stalking a population that for nearly 11 months has been on the run from relentless bombardment.

Notice how “polio” — not Israel’s murderous military, is “stalking the population.” The beginning of that sentence is even worse: “War and disease have been cruelly intertwined as long as humans have confronted one another on the battlefield. . .” No mention of Israel’s deliberate destruction of Gaza’s healthcare system for nearly a year now, and no mention that its military is deliberately depriving civilians of food and water, which surely weakens their resistance to disease. The article later does include some oblique criticism of the Israeli response, although it nowhere explains why it took six weeks after the illness was detected to implement short cease-fires to re-start vaccinations. 

The tone was set in the report’s first sentence: the polio outbreak in Gaza is more or less a natural disaster for which no one is to blame. 

Let’s now turn to how the Times reported on Israel’s massive ongoing military attack in occupied West Bank Palestine, which started August 28. One of the paper’s first reports would have been ludicrous if it weren’t so tragic. Here’s the headline:

Where to start? First: Who was killed? Israeli soldiers? Palestinian resistance fighters? Palestinian civilians? The Times headline writer cleverly hid who killed whom. Next:  What does “Amid” mean here? Were these (unspecific) deaths some kind of accident? And finally: Why leave out “Occupied West Bank Palestine? 

Here’s an accurate headline, using the same number of words

Israel Invades Occupied Palestinian West Bank, Kills 10 Palestinians. Victims May Be Civilians.

Next, Patrick Kingsley, the paper’s Jerusalem bureau chief, used Israel’s attack in the West Bank as part of a long analysis that was either criminally incompetent or deliberate lying. Kingsley notes that Israel’s big offensive adds to its existing war in Gaza, and clashes on its northern border with Hezbollah. But here’s the amazing fact: the name “Benjamin Netanyahu” appears only once in his report, in passing. 

Meanwhile, plenty of critics, in Israel and elsewhere, argue that Netanyahu is actually seeking to provoke a wider war to both draw in the U.S. and further distract from his own political failures. One view is that Netanyahu has tried to instigate an American attack on Iran for the past decade, to set back its allegedly rising nuclear threat. More recently, Israeli commentators aren’t too squeamish to note that he fears that an end to the conflicts will bring a political reckoning, in which he and his far-right coalition lose the next election and his trial(s) for corruption restart. (And Israel does put convicted prime ministers in prison.)

Kingsley’s failure in this article is only the latest example of how the paper has whitewashed or downplayed the harsh criticism of Netanyahu within Israel. Which explains why Times readers will be surprised, even stunned, by the reaction there to yesterday’s news that six hostages were found dead in Gaza. Several hundred thousand anti-Netanyahu demonstrators clogged the streets in Tel Aviv, and the country’s labor federation carried out a general strike yesterday. 

In recent days, the Times has finally started to grudgingly recognize that it can no longer hide Netanyahu’s unpopularity. But for most of the conflict, now about to enter its 12th month, the paper has taken him seriously, at face value, and left unchallenged his dishonest assertions.

Here’s a final stunner. On August 20, the Times ran a long article by Linda Kinstler titled: “The Bitter Fight Over the Meaning of ‘Genocide.’” The article, which appeared in the Sunday Magazine, was mostly historical, citing past examples like Serbia/Bosnia, Rwanda and the Cambodian Khmer Rouge, but it could hardly entirely avoid Israel and Gaza. 

But there was an astonishing omission. Omer Bartov is Israeli-born, a professor at Brown University, and unquestionably one of the world’s leading academic authorities on genocide. He has written 11 books on the subject, along with countless articles.  

What’s more, Bartov is increasingly outspoken about what he’s witnessing in Israel. Here was the headline over his recent contribution to the British Guardian

As a former IDF soldier and historian of genocide, I was deeply disturbed by my recent visit to Israel.

Professor Omer Bartov is mentioned nowhere in the Times article. Not quoted. Not cited. This is the rough equivalent of writing about the theory of relativity and leaving out Albert Einstein. What possible excuse is there for this journalistic malpractice?

31 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

The Omer Bartov article is very interesting – although he dances around it, he clearly calls what Israel is doing genocide. I’ve heard him state it in at least one interview.

What’s also interesting about the article is the denial by IDF soldiers he met that they’re committing war crimes. I have to wonder how they figure, telling Bartov Hamas was using human shields and hiding in the hospitals and so on. Clearly a lot of nonsense made up by the IDF, including with planted evidence. But maybe critical and independent thinking is rarer than I imagine – certainly the DNC convention showed how people just fall in line with mass thinking – chanting “We Love Joe” when the anti-genocide protesters attempted to display their sign.

I sympathize with Bartov’s alternate history – it didn’t have to be that way. However, I think he’s failing to note that the mass murders of 1948 and the current genocide are logical outcomes of Zionism as an ideology – one cannot create a “Jewish” state with too many Palestinians, logically, one has to commit ethnic cleansing, and/or genocide and/or apartheid to make the state “Jewish.” Without wishing harm to Israeli people, Israeli Jews, the state has to go.

The New Yorker interviewed Omer Bartov a few weeks before the Guardian article appeared – here Bartov discussed his experience talking with Israeli reservists ( delete New Yorker cookies ):

A Holocaust Scholar Meets with Israeli Reservists…They [the reservists ] know what they’re seeing, but then they have to interpret it in a way that does not put them in a particularly bad light. And so they can say all kinds of things. They can say, “We took care of them.” They can also say, “But they’re animals.” And they can say, “They all support Hamas.” People who are in that state of mind will say a whole lot of things that are contradictory; I think they believe them, but there’s something underlying all of this, which is that they are in denial. They’re actually denying to themselves, and not just to me, some of what they saw and experienced….The majority of Jews in Israel right now are right-wing, and they support people like Ben-Gvir and [the finance minister, Bezalel] Smotrich and various other right-wing tendencies. And they are already beginning to pay the price for what they believe in….Anybody who puts on a uniform or is killed or wounded—they’re a hero. This kind of language was not used to the same degree when I was a soldier. But, at the same time, nobody actually talks to them or listens to them. You just send them to do things, and you don’t want them to tell you exactly what they did, and then you don’t even provide enough psychological help. This will have really severe repercussions in the future. 

https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/a-holocaust-scholar-meets-with-israeli-reservists

Thanks for the carful reading and report on yet another NYT masterpiece. As you know, NYT reports all the news [that’s “fit to print.”] That requires careful editing.

As for the question of whether Kingsley’s reporting is “criminally incompetent or deliberate lying,” it could be both, in theory. But in practice there is no question that it is lying. Carefully, artfully crafted language in story after story. Assisted perhaps by some of that careful editing. He knows what to deliver and has proven repeatedly that he can do so. That’s a certain kind of competence.

It isn’t just NYT.

Juan Cole compares last night’s TV coverage of the school killings in Georgia with coverage of the deaths in Gaza:

https://www.juancole.com/2024/09/shooting-dominated-bombardment.html

Along similar lines, Gideon Levy reflects on the implications “When six Israelis are mourned more than 40,000 Palestinians”

https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2024-09-05/ty-article-opinion/.premium/when-six-israelis-are-mourned-more-than-40-000-palestinians

(On another matter, Haaretz also reports that some Palestinians are suspicious of the polio vaccine, because Israel “signed off” on its use. In reality, they should realize that Israel’s self-interest should motivate it to facilitate the vaccination campaign because–as is explained in the latest “Health Check” podcast episode from the BBC–if the virus were to escape from Gaza, other people could be infected. (Most of the episode is devoted to the need to distribute the monkey pox vaccine in Africa, but there is a short discussion near the end that alludes to conditions in Gaza.)

Another thoroughly dishonest piece in today’s NYT, headlined: The Pivotal Decision That Led to a Resurgence of Polio.
Was that pivot anything to do with Israel’s total destruction of the healthcare system in Gaza? of course not. It was “the consequence of a fateful decision by global health organizations to pare down the oral polio vaccine in 2016.” It is true that that decision has had problems in that (if I remember correctly) it may have led to one type of polio virus mutating more quickly. Obstructions placed by Israel in the way of the program get a passing mention:

The Israeli government did not acquiesce to the W.H.O.’s requests to vaccinate over a period of seven days and to begin the campaign first in the north and finish in the south, which has the largest population of unvaccinated children. Instead, health officials were told to start the campaign in the central zone and finish in the north.