FAZ's Dishonest Smear Targets Malkin - Bloggers

(By Ray D.)

Nina Rehfeld's Attempted Hit Job - Or How it Backfired

A small German blog recently chronicled a particularly suspect article authored by correspondent Nina Rehfeld for the FAZ (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung - one of Germany's most respected daily papers). The piece, entitled "Debacle for the Online Sniper" can only be described as a hit job gone terribly wrong. The "online sniper" in question is none other than journalist and top blogger Michelle Malkin:

FAZ Caption: "Converted Blogger: Michelle Malkin"

The FAZ piece reads as follows (our translation - this is the entire article):

"Blogs
Debacle for the Online Sniper

By Nina Rehfeld, Phoenix

A few days ago a witch hunt called out by conservative bloggers in the United States against the news agency AP came to an end. The starting point for the hysteria was an AP report according to which six Iraqi Sunnis were doused with gasoline by Shiites in front of a mosque and burned alive as Iraqi soldiers looked on. As a source, AP named a Baghdad police captain by the name of Jamil Hussein, but the American military and Iraqi Ministry of Interior denied for a long time that there was a policeman by that name. No one else could confirm the report, yet the story went around the world.

In Internet forums doubts were quickly raised about the authenticity of the AP story and the reliability of sources in Iraq in general. But what should have been a debate about the pitfalls of reporting from war zones turned into a vanity fair. Led by the prominent conservative blogger Michelle Malkin, the AP story was presented as proof that the "liberal mainstream media" were intentionally distorting the situation in Iraq to turn people against the Bush government: "MSM credibility, R.I.P.," wrote Malkin.

The Outcry is Silenced

The talk quickly turned to "AP scandal"; All AP reporting on Iraq was brought into question. Liberal websites like Media Matters struck back at the "warbloggers." And because the mainstream media in America leaves the field of reporting on the background details to the bloggers, they were able to smash journalistic porcelain undisturbed. In the meantime, AP stuck with the story that its reporters had spoken with Jamil Hussein.

A few days ago the Iraqi Ministry of Interior confirmed the existence of Jamil Hussein and announced that he may be subject to a fine - because he spoke to journalists. The outcry is silenced. Michelle Malkin accepted a challenge to visit Iraq from CNN news boss Eason Jordan where she has meekly reported on danger, violence and corruption, but also on signs of hope in Iraq that the mainstream media is allegedly happy to overlook. Nobody is talking about the policeman Jamil Hussein anymore."

Memo to FAZ: The Outcry is Not Silenced

Rehfeld would be right if the only aspect of the AP story brought into question by bloggers was the existence of source Jamil Hussein. In reality, there are two elements of the original AP story that remain controversial: The first, Mr. Hussein's reported claim that four mosques were "destroyed" in sectarian violence, has been proven demonstrably false. The second, that six Iraqi Sunnis were burned alive as Iraqi soldiers looked on, remains uncorroborated and has been disputed by other sources. Bloggers continue to discuss both - Ms. Rehfeld completely fails to acknowledge the controversy surrounding either.

In other words, this is neither a witch hunt nor is it "case closed" as Ms. Rehfeld clearly implies. In fact, the bloggers' skepticism over the original AP piece has proven to be largely justified. Unfortunately, those inconvenient details are conspicuously omitted by FAZ.

Because Rehfeld and her FAZ editors are clearly aware of Michelle Malkin's blog (see caption above), it is hard to believe that they simply overlooked the two contested elements of the original AP story. This appears to be yet another case of a major German media outlet omitting and twisting facts to vilify those (conservatives - bloggers - Americans) it perceives as political enemies. The arrogant, frothing-at-the-mouth tone of the piece is, taken by itself, a clear sign of journalism gone bad. Beyond that, it is difficult to conclude that Rehfeld is anything more than a cynical liar. Her work is particularly disturbing because it is directed at a German audience that, with a language barrier and lack of alternative sources, will likely never know to what extent it has been defrauded and misled.

This much is clear: To avoid future "witch hunts" and journalistic "debacles", FAZ would be well advised to drop Ms. Rehfeld and her particularly destructive brand of character assassination. Instead of cutting Michelle Malkin down to size, Rehfeld has succeeded only in shooting herself and her publication's reputation in the foot.

(Hattip: Joerg)

Post Execution Media Reaction: The Death Penalty - Really a Wedge Issue?

(By Ray D.)

Majorities in USA and Europe Favor Saddam Execution

The recent results of a poll conducted by Novatris/Harris for the French daily Le Monde on the death penalty shocked the editors and writers at Germany's left-leaning SPIEGEL ONLINE. When asked whether they favored the death penalty for Saddam Hussein, a majority of respondents in Germany, France and Spain responded in the affirmative. Here the results by country:

Percentage of respondents in favor of executing Saddam Hussein:

USA: 82%
Great Britain: 69%
France: 58%
Germany: 53%
Spain: 51%
Italy: 46%

Clearly, there is a gap between the United States and the European nations polled. On the other hand, the western Europeans polled demonstrated that there is majority support for the death penalty in particular cases. In other words, the gap that exists across the Atlantic is not at all the clear-cut, "black-white" divide that some in media make it out to be.

Die Zeit: "The Europeans condemn the use of the death penalty" / Do they? The poll numbers above contradict that assumption.

Frankfurter Allgemeine: "President Bush praised the execution, from Europe came sharp criticism." / A tempting -and in the media oft used- opportunity to again pit "Europe" against Bush. A more intellectually honest headline would have pointed out that the majority of the criticism coming from "Europe" has emanated from a tiny media-political elite. The rest of society is evenly divided.

ZDF Heute Online: "Bush Welcomes Saddam's Execution - Criticism from Europe: Divided Reactions to Death Penalty: US President George W. Bush greeted the execution of Saddam Hussein as a milestone on the way to a democratic Iraq. In contrast, criticism came from European countries and human rights organizations - they reject the death penalty as a matter of principle." / ZDF is clearly attempting to create an "us versus them" - "Europe versus Bush and America" wedge issue out of the death penalty. This piece also totally ignores the opinions of the average German.

Deutsche Welle: "Europe condemns death penalty" / But what about the more than half the population in Germany and other European nations that does not condemn it in Saddam's case? Do they simply not matter? Do they somehow not exist for certain media-political elites? Why are their views systematically ignored?

Sueddeutsche published a piece entitled: "Worldwide Sharp Criticism of the Execution." The piece goes nation by nation and lists criticisms as if they represented the view of the entire country. It does not mention poll results that indicate majorities in many of the same countries actually favored Saddam's execution.

Other media outlets, including Financial Times Deutschland and even SPIEGEL ONLINE have actually treated the death penalty question as a debate instead of falsely claiming that an imaginary, monolithic "Europe" has "sharply criticized" Saddam's execution. Another major theme in most of the Western media is that Saddam's execution does not help Iraq - in other words, more of the usual pessimism.

Additionally, there has long been a heated debate on the death penalty in the United States. Several U.S. states do not legally permit executions or do not make (wide) use of them. From the mid 1960s to the mid 1980s, executions came to a near standstill in the United States, in part because of legal challenges which culminated in the Supreme Court's 1972 Furman vs. Georgia decision. Recently, a botched execution in Florida led Republican Governor Jeb Bush to suspend the death penalty as a federal judge in California imposed a moratorium halting executions in that state. 

Put another way: There is a lively debate on the death penalty on both sides of the Atlantic, with significant numbers and powerful factions on either side. Unfortunately, many in the German media have made death penalty out to be a divisive, "good versus evil" wedge issue. This stems in part from the transatlantic legal contrast: Most European nations have banned the death penalty while it remains legal in much of the United States.

The desire in influential segments of German media and society to reduce the death penalty to the level of a transatlantic wedge issue is also deeply rooted in another key factor: Ideology. The far-left in Germany is a political force to be reckoned with. Its representatives dominate wide swaths of the media, academia and certain political parties including the SPD, Greens and the PDS. Not only do representatives of the far-left reject the death penalty in all cases (putting them at odds with many ordinary Germans), they also oppose American-style free-market capitalism, smaller, less restrictive government, and the projection of American power in the world. This movement consists largely of an assortment of 68-radicals (including ex-Maoists, Leninists, RAF sympathizers, and your run-of-the mill Socialist demonstrators); ex-eastern-bloc-Communists; young people radicalized through academia, media and far-left political parties and movements; and out-and-out America-haters. Quite honestly, these folks would have rejected the execution of Hitler and Eichmann just as they reject the execution of Saddam. Ironically, they see the issue as a "black-and-white" - "with us or against us" issue. (Sound familiar?)

Nonetheless the death penalty remains contentious. Conservatives, libertarians and European Liberale, who traditionally favor a less powerful, less intrusive government, must ask themselves if they trust the state to determine who should live and who should die. Furthermore, they must consider whether the death penalty in the United States has become so legally contentious (filled with endless appeals, challenges and expenses) that it is practically (if not also ethically) questionable?

These are the debates that citizens on both sides of the Atlantic should be having with one another and not against one another, as many on the far-left would have it. The real "wedge", in this and many other cases, is not a transatlantic one. The real "wedge" is and has long been firmly lodged between the Angry left and the rest of society.

As the poll numbers above demonstrate, the peoples of the United States and Europe are not nearly as far apart on the death penalty as some would have us believe. Sadly, in a media culture that thrives on creating new controversies and divisions and exacerbating old ones (whether real or imagined) you might never know it.

UPDATE: Watch the full Saddam execution here:

A quick and painless death for a tyrant responsible for the murder and torture of so many.

UPDATE #2: Another poll conducted for the far-left publication stern confirms that significantly more Germans support the death penalty for Saddam than oppose it. The results of that poll:

In favor of executing Saddam: 50%
Against executing Saddam: 39%
Don't know: 11%

The image “http://img2.stern.de/_content/57/64/576452/saddamgrafik_250.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Stern graphic: "No Mercy for Saddam: Should the death penalty be enforced against Saddam Hussein?"

Stern may be a populist, trashy, anti-American media outlet, but they sure can put together a good graphic!

Opfer des Bush Derangement Syndrome: Das FAZ-Feuilleton

(For our German speaking audience: a posting on an anti-Bush article in the cultural section of the German conservative daily FAZ. The FAZ article falsely claims a confession of President Bush (in an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos) that the Iraq war parallels the Vietnam war.) 

An Bush-Feinden herrscht in den deutschen Medien wahrhaft kein Mangel. Eine ganze Armada deutscher Journalisten verliert regelmäßig Schlaf und Fassung schon bei der bloßen Erwähnung des Namens des amerikanischen Präsidenten. Doch selbst in den hart gesottensten Anti-Bush-Lagern findet sich sehr gelegentlich eine einsame Stimme zu seinen Gunsten, vielleicht als indirektes Geständnis, daß es man es mit der einseitigen Kritik an Bush doch etwas zu weit getrieben habe.

Nur eine Redaktion bleibt ihrer unbedingten Anti-Bush-Linie ohne pluralistische Ablenkung treu: das Feuilleton der konservativen FAZ. Wir haben uns bereits mehrfach (1, 2, 3) in diesem Blog gewundert und belustigt über die polemischen, einseitigen Artikel im FAZ-Feuilleton zu Amerika im allgemeinen und Präsident Bush im speziellen. Und es ist nicht die anti-amerikanische Linie der Redaktion alleine, die irritiert. Es ist auch die journalistische Qualität der Artikel, oder besser: die Abwesenheit von journalistischer Qualität.

Ein Musterbeispiel hierfür bietet Christian Geyer mit dem Artikel "Der Rest steht in den Sternen" im FAZ-Feuilleton vom 20. Oktober 2006 (S. 42). Der Artikel ist - wenn man es aus Mitleid mit dem Autoren zurückhaltend formulieren möchte - eine Ansammlung falscher Behauptungen und

Continue reading "Opfer des Bush Derangement Syndrome: Das FAZ-Feuilleton" »

Inside Report: German Media Coverage of the United States

(Now available: German Translation / Deutsche Übersetzung - special thanks to Paul of NBFS)

(The following text is a final exam paper authored by Ray for a graduate level class on media and politics taken in Spring of 2006. It contains excerpts from actual interviews conducted with top members of the German media as well as outside experts on the German media scene. Particularly shocking are admissions by top German journalists that self-censorship took place to a significant degree in the run-up to the Iraq war at the very highest levels of both state-sponsored and private media. The paper offers a comprehensive look at many of the problems with media coverage of the United States today:)

Introduction

The international media research institute Media Tenor has released several studies over the past few years with one common finding: Rising anti-Americanism in German media.[1] A 2005 study concluded that German television broadcasters had been continually casting “US-American protagonists and institutions” in a negative light since 2002.[2] Another 2004 study on German-American divisions over Iraq concluded: “Especially German TV broadcasters worked less as news reporters and instead came across as part of ‘their’ government.” The same study found that in the run-up to the Iraq war, German media “barely drew a distinction between democracy and dictatorship in their news coverage.” Another study concluded: “While there were more opposing voices, such as the FAZ, available to the German readers than in its neighbor France, the media generally jumped on the popular, anti-war band-wagon.” [3]

The German media’s coverage of the United States was also discussed at length at a 2004 conference hosted by the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (AICGS). The participants concluded that German media “overwhelmingly backed the Schroeder government’s position” in the months prior to the Iraq war. Panel members also debated whether influential segments of the German media tend towards anti-Americanism. Considering decades of robust German-American ties through the much of the Cold War and beyond, the implications were troubling. But recently, a slew of contentious issues and conflicting interests, including the Iraq war, have served to widen the transatlantic divide. Several AICGS panelists discussed the recent rift and concluded that, “while the media is part of the problem, they are not the source or instigator.” In private interviews, however, numerous German journalists and media observers expressed a far more candid view of the German media’s role in shaping perceptions of the United States. Some spoke openly of pandering to anti-American populism, pressure from above to exclude certain viewpoints, lack of expertise and access, and pervasive bias. What follows is a summary of those interviews and the major themes addressed.

Ideological Media: Tradition or Problem?

Professor and State Department Foreign Service Officer Richard Schmierer served two four-year tours at the United States Embassy in Germany from 1992 to 1996 as Press Attaché and from 2000 to 2004 as Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs. During his second tour, transatlantic relations cooled considerably and media coverage of the United States became noticeably more critical. When asked whether he thought anti-Americanism was a problem in German media, Schmierer diplomatically replied that the charge of anti-Americanism was “too broad.” He emphasized that German media, “are professional and world class,” and have a long tradition of reporting from a particular viewpoint. Generally speaking, Schmierer felt that some German media reflect, “a certain European point of view that sees elements of the U.S. and certain administrations as not having the worldview they share.” Cornel Faltin, the Washington, DC Bureau Chief for Springer Publishing, also pointed out that, “there are different papers for different readers. On the one hand you have TAZ (Tageszeitung – left-wing daily) and on the other you have Die Welt (conservative daily). That’s freedom of press.”

Others, including ZDF Bureau Chief and Correspondent Eberhard Piltz, felt that ideology was a major impediment to quality coverage of the United States. Piltz spoke of “prejudice” and described it as “an intellectual arrogance that thinks that the American way of life, feeling, taste and thinking is inferior and not authentic.” He complained that many journalists see “the U.S. through an ideological lens,” and that “most of them grew up with the leftist, socialist dream and now they look for scapegoats.” Stern magazine correspondent Michael Streck agreed with Piltz’s statement and worried “that populism goes over the line quite often.” Deutsche Welle Bureau Chief for North and South America Ruediger Lentz also expressed deep concern that “populist” ideology and views often “resonate the public mood” when it came to coverage of the United States.

Iraq: Views Suppressed

Ideology is clearly a serious problem in some corners of the German media. All too often, particularly in reporting on foreign affairs, viewpoints that go against popular sentiment are not given a fair hearing. Additionally, most of the journalists interviewed worried that bias negatively influenced reporting. One of the most troubling aspects of the interviews was the assertion, made by at least three of the interviewees, that journalists were pressured, or knew of colleagues who were pressured, not to run certain stories in the run-up to the Iraq war. Eberhard Piltz related that he “had to fight with the desk people (the editors) to tell and get in why the war was coming” and added that he "had a hard time telling the stories." Martin Wagner of Bayerische Rundfunk radio broadcasting said that he had not personally been pressured, but that “more than a couple colleagues,” experienced a “tendency especially in the run-up to the Iraq war,” not to run stories explaining the Bush administration’s position for fear of upsetting readers. Wagner claimed that the pressure on colleagues came from “above” from “owners.” Professor Schmierer observed that: “In the run-up to Iraq, media were put under strictures to limit the opposing side because readers and viewers might become incensed and the media were afraid to alienate or lose audience.” He summarized the situation this way: “Things got emotional.”

Stories in their Suitcases and “Leitmedien

Cornel Faltin put it best: “Some colleagues already have stories in their suitcases.” In Faltin’s view, some correspondents working in the United States are influenced by pre-existing views. One interviewee stated anonymously that many journalists come to the U.S. “with preconceived bias.” Eberhard Piltz concluded that, “they tend to look at America with their European, German eyes.” He added that, "stories that make Bush look bad were requested all the time." According to Piltz, one would only have to "wait by the phone for the editors." Piltz also stated that the editors were those who "went in the streets and cried for Ho Chi Minh" at an earlier time and many still viewed the United States as "the spoiler of their dreams." Piltz was of the opinion that Spiegel and Stern magazines were in the forefront of "Bush bashing" and cautioned that it was often difficult to separate "Bush-bashing from anti-Americanism." He described anti-Americanism as a "larger phenomenon" that reaches back to at least 1917.

Another factor that has contributed to “predetermined” reporting is the excessive reliance on so-called “Leitmedien” or leading media. Martin Wagner explained that many “editors at quality papers read The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Der Spiegel and have stories and ideas all ready before the day starts.” This game of follow-the-leader reduces the number of issues that actually reach the German news consumer. Wagner stressed that many examples of good journalism were ignored because they did not relate to “hot” topics. The problem is compounded by what Cornel Faltin identified as, “too much entertainment” reporting. Uwe Schmitt agreed that media was “too celebrity oriented.” The result is limited coverage of substantive issues.

Monolithic Views, Pet Issues, and Clichés

Medien Tenor studies conducted over the past few years clearly indicate an increase in critical, negative reporting on the United States. German media have “picked out only the negative (issues) and forgotten the others,” according to Ruediger Lentz. Lentz suggested that too many Germans see America in a “monolithic way” and have a stereotypical image of a “bad, ugly American.” He lamented that German media “don’t follow up on the open and heated debate in the U.S. and the divisions.” Eberhard Piltz agreed that, “the criticism in the U.S.A. doesn’t fit into some Germans’ picture of the bad or ugly America.” David Kaspar, the founder of the German-American blog Davids Medienkritik, pointed to an excessive interest in the negative and sensational as a source of bias: “They search for problems and even if there weren’t any they would invent them.” Kaspar opined that positive stories, such as low unemployment levels in the United States, are often ignored.

A frequent complaint expressed by interviewees was that German media inadequately convey the complexity and internal divisions that make up American society. Professor Schmierer emphasized that it is important for Germans to understand “America’s position, values and approach” as well as the country’s “unique circumstances.” He felt that German media “did not generally give that level of depth.” Uwe Schmitt argued that, “high quality papers do get nuance,” but added that, “there are pet issues” that some media dwell on. Cornel Faltin acknowledged the presence of pet issues, but felt that it was a “periodical thing” and that “certain issues” evoked more interest at times than others. One interviewee stated anonymously that the media “don’t make an honest effort to explain the American mind” and don’t “explain why people supported Iraq.” He worried that the media regularly “feed stereotypes.”

Two Media Tenor reports from 2004 spoke of a view of America clouded by clichés. One offered a fitting quote from author Friedrich Mielke[4]: “Today the Americans and Germans are again allowing themselves to be seduced by clichés. For many Germans, America is the land of predatory capitalism, striving for hegemony, and the arrogance of power.”

Lack of Access, Experience, and Travel

The most universally expressed frustration among journalists interviewed was the lack of access to the United States government. Claus Tigges, the Economics Correspondent for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), referred to German journalists in the United States as “no vote reporters.” When asked how he dealt with the problem, Tigges concluded that German media are often forced to rely on U.S. media and think tanks. Michael Backfisch, Bureau Chief of the financial daily Handelsblatt, agreed that access was “tough” and “networking crucial.” The access problem clearly boils down to a lack of interest and time on the part of U.S. government officials. Because most American politicians are interested in reaching voters, even small domestic newspapers receive more attention than the largest German network. With the end of the Cold War, Germany has become less central to U.S. geopolitical objectives and, as a result, no longer attracts the same level of interest from high-ranking U.S. government officials.

Professor Schmierer also pointed out that some reporters had inadequate knowledge of the United States: “Those who are reporting should have had recent exposure to the U.S.” As an example, Schmierer pointed to ZDF, a major public television network. According to Schmierer, most of the “ZDF staff assigned to foreign affairs had never been to America and an exchange was arranged.” Martin Wagner countered that, “many Germans have been to the U.S.” and added that, “media are often prepared.”

While it is true that many Germans have been to the United States, it is not necessarily the case that German journalists assigned to cover the world’s only remaining superpower are fully prepared. As in most nations, German media focus primarily on domestic events. International coverage, though relatively extensive in Germany, still suffers from limited budgets and lack of interest. When coupled with the pressures of the twenty-four hour news cycle and the need for ever-shorter sound bites, the impact on the quality of coverage can be stifling. Limited budgets also make it difficult for some journalists to travel outside of Washington, DC or New York. Uwe Schmitt felt that it was “pulling the rug out if you can’t travel” and worried that, “it does influence journalism.” Ruediger Lentz agreed that, “it is a problem getting out” and getting “exposure.” Other journalists, including Michael Backfisch, felt that the focus on Washington was “overloaded” and remarked that journalists often felt compelled to stay in Washington for “scoops” and “new material.”

But not everyone agreed that travel was a problem. Several correspondents insisted that a reasonable balance was possible. Additionally, escaping the Washington “bubble” is hardly a problem unique to German media. The focus on Washington, DC is, however, clearly another factor that influences German coverage of the United States.

Anti-Americanism? Populism, Bush, the 800 Pound Gorilla, and Iraq

There is little doubt that the German media has grown more critical of the United States over the past five years. But there is disagreement as to the causes and implications of this trend.

Since September 11, 2001, German and American leaders have cooperated in Afghanistan but bitterly disagreed over Iraq. Gerhard Schroeder turned opposition to a military confrontation with Saddam Hussein into a winning campaign issue during the 2002 elections, much to the dismay of the Bush administration. Overall, approval of the United States and the Bush administration has fallen significantly in Germany since 2001. The overwhelming majority of Germans opposed the Iraq war and America’s refusal to seek a more multilateral solution. Many Germans dislike President Bush and what they perceive to be his overbearing approach to issues such as the Kyoto Protocol, the International Criminal Court, and Guantanamo Bay. Some worry that America is striving towards world hegemony. Uwe Schmitt remarked that the United States is admired as a “cultural leader,” but is also perceived as an “800 pound gorilla that wants to dominate yet be loved at the same time.”

So is German media coverage of the United States a fundamental source of the transatlantic divide or simply a reflection of larger societal trends? The answer is both. History is an undeniable source of differences. Contemporary observers too often forget the heated disagreements between the United States and West Germany over Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s and over the deployment of nuclear missiles in the 1980s. These disagreements also revolved around the question of military force and American geopolitical dominance. For Germany, the use of military force was taboo for decades following the Second World War. Because of its past, Germany has a far more skeptical view of military action and tends to favor multilateral approaches, even if they are sometimes flawed or ineffective.

Unfortunately, many influential figures in German media, politics and society have undeniably exploited recent transatlantic tensions for political and financial gain. All too often, populism and anti-Americanism have replaced honest, constructive criticism. Take, for example, the following covers from Stern and Der Spiegel, two of Germany’s best-selling, most influential political weeklies:

How America Lied to the World (2004) / Method Wild West (2004)

USA: The Lords of the World (1997) / Blood for Oil (2003) / The Conceited World Power (2003) / Operation Rambo (2003)

Jeff Gedmin, Director of the Aspen Institute in Berlin, relayed this story in an article he wrote in 2004[5]:

“A writer for the German weekly Der Spiegel told me during the Iraq debate not to take offense at the crude anti-American covers of the magazine such as the ugly, bearded, drooling Rambo figure it used to show the typical GI in Iraq. "We're just trying to please our million readers," he explained.”

Then there was also the portrayal of Americans as bloodsucking mosquitoes by IG Metall, Germany’s largest trade union:

US Firms in Germany: The Bloodsuckers (2005)

Some, including German diplomats, have attempted to downplay and deny the problem of anti-Americanism. Others, including some of the journalists interviewed, felt that most of the recent ugliness in German media was attributable to dislike of the Bush administration. Ruediger Lentz put it best when he said that, “it’s not as simple as anti-Bush.” Lentz worried about a vicious cycle or “Teufelskreis” of anti-American media feeding anti-American, populist sentiment. When asked how the cycle could be broken, Lentz offered only this: “To change patterns of behavior is a long process.” It now seems that that process is slowly beginning to move forward. Iraq is no longer as divisive an issue and Gerhard Schroeder has since left office, leaving a more America-friendly Angela Merkel to patch up the wounds. Most observers hope that this difficult period in German-American relations is just another bump in the road of an otherwise healthy relationship. Only time will tell.


Individuals Interviewed:

  • Eberhard Piltz, Bureau Chief and Correspondent, Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) – German state television.
  • Uwe Schmitt, Senior National Correspondent, Die Welt – Daily newspaper.
  • Ruediger Lentz, Bureau Chief and General Manager of Deutsche Welle North and South America – State sponsored international news broadcaster.
  • Michael Streck, Correspondent, Stern magazine – Weekly political illustrated.
  • Martin Wagner, Foreign Corresponent, Bayerischer Rundfunk – Bavarian Radio Broadcasting
  • Claus Tigges, Economics Correspondent, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ)  – Daily newspaper.
  • Cornel Faltin, Bureau Chief, Springer Publishing – Media publishing house.
  • Michael Backfisch, Bureau Chief, Handelsblatt – Daily financial newspaper.
  • Richard Schmierer, State Department Foreign Service Officer and Georgetown University Professor, Press Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Bonn from 1992 to 1996 and Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs at the American Embassy in Berlin, Germany from 2000 to 2004.
  • David Kaspar, Founder and Editor in Chief, Davids Medienkritik – English-language weblog on German media and politics.
Footnotes:

[1] Media Tenor, “Wenn Klischees die Wahrnehmung trüben (When Clichés Cloud Perceptions),” Sep. 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[2] Media Tenor, “Bush hat bei Europas Journalisten einen schweren Stand (Bush Has a Difficult Standing with Europe’s Journalists),” March 2006. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[3] Lehmann, Ingrid A., “Transatlantic Divide over Iraq,” Sep. 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[4] Media Tenor, “Supermacht mit Imageproblem (Super Power with Image Problem),” June 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[5] Gedmin, Jeff, “Mad About Us,” 11 May 2004, The American Spectator. At http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=6547

UPDATE: For more on this topic, see this interview with Lutz Erbring.

Addendum: Pet issues common in German media coverage of the United States include:
  • Perceived American religiosity.
  • Perceived American obsession with guns and violence.
  • The death penalty.
  • The perceived excess and superficiality of American capitalism and (non)culture (i.e. fat people, the super rich, SUVs, fast-food, M-TV/hip-hop culture, Hollywood, corporate scandals, buy-outs and "excessive" profits.)
  • Perceived social inequality in the United States (i.e. amerikanische Verhaeltnisse, poor Americans are starving and freezing to death or at least struggling with 2-3 jobs and no health insurance while the rich live it up. Perception that America has no social safety net or a woefully inadequate social safety net.)
  • Perceived American unilateralism/exceptionalism (i.e. Iraq, Kyoto, ICC, Guantanamo)
  • Perceived American "hurrah" patriotism or "hyper" patriotism (i.e. flag-waving).
  • Perceived American paranoia/overreaction about terror and obsession with security and the "war" on terror and the perceived willingness of Americans to sacrifice key civil liberties (the Patriot Act has become a favored target) and take extrajudicial actions involving torture, renditions, etc.
  • The perception that the Bush administration controls (or at least dominates) the media and can somehow intimidate media into following the party line. The perceived view that there is a lack of diversity of opinion in US media and that FoxNews, talk radio and blogs are the menacing conservative vanguard of what all US media are becoming or have already become. (i.e. US media are "gleichgeschaltet" or in lock-step.)
  • Anything that casts a negative light on the US military (i.e. Abu Ghraib, trials of US troops, bombings or killings of civilians real or imagined).
  • Anything that casts a negative light on the Bush administration.
  • Iraq is a disaster-quagmire-catastrophe-debacle perhaps unparalleled in human history. Iraq = Vietnam = defeat and humiliation for America, the US military and Bush.
  • The perception of the US as an imperial hegemon out to expand its global power and military-industrial complex while using democracy as a convenient (yet false) excuse to do so. Oil = blood = Halliburton = war.

Continue reading "Inside Report: German Media Coverage of the United States" »

The Ethics of the Israeli Army

One of the special features of the IDF's (Israeli Defense Force) Gaza operation is the minimal damage to civilian human life. Constant care is taken to spare the civilian Palestine population.

This interview in the Jerusalem Post with Israel Air Force chief Maj.-Gen. Eliezer Shkedy explains the ethics behind the Israeli operations:

Q: If they (the terrorists) are making themselves ever harder to hit, the chances of hitting only them...

A: Are becoming ever more complicated.

Q: So, are we relaxing our limitations in determining when to fire? When we see his son in the car with him, that's it, we don't fire? Or do we say, "His son's always with him." And he's firing at us every day.

A: The question is very appropriate and no, we're not relaxing our limitations.

Q: Instead, we're improving our accuracy?

A: Our answer is to create a situation where you hit within a meter, a meter and a half. If we know that [the terrorist] is holding his son's hand, we do not fire. Even if the terrorist is in the midst of firing a Kassam, and the Kassam is aimed to kill. We do not fire. You should know that. And that's a fearsome thing.

Q: So we open the door to him to keep firing at us?

A: Yes. And that is the kind of dilemma we live with every day and I'm very pleased you asked me about it.

I'm very proud of what we do. I think it is unprecedented. I'm proud of our morals. I'm proud of our operational capabilities.

Q: Maybe in the end we'll kill more people because we weren't ruthless enough at the start, because we encouraged them to become bolder? Maybe we're too moral, for our own good and theirs?

A: That's a very interesting philosophical question, with practical consequences. And yet I'll tell you something...

(Shkedy pauses here for a full 20 seconds.) Ultimately our strength is not solely our military power. That's part of our strength. The strength of the Jewish people in the State of Israel and the Land of Israel is first and foremost our profound moral strength. Everything stems from that.

If we were to lower our standards, not to find a solution that meets the highest ethical standards, that would be a mistake with far more, immense significance for us as a nation and a state and as people than the operational error.

That's the great strength that I believe in. That's how I educate the people [in the IAF], and that's what the air force does. And, still, I'm aware that this is war, with live fire, and things will happen that I don't want to happen. Because to protect your child and my child, that can happen. (emphasis added)

Shkedy's explanation shows how inappropriate it is to equalize the Hamas terrorists' actions with those of Israel. There is no moral equivalence: the terrorists deliberately target civilians, while Israel takes great care to avoid actions even against terrorists if civilians are around. (For example, the IDF informed civilians in the Gaza strip about forthcoming air attacks.) That's why it is grossly misleading to talk of a "cycle of violence" between two brutal military powers, as for instance Joerg Bremer, Israel correspondent of the FAZ, and scores of other German Israel correspondents constantly do.

It's the rules of cause (Hamas terrorism) and effect (Israeli response) that govern this conflict. Probably too simple a fact for the sophisticated minds of German journalists...

Resources

Appeasing Oppressors: A Proud German Tradition Continues

(By Ray D.)

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called the Holocaust "a myth." He's called for Israel to be "wiped off the map." He's the head of one of the most repressive governments on earth. And, as far as most German authorities are concerned, he's a welcome guest at this summer's 2006 FIFA World Cup.

German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble (CDU) recently stated that Ahmadinejad is welcome at the World Cup because Germany wants to be "a good host." Schaeuble, who is considered conservative by German standards, said that he would "talk to him about his statements" in the event of a visit and added that "it will not be entirely simple."

Adolfinedschad

"Thank you very much for the kind words, Herr Schaeuble! I am already happy about coming to the land of my great idol..." (cartoon via Politically Incorrect)

Once again, German leaders are paying lip service to ideals that they have no intention of honoring. One day they pose as moral paragons of virtue, the next they are in bed doing deals with the world's most repressive regimes. It doesn't matter if you're the leader of a brutal theocracy who has denied the Holocaust and called for the destruction of Israel. Germany's special historic responsibility to the millions of murdered Jews and the state of Israel is apparently less important than being "good hosts" and rolling over to placate tyrants. What really matters is that the World Cup goes smoothly and serves German interests.

In a story on the potential Ahmadinejad visit, the FAZ newspaper detailed all of the problems with Iran and its President but pointed out: "On the other hand, German-Iranian trade is being promoted." Just another reason not to rock the boat! When in doubt, appease and call for more "dialog." If this is any indication of Germany's sincerity in negotiations with Iran on its nuclear program, the American "friends" ought to be quite concerned.

The only person who seems to have any sense in this is Edmund Stoiber, Governor of Bavaria (CSU). Stoiber warned that Iran's President would be less than welcome for his "tirades against the Jewish state and contesting the Holocaust." But even he wasn't willing to challenge the national government's right to allow Ahmadinejad into the country.

The ultimate question is how other World Cup attendees will react to the German government's weak-kneed stance on a potential Ahmadinejad visit. If a major player decides to pull out rather than participate in an event attended by Iran's notorious head of state, the German appeasement gamble could backfire quite badly indeed.

Endnote: You can contact Wolfgang Schaeuble at: wolfgang.schaeuble@bundestag.de. Read more on this in German here.

On another note, German entrepreneurs of a special sort are busily preparing for this summer: Berlin readies giant brothel for World Cup. According to MSNBC, "Experts estimate as many as 40,000 prostitutes may travel to Germany to offer their services to fans during the tournament." Here is a past Medienkritik post on the topic.

The Newspaper of Lies

Your daily dose of anti-Americanism in the famed cultural section of Germany's conservative newspaper FAZ:

Sam Mendes
We Are Still in the Desert
05. Januar 2006 / "Jarhead" film director Sam Mendes about a movie without spectacular actions, the desert as a methaphor for war, and working in the land of lies (emphasis added)

It's the little things in life that count so much...

The FAZ Cultural Section’s Anti-Bush Rage

On various occasions we’ve reported on the aggressive articles against the American government in the conservative FAZ’s Cultural section. The December 9 edition contains some nice examples of the FAZ Cultural section’s openly polemical style.

The occasion is the conferring of the Nobel Prize on Harold Pinter and the speech he gave on this occasion. Hubert Spiegel (sic!) writes:

"Probably nobody, not even its closest allies, views recent American politics without great concern. Everyone knows that American’s leadership unscrupulously lied to its own citizens and to the whole world about Saddam’s alleged weapons of mass destruction."

Everyone knows? A better formulation would be: "Everyone who works for the cultural section of the FAZ knows..." I mean, these folks are so smart - they know deep down in their heart that Bushitler Bush lied, though he never admitted to it, and no proof for a lie was ever provided.

In the same edition Elke Heidenreich, a left-wing book critic with limited intellectual appeal, gets the opportunity to criticize Bush at a level that has become the trademark of the FAZ cultural section. She calls the U.S. government a "gang" that is fittingly "charged with murder."

Dear Mr. Pinter, To be honest, I wasn’t really happy about your getting the Nobel Prize; there were more eligible people on the list, don’t you think? ...

I’m glad now even so. Because what you hammered home to the academy, to the USA and to all of us in your speech has something in it that rivals an earthquake. Just as Mrs. Rice hinted that no mistakes are allowed when it comes to torture, you charge the whole gang with murder. That fits.

You have to deal with it amid this fraudulent Christmas schmaltz, but it’s high time. I live in a country that hasn’t been dragged into this war. Yours unfortunately has, so I understand that you must be doubly angry. Let’s see what happens now. Let’s see whether a Nobel Laureate’s word still packs any punch. And best wishes with the prize from the bottom of my heart. Your Elke Heidenreich (article not available online)

In a commentary on the front page of the same day’s FAZ, Johannes Leithäuser challenges the new German government to dedicate itself to the “procurement of a better appreciation of the United States among the German public as well as of Europe and Germany in America.” As far as the "appreciation” of Germany in America is concerned, further efforts are certainly unnecessary: According to a poll conducted by the German Embassy in the USA, only 30% of Americans consider German-American relations to be good or very good.

Against the backdrop of coverage in the German Media, this statistic seems excessively high to me…

(emphasis added)

(Translation by Richard Bartholomew)

UPDATE: For our German-language audience, here is an excellent piece over at Politically Incorrect on why the tone of the entire transatlantic debate must change.

Welcome to the Epicenter of Anti-American Madness

If you are looking for the ultimate in anti-American stupidity, for unbridled, undisguised anti-American mudslinging in the German media - where do you go?

SPIEGEL ONLINE? Well, not a bad choice, considering some of their towering dwarves of anti-Americanism, such as Marc Pitzke. But SPIEGEL ONLINE has its good and (mostly) bad days, you know. Awful on average? Definitely! Often downright abominable in their biased presentation of American politics? You bet! But the worst? Well, I'd place them in the top 3 among German media, but they don't have the stature for rank #1. (Also, there is the occasional brilliant article from Henryk M. Broder.)

Stern? Another safe bet for the top 3 of Germany's worst anti-American media outlets. But again, no contender for the #1 spot. Too bland, too much of a copy of former champions.

Nope - if you’re looking for the real thing, the ultimate, not-to-be-disputed champion of German anti-American trash journalism, you don't need to search among run-of-the-mill left-wing media.

You have to look no further than your respected conservative elite newspaper.

Palpatine

The image of Ronald Reagan, as
invoked by the FAZ cultural section

Introducing German media's "Epicenter of Anti-American Madness": the cultural section of "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" (FAZ) - the same folks who had the audacity to publicize the analogy of Abu Ghraib and Auschwitz. In "Untergang des Abendsterns" ("Downfall of the West Star") Dietmar Dath hits another low point of anti-Americanism in the FAZ cultural section.

Dath presents an elaborate and terribly boring critique of the latest Star Wars episode, "Revenge of the Sith". I do not suggest actually reading Dath's confused piece (you would at any rate need to be fully fluent in German left-wing psycho-political babble) but it's worth taking a closer look at Dath's attempt to link the Star Wars film plot to, of all people, Ronald Reagan and his SDI initiative.

Enjoy Dath's enlightening analysis:

What is "Star Wars" about then? ... No film enthusiast, professor of pop culture or science fiction expert has come even close to understanding the true purpose of the whole thing; instead it took a former movie star and president of the United States of America: Ronald Reagan.

In the early 1980s, he strongly promoted the so-called Strategic Defense Initiative ("SDI"), (...)

For purposes of media propaganda, the new program was dubbed "Star Wars" and Reagan explained what that meant in a speech on March 23, 1983: "Let us turn to the very strengths in technology that spawned our great industrial base and that have given us the quality of life we enjoy today."

Finally, someone telling it like it is. Forget the idle talk of liberality, plurality, and so on that supposedly got us where we are today – it was technology, nothing more. This is exactly what "Star Wars" is about: the dream of achieving better and better horns of technological plenty, without anyone having to worry about the corresponding relationships between people. Just leave them as they are and call them the "Old Republic". Progress is a blessing, not the consequence of hard work; prosperity is magic, not the result of politics. The entire free West bought into this dream; it was the most important weapon of motivation against the evil empire and its inferior technology, its lack of tropical fruit and churches.

Lucas should be praised for devising the unforgettable characters, sweeping imagery, silly dialogue and impossible roar of engines in the vacuum of space that elevated this insanity to the level of art. After all, without such aesthetic visual aids, how could later generations (should there be any in the first place) understand and forgive us for what we have done?

Can you believe this? Ronald Reagan's (eventually successful) containment policy against a highly dangerous and - indeed - evil empire described as technological madness? Reagan despising the virtues of a free society, to advance nightmarish technological ventures? The anti-communist policies of the US in the pre-Gorbachev era deemed insanity?

Compare Dath's mindless and highly inflammatory "analysis" with what Ronald Reagan actually said in crystal clear terms in his speech of March 23, 1983.

Reagan's goals were to preserve peace and freedom and reduce the risk of a nuclear war - for the US and its allies. The SDI plans were intended as a deterrent against the expansionist and imperialist policies of the former Soviet Union. Knowing what we know today about the motivations of the Soviet leadership of the time, it was quite appropriate to build a technological shield against the growing communist missile threat.

Without the resolute policies of the US and its allies during the Reagan period, West Germany might well have ended up as another communist colony in Europe. Hard to say what then would have happened to the left-wing journalists of the FAZ's cultural section... At the very least they wouldn't have been able to watch Star Wars episodes.
Which, in turn, would have stopped them from producing film reviews like the one from Dath (whose name, BTW, reminds me of a certain character in "Star Wars").

Damn, now there’s one reason why a communist Germany might not have been such a bad concept after all...

(Translation by Lain Coubert) 

Continue reading "Welcome to the Epicenter of Anti-American Madness" »

A German's Best Friend: No, It's Not the US

Guess who's on top of Germany's preferred politicians ranking? You don't have to search long and hard...

Bestfriends

Two Politicians Dear to German Hearts...

In a poll by "Institut für Demoskopie Allensbach" in April/May 2005 64 % of Germans have a good opinion of France's president Jacques Chirac. (I guess that trumps Chirac's stats in France...) On second rank another true world class politician emerges, the incomparable Kofi "I can do business with Saddam" Annan (58 % of Germans have a good opinion of him). Rank 3 on Germany's favorite politicians list is the very embodiment of democracy, Vladimir Putin (34 %).

Further down the list, at rank 9, US president George W. Bush shows up, with a whopping 16 %. He even beat Hosni Mubarak by a percentage point! (Too bad Erich Honecker, former East German communist leader, died in 1994. He would have easily squashed Bush in this survey...)

But George W. Bush enjoys a comfortable lead in another category: the ranking of politicians the Germans don't like. 70 % of Germans don't have a good opinion of the American president. He's clearly ahead of Italy's Silvio Belusconi (58 %), and even Ariel Scharon - who made poor Arafat's life so miserable, to the chagrin of the German media - aroused negative feelings of only 38 % of Germans. And of course no chance for Bush to beat Vladimir Putin's 33 %. Naturally, Jacques and Kofi are doing exceptionally well in this category as well: only 10 % have negative feelings towards Jacques Chiraq, and 6 % towards Kofi Annan (I guess the latter audiences consist mainly of the readership of "Davids Medienkritik").

No surprise France has surpassed the US as Germany's best friend. 41 % of Germans considers France "Germany's best friend". Compare this to the meager 15 % who call the US "Germany's best friend". And boy, have things changed since 1995, when Helmut Kohl was German chancellor! At that time only 18 % of Germans called France "Germany's best friend", while 48 % identified the US as "Germany's best friend". By the way... 6 % of Germans think Russia is "Germany's best friend". OK, that's not a lot, but compare this to 1995, when zero percent held that opinion of Russia. Wait another five years, and Russia might pass the US...

These results can make the German media and chancellor Gerhard Schroeder proud. Due to their relentless Bush bashing and anti-American rhetoric, Germany probably has become the most anti-American European country, in my opinion even beating France.

(The results quoted above are from an article by Elisabeth Noelle in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, May 18, 2005 - paid content).

This Day in History: April 15

On April 15, 1945, the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp was liberated by the British,

who were appalled to find most of the 60,000 inmates in critical condition and who were totally unprepared to deal with the situation. During the next five days, 14,000 died, and in the following weeks, another 14,000 succumbed. Bergen-Belsen became the site of a displaced persons' camp, which remained in existence until 1951. Forty-eight former members of the camp staff were tried by the British. Eleven were sentenced to death, including Josef Kramer. They were executed on December 12, 1945. (Source)

Bergenbelsen1
Bergen-Belsen inmates

Bergenbelsen2
Bergen-Belsen SS guards

"Living" conditions in Bergen-Belsen weren't exactly in accordance with the Geneva Convention (which by the way wasn't put into force until 1950):

Beginning in March 1944, Bergen-Belsen gradually became a "regular" concentration camp, the Germans transferring to it, from other camps, prisoners who were classified as "unfit to work." The first group of 1,000 that arrived from Dora were housed in terrible conditions in a new part of the camp; nearly all died quickly and at liberation, only 57 were alive. More transports arrived and most of the prisoners were housed in the former "prisoners' camp." German convicts were also transferred from Dora, to serve as "block elders" and Kapos. They treated the other inmates very brutally.

In August 1944, a women's camp was added. From Buchenwald, 4,000 women prisoners were transferred to the camp and then dispatched to Flossenbuerg. Most of them returned to Bergen-Belsen, sick or exhausted. Women from Plaszow and Auschwitz also were sent to Bergen-Belsen in October 1944, among them Anne Frank and her sister Margot.

At the end of 1944 and early in 1945, a complete deterioration of living conditions set in when thousands of survivors of death marches began to reach the camp. The administration did not even try to house them and a raging typhus epidemic broke out. From January to mid-April 1945, 35,000 prisoners perished.

Here are some gripping testimonies from inmates:

Judy Rosenzwieg:
"Suddenly we were marched into Bergen Belsen, that's where we were taken. In Bergen Belsen it was absolutely the worst of them all. It was not blocks; not organized. It was in the streets. We were just thrown in there between the electric wires, and wherever you could go-you go, and wherever you want to sleep-you sleep. No food. Only once or twice a week they were handing out some of that horrible grass soup."

Shmuel Judkiewitz:
"The horror in that camp is indescribable. Worse than all the other camps."

The Liberation of Bergen Belsen
Judy Rosenzweig:
"All of a sudden out of the blue sky we saw tanks rolling into the camp…We had no idea what kind of tanks they were. Is it the Americans? Is it the Germans? Is it…We just didn't know. We just suddenly panicked…
And loudspeakers started speaking loudly in German and in English:
'You are liberated.'
'We are the English Army - You are liberated.'
'Stay away from danger and stay inside and we'll help you.'
'Stay alive. Try to hang in there. We're here to help you.'
And we knew we were liberated. Needless to say, our feelings were very mixed. So we were liberated. So thank God we are alive. But are we really thankful? Who are we? Where are we going to go? What are we? Nothing. That's okay, we're alive."

Josef Rosensaft:
"Bergen Belsen, or Belsen, is a double symbol in the history of the years after the second World War; it is not just the name of a town in Northern Germany.
The name 'Belsen' invokes tremor in Jews' hearts. Belsen is engraved in the Jewish consciousness as one of the most cursed places in Germany, where the bones of tens of thousands of Jewish victims are buried. The Belsen camp is, in Jews' memories and in the memories of all people in the world, a camp of starvation, and unbelievable filth which caused diseases and plagues. Belsen has become a symbol of man's inhumanity to man.
On the other hand, Belsen is also the camp that was liberated on April 15, 1945, and then became a symbol for renewal and rebirth, and the 'return to life' of the survivors."

It should be noted that the German media these days report extensively on the liberation of Bergen-Belsen. Still, some go the extra mile: the conservative daily FAZ presents on April 15 a large painted picture of inmates being brutally beaten by guards.

In Abu Ghraib.

(Hat tip Michele)

Items of Interest from the German Press

Our friend David L. has compiled an overview of some America-related reports in the German media:

FAZ, Sueddeutsche and Tagesspiegel reported that in the controversy over consular assistance for foreigners who were arrested in the United States, Washington no longer wants to comply with future rulings of the International Court of Justice. The papers cited State Department spokeswoman Darla Jordan as having said these measures should "protect the United States from future rulings of the International Court of Justice." Financial Times Deutschland wrote that the U.S. move is another sign of the United States accepting rules of international law only as long as they do not impede the U.S. scope of action.

Sueddeutsche carried an editorial saying this decision "is extremely stupid and wrong." It also said that Secretary Rice will again nurture all the prejudices that exist abroad about the arbitrariness of U.S. justice authorities. Stefan Kornelius also wrote that "this decision provokes a response: The majority of Americans will certainly not like it if they can no longer rely on the protection of U.S. consulates during their trips abroad."

In a report on the release Italian journalist Guiliana Sgrena, ARD-TV's current affairs magazine Panorama reported that the brutalization by U.S. soldiers in Iraq is increasing and presented as evidence a video in which U.S. soldiers, cheered on by other U.S. soldiers, pulled a dead Iraqi out of a car and kicked the corpse. Panorama commented on the film, saying these are shocking pictures, showing that everyday life in Iraq is "turning young soldiers into Sadists." (See ARD online)

FAZ Joins the Coalition of the Misinformed

(By Ray D.)

It is hard to tell whether the following excerpt from an article by FAZ’s Jochen Buchsteiner is simply a case of journalistic incompetence or an intentional attempt to spread disinformation to further harm transatlantic relations. Buchsteiner writes:

"The quake could also push Europe and America further apart. The coalition of the willing rescuers proclaimed by Bush includes the United States, India, Japan and Australia. That neither Europe or its favorite – the United Nations – come up in his aid plan will surely and rightfully be understood as an affront in the old world. Instead of finding back to the way of multilateralism, that maybe hasn’t always proven itself in cases of war, but has almost always proven itself in cases of catastrophe, the American President is cementing the thread of nation state foreign policy." 

Where does he get this garbage? This is the same bunk that SPON was reporting days ago. Has Mr. Buchsteiner been living in a cave the past two weeks? Or is he simply exploiting the tried-and-tested method of bashing America to sell more newspapers?

Here is a segment from a CNN report on recent statements made by Colin Powell and Jan Egeland of the UN:

“CNN: He also insisted that the U.S. creation of a "core group" -- the United States, India, Japan and Australia -- to respond to the crisis was not an effort to undermine the United Nations.

"What we have tried to do is use the core group ... as a way of getting started, recognizing that it would ultimately be subsumed into the efforts of the United Nations," he said.

Egeland praised the core group and said it was "helping" the United Nations.

Powell has said the United States may add to its $350 million pledge, and he told CNN the figure does not cover the total U.S. contribution.”

Does that sound like the US is excluding the United Nations from its tsunami aid plan? Does it sound like the UN feels excluded or is unhappy with the US?

The truly scary part of this all is that Germans rely on people like Mr. Buchsteiner to properly inform them as to what is going on in the world. Is it any wonder then that so many in Germany have such a negative view of the USA and Bush?

(Note: emphasis ours on all quotes)

Tsunami: FAZ Senses Unwelcome American Help

Germany's conservative daily FAZ cannot refrain from adding an anti-US slant to an overview story on international help for countries hit by the tsunami:

Translation: The countries hit by the flood need help. But not each kind of help is welcome: support coming as American fleet ships or Israeli soldiers produces misgivings. Caption of picture: "Swords to Phlougshares: The USS Abraham Lincoln"

The article this summary refers to contains more subtle critique of help by American military:

Wahington sends fleet ship unit

It is not clear what the reasons are for a help offer from the US. ...the American airplane carrier "USS Abraham Lincoln" ... has left Hongkong.

Unwelcome Help

...in Thailand and South Asia in the next days American emissaries are expected to evaluate the situation. Another American fleet ship unit hast started from Guam to the Gulf of Bengal. It is as yet unclear how welcome this help is in Sri Lanka and India.

The article then goes on to quote unnamed Indian sources rejecting international assistance.

Well, there seem to be at least some people in "South Asia" who appreciate help from American military units:

Tsunami Survivors Mob U.S. Aid Copters

By DENIS D. GRAY, Associated Press Writer 

ABOARD THE USS ABRAHAM LINCOLN - Desperate, homeless villagers on the tsunami-ravaged island of Sumatra mobbed American

Continue reading "Tsunami: FAZ Senses Unwelcome American Help" »

FAZ: Terrorists are Human / FAZ: Terroristen sind menschlich

(Deutsche Version am Ende des Beitrags)

(Translation by Paul Smith.)

The FAZ (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung) was once the flagship of high quality journalism in Germany.

No longer.

It seems as if the FAZ has an editorial policy that obliges it to display the greatest possible sympathy for terrorist butchery. Immediately after 9/11, for example, the FAZ offered Susan Sontag a platform for her execrable diatribe against the USA and its government. Only in this light is it possible to understand the article by Kerstin Holm in the Feuilleton of the FAZ on 6 September 2004:

Lies about Beslan

(...) the cancer of terror, that spread in Chechnya during the 'surgical' interventions of Russian troops...

The daily repeated lie that the hostage takers had captured only 300 people - instead of more than a thousand - seems to have intensified the situation at the occupied schoolhouse in Beslan. Freed hostages reported that their tormentors had told them that the false numbers were an expression of the
Russian government's indifference to their plight. Witness statements also indicate that the Russian authorities had maintained virtually no contact with the kidnappers, inducing them to cast off all remnants of human decency after two days.

So, Ms. Holm believes she "knows" that the Russian government has "lied". Not that she can adduce any evidence to support her claim. It's enough for her that the authorities initially underestimated the number of hostages and subsquently corrected their estimate. Even if this was only a case of an honest misunderstanding on the part of distressed civil servants who initially simply did not have any better information at their disposal, for Ms. Holm the incorrect information mutates to a "lie". But why would the Russian authorities have deliberately promulgated a low estimate of the hostage numbers, well knowing that the truth would come to light after the end of the incident? Thank goodness that clever FAZ journalists can expose such a conspiracy without giving a thought to the coherency of the government's supposed motives...

Unintentionally humorous is the statement that the terrorists - whom Ms. Holm always deferentially denominates "tormentors" and "kidnappers" - were so disappointed by the low estimate of the hostage numbers that it led to an "intensification" of the situation. If only the Russian authorities had spoken of 3000 hostages from the very beginning! Surely the flattered Tormentor-Team would then have immediately released their hostages.

Or maybe not. For according to Ms. Holm the kidnappers discarded "all remnants of human decency" after two days because of a lack of contact to the Russian government. Clearly, some psychotherapeutical support for human decency is what was missing, because the Russians just weren't thoughtful enough. But was it not the case that the "tormentors" (please excuse this demeaning epithet for the "kidnappers") had already murdered untold numbers of innocents in their initial assault on the school - all the while preserving, of course, their "remnants of human decency"? The FAZ can probably fill in some details here...

In the climax of her remarks Ms. Holm discovers the human side of the murderers:

The security forces claim that the terrorists, among them several Arabs, were masked. But the freed hostages speak of only one masked man and do not mention Arab terrorists at all. Instead, they mention 'their own' people - aside from Chechnyans also Russians and an Ossete. The survivors describe the modern battlefield: humans, who have become 'intelligent weapons', among the defenseless herd of their own kind.
beslan1

FAZ: "humans ... among their own kind"

The last sentence is difficult to bear. It can only mean that Ms. Holm believes the terrorist murders to be the "humans, who have become 'intelligent' weapons" and are "among the defenseless herd of their own kind."

The child murderers of Beslan: "humans" among "their own kind"?

Next in the Feuilleton of the FAZ: "Humans among their own kind - As camp guard in Auschwitz."

Continue reading "FAZ: Terrorists are Human / FAZ: Terroristen sind menschlich " »

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