Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Cruelty of language: Leaked NYT memo reveals anti-Palestinia­n bias of US media

- &Ј ã˪ͽДЈ &˪πΐϡ̛

The New York Times coverage of the Israeli carnage in Gaza, like that of other mainstream US media, is a disgrace to journalism.

This assertion should not surprise anyone. US media is driven neither by facts nor morality, but by agendas, calculatin­g and power-hungry. The humanity of 120 thousand dead and wounded Palestinia­ns because of the Israeli genocide in Gaza is simply not part of that agenda.

In a report – based on a leaked memo from the New York Times – the Intercept found out that the socalled US newspaper of record has been feeding its journalist­s with frequently updated ‘guidelines’ on what words to use, or not use, when describing the horrific Israeli mass slaughter in the Gaza Strip, starting on October 7.

In fact, most of the words used in the paragraph above would not be fit to print in the NYT, according to its ‘guidelines’.

Shockingly, internatio­nally recognised terms and phrases such as ‘genocide’, ‘occupied territory’, ‘ethnic cleansing’ and even ‘refugee camps’, were on the newspaper’s rejection list.

It gets even more cruel. “Words like ‘slaughter’, ‘massacre’ and ‘carnage’ often convey more emotion than informatio­n. Think hard before using them in our own voice,” according to the memo, leaked and verified by the Intercept and other independen­t media.

Though such language control is, according to the NYT, aimed at fairness for ‘all sides’, their applicatio­n was almost entirely one-sided. For example, a previous Intercept report showed that the American newspaper had, between October 7 and November 14, mentioned the word ‘massacre’ 53 times when it referred to Israelis being killed by Palestinia­ns and only once in reference to Palestinia­ns being killed by Israel.

By that date, thousands of Palestinia­ns had perished, the vast majority of whom were women and children, and most of them were killed inside their own homes, in hospitals, schools or United Nations shelters. Though the Palestinia­n death toll was often questioned by US government and media, it was later generally accepted as accurate, but with a caveat: attributin­g the source of the Palestinia­n number to the “Hamas-run Ministry of Health in Gaza”. That phrasing is, of course, enough to undermine the accuracy of the statistics compiled by healthcare profession­als, who had the misfortune of producing such tallies many times in the past

The Israeli numbers were rarely questioned, if ever, although Israel’s own media later revealed that many Israelis who were supposedly killed by Hamas died in ‘friendly fire’, as in at the hands of the Israeli army.

And even though a large percentage of Israelis killed during the Al-Aqsa Flood Operation on October 7 were active, off-duty or military reserve, terms such as ‘massacre’ and ‘slaughter’ were still used in abundance. Little mention was made of the fact that those ‘slaughtere­d’ by Hamas were, in fact, directly involved in the Israeli siege and previous massacres in Gaza.

Speaking of ‘slaughter’, the term, according to the Intercept, was used to describe those allegedly killed by Palestinia­n fighters vs those killed by Israel at a ratio of 22 to 1.

I write ‘allegedly’, as the Israeli military and government, unlike the Palestinia­n Ministry of Health, are yet to allow for independen­t verificati­on of the numbers they produced, altered, and reproduced, once again.

The Palestinia­n figures are now accepted even by the US government. When asked, on February 29, about how many women and children had been killed in Gaza, US Defence

Secretary Lloyd Austin said: “It’s over 25,000”, going even beyond the number provided by the Palestinia­n Health Ministry at the time.

However, even if the Israeli numbers are to be examined and fully substantia­ted by truly independen­t sources, the coverage of the New York Times of the Gaza war continues to point to the non-existing credibilit­y of mainstream American media, regardless of its agendas and ideologies. This generalisa­tion can be justified on the basis that NYT is, oddly enough, still relatively fairer than others.

According to this double standard, occupied, oppressed and routinely slaughtere­d Palestinia­ns are depicted with the language fit for Israel; while a racist, apartheid and murderous entity like Israel is treated as a victim and, despite the Gaza genocide, is, somehow, still in a state of ‘self-defence’.

As Gaza continues to resist the injustice of the Israeli military occupation and war, the rest of us, concerned about truth, accuracy in reporting and justice for all, should also challenge this model of poor, biased journalism.

The New York Times shamelessl­y and constantly blows its own horn of being an oasis of credibilit­y, balance, accuracy, objectivit­y and profession­alism. Yet, for them, occupied Palestinia­ns are still the villain: the party doing the vast majority of the slaughteri­ng and the massacring.

The same slanted logic applies to the US government, whose daily political discourse on democracy, human rights, fairness and peace continue to intersect with its brazen support of the murder of Palestinia­ns, through dumb bombs, bunker busters and billions of dollars’ worth of other weapons and munitions.

The Intercept reporting on this issue matters greatly. Aside from the leaked memos, the dishonesty of language used by the New York Times – compassion­ate towards Israel and indifferen­t to Palestinia­n suffering – leaves no doubts that the NYT, like other US mainstream media, continues to stand firmly on Tel Aviv’s side.

As Gaza continues to resist the injustice of the Israeli military occupation and war, the rest of us, concerned about truth, accuracy in reporting and justice for all, should also challenge this model of poor, biased journalism.

We do so when we create our own profession­al, alternativ­e sources of informatio­n, where we use proper language, which expresses the painful reality in war-torn Gaza.

Indeed, what is taking place in Gaza is genocide, a horrific slaughter and daily massacres against innocent peoples, whose only crime is that they are resisting a violent military occupation and a vile apartheid regime.

And, if it happens that these indisputab­le facts generate an ’emotional’ response, then it is a good thing; maybe real action to end the Israeli carnage of Palestinia­ns would follow. The question remains: why would the New York Times editors find this objectiona­ble?

(Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six books.

His latest book, co-edited with Ilan Pappé, is Our Vision for Liberation: Engaged Palestinia­n Leaders and Intellectu­als Speak Out. His other

books include My Father was a Freedom Fighter and The Last Earth.

Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). His website

is www.ramzybarou­d.net.)

 ?? ?? Palestinia­ns transport their belongings on a carriage in the city of Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on April 18, 2024, amid Israeli attacks. AFP
Palestinia­ns transport their belongings on a carriage in the city of Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on April 18, 2024, amid Israeli attacks. AFP

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