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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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June 23, 2017
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A
Tale of Two Terror Attacks and The New York Times
by Noah Beck
Special to IPT News
June 23, 2017
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Last month's suicide
bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester wasn't the first
time an Islamist terrorist targeted young people out for a night of fun. In
2001, a Hamas-affiliated terrorist blew himself up outside the Dolphinarium, a Tel Aviv
nightclub, killing
21 Israelis, including 16 teenagers.
But news coverage of the two massacres was strikingly different, as the
Manchester attack generated exponentially more attention. The New York
Times, for example, offered a handful of small accounts about the Tel
Aviv attack. But the Manchester bombing generated dozens of wire service
and Times staff updates along with analysis stories and an editorial lamenting the horror of targeting
children.
There are reasons why attacks in Europe are covered more exhaustively
than those targeting Israelis. But as a result, Americans may not fully
appreciate the depth of Palestinian violence because the near-daily
examples of it are all but ignored.
The stark reporting contrast between the Manchester and Dolphinarium
attacks reveals a change in how terrorism has been covered during the
intervening 16 years. The Dolphinarium attack took place about three months
before the September 11th attacks that dramatically increased media
attention to terrorism.
A significant reporting gap continued after 9/11, however. Two 2002
shooting attacks within 12 days of each other prompted vastly different
coverage by the New York Times. The July 4 shooting attack at Los Angeles International
Airport, which claimed two lives, produced at least 13 articles. By contrast, nine people were murdered in
a July 16 shooting and bombing attack against an Israeli
bus going to the settlement of Immanuel. The Times devoted only one article to this slaughter.
The Times commits minimal attention to attacks on Israelis today.
Last Friday's fatal stabbing attack in Jerusalem received a scant 431-word article containing no images or
references to "terror," "terrorist," or
"terrorism."
Worse, the newspaper ran a 243-word Associated Press article about the attack with
a headline emphasizing the terrorists' deaths, rather than their victim:
"Palestinian Attackers Killed After Killing Israeli Officer."
By contrast, the Times provided much more sympathetic coverage to
an April terrorist attack in Paris that similarly claimed a police
officer's life. At 1,037 words, the article was almost three times as long, contained
six photos of the attack scene, and referred six times to
"terrorism" and thrice to "terrorist attack."
An attack's location plays a significant role in determining the extent
of news coverage. Commentator Joe Concha calls this the "there versus here"
phenomenon.
For example, the Times published eight articles about last November's car ramming and
stabbing attack at Ohio State University that killed no one, but injured 11
people. That included a profile of the suspected terrorist behind it.
Deadlier attacks overseas generally receive far less coverage.
However, that "there versus here" explanation falters in
comparison to coverage of vehicular attacks in Israel with others that
occurred overseas since Ohio State.
The March truck attack in Westminster that killed five people
generated 20 articles. December's Berlin Christmas market truck attack that killed 12 generated at least 50 articles.
By contrast, January's truck
attack in Jerusalem that killed four people generated just three articles and a mention in a daily
news digest.
One reason European attacks receive more attention is that they raise
new concerns about safety throughout the West, as the Islamic State pursues
a campaign to hit soft targets wherever it can.
Another explanation may be that so many terrorist attacks in Israel have
occurred over the last few decades that the Times has grown
desensitized to them, no longer considering them as newsworthy.
Egyptian Copts, who have also suffered from Islamist terror for decades,
may fall into the same unfortunate category. The attack last month in Minya, in which gunmen opened fire
on Christian pilgrims, massacring 29, generated only four Times articles.
When the news media under-report terrorist attacks in places where they
occur routinely, they do an injustice to victims in need of sympathy, while
helping terrorists to defer the day that international leaders unite against
them.
CAMERA, a nonprofit
media watchdog, has compiled an extensive record of chronic anti-Israel coverage and commentary by the Times, and has launched billboard campaigns
to expose the bias.
While some might point to the newspaper's April decision to hire
pro-Israel columnist Bret Stephens as a sign of growing balance on the
issue, subsequent coverage led veteran Times
critic Ira Stoll to argue that the move just gave the paper cover to intensify its anti-Israel slant. Stoll lists five Times
op-eds, each of which "taken alone, would be totally outrageous and
indefensible. The onslaught of all five of them, in six weeks, constitutes
an outbreak of anti-Israel and anti-Jewish hostility at the Times"
The Dolphinarium attack, one of Israel's deadliest suicide bombings,
marked its 16th anniversary on June 1. While it's too late for the Times
to give due coverage to the 16 teens and five adults who were slaughtered,
the paper conceded the parallels between their fate and that of the
Manchester victims, by running this op-ed by a survivor of the Dolphinarium massacre
expressing empathy for those affected by the Ariana Grande attack.
However, when the Times published its May 23 editorial on the Manchester attack, it failed to
mention the Dolphinarium attack, and thereby omitted the suicide bombing most
similar to the Manchester attack in its targeting of children. The
editorial duly notes how terrorists have shattered innocent lives, listing
attacks in three European cities, but somehow forgets that Islamists have
taken far more lives of Israelis "simply out enjoying themselves"
than of all Islamist terror victims in Europe combined.
At least 1,600 Israelis have been killed in terrorist attacks since the 1993 Oslo accords
that were intended to foster Israeli-Palestinian peace. How many more
Israeli casualties are needed before the New York Times starts to
cover them as they would European victims?
Noah Beck is the author of The
Last Israelis, an apocalyptic novel about Iranian nukes and other
geopolitical issues in the Middle East.
Related Topics: Media
| Noah Beck,
suicide
bombings, Ariana
Grande, Manchester
attack, New
York Times, Dolpinarium
attack, Palestinian
terror attacks, Westminster
attack, Christmas
market attack, vehicle
attacks, CAMERA,
Ira
Stoll, Media
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