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Wall Street Journal
Censors Reporter
Who Dares Tell the Truth
About Iraq
This article speaks for itself: A Wall
Street Journal reporter in Iraq sent a personal
e-mail to several friends. The e-mail was
not in line with the happy face the Bush junta
wants to put on the war in Iraq. Someone
released the e-mail publicly; the WSJ jerked the
reporter out of Iraq. Can't stand the truth.
http://www.latimes.com/news/custom/showcase/cl-et-rutten2oct02.column
Tim
Rutten:
Regarding Media
Private e-mail is
public
At the core of the relentless
partisan assault on the American news media's
tradition that good journalism can and should be
unbiased, is a campaign to obliterate the
distinction between the public and the private.
The notion here is that because journalists, like
other human beings, have thoughts and opinions
about the world around them, those sentiments must
ultimately contaminate their journalism. According
to this argument, no amount of training, no
adherence to principle, no form of self-discipline
is sufficient to guarantee unbiased, dispassionate
reporting.
Facts may be facts, in other words, but they still
have been selected by a biased mind. The only
remedy is to admit that everything we call
journalism is the continuation of opinion by other
means. What's required is that our media stop the
hypocrisy of pretending to inform and wade into
the argument with all biases blazing.
That's the backdrop for this week's ambiguous case
of Farnaz Fassihi, the Wall Street Journal's
Middle East correspondent, currently reporting
from Baghdad. The Journal's news columns are
justifiably admired for their dispassion and
clarity. Fassihi's reportage is no exception. Over
the course of her assignment in Iraq, the
31-year-old Iranian-born, American-educated
correspondent has been in the habit of sending
monthly e-mails to some of her friends — keeping
in touch, letting them know how she's doing.
Private correspondence, in other words.
This week, one of her lengthy note's recipients
took it upon himself or herself to circulate
Fassihi's e-mail to others. Within days, it had
spread across the Web, a painfully bleak and
clearly heartfelt appraisal of the Iraqi morass:
"Being a foreign correspondent in Baghdad these
days is like being under virtual house arrest,"
she wrote. "Forget about the reasons that lured me
to this job: a chance to see the world, explore
the exotic, meet new people in far away lands,
discover their ways and tell stories that could
make a difference.
"Little by little, day-by-day, being based in Iraq
has defied all those reasons. I am housebound. I
leave when I have a very good reason to and a
scheduled interview. I avoid going to people's
homes and never walk in the streets. I can't go
grocery shopping any more, can't eat in
restaurants, can't strike a conversation with
strangers, can't look for stories, can't drive in
anything but a full armored car, can't go to
scenes of breaking news stories, can't be stuck in
traffic, can't speak English outside, can't take a
road trip, can't say I'm an American, can't linger
at checkpoints, can't be curious about what people
are saying, doing, feeling. And can't and can't …
"
What 'turning point'?
Fassihi went on to write, "It's hard to
pinpoint when the 'turning point' exactly began….
Was it when the insurgency began spreading from
isolated pockets in the Sunni Triangle to include
most of Iraq? Despite Present Bush's rosy
assessments, Iraq remains a disaster. If under
Saddam it was a 'potential' threat, under the
Americans it has been transformed to 'imminent and
active threat,' a foreign policy failure bound to
haunt the United States for decades to come."
Iraqi officials have stopped releasing civilian
casualty figures, she wrote, because the "numbers
are so shocking." The insurgency, Fassihi wrote,
"is growing stronger, organized and more
sophisticated every day. The various elements
within it — Baathists, criminals, nationalists and
Al Qaeda — are cooperating and coordinating…. One
could argue that Iraq is already lost beyond
salvation. For those of us on the ground it's hard
to imagine what if anything could salvage it from
its violent downward spiral.
"The genie of terrorism, chaos and mayhem has been
unleashed onto this country as a result of
American mistakes and it can't be put back into a
bottle."
There is more, equally pained, equally persuasive.
Splashing this sort of stuff around the Internet
is bound to cause talk, and a good bit of it
occurred in the Journal's newsroom. Wednesday, two
of the paper's staff members — both of whom asked
not to be identified — said they had been told
that Fassihi would not be allowed to write about
Iraq for the paper until after the election,
presumably because unauthorized publication of her
private correspondence somehow called into
question the fairness of her journalism.
In point of fact, no one has questioned the
content of Fassihi's reporting nor alleged that it
has been in any way biased.
Was reporter sanctioned?
So was Fassihi told not to write about Iraq by
WSJ editors until after Nov. 2? It seemed an easy
matter to resolve, though — as it turns out — very
little in this uneasy moment yields to easy
resolution.
Paul Steiger, the Journal's managing editor, was
unavailable by phone Thursday, but his spokesman,
Robert Christie, accepted a question on his behalf
and agreed to put it to the editor: Had Fassihi's
e-mail been the subject of discussion among her
editors and had they decided that its
dissemination should prevent her from writing
about Iraq until after Nov. 2?
Christie forwarded Steiger's response by e-mail:
"Ms. Fassihi is coming out of Iraq shortly on a
long planned vacation. That vacation was planned
to, and will, extend past the election."
A follow-up question seemed in order and was sent
to Steiger, through Christie, by e-mail: "If this
correspondent wishes to write about Iraq for the
Wall Street Journal, is she free to do so?"
Steiger's reply, via his spokesman, was this: "She
is going on a long-scheduled vacation outside Iraq
and has no plans to work during that time."
Fair-minded readers can make of that what they
will.
The Wall Street Journal is one of the world's
great newspapers, vigorously and intelligently
reported, rigorously edited and impeccable in its
division between news and opinion. Farnaz Fassihi
is an admirable correspondent who certainly has
earned — and perhaps, as her note suggests, needs
— a long vacation.
Still, it's impossible to come away from all this
without thinking that, like so many American
journalists and news organizations, the Journal
and its staff are feeling around for what used to
be familiar boundaries, wondering whether they're
still there and — if so — precisely where.
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