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Title: Newsweek Says It Is Retracting Koran Report
Source: NY Times
URL Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/17/p ... 319f66d36e67e&hp=&ex=111638880
Published: May 17, 2005
Author: KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
Post Date: 2005-05-17 06:19:11 by crack monkey
Keywords: Retracting, Newsweek, Report
Views: 347
Comments: 23

Newsweek Says It Is Retracting Koran Report By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE and NEIL A. LEWIS After a drumbeat of criticism from the Bush administration and others, Newsweek magazine yesterday went beyond an apology it issued Sunday and retracted an article published May 1 that stated that American interrogators at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, had tried to rattle Muslim detainees by flushing a Koran down a toilet.

The original article was blamed for inciting widespread protests and riots in the Muslim world, where desecration of the Koran is viewed as an incendiary act, and where at least 17 people were killed in the ensuing violence.

"Based on what we know now, we are retracting our original story that an internal military investigation had uncovered Koran abuse at Guantánamo Bay," the statement from Newsweek said.

The carefully worded retraction came after the White House said the Newsweek article had damaged the image of the United States abroad. It reflected the severity of consequences that even one sentence in a brief news article can have at a time of intense anti-American sentiment overseas and political polarization, as well as extreme distrust of the mainstream media at home.

Mark Whitaker, editor of Newsweek, said in an interview that the magazine was retracting the part of the article saying sources told Newsweek that a coming military report would say interrogators had flushed a holy book down the toilet to unnerve detainees. As it turned out, Newsweek now says, there was one source. And Mr. Whitaker said that because that source had "backed away" from his original account, the magazine could "no longer stand by" it.

"I did not want to be in the position of splitting hairs," Mr. Whitaker said, "to look like we were being evasive or not fully forthcoming."

The magazine's retraction was the latest step in a complicated and fast-moving drama that involved a disparate cast of players, including one of the nation's top investigative news reporters and a cricket star in Pakistan. In the span of a few days, it has added a new dimension to the journalistic debate about anonymous sources as well as new questions about how the United States treats captives from the Muslim world.

In the interview, Mr. Whitaker contrasted his action with that of CBS News when it refused to back down immediately last year from a report that raised questions about President Bush's National Guard service.

"Clearly it became a problem for CBS because people thought they weren't acknowledging that they screwed up," Mr. Whitaker said.

He continued: "Unlike CBS, we felt we were being extremely forthcoming by publishing all the details and publishing the Pentagon's denials and saying we committed an error. But then it seemed that people felt like we weren't apologizing. In order for people to understand we had made an error, we had to say 'retraction' because that's the word they were looking for."

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#1. To: All (#0)

As it turned out, Newsweek now says, there was one source. And Mr. Whitaker said that because that source had "backed away" from his original account, the magazine could "no longer stand by" it.

It sounds to me like the Bush troops first twisted the arm of the single source. No doubt a military person who didn't have a lot of options. Once the source went wobbly, Bush and his pals then went after Newsweek.

I think the real goal here is to discredit anyone who might reveal inconvenient facts about Bush and his administration.

crack monkey  posted on  2005-05-17   6:22:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 1.

#2. To: crack monkey (#1)

Without a doubt, it's a criminal offense to report the truth...It doesn't matter, the targeted audience (other than Americows) doesn't believe any of the retracted parts of the piece are false...

Eoghan  posted on  2005-05-17 06:57:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: crack monkey (#1)

That is the goal. First- the notion that these riots in Afghanistan were touched off by a "Newsweek" one liner about the Koran being flushed down a toilet was and is preposterous. This is a country in which a virtual Gulag is being run and in which American troops have murdered detainees. Yes- murdered. So the idea that the are rioting over something so feeble as a rumor about the Koran being disgraced half a world away is simply a joke. Karazai spilled the beans essentially when he said "US troops tactics" were "heavy handed."

The "Koran was desecreated" excuse is for American moron consumption and as a side benefit another government attack on our already whipped and tamed media. The anti media campaign is already whipped up. Some lackie GOP congressman was on Imus this morning with his talking points about how the media is "out of control" and how this was "Dan Rather" all over again. Imus- being the sycophantic Beltway lackie he is- agreed of course.

Scary, folks, simply scary.

What these attacks on the media from public servants do, in the name of "The troops" and "national security" is actually get their "grass roots" foot soldiers to do their work for them, like the asshats over at TOS- to attack the media and intimidate it, silence it. Make them leary of reporting anything that would call into question administration policy. And in our corporate media culture that wishes to please DC for it's own purposes and bottom line- this has the effect of censorship. The US government doesn't have some "Censor" sitting in the press rooms all across the country. But it does communicate through the now very small network of executives who control our media what is expected of them and what is allowed or permissable or in "good taste" and then from the "ground up" it fans it's moron ideolouge foot soldiers to attack and condemn the media for the slilghtest missteps. It is highly sophisticated and far more effective than having outright censorship. Though- I do think even formal censorship is becoming a reality in some ways.

Burkeman1  posted on  2005-05-17 10:27:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: crack monkey (#1)

This retraction was made in an attempt to calm the Immans threatening Holy Jihad over this.

From Jihad Watch:

Qur'an Gitmo shocker: Muslims don't believe Newsweek's retraction

No surprise here: as I said yesterday, "Newsweek's belated retraction is unlikely to blunt the force of this as yet another new pretext for jihad." "Muslims doubt Quran climbdown," from CNN:

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Muslims in Afghanistan and Pakistan were skeptical after a U.S. magazine backed away from a report that U.S. interrogators desecrated copies of the Quran while questioning prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

The account in Newsweek magazine's May 9 issue has been blamed for sparking deadly riots in Afghanistan and other parts of the Muslim world.

On Sunday, Newsweek backed away from the report and offered its sympathies "to victims of the violence and to the U.S. soldiers caught in its midst."

But Muslims said they suspected that pressure from Washington was behind the magazine's climbdown, Reuters reported Monday.

"We will not be deceived by this," Islamic cleric Mullah Sadullah Abu Aman told Reuters in the northern Afghan province of Badakhshan.

"This is a decision by America to save itself. It comes because of American pressure. Even an ordinary illiterate peasant understands this and won't accept it."

On Sunday, a group of clerics led by Aman vowed to call for a jihad, or holy war, against the United States in three days unless it handed over the interrogators reported to have desecrated the Quran...

CNN terrorism analyst Peter Bergen said "desecrating the Quran is a death-penalty offense" in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan.

The Pentagon said last week it was unable to corroborate any case in which interrogators at the U.S. Naval Station in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, defiled the Muslim holy book, as Newsweek reported...

"It's not acceptable now that the magazine says it's made a mistake," Reuters quoted 42-year-old writer and journalist Hafizullah Torab as saying. "No one will accept it."...

"Newsweek is backtracking, but it's not just their report," said Ghaffar Aziz, a top official of the Jamaat-e-Islami party. "All innocent people released from U.S. custody have said on the record that there was desecration of the Koran."...

CounterPunch:
Pinning the Blame on Newsweek By ROBERT JENSEN and PAT YOUNGBLOOD

The Financial Times
Newsweek retracts ‘Koran abuse' report

robin  posted on  2005-05-17 11:45:20 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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