NYT:At U.S. Request, Networks Agree to Edit Future bin Laden Tapes
October 11, 2001 THE COVERAGE http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/11/national/11TUBE.html?pagewanted=print At U.S. Request, Networks Agree to Edit Future bin Laden Tapes By BILL CARTER and FELICITY BARRINGER he five major television news organizations reached a joint agreement yesterday to follow the suggestion of the White House and abridge any future videotaped statements from Osama bin Laden or his followers to remove language the government considers inflammatory. The decision, the first time in memory that the networks had agreed to a joint arrangement to limit their prospective news coverage, was described by one network executive as a "patriotic" decision that grew out of a conference call between the nation's top news executives and the White House National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice, yesterday morning. The five news organizations, ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, along with its subsidiary, MSNBC, the Cable News Network and the Fox News Channel all had broadcast, unedited, a taped message from Mr. bin Laden on Sunday. On Tuesday, the all-news cable channels, CNN, Fox News and MSNBC, also carried the complete speech of a spokesmen for Al Qaeda. Ari Fleischer, the White House spokesman, in his news briefing yesterday, indicated that Ms. Rice was primarily concerned that terrorists could be using the broadcasts to send coded messages to other terrorists, but the network executives said in interviews that this was only a secondary consideration. They said Ms. Rice mainly argued that the tapes enabled Mr. bin Laden to vent propaganda intended to incite hatred and potentially kill more Americans. The executives said that they will broadcast only short portions of any tape issued by Al Qaeda and would eliminate any passages containing flowery rhetoric urging violence against Americans. They agreed to accompany the tapes with reports providing what they called appropriate context. They also agreed to avoid repeatedly showing excerpts from the tapes, which they had previously done in what one executive described as "video wallpaper." One network, ABC, said it would limit the use of moving images from tapes released by Mr. Bin Laden or Al Qaeda, mostly relying on a still picture from a frame of the tape and the printed text of whatever message was being delivered. The coverage of the aftermath of the terrorists attacks on New York and the Pentagon has generated intense competitive pressure among the television news organizations, which has increased this week as the news divisions labored to find images to continue documenting United States attacks on Afghanistan. The tapes have been broadcast by the Arabic language satellite network, Al Jazeera, and picked up by the American networks. The news executives said they had never previously consulted each other en masse and come to an agreement on a policy about coverage. But they said the current circumstances were unlike any other they have encountered. "This is a new situation, a new war, and a new kind of enemy," said Andrew Heyward, the president of CBS News. "Given the historic events we're enmeshed in, it's appropriate to explore new ways of fulfilling our responsibilities to the public." The presidents of the news divisions all said that Ms. Rice had not tried to coerce them. "She was very gentle, very diplomatic, very deft," said Roger Ailes, the chairman of Fox News. Walter Isaacson, the chairman of CNN, said, "It was very useful to hear their information and their thinking." He added, "After hearing Dr. Rice, we're not going to step on the land mines she was talking about." Mr. Isaacson did not specify what information Ms. Rice had provided that led to the executives' decision. "Her biggest point was that here was a charismatic speaker who could arouse anti-American sentiment getting 20 minutes of air time to spew hatred and urge his followers to kill Americans," said Neal Shapiro, the president of NBC News. The notion that Mr. bin Laden was sending messages to followers through the tapes seemed less than credible to several of the executives. "What sense would it make to keep the tapes off the air if the message could be found transcripted in newspapers or on the Web?" said one network executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "The videos could also appear on the Internet. They'd get the message anyway." The unusual interaction between the White House and television executives was set up late Tuesday evening when Ms. Rice called each executive. They gathered in their offices at 9 a.m. for the conference call. She spoke with them for about 20 minutes, explaining her reservations about allowing Mr. bin Laden such access to American television. A White House official familiar with the phone call said Ms Rice had two concerns: that the messages would reach any remaining terrorist cells in the United States and would also inflame Muslim populations in such places as Malaysia and the Philippines, who would see the tapes through international channels of CNN and NBC. Ms. Rice answered questions. Then she hung up. But the executives had agreed before the call to stay on the line and talk among themselves. The networks were not the first news organizations to acquiesce to an administration requests to edit or withhold information. Leonard Downie Jr., the executive editor of The Washington Post, said yesterday, that "a handful of times" in the past month, the newspaper's reporting had prompted calls from administration officials who "raised concerns that a specific story or more often that certain facts in a certain story, would compromise national security." He added, "In some instances we have kept out of stories certain facts that we agreed could be detrimental to national security and not instrumental to our readers, such as methods of intelligence collection." Clark Hoyt, the Washington editor of Knight Ridder, said that his organization had decided to hold back a report about "some small units of U.S. special operations forces had entered Afghanistan and were trying to locate bin Laden" within two weeks of the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. Howell Raines, the executive editor of The New York Times, said that since Sept. 11, Times executives have not had any conversations with government officials about the handling of sensitive information. Mr. Raines said, "Our longstanding practice has been that if a high government official wants to talk to us about security issues, we're available for that conversation. We also would feel free to seek guidance if there was information in our judgment that might be sensitive." The networks' decision has not raised serious protests among television journalists. Ted Koppel, the ABC "Nightline" anchor, said, "If we want to run some of the videotape, our understanding is we're still free to do it." But, he said, the videotapes by and large have not been compelling enough for long showings. The CBS anchor, Dan Rather said: "By nature and experience, I'm always wary when the government seeks in any way to have a hand in editorial decisions. But this is an extraordinary time. In the context of this time, the conversation as I understand it seems reasonable on both sides."
At 08:27 PM 10/10/01 -0700, Xeni Jardin wrote:
One network, ABC, said it would limit the use of moving images from tapes released by Mr. Bin Laden or Al Qaeda, mostly relying on a still picture from a frame of the tape and the printed text of whatever message was being delivered.
Right, so the placement of his gun/color of his turban/beard/etc. are not potential out of band channels. Is the US going to shoot down the Al Jazeera relay satellite? (What will CNN do?) Maybe our maps will be off, like that chinese problem in FRY. Better to apologize than to ask permission.
And hopefully we'll be able to get the unedited transcripts from somewhere? WTF? Anybody want to bet on what the next new cabinet position will be? I'll bet the Minister of Truth. -- Harmon Seaver, MLIS CyberShamanix Work 920-203-9633 Home 920-233-5820 hseaver@cybershamanix.com http://www.cybershamanix.com/resume.html
On Wed, Oct 10, 2001 at 11:37:08PM -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
And hopefully we'll be able to get the unedited transcripts from somewhere?
Um, right. I'm sure the White House will be overjoyed. Besides, how could you tell it's an accurate transcript? See also an excerpt from a WH briefing Wed: http://www.politechbot.com/p-02643.html -Declan
Perhaps someone out of country could put the recorded interviews up on a website in streaming/realplayer/quicktime/whatever format? Declan McCullagh wrote:
On Wed, Oct 10, 2001 at 11:37:08PM -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
And hopefully we'll be able to get the unedited transcripts from somewhere?
Um, right. I'm sure the White House will be overjoyed. Besides, how could you tell it's an accurate transcript?
See also an excerpt from a WH briefing Wed: http://www.politechbot.com/p-02643.html
-Declan
-- Harmon Seaver, MLIS CyberShamanix Work 920-203-9633 Home 920-233-5820 hseaver@cybershamanix.com http://www.cybershamanix.com/resume.html
I believe that qualify as taunting Happy Fun Fed. -Declan At 09:27 AM 10/11/01 -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
Perhaps someone out of country could put the recorded interviews up on a website in streaming/realplayer/quicktime/whatever format?
Well, I would assume that if the US media is going to censor the interviews, Osama wouldn't bother sending the tapes to them in the first place, but instead to some non-US broadcast outlet. Or are you saying that the New World Order is already so entrenched that Dubbya already has them all locked down? Otherwise, why should they care about "taunting Happy Fun Fed"? Declan McCullagh wrote:
I believe that qualify as taunting Happy Fun Fed.
-Declan
At 09:27 AM 10/11/01 -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
Perhaps someone out of country could put the recorded interviews up on a website in streaming/realplayer/quicktime/whatever format?
-- Harmon Seaver, MLIS CyberShamanix Work 920-203-9633 Home 920-233-5820 hseaver@cybershamanix.com http://www.cybershamanix.com/resume.html
At 09:27 AM 10/11/01 -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
Perhaps someone out of country could put the recorded interviews up on a website in streaming/realplayer/quicktime/whatever format?
Or you could go straight to the horse's mouth: Al Jazeera http://www.aljazeera.net Their live feed (though it's not working for me): http://www.aljazeera.net/live.asx "Best experienced using MS Internet Explorer 5.5" DCF ---- "I brought up blankets, towels, toilet paper, Kleenex, aspirin, a bottle of rum and the .38" -- What my grandmother Louise Porter Frissell took to the evacuation assembly point at Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, on December 7th 1941.
At 09:27 AM 10/11/01 -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
Perhaps someone out of country could put the recorded interviews up on a website in streaming/realplayer/quicktime/whatever format?
Here's a translator that will let you view the Al Jazerra site: http://tarjim.ajeeb.com/ajeeb/ Click English Site on right Click Aljazzer.net on the top of the Most Visited Sites list to the left DCF
participants (5)
-
David Honig
-
Declan McCullagh
-
Duncan Frissell
-
Harmon Seaver
-
Xeni Jardin