When a series of bombs went off at the Brussels airport and in a subway station yesterday, killing 31 people and injuring more than 200, the reaction of the US press was immediate and overwhelming. Every major news outlet turned its website over to coverage of the suicide attacks, often accompanied by live tickers and infographics. “Brussels Attacks Shake European Security” reads the banner headline on today’s New York Times’ front page (3/23/16); the Washington Post (3/22/16) worried that the bombings “made clear that European capitals remain perilously vulnerable despite attempts to dismantle the militant network that perpetrated the worst terrorist attack in Paris in generations last November.”
It was a curious statement, given that just nine days earlier, another European nation’s capital had been the site of a remarkably similar suicide bombing. On March 13, a car bomb went off in Ankara, Turkey, killing 34 people and injuring 125. As in Brussels, the Ankara bombing, carried out by a Kurdish group opposed to Turkey’s military actions in Kurdish regions of Syria, targeted a transit hub—there a heavily trafficked bus stop—and the victims were likewise unsuspecting civilians going about their lives, including the father of international soccer star Umut Bulut (Guardian, 3/14/16), who was on his way back from one of his son’s matches.
If terrorists had set out to conduct a controlled experiment on how the US media covers mass deaths overseas, they couldn’t have planned it any better. The Ankara bombing was mostly relegated to smaller stories buried in the foreign section: The New York Times (3/14/16) ran a 777-word story on page 6, noting that the attack “raised questions about the Turkish government’s ability to protect its citizens”; the Washington Post (3/14/16) ran an even shorter story reporting that “initial reports suggested at least some of the casualties were civilians waiting at nearby bus stops” — a strangely inexact account, perhaps explained by the article’s dateline of Beirut, over 400 miles away. CNN at least had a reporter on the scene — Arwa Damon, an Emmy-winning Syrian-American journalist based in Istanbul — though she was limited to a series of five-minute reports running down the basics of the attacks.
The news reports following the Brussels bombings were dramatically different in both scale and tenor. Multiple stories on the bombings and on the growth of support for ISIS in Belgium, plus video of the bombings’ aftermath were the norm; the New York Times website added a series of interactive graphics showing the bombing sites in detail. Scrolling website tickers updated readers on related news both large and small: The Washington Post’s feed included the breaking news “Starbucks Closes All Belgian Stores,” while the Times ticker included a post reporting that Facebook hadn’t yet released a tool to overlay the Belgian flag on top of profile photos.
It was almost an exact repeat of last November, when bombings in Beirut and Paris on subsequent days received wildly disparate attention from the US news media, with the Beirut bombings that killed 43 getting just 1/40th the US media coverage of the next day’s Paris attacks that killed 136. And the wall-to-wall coverage of Paris and Brussels is called into even greater relief when compared with the numerous other terrorist incidents in recent months that have received little US attention, such as attacks in Bamako, Mali; Tunis, Tunisia; Istanbul, Turkey; Jakarta, Indonesia; Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso; Mogadishu, Somalia; and Grand-Bassam, Ivory Coast, between November and March that collectively took 117 lives (Public Radio International, 3/22/16).
The usual defense of US outlets that offer lesser coverage of deaths in other parts of the world cites readers’ and viewers’ increased interest when Americans are somehow involved — at its most base, the principle expressed in McLurg’s Law that a death in one’s home country is worth 1,000 deaths on the other side of the world. (This was on full display in the Chicago Tribune’s lead story on the Brussels bombings, which was headlined “Brussels Attacks: 3rd Bomb Found; Americans Hurt.”) But while US citizens were injured in Brussels — three Mormon missionaries caught in the airport blast received widespread coverage, including in USA Today (3/22/16) and on CBSNews.com (3/22/16) and NBCNews.com (3/22/16) — and none in Ankara, another Turkish bombing this month did have American casualties: Two Israeli-Americans, Yonathan Suher and Avraham Goldman, were killed along with two others in an ISIS suicide bombing in Istanbul on March 20. Their deaths earned brief stories in the New York Times (3/19/16) and Bloomberg News (3/19/16), but no mention elsewhere in the US news media.
Perhaps the greatest difference in post-bombing coverage, though, came in the lessons the media suggested that readers draw from the Brussels and Ankara attacks. Ankara’s bombing was treated as matter-of-fact, if not entirely unremarkable: The New York Times article’s first sentence (3/13/16) described it as merely “the latest of a string of terrorist attacks that have destabilized the country.”
The Brussels attacks, meanwhile, were presented as a “shocking turn of events” (Washington Post, 3/23/16), but one explained by Belgium no longer really counting as European at all. The Post’s Adam Taylor reported that the Brussels bombing “wasn’t exactly a surprise,” noting that the Belgian capital, “once best known as a center for European culture and politics,” was now “tainted” by its “links to extremism and terrorist plots.” The problem, it specified, was centered in Molenbeek, a Brussels suburb “just across the Canal not far from some of Brussels’ more fashionable areas,” which “first began to fill up with Turkish and Moroccan immigrants around 50 years ago” and is now beset by high unemployment and “many seedy and rundown shops.”

This New York Times article (3/22/16) originally suggested that security would require “crimping civil liberties.”
The New York Times, meanwhile, prominently featured a news analysis piece by Adam Nossiter (headlined “Brussels Attacks Underscore Vulnerability of an Open European Society”) warning that “the enduring vulnerability of Europe to terrorism in an age of easy travel and communications and rising militancy” would lead to
a new round of soul-searching about whether Europe’s security services must redouble their efforts, even at the risk of further crimping civil liberties, or whether such attacks have become an unavoidable part of life in an open European society.
Nossiter didn’t specify which civil liberties could be “crimped” — a term that had been toned down, by the time his article appeared on today’s print front page (3/23/16), to “impinging on.” He did suggest, though, that Belgium could face “widening derision as being the world’s wealthiest failed state” — something that raises the question of how the United States, with 31 mass killings in the year 2015 (according to USA Today’s ongoing “Behind the Bloodshed” count), should be categorized.
(Nossiter, a longtime Times correspondent, has a bit of a history of “news analysis” pieces showing the need for a bit more analyzing, including one arguing that the displacement of New Orleans’ poor could present an “upside” of Hurricane Katrina, and another citing the African Union’s refusal to cooperate with the International Criminal Court as representative of “the gulf separating the West and many African leaders” on human rights, notwithstanding that the US has itself refused to cooperate with the ICC on numerous occasions.)
Bloomberg News echoed the idea that freedom — either of civil liberties, of travel, or both — was to blame, noting “the vulnerability of open societies such as Belgium” while asserting that “a deluge of refugees from the Middle East is testing the 28-nation bloc’s dedication to open borders and stirring up anti-foreigner demagoguery” — a correlation that would be more believable if Europe hadn’t had a long history of xenophobia well before Syrian refugees began arriving in 2015.
There are certainly reasons why the Brussels bombings might be considered of greater direct concern to American residents than the one in Ankara—specifically, the involvement of ISIS, which as the target of US bombing is more likely to attack the US than a Kurdish group. (Much of yesterday’s reporting on the Brussels bombings focused on what they meant for possible attacks on the US, including former US House homeland security chair Peter King helpfully telling CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, “Even though there is no indication of an attack, it could happen.”)

Coverage in the London Independent did much more to humanize the victims of the Ankara attack than most US papers did.
Yet the deluge of coverage of the Brussels bombing, and the paucity of attention for Ankara, began even before the bombers’ identities were known. And US news outlets steered clear of any opportunities to humanize the Ankara victims — unlike the UK’s Independent (3/14/16), which reported on a widely shared Facebook post that asked “Will you be Ankara?” and compared the site of the attack to “a bomb going off outside Debenhams on the Drapery in Northampton, or on New Street in Birmingham, or Piccadilly Circus in London.”
Instead, the lasting impression for US readers is that deaths in Belgium are more newsworthy than an equal number of deaths in Turkey, and that if Belgium is to avoid sinking to the level of “failed nations,” it needs to address the outsiders who are dragging it down to a level unbecoming of its continent, or at least its western half. Europe, it’s clear, has no monopoly on anti-foreigner demagoguery.
CORRECTION: This piece originally criticized articles in the New York Times and Associated Press for describing attacks on military targets as terrorist attacks. This was a misreading of the articles; the attacks they were discussing included attacks on civilians.
Neil deMause is a contributing writer for FAIR, and runs the stadium news website Field of Schemes.









Food for thought.
Have you considered the impact of the Turkish government’s strict regulations on the media and how it would impact news coverage globally.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_freedom_in_Turkey
The quick to qualify the dead
Besides the fact that the western news services have few if any staff reporting from Turkey (as apposed to the vast European press corps, at home, at work), the key to the difference in treatment might be the fact that there is no Starbucks in either Ankara or Istanbul. There is one in Kayseri, but that’s a long way from either capital city. Maybe it’s time they got one.
Even less reported than the Ankara bombing is the Turkish military’s violence directed at Kurdish people. For example, the day after Ankara, retaliatory Turkish airstrikes killed 45 people. http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160315/1036299015/turkey-forces-kurds-airstrikes.html
Western media organizations are for-profit businesses. They cover stories that will allow them to sell advertisements. They cover stories in a way that will maximize viewers and eyeballs. A terrorist bomb in Belgium will attract way more viewers and eyeballs than a terrorist bomb in Turkey, due to American public perception of those two locations. Its unfortunate that the for profit media must fund its reporting and coverage this way, but its the reality. As for “public radio” or “public TV,” they must fund their work via donations, which of course, are generated by coverage that attracts viewers and donors.
I greatly appreciate FAIR’s commentary and pointing out the sometimes obscured biases and motives behind most Western reporting. It helps create more critical readers and consumers of media coverage. That said, significant changes in coverage are not likely to occur anytime soon.
Keep up the good work!
Terrorist actions in some countries are considered a bit more “normal”. Maybe you remember what the news looked like during the height of the Northern Ireland conflict. It was expected that there would be bloodshed so everyone grew very numb to it. Much the same can be said for bombings in Turkey, Afghanistan, Iraq, etc. It has become expected. Brussels and Paris are two cities that such violence is not expected, not “normal”. It should also be noted that many of the countries listed are dealing with civil wars or some sort of internal strife. The attacks on Paris and Brussels weren’t part of a civil war but rather an attack on western culture.
An excellent article which should lead intelligent persons to ask if as stated “the lasting impression for US readers is that deaths in Belgium are more newsworthy than an equal number of deaths in Turkey”; what the effect of such biased Western news coverage is on the 80 million Turks who see this. There is no question that such double-standards are a contributing factor to the rise of anti-Western feelings and public support for the ruling Islamist political party in Turkey, the AKP.
Yet another example of such double-standards to Turks specifically with regard to Belgium is that it has in the past repeatedly ignored Turkish requests to extradite suspects wanted for terrorism offenses. According to Turkish sources, of 30 extradition requests for members of terrorist groups such as the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C), Belgium has turned down 20:
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/belgium-refusing-turkeys-extradition-requests-for-terror-suspects-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=96832&NewsCatID=338
In fact, although Belgium along with the U.S., EU and NATO have designated the PKK as a terrorist organization, they recently allowed the PKK to erect an “information” tent in the city center of Brussels promoting their terror organization and refused to have it taken down even after the Turkish government filed an official protest:
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-protests-belgium-over-pkk-tent-in-brussels.aspx?pageID=238&nID=96701&NewsCatID=510
Maybe after the terror attack by ISIL in their own country, the Belgian government will now realize that attempts to gain members, donations and support through “non-violent” public relations activities by a terrorist organization engaged in deadly attacks against the civilian population of an allied nation cannot be countenanced under freedom of speech. Or perhaps they will also allow ISIL to erect an “information” tent in Brussels next to that of the PKK.
Well most Europeans I know do not consider Turkey to be part of Europe despite what the politicians might say
“THE CURSE CAUSELESS HAS NOT COME”
The Western corporate rich who help the oil-rich dictators enslave their people, the corporate rich who make a profit trading war materials for Middle-East oil, if they were to rot in prison for life, would that bring a screeching halt to terrorism?
GENUINE TRANSCRIPT OF FAIR STAFF MEETING
Naureckas: Any of you geniuses have an idea how we handle Brussels?
Intern: You mean we need to find a way to denounce terrorism, and–
Naureckas: What the heck? They don’t teach you much in journalism school these days, huh? Our core mission as a progressive media watchdog is to apologize for the Islamists.
Staffer 1: How about we talk about Islamophobia?
Naureckas: Nah, we’ve beaten that dead horse enough.
Staffer 2: How about this headline: “What about Breivik?” Or: “What about McVeigh?”
Naureckas: Negatory. You can only go back to that well so many times.
Staffer 3: What about Israel?
Naureckas: Now you’re talking! Lay it on me.
Staffer 3: We can argue that if the Israelis had the decency to allow Hamas to shell their civilian population with impunity, then ISIS would – um – that is to say…
Naureckas: Huh?
Staffer 3: ISIS could be reformed, or whatever.
Naureckas: What? They’d become a band of Yoko Ono’s? Nice try, but that angle won’t work here.
Intern: I have an idea. How about promoting a new slogan: “Je suis so friggin’ tired of hearing about blowed-up Eurotrash.” In other words, why can’t we hear more about blowed-up Turks and Ouagadougouans and what-not?
Naureckas: Outstanding! You’re promoted!
Staffer 3: But didn’t DeMause do an identical story a few months ago about coverage of Paris v. Beirut?
Naureckas: That’s the best part. He can just recycle that piece, and I can pay him half the usual rate. It’s a win-win!!
MORAL OF THE STORY: ISLAMIC TERRORISTS ARE PEOPLE, TOO!!!
There have now been a few pieces like this in the UK media, comparing the responses to Brussels and Ankara. But not even these have pointed out how the Western media have whitewashed the terrorism of the Kurdish rebels who allegedly carried out the Ankara attacks, and the US military has actively aided them. This is not to excuse the Turkish government’s atrocities. But is a responsibility of journalists to expose the hypocrisy of the powerful and to humanize the powerless and the innocent.
This article badly needs fact-checking. The latest Ankara attack was hardly “the first” to target civilians. As anyone who clicks on the article’s own link to the 3/13/16 AP story will discover, a much deadlier attack “came in October when a bombing at a peace rally outside Ankara’s main train station killed 102 people.” Bizarrely, Mr. deMause criticizes AP when he is the one who has mangled the facts. I hope FAIR will correct the error.
In reality, the current string of terror attacks on civilians began as early as last July when a bombing at a cultural center in Suruç killed 32 people, mostly student activists. This January, a suicide bombing killed ten German tourists in Istanbul. If Mr. deMause does not follow the news from Turkey, he shouldn’t be writing about it.
David Star: My bad on the civilian error — I was misreading what the Times was considering the current “string” of attacks. (The Times reference to a “shift in tactics” doesn’t exactly make sense when comparing this to the October bombing — a shift from bombing civilians in a public place to bombing civilians in a public place where buses stop? Also, a shift in tactics from being ISIS to being Kurdish insurgents?)
We’ll have a correction up shortly, thanks for pointing it out.
Willy, do you have the stencil for that slander of Jim Naurekas? Does it requires special color pencils or pens, or will just any do? I’ve never been so startled by an instance of style masquerading as substance. You betray yourself as a shameless liar that the piece is actual dialogue apparently secretly recorded from a FAIR staff meeting when you have Naureckas say, “Our core mission as a progressive media watchdog is to apologize for the Islamists.” Naureckas would never utter such an absurdity, as anybody born with the sincerity god gave a billygoat who has read two of Naureckas’s column would know. Nor let’s be clear, does your piece ring with any hint of parody. Which doesn’t even touch upon the fact that the term “Islamists,” like “conservative,” like “liberal,” like “drugs,” has been so mangled by use as to be unintelligible. I mean, WTF is an Islamist? Cat Stevens? And how am I going to conjure a boogie man to descend upon Cat Stevens?
Neil deMause: Thank you for making the correction. I think the change takes some of the wind out of your argument since it means the Turkish incident was not as exceptional – in the context of the country where it occurred – as the Belgian one. But I appreciate your taking the trouble to answer my comment and act on it.
Perhaps the lesson is not to expect an article in the Times to make sense…