
The New York Times (5/29/18) crafts its headline around a baseless charge from political enemies.
Eight overt white nationalists are running for office in 2018—a new record, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Overt fascists, inspired by the rise of President Donald Trump, have found a place both within and just outside the margins of the official Republican Party. Over 20,000 people voted in a GOP primary this past March for former American Nazi Party member Art Jones, making him the Republican candidate for the US House in Illinois’ 3rd District. Patrick Little, who told NBC (5/3/18) that the “monstrous nature of the Jewish people must be known to the public,” ran as a Republican for Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s seat in California, and got more than 50,000 votes.
With the increase on the US right in overt Nazi activity, one might be surprised to see the paper of record (New York Times, 5/29/18) turn its sights not on this disturbing trend, but on progressive candidate Leslie Cockburn, whose criticism of Israel is being cynically exploited by her opponents in the Republican Party—the same party increasingly finding common cause with a host of white nationalists, alt-right and “alt-light” elements.
Let’s begin with the headline, “Democratic Candidate Who Criticized Israel Faces Charges of Antisemitism.” It’s rare for political reporters to let partisan opponents wholly manufacture a controversy, much less frame it, but when it does happen—as it did in January 2016 when the Times let a number of Clinton operatives smear Sanders as a Commie infiltrator (FAIR.org, 5/25/16)—one can be certain it will be against a left-leaning candidate.
The very existence of this piece makes little sense. The only people in the 1,100-word report who think Cockburn is an antisemite are operatives for the Virginia Republican Party, who have an obvious political agenda. Times reporters Thomas Kaplan and Michael Tackett can’t find a single independent or third-party talking head to accuse Cockburn of antisemitism and the very meeting that frames the piece is expressly said by its attendees to not be about antisemitism, but about Israel:
“None of us think she’s antisemitic,” said Sherry Kraft, one of the organizers of the meeting. “That’s not even an issue. It’s more where are you about Israel.”
OK—so the story isn’t about “charges of antisemitism,” it’s about criticism of Israel. The headline—which is the only thing a majority of people will read—ought to have said, “Democratic Candidate Questioned About Criticism of Israel.” Instead, criticism of a Middle Eastern government is sloppily conflated with being racist—an equation advanced by the story’s claim that “Mr. Trump has used his Middle East policies to try to drive a wedge between Jewish voters and the Democratic Party.”
In fact, Trump’s signature Mideast policy—the unilateral move of the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem—is deeply unpopular with Jews in the United States (Washington Post, 12/22/17), and is much more accurately described as a policy aimed at appealing to white Christian Evangelicals.
The Times story reports that a book about Israeli intelligence that Cockburn co-wrote with her husband Andrew Cockburn 27 years ago was “panned in several reviews as an inflammatory screed.” It doesn’t mention that the book, Dangerous Liaison: The Inside Story of the US/Israeli Covert Relationship, was also praised, for example, by Kirkus (6/1/91), the standard book review reference, as
a critical, impressively researched history of US/Israeli relations…an unflinching, fact-packed, closely reasoned exploration of our relations with our strongest ally in the Middle East.
The only review quoted by the Times is from the Times itself, in which David Schoenbaum (8/18/91) said that the book was “largely dedicated to Israel-bashing for its own sake.” Not quoted is the passage most relevant to the GOP’s charge of antisemitism, in which Schoenbaum wrote:
Unlike other Israel-bashing volumes, this one at least acknowledges the long shadow of the Holocaust, as well as Stalinist antisemitism, Syrian hysteria, Egyptian and Iraqi poison gas, and Palestinian unloveliness.
The party with the most stake in whether or not Cockburn hates Jews—the Jewish constituents in her district—don’t appear to think she hates them, or any other Jews. The only sources making this claim are those charged with defeating her in the November election: the Virginia Republican Party.
Lumping left-wing criticism of Israel with antisemitism is a go-to tactic by Israel’s defenders, and one done so frequently it wouldn’t merit mention if it weren’t so potentially damaging. Why, one is compelled to ask, would the Times let Republicans totally frame a “debate” that is so razor thin they couldn’t find anyone not on the GOP payroll to take the affirmative position?

The New York Times profile (11/25/18) of a neo-Nazi featured an image of him shopping for barbecue sauce.
The New York Times was much more polite when it did a glossy profile (11/25/18) on an actual, literal Nazi in November last year—a piece widely criticized for providing softball coverage of rising white nationalism.
The Times has covered actual Nazis running for Congress (2/7/18, 3/20/18), but these are candidates who identify as Nazis, wear the label with pride, and almost certainly appreciate the national coverage. The Times even threw in a CYA line about “openly anti-Semitic candidates in Wisconsin, Illinois and California running office as Republicans” in this piece, but this just raises the question: Why aren’t we framing entire articles around this threat? Why indulge partisan speculation and dredge up books from three decades ago when there’s candidates wearing signs around their necks saying, “I’m a Nazi and I hate Jews, vote for me”?
Nor has the Times given any “mainstream” Republican candidates the same type of tea leaf–reading, “some say” interrogation they’re giving to Cockburn. They have yet to publish anything wondering if Paul Gosar of Arizona, who shared a Jew-baiting theory that George Soros manufactured last August’s Charlottesville attack, is an antisemite. Nothing centering Wisconsin Republican congressional candidate Paul Nehlen’s very real and overt antisemitism, simply passive mentions here and there.
There are real, honest-to-god racists in our midst, and they come almost entirely from the right. This likely explains why those running the GOP messaging machine would be so quick to label others’ antisemitic, a sleazy deflection tactic one would expect from a party increasingly associated with white nationalism. What one wouldn’t expect—or at least shouldn’t have to—is that the most influential paper in the English-speaking world would assist such an obvious and cynical smear.
You can send a message to the New York Times at letters@nytimes.com (Twitter:@NYTimes). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective.




For the corpress, the road to antisemitism has tellingly few right turns
It’s your fault for trying to commit genocide against the Israeli people.
They are turning to people who will protect them with actions, not words.
Hmmm, the genocide is apparently directed toward the folks who live in Gaza and the West Bank…
The NYT article (which I actually read) was factual. Ms. Cockburn was accused of anti-semitism by Republicans, but the charges were dismissed by her Jewish supporters. In no way did the article suggest the truth of the accusation. Are you suggesting that account was was factually incorrect? Or are you disturbed that the Times reported it? For some reason Fair makes a habit of distorting the NY Times news coverage and conflating opinion pieces with their editorial positions. I’m frankly getting tired of reading your twisted interpretations.
Many of us no longer consider the NYT to be a reliable source of the truth in reporting. Sorry, that’s just the way it is.
The author obviously does not realize that the large majority of Jews support Israel. I am a lifelong Democrat and I do not support ms. Cockburn’s criticism of Israel. In my opinion, she is aiding and abetting the Hamas terrorists that wish to kill Jews in Israel and around the world. Meeting with some liberal self hating Jews does not stone for her anti Semitic views. Please remember that denial is not just a river in Egypt.
@Alan:
Yawn.
telling you use the garbage term “self hating Jews”.
at the time, chomsky referred to the book as ”an important and informative study, as indicated by the hysterical and infantile reviews in the New York Times and other major journals (for some amusing examples, see David Schoenbaum, NYT Book Review, Aug. 18, 1991; John Yemma, Boston Globe, Aug. 15, 1991).”
at the time, chomsky referred to the book as ”an important and informative study, as indicated by the hysterical and infantile reviews in the New York Times and other major journals (for some amusing examples, see David Schoenbaum, NYT Book Review, Aug. 18, 1991; John Yemma, Boston Globe, Aug. 15, 1991).”
What does one expect from the NYTimes, here they are from earlier this week calling the 2003 US invasion of Iraq an “intervention”, as if there was some ongoing civil war:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/04/obituaries/bernard-e-trainor-dead.html
“The final book, “The Endgame: The Inside Story of the Struggle for Iraq, From George W. Bush to Barack Obama” (2012), analyzed American intervention in Iraq beginning with the capture of Baghdad in 2003 and ending with the departure of the last American troops in December 2011.”
This is an obituary, one that likely had advance work, so it’s not like some party was rushing to write this lie under pressure.
So that’s the NY Times covering for a war of aggression, the crime for which many surviving Nazi generals were prosecuted at Nuremberg after World War Two.
The NY Times should, remember to focus on Senator Schumer. and how he disses BDS and wants supporters of BDS to be prosecuted! So here we have an American senator dissing the First Amendment————and yeah———Arabs are semites too———-so anti-Semitic makes no sense anymore and please——– that term is long past its sell by date.
Israel has successfully equated criticism of Israel with antisemitism in public discourse. Much as criticism of our government is labeled “Anti-American” when powerful interests want to shut down the critical voice. It is dangerous when “the paper of record” chooses to follow this model. The NYT should be focusing on our government’s move to align itself with Middle Eastern powers (Israel, Saudi Arabia, UAE) that are promoting war with Iran in hopes of changing the balance of power in the region. We (the people) have had enough of war, enough of death and destruction. Israel often tests new weaponry on the Palestinians, particularly in Gaza. If this were not horrific enough, the prospect of war with Iran should frighten us all.
how love will the media go? unbelievable we have an epidemic of this bullshit smear campaign in the UK against Jeremy Corbyn supporters and even the man himself for having the audacity to defend Palestine, criticize Israel, and extend Holocaust remembrance to other victims of discrimination and genocide. some them are Jewish themselves but this is always left out in the waste of ink, space, and oxygen known as the UK press.
how low will they go lol not love