Difference between revisions of "Jeffrey Goldberg"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Online Attacks)
Line 43: Line 43:
 
*Harvard Professor Stephen M. Walt describes Goldberg as a journalist:
 
*Harvard Professor Stephen M. Walt describes Goldberg as a journalist:
  
:...whose intense passion for Israel led him to emigrate there and enlist in the IDF, where he served as a prison guard. I have no problem with that, as Americans are allowed to hold dual citizenship; but it does help you understand why he is quick to attack anyone who criticizes Israel. Objectivity about the Middle East is not his strong suit.<ref>Stephen M. Walt, [The problem with judging a blog by its commenters (updated) http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2010/07/21/the_problem_with_judging_a_blog_by_its_commenters], 'Foreign Policy,' 21 July 2010</ref>  
+
:...whose intense passion for Israel led him to emigrate there and enlist in the IDF, where he served as a prison guard. I have no problem with that, as Americans are allowed to hold dual citizenship; but it does help you understand why he is quick to attack anyone who criticizes Israel. Objectivity about the Middle East is not his strong suit.<ref>Stephen M. Walt, [http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2010/07/21/the_problem_with_judging_a_blog_by_its_commenters The problem with judging a blog by its commenters (updated)], 'Foreign Policy,' 21 July 2010</ref>  
  
 
*According to constitutional lawyer turned political analyst Glenn Greenwald, Goldberg uses two types of "smear tactics:" "guilt by association" and accusations of anti-semitism to silence debate:  
 
*According to constitutional lawyer turned political analyst Glenn Greenwald, Goldberg uses two types of "smear tactics:" "guilt by association" and accusations of anti-semitism to silence debate:  

Revision as of 22:04, 27 July 2010

Jeffrey Goldberg is an American-Israeli journalist and Zionist political pundit that writes for David G. Bradley's The Atlantic. Referred to as Netanyahu's "faithful stenographer" by Roger Cohen of The New York Times,[1] Goldberg focuses on matters related to Israel and its relationship with the United States in particular. He was influential in building American support for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and has been criticized for making alarmist claims and using unreliable sources during the run-up to the war.[2] Goldberg is also known for launching attacks on those who criticize Israeli policy while constantly pushing the claim that Israel is a strategic asset rather than a liability for the US.[3] He has publicly attacked fellow staff members at The Atlantic (as well as the editors for their lack of "editorial standards") for allegedly making comments that are critical of Israel even though the publication and its writers are known to propagate a pro-Israel line.[4]

Early History

Goldberg was born and raised in New York but his self-stated strong identification with Israel saw him joining a Zionist summer camp and Kibbutz during his youth. He relocated to Israel during his college years and joined the Israeli Defense Forces shortly after. His acclaimed book, Prisoners: A Story of Friendship and Terror, is a memoir which includes an account of his experience as a guard at Ketziot, an Israeli prison located in the Negev desert were thousands of Palestinians were detained during the first intifada. Still in operation today, Ketziot is known for its harsh living conditions and for imprisoning boys and men without trial.[5]

During his residency in Israel, Goldberg served as a journalist for the right-wing Jerusalem Post. While working as Washington correspondent for The New Yorker, Goldberg produced an 17,000+ word article entitled "The Great Terror" which George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and others referenced as justification for the US invasion of Iraq. In it Goldberg described Saddam Hussein's gassing of the Kurds in long and vivid detail and strongly suggested that Hussein posed the same threat to the US and other nations. Goldberg also suggested that the Iraqi regime had ties with Al Qaeda. The article won the Overseas Press Club award for "Best international reporting in a print medium dealing with human rights."[6]

Goldberg has reported from various political hotspots in South Asia and the Middle East including Iraq, the occupied Palestinian territories, Afghanistan and Pakistan. He has received awards from various organizations including the Anti-Defamation League which provided him with their Daniel Pearl Prize in 2005.

Analysis of "The Great Terror"

Goldberg is known for a series of articles he wrote during the run-up to the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq which were used as reference by pro-war advocates. A 17,000+ word article in The New Yorker entitled "The Great Terror" was referenced by members of the Bush administration and has since been debunked by several analysts for its use of questionable sources and deeply alarmist claims.

Goldberg on the alleged link between Iraq & Al Qaeda

The allegations include charges that Ansar al-Islam has received funds directly from Al Qaeda; that the intelligence service of Saddam Hussein has joint control, with Al Qaeda operatives, over Ansar al-Islam; that Saddam Hussein hosted a senior leader of Al Qaeda in Baghdad in 1992; that a number of Al Qaeda members fleeing Afghanistan have been secretly brought into territory controlled by Ansar al-Islam; and that Iraqi intelligence agents smuggled conventional weapons, and possibly even chemical and biological weapons, into Afghanistan. If these charges are true, it would mean that the relationship between Saddam’s regime and Al Qaeda is far closer than previously thought.[7]

Goldberg on Iraq's alleged WMDs

There is some debate among arms-control experts about exactly when Saddam will have nuclear capabilities. But there is no disagreement that Iraq, if unchecked, will have them soon, and a nuclear-armed Iraq would alter forever the balance of power in the Middle East. “The first thing that occurs to any military planner is force protection,” Charles Duelfer told me. “If your assessment of the threat is chemical or biological, you can get individual protective equipment and warning systems. If you think he’s going to use a nuclear weapon, where are you going to concentrate your forces?”
There is little doubt what Saddam might do with an atomic bomb or with his stocks of biological and chemical weapons. When I talked about Saddam’s past with the medical geneticist Christine Gosden, she said, "Please understand, the Kurds were for practice."[7]

Criticism

  • According to Alexander Cockburn, Goldberg's "The Great Terror" could not have come at a better time for pro-war members of the Bush Administration because it followed a joint FBI-CIA investigation which revealed that the alleged meeting between a 9/11 hijacker and an Iraqi intelligence agent prior to 9/11 (used as evidence that Al Qaeda was linked to Iraq) had not actually happened. Cockburn also notes that Jason Burke of the London Observer visited the Sulaimaniya prison where Goldberg met Mohammed Mansour Shahab, his main source for the "Great Terror," and established his lack of credibility. Burke's claim was also echoed by other journalists:
The piece was gratefully seized upon by the Administration as proof of The Link. The coup de grâce to Goldberg's credibility fell on February 9 of this year in the London Observer, administered by Jason Burke, its chief reporter. Burke visited the same prison in Sulaimaniya, talked to Shahab and established beyond doubt that Goldberg's great source is a clumsy liar, not even knowing the physical appearance of Kandahar, whither he had claimed to have journeyed to deal with bin Laden; and confecting his fantasies in the hope of a shorter prison sentence.[8]
  • In 2006 Ken Silverstein of Harper's Magazine noted that after successfully aiding the Bush Administration by warming Americans to the idea of waging war on Iraq, Goldberg began advising the Democrat Party against calling for a withdrawal because it would be exploited as a sign of weakness by the Republicans:
Goldberg and his friends predicted that events would unfold smoothly in Iraq, and now that they haven't, he wants to make sure that U.S. troops stay put and fight the war that he helped promote. The Democrats, he told the Washington panel, can regain power only by reaching out to their conservative wing (and to voters even further to the right who over the years have migrated from the party to the G.O.P.). He's been interviewing members of this vital voting-bloc, he said, and he was able to report that they would “like to leave Iraq but they'd really like to win Iraq” and are looking for “a party and leadership” that can lead the way to victory.[2]

Reaction to Prisoners: A Story of Friendship and Terror

Criticism

Online Attacks

Goldberg is known for launching vehement attacks on analysts he disagrees with. He is particularly sensitive to critics of Israeli policy, having even accused fellow staff member, Andrew Sullivan (a Liberal Zionist), of publishing "malicious nonsense" the day after Sullivan posted maps showing Israeli acquisition of Palestinian land.[4] In that same post Goldberg also lashed out at The Atlantic staff for their alleged lack of "fact-checking standards."

  • Harvard Professor Stephen M. Walt describes Goldberg as a journalist:
...whose intense passion for Israel led him to emigrate there and enlist in the IDF, where he served as a prison guard. I have no problem with that, as Americans are allowed to hold dual citizenship; but it does help you understand why he is quick to attack anyone who criticizes Israel. Objectivity about the Middle East is not his strong suit.[9]
  • According to constitutional lawyer turned political analyst Glenn Greenwald, Goldberg uses two types of "smear tactics:" "guilt by association" and accusations of anti-semitism to silence debate:
...what Goldberg is doing here...is relying on the most standard, by-now-clichéd debate-suppressive tactic of neoconservative Israel-fanatics in the U.S. Anyone who criticizes the actions of the Israeli Government will, for that reason alone, have "anti-Semite" tossed in their vicinity and attached to their name (just as those who criticized the actions of the Bush administration -- say, for attacking Iraq -- were branded "anti-American"). Any American citizen who argues that we are acting counter-productively with our unquestioning, full-scale support for Israel -- the use of American money, arms and diplomatic tools to enable anything the Israeli Government does -- is guilty of the crime of "Israel-bashing" and is condemned as being "anti-Israel."[10]
  • Former AIPAC-staffer-turned-critic-of-the-Israel-lobby M.J. Rosenberg notes that Goldberg's smear tactics are "nothing new," but in 2010 Goldberg began a directed attack on reputable critics of the Israel Lobby because Goldberg anticipates that these people will be the most important critics of his expected call for a US-led war on Iran:
Goldberg has a problem. As an American who chose to serve in the Israeli army (he was a guard at a Palestinian prison camp), he fears that Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer -- who accused the Likud lobby of promoting war with Iraq in their groundbreaking bestseller -- will point out that Goldberg is just about the least credible advocate for war with Iran.[11]
  • Journalist Daniel Luban has argued that Goldberg's use of quotes from insulting emails that he has allegedly received to prove that his "adversaries are all anti-Semites" is a clear distraction method:
...I can guarantee that anyone who writes about the Middle East online for any extended period of time receives plenty of deranged emails and comments from all sides of the political spectrum. Sometimes it is anti-Semitic email ranting about the Zionist Occupied Government of the U.S., and sometimes it is anti-Arab email ranting that there is no such thing as the “Palestinian people,” or that there can be no peace with Muslims because Islam is inherently a religion of war, or that the Palestinians should be ethnically cleansed from the West Bank and driven into Jordan...This means that if one wants to make the case that the “other side” is a bunch of crazed bigots, it’s quite easy to gather evidence by cherry-picking from the appropriate body of crazy emails.[12]

Reporting

On alleged Gulf Arab Support for a Military Strike on Iran

  • Goldberg has been criticized for misrepresenting the ideas and comments of other people. In July 2010 Goldberg blogged about an interview with Yousef al-Otaiba, the United Arab Emirate ambassador to Washington, alleging that the UAE endorsed a military strike on Iran: "he did say the U.A.E. would sooner see military action against Iran's nuclear program than see the program succeed."[13]. One hour after publishing that post, Goldberg put up another one entitled "UAE's Ambassador Endorses an American Strike on Iran (Cont'd)," with further remarks intending to prove Goldberg's understanding of the ambassador's position.[14]. However, UAE officials quickly denied Goldberg's representation of al-Otaiba's comments and clarified their position on military action on Iran: "These statements came as part of general discussions held on the sidelines of an unofficial gathering and were taken out of their context in which Al-Otaiba was speaking."

and

The UAE has already declared, more than once and in official statements issued by the Foreign Ministry, its position on the Iranian nuclear issue. The UAE totally rejects the use of force as a solution to the Iranian nuclear issue and rather calls for a solution through political means that are based on the international legitimacy, transparency as well as the need for working, through the International Atomic Energy Agency, on the right of all states to the peaceful use of nuclear energy. The UAE, at the same time, believe in the need of keeping the Gulf region free of nuclear weapons.[15]

On the use of Unverifiable Sources

  • Lebanese-American Political Scientist As'ad AbuKhalil has criticized Goldberg's tendency for making claims which are invulnerable to refutation because they are based on conversations with sources who are dead and therefore cannot confirm or deny the quotes attributed to them. Commenting on a Goldberg article[16] in which he attributes particularly extreme views to two assassinated Hamas leaders (Abdul Aziz al-Rantissi and Nizar Rayyan), Abukhalil asks:
why are those people that he identifies as rabid anti-Semites confiding in him of all people, and revealing their innermost thoughts to him? I mean, Rayyan did not talk to the press and did not talk Arab journalists but for some reason he felt that Goldberg, having served in the Israeli terrorist army, is the right person to confide in, especially on Sunni-Shi`ite matters. [17]

War on Iraq

Ken Silverstein and several other analysts have criticized Goldberg for his poor reporting during the run-up to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003:

What's truly astonishing is that neither the New Yorker nor Goldberg have ever been held accountable for the egregious propaganda that was published prior to the invasion.[2]

War on Iran

According to M.J. Rosenberg of 'Talking Points Memo,' Goldberg is expected to produce reports similar to those which he produced during the run-up to the US-led invasion of Iraq, on Iran:

For several days, the Atlantic's Jeff Goldberg has been calling Stephen Walt, John Mearsheimer and other critics of Bibi Netanyahu "anti-Semites." Nothing new about that. For Goldberg, a major AIPAC neocon, all critics of Israeli policies are anti-Semites by definition. (See this good piece on Goldberg).
But why is he obsessing about Walt so much now?
It is because, in August, Goldberg is coming out with his big Atlantic piece calling on the United States to bomb Iran so that Israel does not have to.[11]

Anti-Zionist Jews

Prominent Jewish-American journalist and blogger Philip Weiss has pointed out that Goldberg has refuted the Jewish identity of anti-Zionist Jews:

Jeffrey Goldberg goes after the bloggers panel during the J Street conference and describes it as a group of "anti-Zionists with Jewish parents." Think about that. This is a statement of excommunication. He’s not saying anti-Zionist Jews. He’s saying we had Jewish parents. He’s not even calling us non-Jewish Jews, an insult that hurled by an old Israeli recently. This time we don’t get to be Jews. Thus he equates Jewishness with Zionism, entirely.[18]

References

  1. Roger Cohen, 'Israel Cries Wolf', The New York Times, 8 April 2009
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Ken Silverstein, 'Goldberg's War', Harper's Magazine, 30 June 2006
  3. Glenn Greenwald, 'The Jeffrey Goldberg Media', Salon.com, 27 June 2010
  4. 4.0 4.1 Jeffrey Goldberg, 'Andrew Sullivan Revises History (Again)', The Atlantic, 12 March 2010
  5. Martin Asser, 'Palestinians languish in Israeli jails', BBC, 8 August 2003
  6. Overseas Press Club of America website, accessed 25 July 2010
  7. 7.0 7.1 Jeffrey Goldberg, 'The Great Terror', The New Yorker, 24 March 2002
  8. Alexander Cockburn, 'Hacks and Heroes: Meet the New Yorker's Goldberg; Israeli Draft Resisters; Bulworth Screenwriter Lashes New York Times; Are Drunks' Dreams Corrupt?', CounterPunch, 28 February 2003
  9. Stephen M. Walt, The problem with judging a blog by its commenters (updated), 'Foreign Policy,' 21 July 2010
  10. Glenn Greenwald, 'Jeffrey Goldberg's gasping, dying smear tactics', Salon.com, 20 February 2009
  11. 11.0 11.1 M.J. Rosenberg, 'Why Jeff Goldberg Is Losing It', 'Talking Points Memo Cafe,' 23 July 2010
  12. Daniel Luban, 'Somebody Get Jeffrey Goldberg A Tissue', Lobelog.com, 23 July 2010
  13. Jeffrey Goldberg, 'UAE Ambassador on the Challenge of Iran', The Atlantic, 6 July 2010
  14. Jeffrey Goldberg, 'UAE's Ambassador Endorses an American Strike on Iran (Cont'd)', The Atlantic, 6 July 2010
  15. Staff Report, 'UAE envoy's Iran statements 'taken out of context, Gulf News, 7 July 2010
  16. Jeffrey Goldberg, Why Israel Can’t Make Peace With Hamas, New York Times, 13 January 2009
  17. Asad AbuKhalil, 'When Jeffrey Goldberg interviews the dead', 'The Angry Arab Blog,' 14 Jaunary 2009
  18. Philip Weiss, 'Jeffrey Goldberg suggests anti-Zionists aren’t Jews', Mondoweiss, 28 October 2009