NYT Public Editor Dances Around 'Brutal Truth' of Torture

http://mediabloodhound.typepad.com/weblog/2009/04/from-article-17-of-the-geneva-conventionno-physical-or-mental-torture-nor-any-other-form---of-coercion-may-be-inflicted-on.html

Clark Hoyt's New York Times public editor column on Monday, "Telling 
the Brutal Truth," brings the ongoing "debate" over whether 
waterboarding is torture to brave new heights of absurdity.

Hoyt opens the column:

"A LINGUISTIC [all caps are Hoyt's] shift took place in this 
newspaper as it reported the details of how the Central Intelligence 
Agency was allowed to strip Al Qaeda prisoners naked, bash them 
against walls, keep them awake for up to 11 straight days, sometimes 
with their arms chained to the ceiling, confine them in dark boxes 
and make them feel as if they were drowning."

Reading this, you might think, "Finally, in its news pages, the Times 
is going to call waterboarding what it is and what it always has been 
since its first recorded use during the Spanish Inquisition -- 
torture. Plain and simple. Yet you would be gravely disappointed.

For Hoyt then writes:

"Until this month, what the Bush administration called 'enhanced' 
interrogation techniques were 'harsh' techniques in the news pages of 
The Times. Increasingly, they are 'brutal.' (On the editorial page, 
they long ago added up to 'torture.')"

Such wordplay echoes the deadpan satiric riffs of The Marx Brothers, 
Monty Python and George Carlin. It's hardly a stretch to imagine 
Groucho, Cleese or Carlin, in the role of a buffoonish government 
official or a radio or TV anchor oblivious to the inanity of his own 
news copy, delivering these lines in which Orwellian jargon is 
dispensed to the breaking point of all reason and laughter is the 
only sane response...when such lines are intended as comedy.

Of course, the screamingly obvious subtext, the 800 lb. gorilla 
juggling chainsaws under klieg lights, if you will, is the absurdity 
that what's in question here is not whether to call the "techniques" 
such as waterboarding "torture" but rather whether to call them 
"harsh" or "brutal."

The following paragraph encapsulates Hoyt's stubborn unwillingness to 
actually fulfill his column's title -- "Telling the Brutal Truth" -- 
and the obfuscation he employs to keep the focus away from the 800 
lb. gorilla called Torture. Simultaneously, and preposterously, when 
taking into account what's actually at stake here, he portrays the 
Times' editorial struggle over whether to use "harsh" or "brutal" as 
a noble journalistic enterprise worthy of praise. 

"The choice of a single word involved separate deliberations in New 
York and the Washington bureau and demonstrated the linguistic 
minefields that journalists navigate every day in the quest to 
describe the world accurately and fairly. In a polarized atmosphere 
in which many Americans believe the nation betrayed its most 
fundamental ideals in the name of fighting terror and others believe 
extreme measures were necessary to save lives, The Times is 
displeasing some who think 'brutal' is just a timid euphemism for 
torture and their opponents who think 'brutal' is too loaded."

Thus, the preponderance of this column lies almost wholly within 
these pointless parameters, as ludicrous as two emergency room 
doctors pedantically debating whether the point-of-entry of a new 
patient's gunshot wound was his chest or his back as the patient 
bleeds to death on the operating table.

Hoyt provides he said/she said examples to show how the public has 
reacted. But in doing so, in this context, he turns the very idea of 
news reporting -- that it should be based on fact rather than opinion 
-- on its head and, in effect, concedes that Times editors, on news 
stories as serious as torture, are allowing public sentiment to color 
their reports.

"Robert Ofsevit of Oakland, Calif., asked, 'Why can't The New York 
Times call torture by its proper name?' He added, 'Please find more 
backbone and fulfill your journalistic responsibilities by describing 
these immoral and illegal practices for what they were.' Theodore 
Murray of Cambridge, Mass., said that if The Times fails to adopt the 
word torture, 'you perpetuate the fantasy that calling a thing by 
something other than its name will change the thing itself.'

"But Cynthia Jacobson of Phoenix said The Times is 'outrageously 
biased' to use a term like brutal. 'The Times has simply placed 
itself as one actor in a political fight, not a neutral media 
outlet,' she wrote."

And herein lies the crux of what Hoyt -- who is supposed to be the 
Paper of Record's ombudsman, not its cheerleader -- should be 
addressing in this column: 1) If the Times called techniques such as 
waterboarding torture in its reporting, which it should based on U.S. 
and international law, legal experts, historians, military judges, 
combat veterans and human rights organizations, and described, 
however briefly, what that torture entailed, then the use of 
modifying adjectives such as "harsh" or "brutal" would not only be 
superfluous but, in a news story, better left out; and 2) isn't the 
Times (along with any news outlet that has failed to report these 
acts as torture) directly responsible in some way for inspiring the 
kind of response it received from readers like Cynthia from Phoenix? 
If readers are not provided the facts -- a) waterboarding is torture 
and b) torture is illegal -- while Times editors are simultaneously 
ascribing arbitrary descriptors to it like "brutal" or "harsh," then 
the Times is not only denying its readers the necessary information 
to understand the issue but this denial may also lead directly to 
accusations of bias.

There's a reason, of course, why people who get their news from FOX 
and Rush Limbaugh are clueless, nearly 100% of their vitriol 
ill-informed.

In an effort to, as Hoyt says, "describe the world accurately and 
fairly" (and I'd place emphasis on "fairly"), Times news editors and 
Mr. Hoyt have hedged their way into a euphemistic fog, relying, in 
the context of the "torture debate," on describing the surface effect 
-- "harsh," "brutal" or otherwise -- of a criminal act involving 
torture without reporting as fact the act is either torture or 
criminal.

The more Hoyt gives us behind-the-scenes details into these editorial 
decisions, in an effort to defend them, the more ridiculous and 
damning they appear. And the more he inadvertently makes the case 
that this approach has infected his newsroom, muddied the facts and 
invited arbitrary decision-making where it doesn't belong.

"The word ['brutal'] had appeared a few times before in this context, 
most recently, on April 10, when the Central Intelligence Agency said 
it was closing the network of secret overseas prisons where 
interrogations took place. Scott Shane, who covers national security, 
said he and his editor in the Washington bureau, Douglas Jehl, 
negotiated over the wording of the first paragraph. Shane wrote that 
methods used in the prisons were 'widely denounced as illegal 
torture.' Jehl changed that to the 'harshest interrogation methods' 
since the Sept. 11 attacks. Shane said he felt that with more 
information coming to light, including a leaked report by the 
International Committee of the Red Cross, the words harsh and even 
harshest no longer sufficed. He proposed brutal, and Jehl agreed."

First, Hoyt blithely skips over the most telling fact here: Jehl 
censored Shane from reporting that these techniques were "widely 
denounced as illegal torture." (Never mind even that description is 
misleading -- torture is illegal. Period. But "illegal torture" may 
give the impression that these techniques were "widely denounced" as 
such, while other forms of torture are legal.) Moreover, Jehl's edit 
seems influenced by two of the Bush administration's most utilized 
rhetorical tools on the topic of torture: 1) the U.S. doesn't torture 
(OK, delete "torture") and 2) the U.S. instead calls it "enhanced 
interrogation techniques" (insert "interrogation methods").

The bizarro world of this editorial process continues.

"A week later, Jill Abramson, the managing editor for news, came to 
her own conclusion that the facts supported a stronger word than 
harsh after she read just-released memos from the Bush-era Justice 
Department spelling out the interrogation methods in detail and 
declaring them legal. The memos were repudiated by President Obama.

"'Harsh sounded like the way I talked to my kids when they were 
teenagers and told them I was going to take the car keys away,' said 
Abramson, who consulted with several legal experts and talked it over 
with Dean Baquet, the Washington bureau chief. Abramson and Baquet 
agreed that 'brutal' was a better word. From rare use now and then, 
it had gone to being the preferred choice. The result of that 
decision was this top headline in the printed paper of April 17: 
'Memos Spell Out Brutal C.I.A. Mode of Interrogation.'"

Maybe when Abramson "consulted with several legal experts" she should 
have been more concerned with verifying that such techniques were 
indeed torture, and brought that to her Washington bureau chief, 
instead of dithering over the relative meaninglessness of which 
adjective best described her article's subject, torture, which, ipso 
facto, had occurred but which she and her paper nonetheless still 
refuse to report.

Hoyt then notes another reader's dissatisfaction with Abramson and 
Baquet's editorial -- or is that "adjectorial"? -- decision-making.

"That offended Daniel Pilon of Solon Springs, Wis., who said he 
agreed that the article described brutality but did not want The 
Times making that judgment for him. 'Presenting the facts and letting 
the reader decide how to characterize what happened would be more in 
the spirit of objective journalism,' Pilon said. He said The Times 
should have dropped all adjectives in this case."

Once again, however, Hoyt manages to elide the substance of the 
criticism. What offended Daniel from Wisconsin was less the 
adjective's application than the machinations behind it and the 
effect of its use in context. A fine point, maybe, but an important 
distinction.

Daniel's stated opinion is pretty much dead-on: "Presenting the facts 
and letting the reader decide how to characterize what happened would 
be more in the spirit of objective journalism." I'd replace the 
present-day loaded word "objective", pertaining to news reporting, 
with "responsible and accurate." But other than that, Dan from WI 
makes my point -- that is, as long as the Times was "[p]resenting the 
facts" so the reader could "decide how to characterize what 
happened," which it wasn't and hasn't in regards to "torture," 
"waterboarding" and other known torture techniques.

But Hoyt then obfuscates this point with the help of a linguistic 
expert's false equivalency.

"I asked Deborah Tannen, an author and professor of linguistics at 
Georgetown University, what she thought of a suggestion like Pilon's. 
'The search for words that are not in any way evaluative is 
hopeless,' she told me. 'All words have connotations.'"

Tannen's statement fails to address the reader from Wisconsin's point 
and only further muddles what's at stake. But it's Hoyt's 
responsibility for placing her answer in this context and for not 
making clear to Tannen what the reader was actually driving at: 
"[t]he Times should have dropped all adjectives in this case." Drop 
the adjectives and the only "evaluative" words are either 
insufficient and misleading nouns such as "interrogation techniques" 
or the insertion of evaluative words that impart concrete, 
universally recognized meaning: dead or alive, hot or cold, up or 
down, torture or interrogation, legal or illegal.

Hoyt goes on to write:

"I was not sure I saw a huge difference between harsh and brutal - my 
dictionary says one meaning of harsh is brutal. Tannen said there is 
a big difference, and she noticed the change in The Times right away. 
Brutal suggests something animal-like and 'goes beyond the way humans 
are supposed to act,' she said."

Yes, "beyond the way humans are supposed to act," just don't call it 
"torture." And no, in the context of a news story, in which editors 
refuse to call a criminal act by its name, there's not a "huge 
difference between harsh and brutal." That's the point. But once more 
it's buried under Hoyt's narrow gaze.
Finally, Hoyt addresses the "T" word head-on (well, mainly 
vicariously through Washington bureau editor Douglas Jehl):

"And why not, then, go all the way to torture? Jehl said that when 
the paper is discussing what is generally regarded as the most 
extreme interrogation method the C.I.A. used, waterboarding, "we've 
become more explicit in saying in a first reference that it's a 
near-drowning technique" that Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder and 
many other experts "have called torture." But he said: "I have 
resisted using torture without qualification or to describe all the 
techniques. Exactly what constitutes torture continues to be a matter 
of debate and hasn't been resolved by a court. This president and 
this attorney general say waterboarding is torture, but the previous 
president and attorney general said it is not. On what basis should a 
newspaper render its own verdict, short of charges being filed or a 
legal judgment rendered?" Jehl argued for precision and caution. I 
agree."

First, history has long ago reached a "verdict" on waterboarding, 
charges have been "filed," "legal judgment rendered" -- from the U.S. 
trying and hanging Japanese soldiers after WWII for torture that 
included waterboarding, to the Khmer Rouge's crimes against humanity 
which favored the torture technique, to the court martial of a U.S. 
soldier in 1968 after he was captured supervising the waterboarding 
of a North Vietnamese solider in a photo by the Washington Post, to a 
Texas sheriff and his three deputies' conviction and sentence to four 
years in prison in 1983 for waterboarding prisoners. And this, of 
course, is hardly an exhaustive history.

Second, when any non-partisan expert is asked if waterboarding is 
torture, the response is a unanimous "yes." Moreover, framing in a 
news story that those who believe it's torture include "Obama and the 
Attorney General Eric Holder" instead of just citing, say, "most 
legal experts and historians," is the very gruel that has fed this 
intellectually dishonest and historically blind "torture debate." It 
actively, if unintentionally, politicizes something in a news story 
that is widely accepted as an historically and legally indisputable 
fact.
This justification by Jehl and Hoyt's acceptance of it is nothing 
short of shameful and shameless, a abdication of their job as 
journalists under the guise of "caution" and to the detriment of 
"precision."

A couple of paragraphs later, Hoyt begins to lay down his final verdict.

"Reporters and editors need to leave moral and political judgments to 
editorial writers and readers, but they cannot be so detached that 
they appear oblivious to the implications of the facts."

How's that for a rhetorical sleight of hand? "...but they cannot be 
so detached that they appear oblivious to the implications of the 
facts." But Hoyt doesn't mind, in this context, if his reporters and 
editors appear oblivious to the facts directly, i.e. waterboarding is 
torture and torture is illegal, as long as these omitted facts are 
supported in their absence by tough modifiers such as "brutal."

His last lines sum up the weaselly nature of this whole enterprise, 
of both the roots of this bogus "torture debate" and why it continues 
to plague our discourse, our country and our Paper of Record.

"The Times should strive to tell readers exactly what a given 
interrogation technique entails, as Shane does with waterboarding. 
But that is not always practical, as in a headline. When the paper 
needs a short description, the word brutal is accurate and 
appropriate, whether you think the acts were justified or not."

In effect, Hoyt is also saying: The Times shouldn't tell its readers 
which "interrogation techniques" are historically and legally known 
forms of torture. Strong adjectives that confuse the matter and are 
relatively arbitrary, having little reason to be in a news report, 
are preferable at the paper to calling criminal acts by their proper 
name. And even if you're a fan of torture, the adjective "brutal" is 
still appropriate in the context provided.

If we continue down this path, where mindless false debates trump the 
rule of law and where editors err on the side of "caution" by 
concealing facts that might anger members of a particular political 
stripe, we might one day be availed of other sensibly 
middle-of-the-road editorial decisions," such as referring to rape 
as, say, "savagely lustful techniques" or murder as "bloodthirsty 
heart stoppage enhancement."

While that might sound satirical now, who of us foresaw nine years 
ago that today, in the United States of America, there would not only 
be national debates over whether waterboarding is torture but also 
over the efficacy of torture itself?

That's the brutal truth.
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