The mysterious
media Benghazi bugout
“Fox
News is alone in treating the story like it’s a big deal.”
- By
JONAH GOLDBERG
- Last
Updated: 11:39 PM, October 30, 2012
- Posted:
9:52 PM, October 30, 2012
Jonah
Goldberg
Where is the
Benghazi media feeding frenzy?
I don’t think
there’s a conspiracy at work. Rather, I think journalists tend to act on their
instincts. And, collectively, the mainstream media’s instincts run liberal.
In 2000, a
Democratic operative orchestrated an “October surprise” attack on George W.
Bush, revealing that 24 years earlier, he’d been arrested for drunken driving.
The media went into a feeding frenzy.
“Is all the
24-hour coverage of Bush’s 24-year-old DUI arrest the product of a liberal
media almost drunk on the idea of sinking him, or is it a legitimate, indeed
unavoidable news story?” asked Howard Kurtz on his CNN show “Reliable Sources.”
The consensus among the guests: It wasn’t a legitimate news story. But the
media kept going with it.
One could go on
and on. In September 2004, former CBS titan Dan Rather gambled his entire
career on a story about Bush’s service in the National Guard. His instincts
were so powerful, he didn’t thoroughly check the documents he relied on, which
were forgeries.
Oh, there have
been conservative feeding frenzies: about Barack Obama’s pastor, John Kerry’s
embellishments of his war record, etc. But the mainstream media usually tasks
itself with debunking and dispelling such “hysteria.”
Last week, Fox
News correspondent Jennifer Griffin reported that sources on the ground in Libya
say they pleaded for support during the attack on the Benghazi consulate that
led to the deaths of four Americans. They were allegedly told twice to “stand
down.” Worse, there are suggestions that significant military resources were
available to counterattack, but requests for help were denied.
If true, the
White House’s concerted effort to blame the attack on a video crumbles, as do
several other fraudulent claims. Yet, last Friday, the president boasted, “The
minute I found out what was happening” in Benghazi, he ordered that everything
possible be done to protect our personnel. That’s either untrue, or he’s being
disobeyed on grave matters.
Yet Fox News is
alone in treating the story like it’s a big deal. During the
less significant Valerie Plame scandal, reporters camped out on the front lawns
of Karl Rove and other Bush White House staff. Did Obama confiscate those
journalists’ sleeping bags?
Of the five news
shows last Sunday, only “Fox News Sunday” treated this as a major story. On the
other four, the issue came up only when Republicans mentioned it. “Meet the
Press” host David Gregory shushed a guest who tried to bring up the subject,
saying, “Let’s get to Libya a little bit later.” He never did, but he saved
plenty of time to dive deep into the question of what Indiana Senate candidate
Richard Mourdock’s comments on abortion and rape mean for the Romney campaign.
I’m willing to
believe that journalists like Gregory are sincere in their desire to play it
straight. But among those who don’t share his instincts, it’s hard to
distinguish between conspiracy and groupthink. Indeed, it’s hard to think why
one should even bother trying to make that distinction at all.
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