NY Times, AP, Washington Post raise eyebrows with glowing coverage of terror leader Hassan Nasrallah

NY Times, AP, Washington Post raise eyebrows with glowing coverage of terror leader Hassan Nasrallah


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legacy media outlets Eyebrows were raised in the United States over the weekend with glowing coverage of terrorist leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was praised as a “father figure” with a “tendency to joke.”

Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed Hezbollah leader of terrorist organization He died in a strike on Friday against the group’s headquarters in Lebanon. The IDF said Nasrallah was responsible for the killing of numerous Israeli civilians and soldiers, as well as planning and carrying out thousands of terrorist acts around the world.

“He was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Americans, yet here in America the media is making him look like he’s a good guy,” Ansley Earhart said Monday on “Fox & Friends,” as favorable mainstream headlines flashed on the screen. Appeared.

Israeli military says Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah killed in Beirut attack

Legacy media outlets in the United States raised eyebrows over the weekend with glowing coverage of terrorist leader Hassan Nasrallah. (Al Manar TV/Reuters)

The Associated Press, the new York Times The Washington Post was criticized for its coverage of the terrorist leader’s death. Steve Doocy called it “kind of curious” that the press would describe Nasrallah in such glowing terms.

the new York Times faced significant backlash To suggest that Nasrallah “insisted that there should be a Palestine with equality for Muslims, Jews and Christians” did not contain any kind of byline.

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In fact, the word “terrorism” did not appear in the Times article.

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woman reading quran

A woman reads the Quran at the site of the assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

A different times piece noted that the terrorist had a “propensity for telling jokes” and “never enforced strict Islamic rules such as veiling for women in areas under Hezbollah control.”

“No more pretense. The New York Times is no longer even putting names on the byline of its pro-Hezbollah stories. It’s just the newspaper, anonymously as an institution, selecting and determining its own version of the news: That Israel killed a globally beloved saint figure,” one reader responded on Twitter.

The Associated Press also cashed in Calling Nasrallah a “powerful regional force” and emphasizing that “he was also considered a pragmatist compared to the flamboyant militants who dominated after the establishment of Hezbollah in 1982,” noting that he was considered a “united The state was considered “extremist” in the United States and much of the West. ,

The AP said of Nasrallah, “The image of Nasrallah, who wears glasses and has a bushy gray beard like many religious Shia men, was a far cry from that of a terrorist who commands thousands of heavily armed, well-trained and battle-hardened followers.” Used to lead.” “He often paused in his speeches to make jokes or speak in the local dialect.”

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IDF Information Chart

An IDF information chart showing how it destroyed Hezbollah’s chain of command in recent attacks. (IDF Spokesperson Unit)

An IDF veteran responded on X, “He was a terrorist and evil. You missed that part.”

Another user teased that AP should send flowers, while another said AP is “disgusting.”

The Washington Post wrote that Nasrallah was viewed as a “father figure” in an article, adding that he was “condemned as a terrorist by his enemies.”

“Among his followers, Mr. Nasrallah was viewed as a father figure, a moral guide and a political guide. He was lauded as the man who empowered Lebanon’s once downtrodden and impoverished Shia community and protecting it from Israeli incursions by turning Hezbollah into a formidable deterrent force,” wrote Post Global Affairs correspondent Liz Sly.

columbia journalism review Published an article titled “The Life and Death of Hassan Nasrallah”, which mentioned the words “terrorism” or “terrorist” only once, when a State Department official described Hezbollah as “probably the A-Team of terrorists”. Was referred to as.

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Fox News Digital’s Peter Aitken, Loren Taylor and Landon Mion contributed to this report.


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