In my previous post, I mentioned in passing that an article by Declan Walsh in the NY Times about the war in Tigray seemed to have reversed facts and created a false narrative about who was the aggressor. Well, this subplot took a dramatic turn today. Long story short, in addition to the blog post, I asked him publicly repeatedly, and today he publicly admitted it! It is an extraordinary admission but since the editors of the NY Times are apparently sweeping this reversal under the rug, I would like to relay the story more completely here.
First about Feltman meeting Abiy in Addis Abeba in May. The meeting itself is not news, what's being reported is an anecdote about how the meeting went, showing Abiy trying to clumsily charm Feltnan and failing, with details like coffee spills, etc. to show the info comes from someone who was there. So basically this is relaying the story of the meeting from Feltman's perspective. Not really reporting but ok...
Second, it reports that Coons spoke to Abiy in "early November". What happened in that conversation is the real substance of the article. Here's what it said:
- "Washington" heard about the war before it started
- Coons called Abiy and tried to talk him out of starting the war
- Abiy wanted the war and predicted swift victory before it started
- There is no mention in the article of the actual event that started the war, namely the Nov 4 attack by TPLF on the national army.
The story a normal reader would get is basically that the Ethiopian government was the aggressor against TPLF.
But if you are not naive a few things jump out.
- First it is saying the call happened in early November before the start of the war, and before the US election, so it must have been Nov 1-3. At that time Coons was running for reelection. It is hard to believe that a US Senator is making phone calls to foreign leaders in the last 48 hours of his own election campaign.
- Second, the reason Senator Coons has been involved lately is as a personal emissary of President Biden. They are both from Delaware, Coons took Biden's seat in the Senate when Biden became VP, and it is not unusual for a sitting president or a president-elect to have personal emissaries do some international diplomacy for them. What is unusual is for this to happen before he's elected. And it is even more surprising that candidate Biden would be focused on Ethiopia while he is in the final hours of his own very intense presidential campaign!
- Third, consider how might have "word reached Washington" about a war that hasn't started. Who gets "word" about alleged secret military plans of a foreign country? Is the claim that Biden was getting secret foreign intelligence while he was still a candidate? The Trump adminstration and Biden transition were not even cooperating *after* the election, so if there really was a secret channel of intelligence to Biden this would be news!
- Fourth a quick look at Senator Coons website shows that his calls are logged. For example the Nov 23 call is there and is consistent with what was widely reported at the time. But there is no record of a call in early November. Strange exception.
What makes more sense is that there was no pre-Nov 3 conversation. It was the Nov 23 conversation. By taking what Abiy said three weeks after the war was started by TPLF, and placing it before Nov 4, the article creates a false narrative about who the aggressor is. Literally reversing the truth!
But this time it was more than just an omission and subjective tone, it was a blatant true or false question. So I asked him directly on Twitter
And again two weeks later.Convo between Coons & Abiy was on Nov 23, NOT before Nov 3 as you claim: https://t.co/JHIzenPLGo
— Nemo Semret (@nemozen) June 21, 2021
Or was it a secret one? Changing timeline to reverse cause and effect? You did this in May 13 and Feb 27 articles. https://t.co/s8qHCR1KTq pic.twitter.com/LxJa5KFDSR
Finally today, (thanks to @Noslata and many others) Declan Walsh responded! He said the article was updated, and blamed the falsehood on Coons misremembering the dates.
After publication Senator Coons said he misremembered the date and the story has been corrected and appended. https://t.co/nuHeSHaokS
— Declan Walsh (@declanwalsh) July 14, 2021
Here's what the updated article says as of now
So basically the main point, the meat of the story, is now completely different.
Vindicated!
But I'm not celebrating. The whole thing is still a loss for Truth. Either the reporter was lying in the article and is also lying now on Twitter when he blames it on Coons; or he simply writes what a politician tells him without even the most rudimentary checking -- more secretary than reporter. One might wonder how a "bureau chief" of a major newspaper could be such a clumsy liar or so gullible. I guess we are lucky that we are dealing with the B team here. Check this out: "The New York Times shows how not to write an Africa job advert" a hilarious deconstruction of a job ad. That might even be the actual one that was filled by Declan Walsh! Reading it you can totally see how the position could go to second-rate hacks who are easily manipulated by their sources. This is not the first time either -- I've complained before.
More depressing is that on the article itself, even now there is no indication that a correction was made! No editor's note, no diff. It just says updated as if it was a minor punctuation change. It's hard to overstate the impact of this.... One of the most influential newspapers published a completely false narrative about one of the biggest most tragic events, then after millions had read it, quietly reversed the facts. It's much worse than the old problem of print corrections not getting as much visibility as the original falsehood. In this case the damage is done and what little evidence there was is erased....
Another disappointment is that this July 11 artcile in Al Jazeera covers the same conversation with the same tone, and misses the opportunity to clearly put in the right context (i.e. after not before Nov 4). Before today's admission by Declan, I had asked the author privately if he had more info on this conversation but didn't hear back.
So what can we do? When this kind of stuff happened leading up to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, the NY Times played an infamous role. Here is their own list of articles that contributed to deceit about the war. Their ombudsman aka public editor, whose role was to hold the paper accountable on behalf of readers wrote a scathing rebuke of the Time's failures. Sadly, this position was abolished in 2017 it seems. So I resorted to asking the question on Twitter. And that is the silver lining. You are now the public editors! And unraveling falsehoods can now happen in a few days instead of years. And of course, the evidence was never really erased merely swept under the rug. We can see on archive.org that the change occured between June 25 and June 27. Also I usually don't grab screenshots but for some reason something made me latch on to this on June 21. The summer solstice maybe? Anyway I hope this little experiment shows there's hope for truth. Strengthen your mind we are living in serious times
P.S. The title of this post is borrowed from the autobiography of M. K. Gandhi, one of my favorite books.