

NETWORKS NEED TO BE SKEPTICAL OF BOTH SIDES
Reporters Repeated NATO Falsehoods on Refugee Bombing
by FAIR--Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
In the latest
in a series of "accidental" bombings of Yugoslavian civilians
by the U.S., at least 87 ethnic Albanians were killed May 13 in the Kosovo
village of Korisa. But the Pentagon did not admit that it had in fact bombed
the village until several days later; during the first news cycle, when
the story was big news, U.S. and NATO officials advanced a variety of cover
stories in order to deny or reduce its guilt. And network news media were
all too eager to carry these false stories.
Here's NBC's Jim Miklaszewski on May 14, the day after the bombing, reporting
that NATO officials are "fairly certain" they didn't bomb the
village:
"NATO's still investigating, but privately, Pentagon officials believe
the Serbs attacked the village with mortars or small artillery, and then
laid the blame on NATO."
Meanwhile, officials were "privately" giving ABC an entirely different
story. Here's ABC's John Cochran on the same night:
"Privately, though, U.S. officials say American planes apparently did
bomb Korisa, where they say there were legitimate military targets, including
troops and anti-aircraft artillery. NATO analysts are looking at the possibility
that, after the bombing, the Serbs shelled the town with artillery to make
the devastation appear even worse. The analysts say the pictures from the
scene do not seem to match the damage they believe was caused by the bombs."
Why did officials lead the networks to such divergent conclusions? First,
when you hear about such NATO "investigations," keep in mind that
in modern warfare, planes drop bombs on specified targets whose coordinates
are precisely known. Nonetheless, NBC ran with NATO's "fairly certain"
denial of even targeting the village without a shred of evidence, when NATO's
own targeting data would have revealed the truth.
ABC, on the other hand, offers NATO's alternate explanation: that Serb forces
shelled the village after a NATO attack. Again, no substantiation was ever
offered for the charge that Yugoslavians had themselves shelled the site
to worsen the carnage. After NATO officials dropped this claim, and openly
admitted that they had in fact bombed the Albanians, they settled on a new
story to try to redirect the blame for the mass slaughter: The refugees
were "human shields" who were brought to a military facility in
hopes that they would be killed and provide a propaganda victory for Yugoslavia.
(New York Times, 5/15/99)
But press accounts from the scene cast doubt on the idea that Korisa was
a military target: The London Independent, reporting from the scene, noted
on May 16 that "Western journalists who visited the scene saw burnt
scraps of flesh and the scattered possessions of villagers--but no sign
of a military presence beyond a small number of soldiers apparently billeted
in nearby homes." Reports from journalists at the site (e.g., L.A.
Times, 5/15/99; Independent, 5/16/99) suggest that NATO bombs were not aimed
at any obvious military target, but at the tractors and wagons of the refugees.
Still, most of the press accepted the "human shields" story with
little questioning--including those news outlets that had reported NATO's
original falsehoods without a hint of skepticism. U.S. news reports are
properly skeptical of Yugoslavian government assertions, since many of Belgrade's
claims turn out to be wrong. Shouldn't independent journalists apply the
same standards to NATO's frequently inaccurate statements as well?
ACTION ALERT: Please contact the TV networks and urge them to show skepticism
of unverifiable claims made by both Yugoslavia and NATO, since both sides
have made a series of claims that have turned out to be incorrect.
ABC News,
47 W. 66 St., New York, NY 10023, Phone: 212-456-7777 Fax: 212-456-4297
email :netaudr@abcnews.com
CBS News
524 W. 57 St., New York, NY 10019 Phone: 212-975-4321 Fax: 212-245-7560,
email:audsvcs@cbs.com
NBC
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10112, Phone: 212-664-4444 email:nightly@nbc.com
Please send copies of email correspondence, including any responses, to
us at FAIR.
--FAIR--Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting, (212) 633-6700 <http://www.fair.org>
<fair@fair.org>