Foreign Policy
 
 
 
 
_What Wikileaks Tells Us About Al Jazeera_ 
(http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/09/19/what_wikileaks_tells_us_about_al_jazeera)
 
Is the rapidly expanding Middle East satellite television network and voice 
 of the Arab Spring as independent as it claims? 

BY OMAR CHATRIWALA | SEPTEMBER 19,  2011 


 
Al Jazeera has been making waves in the Middle East ever since it aired its 
 first broadcast on Nov. 1, 1996. In its news dispatches and talk shows, 
the  pan-Arab satellite channel, which is funded by the state of Qatar, has 
been a  strident critic of U.S. foreign policies in Afghanistan, Iraq, and the 
 Palestinian Territories, even while it has been a thorn in the side of 
many an  Arab autocrat. But after the last dump of leaked U.S. diplomatic 
cables by  WikiLeaks, on Aug. 30, articles have begun to circulate -- 
especially 
in _Iranian_ 
(http://english.irib.ir/news/political/item/79409-cable-al-jazeera-chief-linked-to-us)
  and _Syrian_ (http://twitpic.com/6j7rhf)  media 
outlets -- about Al Jazeera's _close_ 
(http://arabcrunch.com/2011/09/wikileaks-al-jazeera-deletes-its-website-content-that-disturbs-the-us-government.html)
 
  
(http://arabcrunch.com/2011/09/wikileaks-al-jazeera-deletes-its-website-content-that-disturbs-the-us-government.html)
 _relationship_ 
(http://arabcrunch.com/2011/09/wikileaks-al-jazeera-deletes-its-website-content-that-disturbs
-the-us-government.html)  with a surprising  interlocutor: the U.S. 
government
 
In particular, a _newly_ 
(http://wikileaks.org/cable/2005/10/05DOHA1765.html#par1)  _released_ 
(http://wikileaks.org/cable/2005/10/05DOHA1765.html#par1)   
(http://wikileaks.org/cable/2005/10/05DOHA1765.html#par1) _cable_ 
(http://wikileaks.org/cable/2005/10/05DOHA1765.html#par1)  issued by the U.S. 
Embassy in  Doha and signed by then ambassador Chase Untermeyer, details a 
meeting between  an embassy public affairs official and Wadah Khanfar, Al 
Jazeera's director  general, in which the latter is said to agree to tone down 
and 
remove what the  United States terms "disturbing Al Jazeera website 
content."  
There have been longstanding accusations that Al Jazeera serves as an arm 
of  its host nation's foreign policy, and _earlier_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/05/wikileaks-cables-al-jazeera-qatari-foreign-policy)
   
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/05/wikileaks-cables-al-jazeera-qatari-
foreign-policy) _leaked_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/05/wikileaks-cables-al-jazeera-qatari-foreign-policy)
   
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/05/wikileaks-cables-al-jazeera-qatari-foreign-policy)
 
_documents_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/05/wikileaks-cables-al-jazeera-qatari-foreign-policy)
  referred to the news  organization as "one of 
Qatar's most valuable political and diplomatic tools,"  which could be used as 
"a 
bargaining tool to repair relationships with other  countries." Another 
document urges Sen. John Kerry to engage the Qatari  government on Al Jazeera 
during a visit to the Gulf country, saying, "there are  ample precedents for 
a bilateral dialogue on Al Jazeera as part of improving  bilateral 
relations."  
Despite those assertions by U.S. diplomatic sources, both the network and 
the  Qatari government fiercely insist that it is editorially independent and 
free  from interference.  
Skeptics take the latest leak as proof, though, that Al Jazeera is  
susceptible to external pressures, not least in part due to the document's  
summary:  
PAO [Public affairs officer] met 10/19 with Al Jazeera Managing Director  
Wadah Khanfar to discuss the latest DIA [U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency]  
report on Al Jazeera and disturbing Al Jazeera website content.... Khanfar  
said the most recent website piece of concern to the USG [U.S. government] 
has  been toned down and that he would have it removed over the subsequent two 
or  three days. End summary. 
In what some are seizing upon as evidence of an American-Qatari conspiracy, 
 the cable, dated October 2005, continues with a quote from Khanfar saying, 
"We  need to fix the method of how we receive these reports," mentioning 
that he had  found one of them "on the fax machine."  
Later, there is a reference in the memo to a sort of understanding that's  
been reached between Al Jazeera and the U.S. government:  
On a semantic level, [Khanfar] objected to the use of the word "agreement"  
as used in the August report on the first page, under the heading "Violence 
in  Iraq", where a sentence reads: "In violation of the station's agreement 
 several months ago with US officials etc". "The agreement was that it was 
a  non-paper," said Khanfar. [A non-paper is diplomatic jargon for a 
proposal  that is unofficial and has not been committed to.] "As a news 
organization, we  cannot sign agreements of this nature, and to have it here 
like this 
in  writing is of concern to us." 


Leaving it at that, the cable appears to be a smoking gun showing Al 
Jazeera  at the U.S. government's beck and call. Iran-owned _Press TV_ 
(http://www.presstv.ir/detail/198636.html)  uses this to conclude that "the US 
government  has previously had a say in what content to appear on the 
al-Jazeera 
website."  The website _ArabCrunch_ 
(http://arabcrunch.com/2011/09/wikileaks-al-jazeera-deletes-its-website-content-that-disturbs-the-us-government.html)
  
similarly denounced Al  Jazeera for responding to U.S. pressure, and says 
the cable "might have revealed  the reason behind the AJ one sided coverage of 
Iraq in the recent years." Read  in their full context, though, this and 
other leaked cables tell a very  different story.  
Khanfar could not be reached for comment, and Al Jazeera has made no 
official  response to the latest claims, but a source at the channel told 
Foreign 
Policy that these sorts of meeting between  high-level Al Jazeera management 
and U.S. officials are standard practice, and  continue today. Elaborating, 
he said that representatives of numerous diplomatic  missions regularly 
bring lists of complaints to Al Jazeera, but that doesn't  mean they are heeded 
or given undue weight.  
The controversial cable actually backs up this comment to a certain extent, 
 detailing Khanfar arguing with some points made in the U.S. government 
report  presented to him by the embassy representative. "Some are simple 
mistakes which  we accept and address," he said. Other points, such as airing 
views not  favorable to the United States, are taken out of context, given that 
the  contrasting opinion would have its due in a later report, he said. 
Khanfar also  tells the representative that some grievances can't be addressed, 
including the  use of "terrorist tapes" on air, which he insists is the 
network's policy so  long as they are edited for newsworthiness. And obviously, 
he states, he can't  very well prevent guests or interviewees from using 
language deemed by the U.S.  government as "inflammatory."  
Reviewing the "troublesome website material" Khanfar agreed to tone down, 
the  U.S. public affairs officer cites a sensationalistic report carried by 
Al  Jazeera's Arabic website:  
The site opens to an image of bloody sheets of paper riddled with bullet  
holes.  Viewers click on the bullet holes to access testimony from ten  
alleged "eye witnesses"... 
The unnamed U.S. officer tells Khanfar that the report "came across as  
inflammatory and journalistically questionable." It then says, "Khanfar 
appeared  to repress a sigh but said he would have the piece removed."  
Al Jazeera -- while lauded internationally for the quality of its 
broadcasts  -- has more than once _had to backpeddle _ 
(http://www.thememriblog.org/blog_personal/en/4239.htm) on content carried by 
the  Aljazeera.net website, 
which operates somewhat autonomously from the Arabic  channel in an office 
across town. In 2007, for example, the site carried a poll  asking readers if 
they "support Al Qaeda's attacks in Algeria." A majority of  the poll's 
30,000 respondents answered yes, sparking a furor from the Algerian  media, 
accusing the channel of legitimizing al Qaeda. The website's manager  later 
said posting the poll was a grave error and had been done without his  
permission.  
Beyond this specific memo, WikiLeaks has published _more_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=aljazeera+&qorigin=17920&sort=0)   
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=aljazeera+&qorigin=17920&sort=0) 
_than_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=aljazeera+&qorigin=17920&sort=0) _ 
30 _ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=aljazeera+&qorigin=17920&sort=0) 
_cables_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=aljazeera+&qorigin=17920&sort=0)  
from the U.S. Embassy  in Doha with the label Al Jazeera, 
and many more making mention of the news  organization, ranging in date 
from September 2005 to February  2010. But the portrait the leaked cables paint 
is not evidence of any sort  of conspiracy so much as an organization 
struggling to maintain professional  standards.  
The _earliest_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1567#para-104589-1)   
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1567#para-104589-1) 
_available_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1567#para-104589-1)   
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1567#para-104589-1) _cable_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1567#para-104589-1)  
discusses preparations  for the launch of "Al Jazeera 
International," the original name of Al  Jazeera English, and the recording of 
a 
pilot called "The Hassan and Josh  Show." Offering some insights into the 
younger channel's development, it says  operations were "still in a somewhat 
chaotic embryonic stage" in 2005.  
Curiously, that pilot, which never made it to air, was hosted by the two  
stars of the 2004 Iraq war documentary _Control_ 
(http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0391024/)   (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0391024/) 
_Room_ 
(http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0391024/)  -- former marine Josh Rushing and 
veteran  Al Jazeera 
journalist Hassan Ibrahim. The cable's author concluded  that Ibrahim and 
Rushing were "clearly still amateur anchors and will need  considerable 
practice to present a more professional and engaging program."  
The next _available_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera)   
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera) _cable_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera)  documents 
an earlier meeting  between Khanfar and the embassy's 
public affairs officer, in which the Al  Jazeera director likens the "War on 
Terror" to Osama bin Laden's tactic of  saying, "You're either with us, or 
against us." Khanfar insists Al Jazeera  belongs in neither camp.  
_Another_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera)   
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera) 
_document_ 
(http://www.cablegatesearch.net/cable.php?id=05DOHA1593&q=aljazeera)  from 2005 
describes steps  Al Jazeera has taken to shore up shifting 
standards in quality:  
Khanfar noted that he holds a daily 1pm meeting with an AJ quality  
assurance team entrusted with implementing AJ's code of ethics and conduct,  
which 
views and anlayzes all Al Jazeera programming, looking for lapses in  
professionalism, balance and objectivity. "That meeting is very tight, tighter  
even than your list," said Khanfar. 
The author of that cable concludes that Khanfar "is clearly committed to  
bringing Al Jazeera up to professional international standards of journalism 
and  ... seems to be not only open to criticism but to welcome it."  
Following up, U.S. Embassy officials later met with Jaafar Abbas Ahmed, the 
 head of Al Jazeera's Quality Assurance (QA) unit, who, they said was frank 
about  "resistance and hostility" from the channel's older generation of 
journalists.  Abbas told them some Al Jazeera staff treat the quality 
assurance team with  suspicion, referring to them at times as the KGB and CIA.  
"According to Abbas, the effort to professionalize Al Jazeera is an uphill  
one," the cable reads, indicating the biggest problem he faced was that 
"old  habits die hard." It continues:  

While AJ started out with a significant number of ex-BBC reporters, this  
cadre has shrunk over the years, attracted to other channels such as Al  
Arabiyya, Abbas said. He added that only a handful remains.  
A majority of the remaining journalism staff are therefore ex-state TV  
reporters. They may be brilliant, but the journalistic culture they have  
absorbed is different from the one AJ is trying to cultivate, Abbas  explained. 

At least one expert who has studied the network in depth says Al Jazeera's  
culture may be the very thing behind the mixed standards in output.  
"[My] academic research shows influence is not something that comes on a  
top-down level -- you have to look at the individuals working there," said  
Mohamed Zayani, a professor at Georgetown University in Qatar and co-author 
of  the book The Culture of Al Jazeera: Inside an Arab Media Giant.   
"What we got time and again was that there was a big margin of freedom... 
and  journalists were empowered by it," he told me. But that also makes Al 
Jazeera  more susceptible to the subjective views of individual employees, he 
said.  
Al Jazeera has, if anything, become even more of a household name in recent 
 years, and has been recognized in the West by no less than U.S. Secretary 
of  State Hillary Clinton for offering "real news." The organization has  
aggressively covered the "Arab Spring" uprisings across the Middle East, even  
dropping popular programming to air around-the-clock coverage as revolts 
have  climaxed in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Justifiably or not, though, 
critics accuse  the broadcaster of ignoring the unrest in its own backyard, the 
Gulf.  
In the case of Syria, Al Jazeera has _faced backlash_ 
(http://dohanews.co/post/5894386800)  for covering the brutal crackdown on  
opposition protesters 
by the government there. Syrians have accused Al Jazeera  of seeking to 
foment unrest in the country, and at least one media outlet even  accused the 
Qatar-based broadcaster of setting up film studios to _stage some of the 
uprising_ 
(http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/14/syrian-tv-station-accuses-al-jazeera-of-fabricating-uprising/)
 . It  comes as no surprise, then, that 
some might seize on the latest leaked cables as  a way to discredit the 
news organization as simply being a mouthpiece for the  U.S. government. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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