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NYT chief spells out coverage shift: From Trump-Russia to Trump racism

Dean Baquet
© Monica Schipper/Getty Images
Dean Baquet, New York Times executive editor
Dean Baquet, the executive editor of the New York Times, said recently that, after the Mueller report, the paper has to shift the focus of its coverage from the Trump-Russia affair to the president's alleged racism.

"We built our newsroom to cover one story, and we did it truly well," Baquet said. "Now we have to regroup, and shift resources and emphasis to take on a different story." Baquet made the remarks at an employee town hall Monday. A recording was leaked to Slate, which published a transcript Thursday.

In the beginning of the Trump administration, the Times geared up to cover the Russia affair, Baquet explained:
"Chapter 1 of the story of Donald Trump, not only for our newsroom but, frankly, for our readers, was: Did Donald Trump have untoward relationships with the Russians, and was there obstruction of justice? That was a really hard story, by the way, let's not forget that. We set ourselves up to cover that story. I'm going to say it. We won two Pulitzer Prizes covering that story. And I think we covered that story better than anybody else."
But then came the Mueller report, with special counsel Robert Mueller failing to establish that the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with Russia to fix the 2016 election.

Comment: Excerpt from Slate 15/8/2019: NYT staff fed up with Dean Baquet's explanations:
Baquet was asked about historical use of the word racist. He cited the demonstrations by segregationists in 1957, which were classified as racist, unlike Trump.

Baquet's reasoning seems contradictory when reading [the transcript of the meeting], and it seemed to be in the room as well. Spread through the transcript are long, long questions by staffers asking Baquet to explain his reasoning, like this one:

Staffer: "Yeah, I want to follow up and disentangle a couple of things that I've often seen conflated in these meetings. You have questions like 'should we call Donald Trump a racist' and these broader discussions of our coverage getting flattened with the reason that I think we're here today, which is really narrowly the question of how we present the work that we do and the headlines that end up on our work. Because this is sort of the thing that a lot of us who are, in some capacity, public representatives of the Times feel ourselves called to answer for. Because there are these patterns of getting headlines wrong in a very specific way that recur repeatedly and in a way that makes me think that it's a process issue. And to me, the question of whether you put a phrase like "racial fires" in a headline is not actually about whether we think it's OK to call Donald Trump racist. It's whether we think it's OK to use euphemisms instead of direct, clear speech in a headline.

"And the issue with last week's headline was not really about Trump per se. It was really more broadly about what kind of credulousness we want to reflect in terms of an administration — any administration. Or about other cases where we're sort of shying away from the real content of the story to put a milder spin on it in the headline, which is sometimes actively misleading. ... it's not always clear whether we're taking on board the criticism that I think is very valid of a lot of these headlines. It is a real storyline about the Times out there now, that we are kind of repeatedly making mistakes that other people aren't making so much."

Baquet responds to that series of questions with, "I'm going to be really honest. I actually don't think we make a whole lot more mistakes." ...

Philip Corbett: ... "In other words, that the mistakes you're seeing are when we're going, shall we say, too easy on Donald Trump. There certainly have been headlines where I feel like that has been a failing. But I will say, honestly, there have been headlines that many of us have been concerned about or asked to have changed or have had discussion about where I felt the problem was the opposite. Where we were showing what could be read as bias against Trump, and were perhaps going too far in the opposite direction. "
The full transcript can be found here.

See also: New York Times admits 'we built our newsroom' around #Russiagate and other lies


Sheriff

World sheriff! US 'unseals warrant' demanding seizure of Iranian Grace1 tanker in Mediterranean

Grace 1
© Reuters/Jon Nazca
Iranian oil tanker Grace 1 sits anchored, with its name and Panama's flag removed, after the Supreme Court of the British territory lifted its detention order, in the Strait of Gibraltar, southern Spain, August 16, 2019.
The US has ordered the seizure of newly-freed Iranian oil tanker Grace 1, charging the ship with illegally using the US financial system to sell oil to Syria to support the IRGC after Gibraltar released the vessel.

The Justice Department has unsealed a warrant ordering the seizure and forfeiture of the Iranian tanker, all of the oil it is carrying, and $995,000, claiming the Iranians illegally used the US banking system to finance the shipment of oil to Syria to support the IRGC, which the US designated a terror group earlier this year as Washington's "maximum pressure" campaign against Tehran ramped up.

Accusing the ship of violations of bank fraud and money laundering laws, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, and terrorism statutes, the US complaint alleges "multiple parties affiliated with the IRGC" used voyages like that of Grace 1 to support illegal activities and claims "a network of front companies" laundered millions of dollars through these shipments.

Comment: How America imagines the world sees it:


More from Sputnik 17/8/2019: Iranian tanker on standby to leave, despite US attempts to detain it
Iranian vessel the Grace 1, which has been caught up in a heated diplomatic dispute between Tehran and the West, was given permission to leave Gibraltar on 15 August, with the local authorities confirming on Saturday that the US Department of Justice is still seeking to detain the tanker on a number of allegations.

A shipping agent for Iranian supertanker the Grace 1 has claimed that the vessel is prepared to leave Gibraltar in "24 to 48 hours", despite a last-minute effort by the United States to seize it again, reported AP.

On Saturday the managing director of Astralship, Richard de la Rosa, said logistical preparations had been put into motion, with a new crew of Indian and Ukrainian nationals on standby to take command of the ship.

Data from Refinitiv tracking on Saturday briefly showed the Iranian tanker carrying 2.1 million tonnes of Iranian oil had changed its position status off Gibraltar to 'underway,' but by 12:00 GMT, it said the vessel was still anchored, reported Reuters.

On Friday, the US Justice Department issued a warrant for the seizure of Iranian supertanker the Grace 1. According to it, the vessel, all the oil on board, and $995,000 are subject to forfeiture based on violations of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), bank fraud, money laundering, and terrorism statutes.

In addition, the document stresses that "a seizure warrant and a forfeiture complaint are merely allegations. The burden to prove forfeitability in a civil forfeiture proceeding is upon the government", according to the Justice Department.

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif slammed the US attempt to seize Grace 1 just hours before Gibraltar was poised to set it free as piracy.


Fixated, petty and doubling down, the US also did this:
US State Dept. slaps Iranian supertanker with visa ban after its release from Gibraltar


Footprints

Galloway on German leaks: EU talks tough but needs Brexit deal as much as the UK

Merkel/Scholz
© Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch
German Chancellor Angela Merkel • Finance Minister Olaf Scholz
Both sides may try to seem tough ahead of Brexit talks, but the EU needs the deal as much as the UK, George Galloway said in reference to leaks claiming that Germany is reluctant to renegotiate an agreement with Britain.

An internal briefing paper for the government of Angela Merkel stated that Germany wasn't going to accept Boris Johnson's demand to drop the Irish backstop and prepared for a No Deal Brexit ahead, German paper Handelsblatt reported. This came as German finance minister Olaf Scholz was taking [sic talking] to UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid in Berlin on Friday.

But Galloway believes that the revelations were no reason to panic, as "everyone talks tough before they sit down at the negotiations table."

"Of course, it's possible that the EU will prefer what will be if not a cataclysm, certainly, but a very bumpy landing," he said, referring to the No Deal possibility. But "there's no reason" for Brussels and London to not to reach a mutually satisfying arrangement. Capitalism is the key factor here, according to Galloway:
"The EU has a very substantial trade surplus with us. We buy far more from them than they buy from us, and business is business... The business interests in the EU definitely require a negotiated settlement."

Comment: See also: Brexit: 8 reasons the EU will suffer far more than the UK


Oil Well

PetroChina suspends imports of Venezuelan oil, a huge blow to Maduro

Venezuelan oil crisis
© Freedoms Phoenix
Even if China continues to thwart US sanctions on Iran, in the case of Venezuela Trump appears to be gaining the upper hand.

Bloomberg reported Friday that China National Petroleum Corp. (parent company of oil giant PetroChina Ltd) the country's biggest energy company is for the first time in over a decade backing away from Venezuelan crude, canceling shipments in August:
China National Petroleum Corp. has canceled plans to load about 5 million barrels worth of Venezuelan oil onto ships this month in the aftermath of the latest executive order by President Donald Trump, according to people with knowledge of the situation who asked not to be identified discussing proprietary information.
Beijing is seeking to reduce its exposure to the risk of Washington's sanctions, even as it grapples with the US on other fronts.

This could prove a final massive economic blow to President Nicolas Maduro's future prospects amid food and electricity shortages and hyperinflation, given China has been state-owned PDVSA's top offload destination since the US brought unprecedented sanctions against it starting January 28th. The Trump administrated expanded the sanctions further on Aug. 5, aimed at severing Maduro's final major cash lifeline.

Broom

Mission: Impossible? Ukraine's New President Ventures To Reform Powerful State Spy Agency

Ivan Bakanov

The acting chief of Ukraine's SBU security service, Ivan Bakanov, who previously headed President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's entertainment studio, Kvartal 95, and his presidential campaign.
When Ukraine's domestic security service revealed last year that it had faked the death of a dissident Russian journalist to expose a team of hit men allegedly hired by Moscow to destabilize the country by assassinating high-profile figures in Kyiv, it expected to take victory lap.

Instead, the stunt sparked wide spread criticism and turned into a public-relations nightmare --- one of many in the past 28 years that have tarnished the reputation of the Security Service of Ukraine.

A year later, fresh off huge election victories that brought him and his fledgling Servant of the People party to power, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy -- a former comedian who has vowed to end endemic corruption and implement sweeping reforms - may have a chance to do what none of his predecessors was able to do: revamp the agency and restore its credibility.

How successful the 41-year-old Zelenskiy and his young team of reformers are in cleaning up the agency -- arguably the country's most powerful institution -- will be a litmus test of his administration's resolve to bring Ukraine more into line with Western democracies.

On the other hand, failure to reform the security service, critics say, could hobble wider efforts to curb corruption and economic crime, as the agency's activities have much to do with Ukraine's efforts to bolster the rule of law, and its checkered reputation deters foreign investors from bringing business to a country where the security service has enabled economic crime.

Eye 1

Trump admin requests permanent reauthorization of NSA mass spying program exposed by Snowden

snowden
© Frederick Florin/AFP/Getty Images
Civil liberties groups and privacy advocates raised alarm Thursday after the Trump administration called on Congress to reauthorize an NSA mass surveillance program that was exposed by whistleblower Edward Snowden.

The New York Times, which obtained the Trump administration's request to Congress, reported that "the administration urged lawmakers to make permanent the legal authority for the National Security Agency to gain access to logs of Americans' domestic communications, the USA Freedom Act."

"The law, enacted after the intelligence contractor Edward J. Snowden revealed the existence of the program in 2013, is set to expire in December, but the Trump administration wants it made permanent," according to the Times.

Bullseye

Steele dossier 'pumped myths' into the US justice system - former Trump adviser Carter Page

carter page
© REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
The former MI6 agent credited with launching Russiagate concocted dangerous lies and myths that made a mockery of the US justice system and misled the American people, former Donald Trump campaign adviser Carter Page has told RT.

Page, a primary suspect in the now-debunked theory that Donald Trump's presidential campaign colluded with the Kremlin, said that former MI6 agent Christoper Steele had "pumped myths into the criminal justice system," sparking a two-year investigation based on falsehoods.

"[The Steele dossier] was just a complete myth. Complete lies that were misleading the American public," Page told Afshin Rattansi on RT's Going Underground.

Megaphone

US policy destroyed Honduras and its destruction created opening for Trump - Max Blumenthal

border wall
© Reuters / Jose Luis Gonzalez
The 2009 US-backed coup in Honduras caused the migration crisis US President Donald Trump has weaponized, creating a situation where "everybody's making money except the Honduran people," writer Max Blumenthal tells RT America.

Honduran President Orlando Hernandez is "hated by every sector of society," Blumenthal told RT America's Rick Sanchez, explaining that the leader - who stands accused by a US court of using $1.5 million in narco-trafficking profits to fund his election, even as Washington allows him to travel freely and funds his regime's brutal crackdown on protesters - has allowed foreign corporations to pillage Honduras while plunging his own people into poverty.

Magnify

'How is that non-news?' Lee Camp reveals why MSM chooses to ignore Honduras and Brazil unrest

honduras protests
© REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera; Ricardo Moraes 8
Americans are bombarded with non-stop news on Hong Kong and Moscow rallies, but how come mass protests in Honduras and Brazil aren't high on the agenda? Lee Camp looks at why the US corporate media are keeping mum on the subject.

Honduras, a Latin American nation of nine million people, has been hit by massive unrest, with people venting anger at pro-US President Orlando Hernandez. The wave of violent demonstrations saw the US diplomatic mission attacked by protesters - but the American mainstream media didn't say a word about it, Camp pointed out, speaking on Redacted Tonight.

"Protesters are literally burning the US embassy because we installed a f******d [Hernandez] rule over them, how is that non-news?" he wondered.

Bullseye

Tulsi Gabbard lists political correctness among threats to American values

tulsi
© Reuters / Scott Morgan
Widespread efforts to silence speech deemed to be offensive threaten US constitutional rights, Democratic presidential hopeful Tulsi Gabbard says. Her latest campaign ad takes aim at the hot-button issue of political correctness.

In a new campaign video posted on Twitter, Gabbard lists political correctness alongside things like overly powerful IT corporations and government overreach. All three infringe on Americans' personal rights, she says.

The battle between "PC culture" and free-speech advocates has become particularly fierce in recent months, with "woke" activists rallying against anything that could potentially cause offense.