LEAKED NYT GAZA MEMO TELLS JOURNALISTS TO AVOID WORDS “GENOCIDE,” “ETHNIC CLEANSING,” AND “OCCUPIED TERRITORY”
Amid the internal battle over the New York Times’s
coverage of Israel’s war, top editors handed down a set of directives.
April 15, 2024
https://theintercept.com/2024/04/15/nyt-israel-gaza-genocide-palestine-coverage/
THE NEW YORK TIMES instructed journalists covering Israel’s war on
the Gaza Strip to restrict the use of the terms “genocide” and “ethnic
cleansing” and to “avoid” using the phrase “occupied territory” when describing
Palestinian land, according to a copy of an internal memo obtained by The
Intercept.
The memo also instructs reporters not to use the word
Palestine “except in very rare cases” and to steer clear of the term “refugee
camps” to describe areas of Gaza historically settled by displaced Palestinians
expelled from other parts of Palestine during previous Israeli–Arab wars. The
areas are recognized by the United Nations as refugee camps and house hundreds
of thousands of registered refugees.
The memo — written by Times standards editor Susan
Wessling, international editor Philip Pan, and their deputies — “offers
guidance about some terms and other issues we have grappled with since the
start of the conflict in October.”
While the document is presented as an outline for
maintaining objective journalistic principles in reporting on the Gaza war,
several Times staffers told The Intercept that some of its contents show
evidence of the paper’s deference to Israeli narratives.
“I think it’s the kind of thing that looks
professional and logical if you have no knowledge of the historical context of
the Palestinian-Israeli conflict,” said a Times newsroom source, who requested
anonymity for fear of reprisal, of the Gaza memo. “But if you do know, it will
be clear how apologetic it is to Israel.”
First distributed to Times journalists in November,
the guidance — which collected and expanded on past style directives about the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict — has been regularly updated over the ensuing
months. It presents an internal window into the thinking of Times international
editors as they have faced upheaval within the newsroom surrounding the paper’s
Gaza war coverage.
“Issuing guidance like this to ensure accuracy,
consistency and nuance in how we cover the news is standard practice,” said
Charlie Stadtlander, a Times spokesperson. “Across all our reporting, including
complex events like this, we take care to ensure our language choices are
sensitive, current and clear to our audiences.”
Issues over style guidance have been among a bevy of
internal rifts at the Times over its Gaza coverage. In January, The
Intercept reported on disputes in the Times newsroom over issues with an investigative story on systematic sexual violence on October 7. The
leak gave rise to a highly unusual internal probe. The company faced harsh criticism for allegedly
targeting Times workers of Middle East and North African descent, which Times
brass denied. On Monday, executive editor Joe Kahn told staff that the leak
investigation had been concluded unsuccessfully.
WhatsApp Debates
Almost immediately after the October 7 attacks and the
launch of Israel’s scorched-earth war against Gaza, tensions began to boil
within the newsroom over the Times coverage. Some staffers said they believed
the paper was going out of its way to defer to Israel’s narrative on the events
and was not applying even standards in its coverage. Arguments began fomenting
on internal Slack and other chat groups.
The debates between reporters on the Jerusalem
bureau-led WhatsApp group, which at one point included 90 reporters and
editors, became so intense that Pan, the international editor, interceded.
“We need to do a better job communicating with each
other as we report the news, so our discussions are more productive and our
disagreements less distracting,” Pan wrote in a November 28 WhatsApp message
viewed by The Intercept and first reported by the Wall Street Journal. “At its
best, this channel has been a quick, transparent and productive space to
collaborate on a complex, fast-moving story. At its worst, it’s a tense forum
where the questions and comments can feel accusatory and personal.”
Pan bluntly stated: “Do not use this channel for
raising concerns about coverage.”
Among the topics of debate in the Jerusalem bureau
WhatsApp group and exchanges on Slack, reviewed by The Intercept and verified
with multiple newsroom sources, were Israeli attacks on Al-Shifa Hospital, statistics on Palestinian civilian deaths, the
allegations of genocidal conduct by Israel, and President Joe Biden’s pattern
of promoting unverified allegations from the Israeli government as fact. (Pan
did not respond to a request for comment.)
Many of the same debates were addressed in the Times’s
Gaza-specific style guidance and have been the subject of intense public
scrutiny.
“It’s not unusual for news companies to set style
guidelines,” said another Times newsroom source, who also asked for anonymity.
“But there are unique standards applied to violence perpetrated by Israel.
Readers have noticed and I understand their frustration.”
“Words Like ‘Slaughter’”
The Times memo outlines guidance on a range of phrases
and terms. “The nature of the conflict has led to inflammatory language and
incendiary accusations on all sides. We should be very cautious about using
such language, even in quotations. Our goal is to provide clear, accurate
information, and heated language can often obscure rather than clarify the
fact,” the memo says.
“Words like ‘slaughter,’ ‘massacre’ and ‘carnage’
often convey more emotion than information. Think hard before using them in our
own voice,” according to the memo. “Can we articulate why we are applying those
words to one situation and not another? As always, we should focus on clarity
and precision — describe what happened rather than using a label.”
Despite the memo’s framing as an effort to not employ
incendiary language to describe killings “on all sides,” in the Times reporting
on the Gaza war, such language has been used repeatedly to describe attacks
against Israelis by Palestinians and almost never in the case of Israel’s
large-scale killing of Palestinians.
In January, The Intercept published an analysis of New York Times, Washington Post, and Los
Angeles Times coverage of the war from October 7 through November 24 — a
period mostly before the new Times guidance was issued. The Intercept analysis
showed that the major newspapers reserved terms like “slaughter,” “massacre,”
and “horrific” almost exclusively for Israeli civilians killed by Palestinians,
rather than for Palestinian civilians killed in Israeli attacks.
The analysis found that, as of November 24, the New
York Times had described Israeli deaths as a “massacre” on 53 occasions and
those of Palestinians just once. The ratio for the use of “slaughter” was 22 to
1, even as the documented number of Palestinians killed climbed to around
15,000.
The latest Palestinian death toll estimate stands at
more than 33,000, including at least 15,000 children — likely undercounts due
to Gaza’s collapsed health infrastructure and missing persons, many of whom are
believed to have died in the rubble left by Israel’s attacks over the past six
months.
Touchy Debates
The Times memo touches on some of the most highly
charged — and disputed — language around the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The
guidance spells out, for instance, usage of the word “terrorist,” which The
Intercept previously reported was at the center of a spirited newsroom debate.
“It is accurate to use ‘terrorism’ and ‘terrorist’ in
describing the attacks of Oct. 7, which included the deliberate targeting of
civilians in killings and kidnappings,” according to the leaked Times memo. “We
should not shy away from that description of the events or the attackers,
particularly when we provide context and explanation.”
The guidance also instructs journalists to “Avoid
‘fighters’ when referring to the Oct. 7 attack; the term suggests a
conventional war rather than a deliberate attack on civilians. And be cautious
in using ‘militants,’ which is interpreted in different ways and may be
confusing to readers.”
In the memo, the editors tell Times journalists: “We
do not need to assign a single label or to refer to the Oct. 7 assault as a
‘terrorist attack’ in every reference; the word is best used when specifically
describing attacks on civilians. We should exercise restraint and can vary the
language with other accurate terms and descriptions: an attack, an assault, an
incursion, the deadliest attack on Israel in decades, etc. Similarly, in
addition to ‘terrorists,’ we can vary the terms used to describe the Hamas
members who carried out the assault: attackers, assailants, gunmen.”
The Times does not characterize Israel’s repeated
attacks on Palestinian civilians as “terrorism,” even when civilians have been
targeted. This is also true of Israel’s assaults on protected civilian sites, including hospitals.
In a section with the headline “‘Genocide’ and Other
Incendiary Language,” the guidance says, “‘Genocide’ has a specific definition
in international law. In our own voice, we should generally use it only in the
context of those legal parameters. We should also set a high bar for allowing
others to use it as an accusation, whether in quotations or not, unless they
are making a substantive argument based on the legal definition.”
Regarding “ethnic cleansing,” the document calls it
“another historically charged term,” instructing reporters: “If someone is
making such an accusation, we should press for specifics or supply proper
context.”
Bucking International Norms
In the cases of describing “occupied territory” and
the status of refugees in Gaza, the Times style guidelines run counter to norms
established by the United Nations and international humanitarian law.
On the term “Palestine” — a widely used name for both
the territory and the U.N.-recognized state — the Times memo contains blunt
instructions: “Do not use in datelines, routine text or headlines, except in
very rare cases such as when the United Nations General Assembly elevated
Palestine to a nonmember observer state, or references to historic Palestine.”
The Times guidance resembles that of the Associated Press Stylebook.
The memo directs journalists not to use the phrase
“refugee camps” to describe long-standing refugee settlements in Gaza. “While
termed refugee camps, the refugee centers in Gaza are developed and densely
populated neighborhoods dating to the 1948 war. Refer to them as neighborhoods,
or areas, and if further context is necessary, explain how they have
historically been called refugee camps.”
The United Nations recognizes eight refugee camps in the Gaza Strip. As of last year, before the
war started, the areas were home to more than 600,000 registered refugees. Many
are descendants of those who fled to Gaza after being forcibly expelled from their homes in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War,
which marked the founding of the Jewish state and mass dispossession of
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.
The Israeli government has long been hostile to the
historical fact that Palestinians maintain refugee status, because it signifies
that they were displaced from lands they have a right to return to.
Since October 7, Israel has repeatedly bombed refugee
camps in Gaza, including Jabaliya, Al Shati, Al Maghazi, and Nuseirat.
The memo’s instructions on the use of “occupied
territories” says, “When possible, avoid the term and be specific (e.g. Gaza,
the West Bank, etc.) as each has a slightly different status.” The United
Nations, along with much of the world, considers Gaza, the West Bank, and East
Jerusalem to be occupied Palestinian territories, seized by Israel in the 1967 Arab–Israeli war.
The admonition against the use of the term “occupied
territories,” said a Times staffer, obscures the reality of the conflict,
feeding into the U.S. and Israeli insistence that the conflict began on October
7.
“You are basically taking the occupation out of the
coverage, which is the actual core of the conflict,” said the newsroom source.
“It’s like, ‘Oh let’s not say occupation because it might make it look like
we’re justifying a terrorist attack.’”
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