USA Today’s ‘Slingshots and Sandwiches’ Romanticizes Palestinian Violence
USA Today romanticizes Palestinian violence. That can happen when stringers with anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian histories play the role of foreign correspondent.
USA Today romanticizes Palestinian violence. That can happen when stringers with anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian histories play the role of foreign correspondent.
The Islamic State's (ISIS) destruction of pre-Islamic Middle Eastern antiquities is nothing new. Palestinian Arabs have been doing the same to Jewish sites for years—but without drawing news coverage like ISIS.
Mahmoud Abbas and Palestinian Authority media incite Temple Mount violence. News coverage misses old and deadly pattern.
Jimmy Carter's reaction after a diagnosis of brain cancer won renewed notice of his humanitarian work. Not so for his anti-Israel animus, chronic errors on Arab-Israeli matters and Arab financial support.
Palestinian propagandist Mustafa Barghouti repeated the usual Palestinian boilerplate in The Hill newspaper's Congress Blog. CAMERA's rebuttal exposed his fabrications and evasions.
News media coverage has often failed to note the complex relationship between Shi'ite-ruled Iran and the Sunni terror group calling itself the Islamic State. Hint: They haven't always been enemies.
Want to post a comment at Foreign Policy online? Okay. Want to write a letter to the editor rebutting anti-Israel sources? Forget about it. Two CAMERA letters you should have seen …
The Washington Post foreign policy blog features Ishaan Tharoor, Yale 2006, formerly of TIME Magazine. So far, he's misused Israeli sources, gone easy on Iran and misunderstood the Middle East.