Sean Durns
Iran Becoming Responsible Player — the Mother of All Mirages
As news coverage focused on nuclear talks with Tehran, CAMERA's Op-Ed in The Hill newspaper focused on a media mirage: a “moderating” Iran.
J Street’s Unreported Pro-BDS Partner — ‘Jewish Voice for Peace’
J Street objected to a provision in U.S. trade legislation barring compliance with an anti-Israel boycott, divestment and sactions (BDS) effort. Washington Jewish Week coverage failed to mentioned J Street's de facto ally—the anti-Zionist “Jewish Voice for Peace.” Here's the scoop:
Palestinian ‘Nakba’ Revisionism Rebutted by CAMERA in The Hill
Another bit of Palestinian historical revisionism and invention masquerading as commentary on The Hill's Congress Blog site, another factual CAMERA rebuttal.
L A Times Lets Saree Makdisi Incriminate Himself, Again
Washington Post Holds Up Palestinian Soccer Red Card
The Palestinian Football Association, headed by a convicted terrorist, wants international soccer to “isolate and embarrass” Israel. Superficial Washington Post coverage should embarrass the newspaper.
CAMERA Refutes ‘Jewish Voice for Peace’ BDS Advocacy
The Hill newspaper's Congress Blog hosts frequent anti-Israel screeds, as well as pro-Israel commentaries. When ‘Jewish Voice for Peace' weighed in supporting the boycott, divest and sanction (BDS) movement, CAMERA exposed its many falsehoods.
CAMERA Corrects Defense News on ‘Breaking the Silence’
Defense News was among the many news media outlets taking seriously “Breaking the Silence's” claims of widespread Israeli military wrong-doing during last summer's war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. CAMERA's letter to the editor set the record straight.
CAMERA Letter Rebuts Roll Call ‘Dual Loyalty’ Implication
A blog post in the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call implied that Congress had to chose between U.S. and Israeli interests over Iran’s nuclear programs and that a Jewish member’s religion played an important role. CAMERA’s letter set the record straight.
Washington Post’s Kenya Massacre Coverage Short on Why?
Washington Post reporting on al-Shabab's mass murder at a college in Kenya detailed what happened. But it slid too quickly over why—the deadly ideology of Islamic supremacism—nearly 150 people died.