NBC Promotes Bill Clinton, Foreign Policy Genius
by L. Brent Bozell III
October 30, 1998
Years from now, will anyone remember Bill Clinton's
presidency as a marvelous epoch of foreign policy triumphs? No. So why then
are so many in the press publicly swooning over his
"accomplishments"?
Nobody remembers that in the last days of the 1994 campaign,
Clinton was traveling around the Middle East trying to push Israel, Jordan,
and Syria into agreements. Do you remember what he accomplished? (Hint: How
many games have the Redskins won this year?)
But ABC and CBS both touted the "latest in a
string" of foreign policy successes. NPR's Nina Totenberg gushed:
"He was there in the middle of the desert. I mean, it was biblical!"
Then there was NBC. "Today" co-host Matt Lauer boasted:
"America's peace-making President appears to have won some grudging
concessions from Syria."
A fat lot of political good that last-minute puffery did the
Democrats. But almost four years to the day of those reports, NBC came back
with more. As Benjamin Netanyahu and Yasser Arafat came to sign the Wye River
agreement, the Peacock Network's Washington bureau was living up to its
boasting symbol.
Hours before the signing on the October 23
"Today," Washington Bureau Chief Tim Russert was grooming Clinton
for world history: "As the impeachment hearings grind on, could you have
a situation where next year the President cannot go to the Judiciary Committee
on a particular day because he's receiving the Nobel Peace Prize? That's the
kind of irony the White House looks at as they look at the success of
President Clinton on this day."
Come now. First, no American President has won the Peace
Prize since Woodrow Wilson "accomplished" the League of Nations
almost 80 years ago. If Jimmy Carter couldn't get it after campaigning for it
since the Camp David accords, what chance does Clinton have? Second, the Nobel
Peace Prize was just awarded a couple of weeks ago. Does that mean impeachment
hearings will still be going on next fall? Does Russert know something that we
don't?
But NBC News was just getting started. Minutes after the
signing at 5: 53 Eastern time, White House correspondent David Bloom explained
to MSNBC anchor Brian Williams:
" You heard the King of Jordan, King Hussein, saying of
President Clinton that he's known many Presidents, all of them dating back to
Eisenhower, and saying that he's known none like President Clinton, saying
that his dedication, his clearheadedness, his focus, his determination is
unlike anything that he's seen from any American President dating back to
Eisenhower. And if those words aren't so sweet to this White House nothing
else could be."
What nonsense! Would any clear-headed American
foreign policy analyst hail Clinton as a model of focus or clear-headedness on
world affairs? This President's foreign policy has been usually marked by
either complete confusion or complete self-regard. Take China. Bill Clinton
ran at George Bush from the right, with all this talk of coddling dictators.
But once elected, he allowed software giants and Chinese-linked foreign donors
to open their pocketbooks, and buy themselves a foreign policy. Focused? Try
the Kosovo imbroglio. Determined? Explain his Iraq arms inspection policy. It
is laughable.
For another dose of White House propaganda, there was
"NBC Nightly News" a couple hours after the agreement. White House
reporter Claire Shipman declared: "Now if this was a test of an embattled
President's clout, aides here are ecstatic at its success and they say he took
to these talks with an unusual intensity even for him they say, seeming to
understand not only his role as peacemaker, but as creator of his
legacy."
Shipman is making a virtue of the fact that Clinton wasn't
so much after the almost-utopian idea of Middle East peace, but he was in it
for himself. Pundits like William Safire choked on how Clinton later
underlined his solipsism by calling the Wye River agreement just another
moment on his "personal journey" back from the seven months of
Lewinsky lies.
But NBC wasn't done. To complete the circle, two days later
on "Meet the Press," Russert asked Clinton-promoting questions to
Netanyahu: "As you know, President Clinton has had his difficulties back
home here. Do you believe that his participation in this summit will portray
him as a strong and effective leader?" When Netanyahu wasn't favorable
enough, Russert added: "But you prefer that President Clinton be around
next year to help you continue this peace agreement."
Credit Clinton for his efforts, but puh-leeze. NBC ought to
be sending these transcripts into the Federal Election Commission so they can
count them as in-kind contributions.
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