OUR PATHOLOGICALLY ANTI-AMERICAN MEDIA
The headline on the top of the front page of the New York Times yesterday, May 26, was: "FBI told of Koran abuses." The wording of the headline and the prominence of the display give the casual reader the impression the story -- written by Neil Lewis -- was new, and that the story was true. Neither is so.
Lewis' story was based on reports of interrogations by FBI agents of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2002 and 2003. He noted in his third paragraph that "they are accounts of unsubstantiated allegations made by the prisoners under interrogation."
The New York Times didn't mention that an al Qaeda training manual, captured a couple of years ago by British police, instructs detainees to make false charges against their captors.
So why is so much of the media giving so much prominence to a recycled story of unsubstantiated charges made by America's enemies who have been told to make false accusations if captured?