Smearing Anti-War Activists

http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2908

Action Alert Smearing Anti-War Activists? NY Times Op-Ed Laments Anti-War Funeral Protests

6/16/06

A June 12 op-ed in the New York Times made a bold accusation: anti- war activists have targeted funerals of Iraq War soldiers with noisy
protests. But evidence to back up that charge is nonexistent.

The author of the piece, writer Karen Spears Zacharias, recounted an
interview with a war widow who said that “antiwar protesters… lined
the streets across from the service… carried signs and… shouted
as her husband’s flag-draped coffin was carried past.” Zacharias
expanded on this claim when she wrote of the “hundreds of anti-war
protestors who appear at military hospitals and funerals.”

Following the op-ed’s publication, several readers posted questions
on Zacharias’ website, asking if she could substantiate either the
specific incident she had reported, or the broad claim that
“hundreds” of anti-war activists have protested at multiple sites.
The author responded by posting a link to a story on a conservative
website about small vigils that were held at Walter Reed military
hospital.

Many of the posts on Zacharias’ website suggested that the funeral
protests she was describing were more likely those organized by Fred
Phelps’ Westboro Baptist Church, a virulently homophobic group that
celebrates U.S. military deaths as punishment for the military’s
“don’t ask, don’t tell” policy towards homosexuals. The Phelps group
is by no reasonable definition anti-war.

In a response to one reader, Zacharias acknowledged that further
research revealed that the widows she spoke with were all referring
to Phelps’ group.

Though the piece appeared on the Times’ op-ed page, the paper has a
responsibility to verify such claims–particularly when, as in this
case, they serve as the premise of a column. Moreover, such anecdotes
have the potential to smear an entire political movement, and live on
long after they are published. Accounts of Vietnam vets being spit
upon by anti-war protesters, for example, persist to this day
(Newsweek, 6/12/06)–despite the fact that it is difficult to
corroborate any of those alleged incidents (see “The Spitting Image:
Myth, Memory, and the Legacy of Vietnam,” by Jerry Lembcke).

ACTION: Contact the New York Times op-ed page and ask them to verify the
claim that “hundreds of anti-war protestors” have demonstrated “at
military hospitals and funerals.” If they cannot, ask them to correct
the record.

CONTACT: New York Times Op-Ed Page oped@nytimes.com

2 Responses to “Smearing Anti-War Activists”

  1. » Blog Archive » Anti-War in Lebanon Rally - BloggingCairo.NET Says:

    […] Doug Henwood Talks Blog Archive Smearing Anti-War Activistshttp://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2908. Action Alert Smearing Anti-War Activists? NY Times Op-Ed Laments Anti-War Funeral Protests. 6/16/06. A June 12 op-ed in the New York Times made a bold […]

  2. » Blog Archive » Anti-War Military Mom Says:

    […] Doug Henwood Talks Blog Archive Smearing Anti-War Activistshttp://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2908. Action Alert Smearing Anti-War Activists? NY Times Op-Ed Laments Anti-War Funeral Protests. 6/16/06. A June 12 op-ed in the New York Times made a bold […]

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