With the final presidential debate scheduled for Monday night on the subject of foreign policy, even as reporting emerges that corroborates the administration’s early assessment of the terrorist attack in Benghazi on Sept. 11 of this year as a reaction to the film Innocence of Muslims,” this Fox News “investigation,” featuring “expert” “analysis” by folks like former Bush administration officials John Bolton and
First up, the popular-with-Romney-water-carriers distortion that President Obama wasn’t referring to the attack in Benghazi when he referenced “acts of terror” during his Rose Garden remarks on Sept. 12. This is actually a fallback position, created to paper over their first-string distortion that “it took the president 14 days before he called the attack in Benghazi an act of terror,” which was exploded by President Obama and Candy Crowley at last week’s debate.
Since the President specifically referenced the Benghazi attack in the very paragraph that conservatives claim demonstrates he wasn’t talking about Benghazi, it’s beyond a tough claim to justify. The only way openly partisan conservatives can make that claim is by not directly quoting the President, which isn’t a trick that a respected news organization, or a respected journalist like Bret Baier, should play:
Fox News clearly had video of the President’
For the record, the President not only called Benghazi an “act of terror” in the Rose Garden on Sept. 12, he did it the following day, in a Nevada campaign speech:
As for the ones we lost last night: I want to assure you, we will bring their killers to justice. (Applause.) And we want to send a message all around the world — anybody who would do us harm: No act of terror will dim the light of the values that we proudly shine on the rest of the world, and no act of violence will shake the resolve of the United States of America.
So what I want all of you to know is that we are going to bring those who killed our fellow Americans to justice. (Applause.) I want people around the world to hear me: To all those who would do us harm, no act of terror will go unpunished. It will not dim the light of the values that we proudly present to the rest of the world. No act of violence shakes the resolve of the United States of America. (Applause.)
In fact, even
That bit of trickery with the Rose Garden speech is nothing compared with what Bret Baier and company did to debate moderator Candy Crowley. After Mitt Romney badly embarrassed himself last Tuesday night by falsely claiming that “”it took the President 14 days before he called the attack in Benghazi an act of terror,” conservatives seized on a post-debate remark by Crowley to falsely insist that Romney hadn’t been wrong, and that Crowley had “walked back” her real-time fact check of him. That’s a notion that Crowley rejected outright, pointing out that her post-debate remarks were no different than what she said onstage. Romney was wrong about what the President said, but Crowley threw him a lifeline by pointing out that an earlier point he had made, that the administration continued to reference the anti-Islam video for “two weeks or so,” was essentially correct.
It’s one thing for openly
After setting up the debate clip of Crowley fact-checking Mitt Romney at Tuesday’s debate, Baier says “Only after the debate does Crowley admit that maybe she was the one with her facts wrong.”
What? Wait, so how does Bret Baier, hard news reporter and anchor, substantiate this? Does he play a clip of Crowley’s “admission,” or even a transcript? Does he report and let you decide? No, he uses a much more reliable source. Since you won’t believe it unless you see it with your own eyes, here’s what Baier did:
That’s right, instead of directly quoting Candy Crowley, Brett Baier sources partisan commentator Charles Krauthammer to distort what Candy Crowley said. What’s surprising here isn’t that Krauthammer said it, it’s that Bret Baier, whom I truly believe is a well-respected journalist among his peers, sells it harder than Krauthammer does.
That’s what is wrong with this entire program, the way this propaganda piece is dressed up as hard news, in clothing that I fear Bret Baier has mortgaged his reputation to buy. There are many excellent journalists who work at Fox News, and they rely on the thin wall between opinion and news