In the 1997 book by the Sunday Telegraph of London's Washington correspondent, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, entitled The Secret Life of Bill Clinton, the Unreported Stories, one can find on pages 199-200 the following passage:
The Daily Telegraph of London was founded in 1855, four years after The
New York Times. It had a good run covering the American Civil War and
the Franco-Prussian War, then settling down as the voice of yeoman
England, advancing the purposes of the Anglican Church, the Union, and
always, without question, supporting Her Majesty's Dragoon Guards
wherever they were deployed.
For a while The Telegraph was the newspaper of the Empire, although for
some reason it has been more muted on this subject lately. Its historic
triumph was to recognize early in the 1930s that fascism was an
exceedingly nasty movement, and a threat to the European order. This
was not obvious to everybody. The Times of London, representing the
prevailing mood of the ruling class, belittled such concerns, ridiculed
Winston Churchill, and supported the Tory appeasement of Adolf Hitler
until the very end.
By the mid-1990s The Telegraph was still fighting for Church, Queen, and
Country, this time struggling to prevent the United Kingdom from being
subsumed into a sort of Vichy II--a European superstate run by the
Germans and the French, and administered from Brussels under the terms
of the Treaty of Maastricht.
The newspaper is doing very well. Now owned by a Canadian proprietor,
Conrad Black (who also owns The Jerusalem Post and The Chicago Sun
Times, among others), the circulation of The Daily Telegraph is around
1.2 million, the highest figure for a "quality" newspaper in western
Europe. The Sunday Telegraph has a circulation approaching 800,000, but
no less influence.
Both the daily and the Sunday editions are large broadsheet papers, a
fact that is well displayed on the newsstand of any Washington hotel.
So it was with some consternation that I read a 331-page report by the
White House Counsel's Office calling The Sunday Telegraph a "tabloid."
It is hard to believe that the authors of this remarkable
document--"Communication Stream of Conspiracy Commerce"--were so
provincial that they did not know the difference between The Telegraph
and The Times, on one side of Fleet Street, and The Sun or The Mirror
with their page three topless girls, on the other. Since this White
House is stuffed with Oxonian Rhodes Scholars I have to assume that the
smear was deliberate. The authors issued a report at taxpayers'
expense, with the full imprimatur of the White House counsel's Office,
that published assertions they knew to be false. It violates the
cardinal rule of Washington spin: Never get caught propagating a
demonstrable lie, and this one was quite demonstrable. Even under
America's forgiving libel laws, it was defamatory.
Talk about a deliberate smear using a demonstrable lie! Please don't
waste your money on it, but do as I did at my local bookstore and check
out what Washington Post "media critic," Howard Kurtz, has to say about
Evans-Pritchard and his newspaper in his just-published Spin Cycle. Even though the Evans-Pritchard book has been out for several months,
setting the record straight for anyone who needed it, Kurtz, when it
comes to Evans-Pritchard and The Telegraph, treats this White House lie as Holy
Writ. Once again, Evans-Pritchard is said to be writing for a "British
tabloid" with such stories as that about Sally Miller Perdue and her
affair with Clinton (and subsequent death threats by the Clinton goons
that Kurtz does not mention) that "not even the National Enquirer" would
touch. Ignorant Americans reading what this naked propagandist Kurtz
has to say would come away believing that The Telegraph has lower
standards of probity and a lesser reputation in the world than an
American supermarket scandal sheet.
So I shall continue to heap scorn in this forum (Usenet) upon The Washington Post
and its many American counterparts. They not only suppress important
news like the forgery findings of the handwriting examiners in the
Foster case, the appending of the devastating Clarke-Knowlton letter to
the report of the Independent Counsel on Vincent Foster's death, and the
local murders of Tommy Burkett, Paul Wilcher, and Tina Ricca, but to
protect those in power they lie like dogs. Howard Kurtz, whom you will
often see on the weekend on network television offering his pearls of
wisdom wholesale to the benighted American public, is Exhibit A.
David Martin, March 7, 1998
p.s. If they ever make an All the President's Men sort of movie about Whitewater, I suggest Jon Lovitz for the role of Kurtz. He even looks a lot like him. Or should he play Michael Isikoff? Tough call.
See
also "Gene Lyons, Paid
Liar, Murder Enabler."
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