Human
Events...
Obama
Hot Mike Moment: I’m Fed Up With
Netanyahu
The media follows its new “precise
rules of conduct.”
by John Hayward
11/08/2011
President
Obama has an interesting
history with “hot mike” blunders, in which he forgets his microphone is
still
turned on, and says something he didn’t want the public to hear. The latest incident
occurred yesterday at the
G20 summit in France, where Obama and French president Nicolas Sarkozy
traded
gripes about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Ynet
News was almost alone among
global media in reporting the details at first, after a lone French web
site
called “Arret sur Images” chose to publish the story:
The
conversation apparently began with
President Obama criticizing Sarkozy for not having warned him that
France would
be voting in favor of the Palestinian membership bid in UNESCO despite
Washington’s strong objection to the move.
Gosh,
I can’t imagine why Netanyahu
would be upset about that.
The
conversation then drifted to
Netanyahu, at which time Sarkozy declared: “I cannot stand him. He is a
liar.”
According to the report, Obama replied: “You’re fed up with him, but I
have to
deal with him every day!”
But
luckily, Netanyahu only comes to
America to take young Barack to school in front of Congress once every
couple
of years.
This
could prove to be a significant
blunder for Obama, who is already skating on thin ice with many Jewish
voters. So why
didn’t you hear about it until a
French website broke it, Ynet News took it wide, the Drudge Report
linked it,
and other news agencies were obliged to weigh in?
Ynet explains:
The
surprising lack of coverage may be
explained by a report alleging that journalists present at the event
were
requested to sign an agreement to keep mum on the embarrassing
comments. A
Reuters reporter was among the journalists present and can confirm the
veracity
of the comments.
A
member of the media confirmed Monday
that “there were discussions between journalists and they agreed not to
publish
the comments due to the sensitivity of the issue.”
He
added that while it was annoying to
have to refrain from publishing the information, the journalists are
subject to
precise rules of conduct.
(Emphases
mine.) They are?
Do we have the exact date in when those rules
went into effect? It
wasn’t January 20, 2009, was it? Because
this is the same media that used to
think nothing of publishing national security information, if it could
be used
to hurt President George W. Bush.
Ben
Smith of Politico thinks the
journalists who agreed to suppress the Obama-Sarkozy grumblings were
primarily
French:
The
original report says a half-dozen
-- apparently, though not explicitly, French -- reporters heard the
conversation, but that they and their bosses jointly decided not to
report off
the glitch, on the grounds that to do so would mark some sort of
ethical
breach, something I don’t quite understand. The report also claims that
the
substance turned up in a Le Monde report asserting, without a source,
Obama and
Sarkozy had complained in private about their “difficult relations”
with
Netanyahu.
UPDATE:
The reporter for Le Monde,
Arnaud Leparmentier, tweets to me that he didn’t hear the conversation,
and
declined to disclose his source.
However,
this is not the first time
the U.S. media has covered for Obama’s open-mike blunders. CBS News famously refused
to release the full
transcript of what was apparently a juicy string of off-the-cuff
remarks by the
President. Hopefully
none of the
Republican candidates is delusional enough to think he’ll enjoy the
same
consideration.
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this and other articles at Human
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