Its Reporter Safe, NYT Returns to Publicizing Hostage Details

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Protections at the New York Times for captured Times reporters don’t extend to captured British citizens.

Months after the New York Times and 40 other news outlets collaborated to keep the kidnapping of reporter David Rohde secret, the Grey Lady is now putting a British couple captured by Somali pirates in danger.
UPDATED With N.Y. Times Response (and more)

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In an article by Jeffrey Gettlemen and Mohammed Ibrahim titled “Somali Pirates Move Couple Onto Land,” the latest details of the kidnapping are exposed, including the fact that the captors are demanding a $7 million ransom.

The Times and other news outlets did not publish information about Rohde’s capture because publicity increases the value of hostages and puts the captives in greater danger.

Former Green Beret turned war correspondent Michael Yon says on Twitter:
Kept it all quiet for NYT. Now why are the NYT endangering British hostages in Somalia? NYT needs to shut up. They are endangering British.


Not only is the New York Times endangering these hostages, Yon also says that it is lying about Rohde’s escape from Afghanistan.

During the week of October 17, Rohde wrote a five-part account of his experiences captive and his eventual escape.

However, Yon says that the Times actually paid his ransom:
Numerous very well placed sources have told me New York Times/associates paid millions to get Rohde release.

I have been told by very close sources that ex-CIA officers helped pay off release for Rohde. I knew this while it was ongoing.


Whatever the facts are, one thing is clear: The New York Times shouldn’t ask for discretion if it doesn't use it itself.

UPDATE: The New York Times responds on its "At War" blog to the their publication of the hostage story and the allegations that they paid for David Rohde's freedom.

Mr. Rohde issued this statement:
As I stated in the series on our captivity, no ransom was paid in our case and no one, including our guards, helped us escape. I would never have written — and the newspaper would never have published — a five-part-series based on a lie.


Rohde also wrote in the epilogue to his report:
American government officials worked to free us, but they maintained their longstanding policy of not negotiating with kidnappers. They paid no ransom and exchanged no prisoners. Pakistani and Afghan officials said they also freed no prisoners and provided no money.


But that's not what this blog post is interested in as much as it is interested in how the Times justifies its reporting on other hostage situations.

The Times issued this statement:
The New York Times did not break the story of the kidnapping of Paul and Rachel Chandler, and during our reporting of it The Times consulted Christine Collett, Ms. Chandler’s sister-in-law, to ask her if the family objected to the publication of any information regarding the case. Ms. Collett, who was quoted in the story, said the family had no objection to The Times reporting on the case.

The Times has continued to abide by its policy of checking with family members or authorities in kidnapping cases to ensure that the information published does not further endanger the victims. The policy has been applied not only in the Chandler case, but to kidnapping victims elsewhere as well.


Indeed, the hostages have been getting a lot of media attention from many other newspapers.

UPDATE II: The Times considered paying ransom.

The allegations that they paid ransom weren't supposed to be the focus of this post, but they have become the major news story.

ABC's Brian Ross today reports that the Times hired a private security company with ties to the CIA and did make preperations to pay $2 million for Rohde.
The Times reportedly moved more than a million dollars in cash to the region and its negotiators reportedly thought they could get Haqqani to agree to a $2 million payment.

—Mitchell Blatt is the editor of the foreign affairs blog Bombs and Dollars.


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Proving (if ANYONE still

Proving (if ANYONE still needs it proving?) that ALL the times they have put people and troops in danger, and released US secrets, they have known EXACTLY what they were doing.

Why does treason go unpunished? Why are treasonous people allowed to own major media?

We have moved beyond reasonable doubt. That is what the court system is for.

___________________________________________________________
Graphical conservative commentary - animations & pictures for posting on forums: http://ubama.org/chu...

Has there been any other

Has there been any other paper of Record that has put more people in danger than this sorry excuse of a 'news' organization?

I'll laugh harder the next time I shred that letter pleading for my subscription.

Six... In answer to your

Six...

In answer to your question...not only no, but hell NO!

WaPo comes close.

I gave up thinking something would be done about their traitorous intentional leaks during the WOT.

I really thought the JD would do something about them....oh well, I was wrong again.

'Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea'~Breitbart

But you just don't get it

But you just don't get it you see...

The Times KNOWS their reporter.  Pinch Sulzburger had coffee with him once and he seemed to be fairly liberal and pledged to "Find out the truth about those awful warmongering soldiers" before he went to Afghanistan.

Pinchy has never actually met a soldier you see...  But he does know they are all warmongering lunatics who support conservatives just like the guys from the football team who beat him up when he was in the locker room in prep school.

Therefore, the reporter MUST be rescued.  And if a couple of them knuckledragging soldiers get killed - it serves them right.

→ Crime pays

The NYT made a conscious decision, in paying off the pirates, to ensure the danger of others.

Maybe Geraldo can get a job with them.

LYDSEXICS UNTIE!

get a bird

I'd love to buy a bird, just to watch it "edit" that stupid US version of Pravda...but then I'd need to subscribe to it.

Never mind. 

WTF?

I guess, one man's "paying a ransom" is another man's "funding terrorism"!

Don't you realize that our right to know

--which actually is the media's right to know--trumps any limey's right to breathe tomorrow. 

Boomercon

Yeah, the bird would have plenty of white out. ;-)

I am glad Michael Yon is

I am glad Michael Yon is voicing that which I suspected - the NYT paid off and is now covering it up.