CBS 60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl interviewed her occasional colleague (and CNN correspondent) Christiane Amanpour for the website The Women on the Web, and the oddest part came when Amanpour insisted "nobody knows my biases...I just try very hard to report the facts and to tell the stories as best as I can." In fact, Amanpour’s biased liberal journalism has landed her in our year-end Best of Notable Quotables issue four times. These professions of impartiality came as Stahl asked whether her Iranian background affected her reporting:
STAHL: That brings me back to Iran, because I wonder – this is always asked of me as a reporter – what are your biases? What are your opinions? How hard is it for you to cover anything in Iran, given your own family background?
AMANPOUR: I understand people asking that question, but I always reject it. I really … I ask people just to look at my body of work. And nobody knows my biases. Do they think I’m against? Do they think I’m for? They don’t know my biases. They don’t know where I come from in this. I just try very hard to report the facts and to tell the stories as best as I can. I am not part of the current crop of opinion journalists or commentary journalists or feelings journalists. I strongly believe that I have to remain in the realm of fact, and from there delve deeper into a society.
Here are the four year-end quotes displaying how her biases can be easily located:
2008: "The black people in France are very proud and very hopeful for their future. They also live, many of them, in poor situations. And you know, you’ve had your own riots here and protests and disturbances in the Banlieue — in the city. At one point, when we were covering those riots, when you were Interior Minister, you called the rioters ‘scum.’ And I’m wondering whether you feel, today, when you stand next to someone you clearly admire so much, and who has broken so many barriers, that you regret that term or that you wish you hadn’t said it?" — Amanpour to French President Nicolas Sarkozy during a July 25, 2008 conference with Barack Obama shown live on CNN.
2003: "I think the press was muzzled, and I think the press self-muzzled. I’m sorry to say, but certainly television and, perhaps, to a certain extent, my station was intimidated by the administration and its foot soldiers at Fox News. And it did, in fact, put a climate of fear and self-censorship, in my view, in terms of the kind of broadcast work we did....The entire body politic...did not ask enough questions, for instance, about weapons of mass destruction. I mean, it looks like this was disinformation at the highest levels."– Amanpour on CNBC’s Topic A with Tina Brown, September 10, 2003.
2000: "Like these young dancers, Carlos [Acosta] benefited from Cuba’s communist system because it not only recognizes physical talent, it nurtures it, whether it’s baseball, boxing, or ballet." -- CBS 60 Minutes correspondent Christiane Amanpour on a star of London’s Royal Ballet, May 21, 2000.
1999: "A lot of the women that I meet from traveling overseas are very impressed by you and admire your dignity. A lot of the people you meet are people who suffered, people you saw today, and who believe that they identify with you because they have seen you suffer. And in a speech in Africa last year, you spoke about living for hope and reconciliation, living for forgiveness and reconstruction, and living for a new life – have you been able to apply that to your own circumstances? Have you been able to forgive your husband?" -- CNN’s Christiane Amanpour to Hillary Clinton in Macedonia after a tour of refugee camps, May 14, 1999.
In the Stahl interview, posted on June 23, Amanpour very quickly turned to the idea that Americans have almost nothing but aged cliches and stereotypes about Iran (like, say, their role as a leading state sponsor of terrorism?):
And I will say one thing very clearly: The lack of information about Iran, in the United States especially but also in the rest of the world, in a way makes my job … it’s sort of like an open well to plumb because anything I say, you know at least increases people’s awareness of what’s going on. And I think the one thing that I have really tried to do over the last now 19 years of covering Iran as a reporter, is try to go beyond the inevitable cliché and the stereotype, which is found strongest in the United States, because the U.S. bases its relationship and its knowledge about Iran on 30 years ago, and has very little impartial reporting to go on. And that’s what I try. But you look right now, if you just look at the television screens right now, all the so-called experts on Iran, 99 percent, are exiles based in the United States, have their own experience, their own history and their own agenda. And so that makes it very difficult for anybody to get a really clear view of what’s going on. That’s what I believe.
Only Amanpour is agenda-less. Then Stahl laments how objectivity isn’t valued any more, as if she practiced so hard at it:
STAHL: Well, let me ask you then about the state… of where objective journalism is heading.
AMANPOUR: Yes.
STAHL: I come out of the same background that you do. I always – I guess the right word is to say, sat on my own opinions because we do have our opinions, you can’t deny that. But I tried as hard as I could to overcome them and to be as impartial a reporter as possible. But I find as I look out on television, and even in my reading, that there’s less and less a market for that kind of reporting. The future seems to be with people who slant their stories. Even my own child, whom I put in that younger generation, says she hates reporting that doesn’t tell her where the correspondent is coming from. And I think she’s representative.
AMANPOUR: She may be, and she’s obviously reacting to something that’s growing like wildflower now in our business. But the thing is, I get afraid when I read something and I just don’t know – is that the fact, is that the truth, is that somebody’s political bias, or somebody’s cultural bias? And that frightens me.
Of course there’s a major role for opinion commentary and there has been since time immemorial. But I strongly think that unless we are able to present people with the objective facts of what’s going on, how are they meant to know what is going on? For instance, right now in Iran I’m telling you with confidence that nobody knows what’s going on there, really, because when you’re just getting Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, amateur videos – and no explanation, no reporting – you just don’t know what’s going on. It’s speculation, it’s guesswork, it’s patchwork.
She quickly realizes that this could be read as dismissive of the brave Internet dispatches that are leaking out, so she praises those, but repeats that every democracy needs that brave band of expert journalists to bring truth to power.
—Tim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center.




















Editor at Large
Comments Policy
God's Warriors
June 28, 2009 - 08:06 ET by allanfI take issue with the word liberal to describe Amanpour. Amanpour is the penultimate politcally correct left wing ideologue. Her delicate sensibilties are not offended by misogynistic Iranian theocrats, Iraqi dictators, Cuban communists, or Palestinean terrorists.
Her ire is directed at Western values and its stable social structure.
Her Christian bashing special "God's Warrior" where she equated conservative Christians to the Taliban and excused Muslim terrorism. For good measure Amanpour also managed to bash Jewish people and called West Bank settlers extremists.
Totalitarian Christianity
June 28, 2009 - 08:20 ET by Tim GrahamThis was our standout NQ on that series:
On [Christian youth activist Ron Luce’s Honor Academy] campus, students must follow a strict set of rules: No secular music or television. No R-rated movies. No alcohol. No drugs. No dating. [To Luce] When I, you know, read that women have to wear skirts of a certain length and guys aren’t allowed to, you know, go on the Internet unsupervised, I mean, I think, you know, totalitarian regimes." — Correspondent Christiane Amanpour in her August 23, 2007 profile of "Christian Warriors," the last of CNN’s 3-part special on "God’s Warriors.
Moral equivalence means unable to distinguish right from wrong
June 28, 2009 - 09:15 ET by allanfThat's quite a quote from Amanpour. Moral equivalence is an intellectuals way of saying "she" can’t distinguish right from wrong. I believe Amanpour is one of the worst “moral equivocators” in broadcasting.
Totalitarian dictators also breathe air ... Another similarity by Amanpour’s reasoning.
CNN's anti-Israeli and anti-Western triumvirate of Amanpour, Ben Wedeman, and Nick Robertson have consistently promoted extremist ideologies. I am saddened that their views may gain a great foothold over the next four years.
Covering bias
June 28, 2009 - 11:22 ET by KC MulvilleThe religion special was a classic example of bias. When she did the report on Ron Luce's Honor Academy, she may have reported the details properly ... but why did she choose him in the first place? He hardly represents the Christianity as experienced by most Christians. Including him as the representative of Christianity is where the bias really is. So to speak, the report may have been accurate, but the reporting was biased.
That's one way they justify it to themselves, and to critics. The other classic example is the opposite technique: to hammer conservatives constantly, and then occasionally offer a criticism of liberals. In that case, their "choices" are even-handed, but each report is filled with distortion.
No one knows what her biases are? Of course we do.
And nobody knows my
June 28, 2009 - 08:00 ET by motherbeltAnd nobody knows my biases. Do they think I’m against? Do they think I’m for? They don’t know my biases.
Amanpour's face should have cracked when she said that!
I have one to add to your list, Tim....
This is how Amanpour described Islam vs. Christianity, here in the US, for the CNN special on religion entitled "God's Warriors":
According to Amanpour, Muslim women bore their restrictions willingly, out of love of Islam; Christian women were forced.
Here is how she described a Muslim woman's (Rehan) practices (emphasis added):
It is a deliberate display of faith, not just covering her head, but swearing off alcohol, praying five times a day, which isn't easy in a typically busy American life...[ ]... Rehan insists that covering up is not a sign of a woman's inferiority, as many Westerners believe, but a sign that Muslim women refuse to be degraded, as she feels they can be in American culture.
When it came to describing the conservative Christian women in Ron Luce's ministry , she had this to say:
On campus, students must follow a strict set of rules.... No
secular music or television. No "R"-rated movies. No alcohol. No drugs. No dating...[ ]... When I, you know, read that women have to wear skirts of a certain length, and guys aren't allowed to, you know, go on the Internet, unsupervised. And I think, you know, totalitarian regimes.
Yeah, Christiane, we know your biases. We most certainly do.
I didn't think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows. -Bart Simpson
but a sign that Muslim
June 28, 2009 - 09:48 ET by ThisnThatbut a sign that Muslim women refuse to be degraded,
I know what she means, MB. Muslim women in the middle east have all the freedoms necessary to keep from becoming degraded. Freedoms such as not being permitted to leave the home without being accompanied by a man. Not being able to drive a car. And freedom to be stoned to death, or otherwise killed, for transgressions.
Yeah, if I were a woman, I'd choose to be a Muslim woman, that's for sure, given all the other degrading possibilities in life.
___________________________________
Liberals constantly demand that we accept a glaring falsehood as truth; Obama's elimination of the word "terror" will make terrorist acts less terrifying
"... unless we are able to
June 28, 2009 - 08:05 ET by Jerry"... unless we are able to present people with the objective facts of what’s going on, how are they meant to know what is going on?"
Uhhh, that's what conservatives have been complaining about for decades Ms Amanpour. That's how Obama got elected. That's how Bush got demonized. Guess what? You are not the victim of unobjective reporting, you are the source.
No one knows your biases??? I guess in your world, no one knows that Hitler disliked Jews.
When asked if he went to war with Iraq to derail the impeachment vote: “I don’t think any serious person would believe that any President would do such a thing." - President Clinton (Dec 1998).
Lesley Stahl: "Even my own
June 28, 2009 - 08:52 ET by TELesley Stahl: "Even my own child, whom I put in that younger generation, says she hates reporting that doesn’t tell her where the correspondent is coming from."
Either Stahl's daughter is as stupid as Stahl is or Stahl's daughter has never read the "news" from New York Times, the Washington Post, the Associated (with terrorists) Press, al McClatchy, USA Today, Time, Newsweek, et al., or seen the "news" on ABC, NBC, CBS, PBS, CNN, MSDNC, ESPN, et al.
They don’t know my
June 28, 2009 - 09:02 ET by nolotrippenThey don’t know my biases
Of course she actually believes that. Just as she actually believes she's dispassionate when when she implies Christians are actually worse than Muslims. Just as when she belives her "body of work" (like people collect her dispatches for posterity) proves how fair and professional she is. She is mad.
An alcoholic never gets better until he first admits he's an alcoholic. The MSM will never get better until it looks itself in the mirror and says, "I'm supposed to be balanced, factual, and honest. And I'm not."
Is there a 12 step program for the MSM? And is the first step watching and learning from Fox?
To paraphrase "Patton"
June 28, 2009 - 11:22 ET by jed58Amanpour... you magnificent bitch, I read your book!
Amanpour is a disgrace.
June 28, 2009 - 12:06 ET by forestAmanpour is a disgrace.
I'm calling BS on Amanpour
June 28, 2009 - 12:56 ET by Arminius"I think the press was muzzled, and I think the press self-muzzled. I’m sorry to say, but certainly television and, perhaps, to a certain extent, my station was intimidated by the administration and its foot soldiers at Fox News. And it did, in fact, put a climate of fear and self-censorship, in my view, in terms of the kind of broadcast work we did....The entire body politic...did not ask enough questions, for instance, about weapons of mass destruction. I mean, it looks like this was disinformation at the highest levels."– Amanpour on CNBC’s Topic A with Tina Brown, September 10, 2003.
Amanpor is married to Jamie Rubin. The same Jamie Rubin worked for Madeleine Albright in the Clinton administration. Madeleine Albright was still claiming that Iraq had WMD during the transition period in January 2001:
http://www.sinsofthehusband.com/Albright-1-8-2001.pdf
If it was disinformation for the Bush administration and Fox News to say Saddam had WMD in 2003, why was it not disinformation for the Clinton administration and Amanpour's CNN to say Saddam had WMD in 2001?
There's a free book online about this whole effort on the Clinton administration and its mouthpieces such as Amanpour to rewrite the history of the WMD claims. See http://www.sinsofthehusband.com/wrh.pdf
HMMMM
June 28, 2009 - 13:05 ET by rick007She's a commie!!!!!!!!!!1
Re Kendall Myers
June 28, 2009 - 13:24 ET by slickwillie2001I sometimes wonder if there are operatives in the American old media that are in fact working for Cuba, or Russia, Red China, Iran, etc. With the Kendall Myers case, it appears that these traitors may be in our midst and more numerous than we could have imagined.
An advanced position in the old media could be just as useful to our foreign enemies as someone in the State Department.
Yes there are
June 28, 2009 - 20:12 ET by jed58And some elected officials
Amanpour...yes we that have
June 28, 2009 - 20:21 ET by bigtimerAmanpour...yes we that have minds out here, that work, that have watched you for years, most certainly do know you and your bias....along with your other half.
I listen to neither of you any longer.
You are both enemies within as far as I am concerned...and both irrelevant anymore.
Thank God...and algore for the internet.
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
This reminds me of the
June 29, 2009 - 16:28 ET by fitzfongThis reminds me of the episode of Seinfeld when Jerry asked George how he came to be such a convincing liar. "It's not a lie...if you believe it," replied George. Perhaps Jamie Rubin's wife has been watching Melrose Place...because I certainly know her biases. If she's trying to conceal them, she's doing a very poor job.
"I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered." -George Best