Associated Press Deconstructed
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Case studies

Following are articles examining AP distortions and omissions that reveal a disturbing pattern:

Letting AP in on the Secret: Israeli Strip Searches

AP Erases Video of Israeli Soldier Shooting Palestinian Boy

Just Another Mother Murdered

Anatomy of a Cover-Up: When a Mother Gets Killed Does She Make a Sound?

Russia, Israel and Media Coverage

The AP speaks Newspeak: Reporting on Afghanistan and the 1,000 civilians killed in 2007 parrots the Pentagon, by Marc W. Herold, University of New Hampshire

  • How AP works

    Since most newspapers don’t have their own reporters in Israel or the Palestinian Territories, they obtain their news on this region from wire services. AP is usually the only global wire service taken by U.S. newspapers.

    Although AP is a cooperative, which means that it is “owned” by all the news organizations that use its news, in reality there is almost no oversight of its work. Editors around the country simply accept its reporting at face value.

    The trouble is, however, that its reporting is consistently Israeli-centric.

    The “control bureau” for the region, through which all news reports are funneled, is located in Israel. Its editors are living in Israel, their families are frequently Israeli, and quite often they themselves are Israeli citizens.

    Even when an AP report carries a Palestinian dateline and even a Palestinian byline, in the large majority of cases the article was actually written in Israel, frequently by an Israeli editor.

    A study of AP’s reporting found that it had reported on Israeli children’s deaths at a rate seven times greater than they reported on Palestinian children’s deaths – even though Palestinian children were killed first and in far greater numbers.

    This blog will deconstruct AP’s daily reporting on Israel-Palestine: it will discuss its editors’ word choices, editorial decisions, and headlines. It will especially explore which “context” AP’s editors on this beat have chosen to include and which to ignore.

Associated Press Deconstructed · Examining AP's reporting on Israel-Palestine