ABOUT THIS BLOG

The Daily Nightly began on May 31, 2005. As Brian wrote in his first post it aims to provide a narrative of the broadcast day and a window into the editorial process at NBC Nightly News. Brian weighs in every weekday and NBC News correspondents and producers post regularly.

Brian Williams became the seventh anchor and managing editor in the history of NBC Nightly News on December 2, 2004. Read his full biography.



White House letter to NBC News

Posted: Tuesday, May 20, 2008 10:30 AM by Daily Nightly Editor

The following is a letter from Counselor to the President Ed Gillespie to NBC News President Steve Capus:

Steve Capus
President, NBC News
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, N.Y. 10112

Mr. Capus:

This e-mail is to formally request that NBC Nightly News and The Today Show air for their viewers President Bush's actual answer to correspondent Richard Engel's question about Iran policy and "appeasement," rather than the deceptively edited version of the President's answer that was aired last night on the Nightly News and this morning on The Today Show.

In the interview, Engel asked the President:  "You said that negotiating with Iran is pointless, and then you went further. You said that it was appeasement. Were you referring to Senator Barack Obama?"

The President responded: "You know, my policies haven't changed, but evidently the political calendar has.  People need to read the speech. You didn't get it exactly right, either.  What I said was is that we need to take the words of people seriously.  And when, you know, a leader of Iran says that they want to destroy Israel, you've got to take those words seriously.  And if you don't take them seriously, then it harkens back to a day when we didn't take other words seriously.  It was fitting that I talked about not taking the words of Adolph Hitler seriously on the floor of the Knesset.  But I also talked about the need to defend Israel, the need to not negotiate with the likes of al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas.  And the need to make sure Iran doesn't get a nuclear weapon."

This answer makes clear: (1). The President's remarks before the Knesset were not different from past policy statements, but are now being looked at through a political prism,    (2).  Corrects the inaccurate premise of Engel's question by putting the "appeasement" line in the proper context of taking the words of leaders seriously, not "negotiating with Iran," (3).  Restates the U.S.'s long-standing policy positions against negotiating with al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas, and not allowing Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon.

Engel's immediate follow-up question was, "Repeatedly you've talked about Iran and that you don't want to see Iran develop a nuclear weapon.  How far away do you think Iran is from developing a nuclear capability?"

The President replied, "You know, Richard, I don't want to speculate – and there's a lot of speculation.  But one thing is for certain – we need to prevent them from learning how to enrich uranium.  And I have made it clear to the Iranians that there is a seat at the table for them if they would verifiably suspend their enrichment.  And if not, we'll continue to rally the world to isolate them."

This response reiterates another long-standing policy, which is that if Iran verifiably suspends its uranium enrichment program the U.S. government would engage in talks with the Iranian government.

NBC's selective editing of the President's response is clearly intended to give viewers the impression that he agreed with Engel's characterization of his remarks when he explicitly challenged it.  Furthermore, omitted the references to al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas and ignored the clarifying point in the President's follow-up response that U.S. policy is to require Iran to suspend its nuclear enrichment program before coming to the table, not that "negotiating with Iran is pointless" and amounts to "appeasement."

This deceitful editing to further a media-manufactured storyline is utterly misleading and irresponsible and I hereby request in the interest of fairness and accuracy that the network air the President's responses to both initial questions in full on the two programs that used the excerpts.

As long as I am making this formal request, please allow me to take this opportunity to ask if your network has reconsidered its position that Iraq is in the midst of a civil war, especially in light of the fact that the unity government in Baghdad recently rooted out illegal, extremist groups in Basra and reclaimed the port there for the people of Iraq, among other significant signs of progress.

On November 27, 2006, NBC News made a decision to no longer just cover the news in Iraq, but to make an analytical and editorial judgment that Iraq was in a civil war.  As you know, both the United States government and the Government of Iraq disputed your account at that time.   As Matt Lauer said that morning on The Today Show: "We should mention, we didn't just wake up on a Monday morning and say, 'Let's call this a civil war.' This took careful deliberation.'" 

I noticed that around September of 2007, your network quietly stopped referring to conditions in Iraq as a "civil war."  Is it still NBC News's carefully deliberated opinion that Iraq is in the midst of a civil war? If not, will the network publicly declare that the civil war has ended, or that it was wrong to declare it in the first place?

Lastly, when the Commerce Department on April 30 released the GDP numbers for the first quarter of 2007, Brian Williams reported it this way:  "If you go by the government number, the figure that came out today stops just short of the official declaration of a recession."

The GDP estimate was a positive 0.6% for the first quarter.  Slow growth, but growth nonetheless.  This followed a slow but growing fourth quarter in 2007.  Consequently, even if the first quarter GDP estimate had been negative, it still would not have signaled a recession – neither by the unofficial rule-of-thumb of two consecutive quarters of negative growth, nor the more robust definition by the National Bureau of Economic Research (the group that officially marks the beginnings and ends of business cycles). 

Furthermore, never in our nation's history have we characterized economic conditions as a "recession" with unemployment so low – in fact, when this rate of unemployment was eventually reached in the 1990s, it was hailed as the sign of a strong economy.  This rate of unemployment is lower than the average of the past three decades.

Are there numbers besides the "government number" to go by?  Is there reason to believe "the government number" is suspect?  How does the release of positive economic growth for two consecutive quarters, albeit limited, stop "just short of the official declaration of a recession"?

Mr. Capus, I'm sure you don't want people to conclude that there is really no distinction between the "news" as reported on NBC and the "opinion" as reported on MSNBC, despite the increasing blurring of those lines. I welcome your response to this letter, and hope it is one that reassures your broadcast network's viewers that blatantly partisan talk show hosts like Christopher Matthews and Keith Olbermann at MSNBC don't hold editorial sway over the NBC network news division.

Sincerely,

Ed Gillespie
Counselor to the President

To View The Edited Version Of NBC News' Interview, Click Here
To View The Full Interview Of The President, Click Here.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

i'm sorry but this is what the white house is worried about a sentence that was left out of an interview? Not a sentence that by no way changes the response the president gave. Not only that the question was about a comment he made that by no way impacts anything other than he doensn't like the policies of a nominee for office.
I think we should be more worried as a country of the national embarssement that this president has been. Not only in the last 8 years has he isolated us by his policies and actions but now with one foot out thr door is is taking this grand tour to lecture the world how our country is so much better and an example for the rest of the world to follow. Everytime i see him on any news broadcast i cringe hoping and praying that he didn't say anything else that will piss people off.
But I'm glad to see that the white house is more worried about a sentence that doens't matter in the context of anything
Mr. Gillespie was absolutaly correct in correcting the slanted biased "news" that emminates and permeates the NBC/MSNBCccp family.  If you want to be a leftist network- then fine and dandy, but NBC/MSNBCccp should stop hiding the peacock's true colors.
I continue to be amazed at how the current administration and it's corporate news minions get all shaky and sweaty when real press fights back.  It seems spewing twisted and opinionated "news" is only kay if fox and it's affiliates and so called journalists, throw wild punches at what they deem the "liberal" press, but when the so-called "liberal" press throws back, (thank
God and FINALLY!) the right wing look for their mom or try to "pay off the ref" to penalize the other team.  I am amused and apalled at the same time.  What does that mean?  And what does the right wingnut press mean by liberal news anyway?  Go get 'em NBC/MSNBC!  I am not an elequent speaker but follow news across the spectrum and I could give a s...t that the Bush Administration and Right wing news thugs are getting all ticked about it.  the full story is always there to read (as long as one can read) in the blogs and online.  Mr. Gillspie, please use your intellect instead of using emotion to bring your gripe to the table.  Tough cookies I say.
Thanks for the chance to write my opinion.
Well, I guess it is President Bush's fault for trusting a scumbag like Richard Engel and his employers by consenting to the interview.  NBC has a reputation for dishonorable behavior, and it looks like they have no intention of changing that.
I don't agree with this president much but what NBC news has done here is precisely why the news media isn't trusted, tolerated or respected in any manner by the (otherwise) dolts of America. Shameful NBC, and all of the profound idiots whom propogated this editing distortion.
It is interesting that those who criticize NBC use words like "scumbag." That is because the facts don't support their position so invective is supposed to carry the day. If you think NBC is so biased just consider the direction. They carried the reverend Wright story ad nauseum for weeks while giving the Reverends Hagee and Parsley a mere wink, emphasizing McCain's position and omitting that McCain sought these endorsements that reflect poorly on his judgment.
NBC has carried water for this Administration far too long, including mouthing their misrepresentations justifying the war (WMD, AlQueda connections, etc.) without any real investigation of the facts or competing information.
All that said, Gillespie's letter is just one more outrageous attempt by Bush to manage the news and control public opinion in a long list of outrageous conduct. Thank God this presidency is drawing to a close!
That's the kettle calling the pot Black!
FOX News does this thing ALL the TIME! FOX News is SO Slanted that it Hurts my eyes!
Also, I want to know when our government notified Halliburton that they needed to hire a couple thousand new employees for "something" in the future?? It would take several months to interview, do background checks, drug test, evaluate, train, etc. and if that was BEFORE 9/11 then we have a MAJOR PROBLEM!!

Just wondering?


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

RECENT STORIES FROM NIGHTLY NEWS

  • Nightly News section front

CONNECT WITH US

About the broadcast | Biographies

RSS is an easy way to get the news you want as it is updated even if you are not on MSNBC.com. More information about MSNBC.com's RSS feeds.

Subscribe to feed

Podcasting brings you audio and video from each weekday broadcast on your iPod or other portable MP3 player anytime, anywhere. More information about MSNBC.com's podcasts.

Subscribe to podcast

Sign-up for our daily e-mail newsletter. It offers a preview of the stories and special reports featured on each weekday broadcast.


Syndicate This Site

Add The Daily Nightly to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google