Was the Grey Lady Selling Herself to John Kerry and the UN?
The New York Times' October Surprise for George W. Bush has strangely gone the way of the dodo now that he's been reelected.
Jonah Goldberg weighs in:
Howard Kurtz might want to get in on this one BEFORE some more of Pinch's boys do the perp walk out of the Times building.
Jonah Goldberg weighs in:
But, as to the intentions of these critics, the most revealing facts were ones that did not appear in that first broadside in the Times. The frightening multi-author article, which dropped like manna from heaven for the Kerry campaign, couldn't find room to mention that the 380 tons of missing explosives constituted a fairly small fraction of the 400,000 tons of explosives and weapons that had been either destroyed or secured from more than 10,000 sites. In that context, what Kerry was calling the greatest blunder of the war suddenly was more like a regrettable but not quite remarkable lapse, in the midst of an extremely fluid situation.
Oh, and they left something else out: The weapons might have been removed before the invasion. Over the course of the week, the Times was forced to concede, often grudgingly and obliquely, that the weapons may not have been there for U.S. forces to secure in the first place. Moreover, it became increasingly implausible to imagine a convoy of trucks absconding with the explosives without U.S. intelligence noticing in the early days after the fall of Iraq. The United States owned the roads and watched them from the air.
Howard Kurtz might want to get in on this one BEFORE some more of Pinch's boys do the perp walk out of the Times building.

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