It’s hardly fair to condemn a newspaper columnist after publishing just two op-eds. Maybe the columnist is just getting warmed up. Perhaps he or she needs a few pieces to get comfortable.
Or, in the case of Bill Kristol, maybe the New York Times just made a ridiculous decision that the paper is likely to regret.
Kristol’s inaugural column, published last week, went a long way in reinforcing critics’ concerns. It was filled with predictable Republican Party talking points; it attributed a quote to the wrong person; and it heralded Hillary Clinton’s demise as a presidential candidate — just one day before she won the New Hampshire primary. I’m obviously not privy to the internal discussions of NYT editors, but I’d like to think they sat in a room, looked at each other, and asked, “Whose idea was this again?”
Today, we see Kristol’s second column, which — get this — criticizes Democrats for not supporting Bush’s “surge” policy.
The Democrats were wrong in their assessments of the surge. Attacks per week on American troops are now down about 60 percent from June. Civilian deaths are down approximately 75 percent from a year ago. December 2007 saw the second-lowest number of U.S. troops killed in action since March 2003. And according to Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, commander of day-to-day military operations in Iraq, last month’s overall number of deaths, which includes Iraqi security forces and civilian casualties as well as U.S. and coalition losses, may well have been the lowest since the war began.
Do Obama and Clinton and Reid now acknowledge that they were wrong? Are they willing to say the surge worked?
No. It’s apparently impermissible for leading Democrats to acknowledge — let alone celebrate — progress in Iraq.
Well, it was impossible to see this one coming. It’s not as if Weekly Standard readers haven’t read this exact same column, practically word-for-word, in almost every issue for several years now. Way to be provocative and thought-provoking there, Bill.
As Kevin put it, “This week, in an apparent effort to make phoning it in look good, freshman New York Times columnist Bill Kristol tells us that the surge is teh awesome. Now that’s fresh copy.”
Clark Hoyt, the NYT’s public editor, explored Kristol’s hire in his column yesterday, which was published before the Fox News contributor’s latest banal tripe. Hoyt acknowledged that the decision has been deeply controversial among Times readers, and while he believes the “reaction is beyond reason,” Hoyt also argues that bringing Kristol on was a “mistake.”
Rosenthal said: “Some people have said we shouldn’t have hired him because he supports the war in Iraq. That’s absurd.”
That is not why I think Sulzberger and Rosenthal made a mistake, and I agree with their effort to address an Op-Ed lineup that, until Kristol came aboard, was at least six liberals against one conservative who isn’t always all that conservative. I’ve heard all the arguments against Kristol — he is “wrong” on Iraq, he is overexposed as editor of The Weekly Standard and a regular commentator on Fox News with nothing new to say, he is an activist with the potential to embarrass The Times with his outside involvements — and one of them sticks with me:
On Fox News Sunday on June 25, 2006, Kristol said, “I think the attorney general has an absolute obligation to consider prosecution” of The New York Times for publishing an article that revealed a classified government program to sift the international banking transactions of thousands of Americans in a search for terrorists.
Publication of the article was controversial — my predecessor as public editor first supported it and then changed his mind — but Kristol’s leap to prosecution smacked of intimidation and disregard for both the First Amendment and the role of a free press in monitoring a government that has a long history of throwing the cloak of national security and classification over its activities. This is not a person I would have rewarded with a regular spot in front of arguably the most elite audience in the nation.
Kristol refused to talk with me about this issue, or an earlier statement that The Times was “irredeemable,” or the reaction to his appointment — an odd stance for someone who presumably will want others to talk to him for his column.
Interesting. A New York Times columnist is refusing to discuss his public comments with the New York Times’ public editor.
The NYT’s editors, if they’re paying attention, should realize by now that offering a sloppy, predictable demagogue one of the most prestigious opportunities in American media was a mistake. If they don’t, one assumes another column or two ought to do the trick.