U.S. Drops to 49th in
World Press Freedom Ranking:
By Glenn Greenwald
February 13, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept" -
Each year, Reporters
Without Borders issues a worldwide ranking
of nations based on the extent to which they
protect or abridge press freedom. The
group’s 2015 ranking was released this
morning, and the United States is ranked
49th.
That is the
lowest ranking ever during the Obama
presidency, and the second-lowest ranking
for the U.S. since the rankings began in
2002 (in 2006, under Bush, the U.S. was
ranked 53rd). The countries immediately
ahead of the U.S. are Malta, Niger, Burkino
Faso, El Salvador, Tonga, Chile and
Botswana.
Some of the U.S.’s closest
allies fared even worse, including Saudi
Arabia (164), Bahrain (163), Egypt (158),
the UAE (120), and Israel (101: “In the West
Bank, the Israeli security forces
deliberately fired rubber bullets and
teargas at Palestinian journalists”; 15
journalists were killed during Israeli
attack on Gaza; and “the authorities also
stepped up control of programme content on
their own TV stations during the offensive,
banning a spot made by the Israeli NGO
B’Tselem that cited the names of 150
children who had been killed in the Gaza
Strip”).
To explain the latest drop
for the U.S., the press group cited the U.S.
government’s persecution of New York
Times reporter Jim Risen, as well as
the fact that the U.S. “continues its war on
information in others,
such as WikiLeaks.” Also cited were the
numerous arrests of journalists covering the
police protests in Ferguson, Missouri (which
included The Intercept‘s Ryan
Devereaux, who was
tear-gassed and shot with a rubber bullet
prior to his arrest).
It should come as no
surprise that the U.S. continues to plummet
in press freedoms under Obama. In October,
2013, the Committee to Protect Freedom
issued
a scathing denunciation of the U.S.
government’s attacks on press freedoms, the
first time the U.S. was ever the subject of
one of its reports. Written by former
Washington Post executive editor
Leonard Downie, Jr., it detailed the
multiple ways the Obama administration has
eroded press freedoms, and concluded:
The administration’s
war on leaks and other efforts to
control information are the most
aggressive I’ve seen since the Nixon
administration, when I was one of the
editors involved in The Washington
Post’s investigation of Watergate. The
30 experienced Washington journalists at
a variety of news organizations whom I
interviewed for this report could not
remember any precedent.
That warning echoed the
one previously issued by James Goodale, the
General Counsel of the New York Times during
the Pentagon Papers battle,
who said: “President Obama wants to
criminalize the reporting of national
security information”
and “President Obama will surely pass
President Richard Nixon as the worst
president ever on issues of national
security and press freedom.”
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