NYT Says Israel Lied About Iran Sanctions, But Experts and Insiders Support Claim

By Published On: December 16, 2013

nyt_logo2.jpg

Yuval Steinitz’s assessment of the financial benefits coming to Iran under the terms of a recent nuclear deal was attacked by The New York Times, but it is starting to look like one of the lower estimates around.

Several days before the deal was finalized, Steinitz, Israel’s Minister of Strategic Affairs, stated that sanctions had cost Iran roughly 100 billion per year, and that the anticipated deal would “directly reduce between 15 to 20 billion dollars out of this amount.” Indirect benefits as a result of new difficulties in enforcing sanctions could be even higher, he argued.

The New York Times, though, was unwilling to accept that Steinitz’s estimate seemed to differ from the U.S. government line, which had put sanctions relief at about $10 billion over six months. A Times news story attacked Steinitz as having seemingly “distorted” the terms of the deal. (In fact, Steinitz’s assessment was largely in line with the American assessment. He predicted up to $20 billion in sanctions relief over one year while the Americans referred to half that much over half the period of time.)

The newspaper has stood by its attack on Steinitz. Meanwhile, though, a diverse array of sources have been giving estimates that are even higher than those provided by the Israeli minister. The Foundation for Defense of Democracy’s Mark Dubowitz argued that “the proposed sanctions relief could yield Iran $20 billion or more through the repatriation of frozen Iranian assets, gold transfers to Iran in exchange for its oil and natural gas sales, petrochemicals exports, and the lifting of sanctions on the Iranian auto sector.” Nader Habibi, a professor of Middle East economics at Brandeis University, calculated $24.5 billion in sanctions relief. And the Israeli daily Ha’aretz, citing Israeli security sources, reported that “senior officials in the administration of President Barak Obama have conceded over the past few days in conversations with colleagues in Israel that the value of the economic sanctions relief to Iran could be much higher than originally thought in Washington.” According to the report, the Americans acknowledge that sanctions relief would amount to “about 20 or 25 billion dollars.”

Each of these estimates are higher than Steinitz’s assessment — much higher if they refer to the impact over six months.

It was clear from the start that a purportedly objective New York Times news story should not have labelled Steinitz as a distorter because he didn’t fall perfectly in line with American talking points on the deal. Now it is even harder to fathom how the newspaper can justify leaving the slur uncorrected.

For a video showing other examples of New York Times editorializing, see here.

We expose the anti-Israel lies so you don't have to. But we can't do it without your help. Join the fight -- Donate now
Tell the World – Share Now!

More from SNAPSHOTS

  • The Palestinian Authority Paid Terrorists $347 Million in 2017

    January 9, 2018

    A Jerusalem Post graph illustrating how PA payments to terrorists are calculated, with amounts shown in shekels The Palestinian Authority (PA) paid imprisoned terrorists and their families 347 million USD in 2017, Israel’s defense ministry [...]

  • Foreign Policy Fails To Tell The Truth About UNRWA

    January 9, 2018

    An image posted on the official Facebook page of an UNRWA school As its headline illustrates, a Jan. 5, 2018 Foreign Policy article, “Nikki Haley’s Diplomacy of Revenge Targets U.N. Relief Agency,” substituted editorializing for [...]

  • Where’s the Coverage? Palestinian Leaders Spend Christmas Celebrating a Terrorist

    January 2, 2018

    PA President Mahmoud Abbas meets with Rafat Al-Jawabra on Dec. 25, 2017. Image courtesy of MEMRI Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and head of the Fatah movement, spent Dec. 25, 2017 [...]

  • Newsweek Errs on Legality of Occupation

    January 2, 2018

    In a Dec. 28 article ("Israeli teens refuse to serve in military, take part in occupation"), Newsweek's Jack Moore errs, stating: The majority of the international community considers Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and [...]

  • Reuters Removes Photograph Implicating Israel in Deaths of Iranian Street Protesters

    January 2, 2018

    What do Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz have to do with the deaths of 10 Iranian protesters demonstrating against their regime? That's what Twitter users were wondering after Reuters [...]

  • ‘Crux’ of the Conflict, According to The New York Times

    December 24, 2017

    What is the crux of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict? According to a New York Times headline in yesterday's print edition, and online here, it is religious settlers encroaching on Palestinian land ("An Israeli Settler, A Dead [...]

  • Where’s the Coverage of New Jersey Imam’s Call for Genocide?

    December 21, 2017

    On December 8, MEMRI, the Middle East Media Research Institute, translated a sermon given in a New Jersey mosque. The organization summarized as follows: Sheikh Aymen Elkasaby, imam of the Islamic Center of Jersey City, [...]

  • DPA Captions Wrongly Blame Israel for Islamic Jihad Deaths

    December 13, 2017

    Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA) published photo captions yesterday which incorrectly imply that an Israeli strike was responsible for the deaths of two Islamic Jihad members in Gaza. The photos and captions, distributed by major photo [...]

  • Reuters Rushes to Publicize Claim of “Israeli Attack.” You Won’t Believe What Happened Next

    December 12, 2017

    There may be times when "local residents" are good sources for a news story. But the death of two members of the Islamic Jihad terror group, killed in an explosion as they raced through Gaza [...]

  • What Were the Motives of the Port Authority Bomber?

    December 12, 2017

    What were the motives of Ayaked Ullah, the Port Authority bomber in yesterday's attack? There are many news headlines that address the issue, and they advance differing theories, each of them presented as fact. Thus, [...]