Become a Member
Opinion

A terrorist’s profile shows the rot in America’s media

The New Yorker’s article doesn’t glamourise Yahya Sinwar, but much about it exemplifies the problem with so much coverage of the conflict between Israel and Hamas

August 7, 2024 11:16
Copy Of 1240346368
Yahya Sinwar, newly appointed head of Hamas (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

I used to like the New Yorker, before wokeness ruined American arts and letters, and especially before October 7 turned progressive America’s Middle Eastern coverage increasingly sympathetic towards Hamas.

Still, this week, I was magnetised by what appeared to be a New Yorker profile of Hamas’s leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, written by David Remnick, the magazine’s (Jewish) editor.

Given that profiles signify some kind of dignity, and a depth and a point of view worth engaging with, I had to read to check: surely the New Yorker hadn’t sunk that low.

At first, it didn’t seem it had. Sure, the framing of the profile did not make it immediately clear that Sinwar is a mass murderer, arch-terrorist, and Holocaust-pursuer with global ambitions. Notes from Underground, the headline teased, accompanied by a black and white picture of a trim Sinwar smirking, legs casually crossed, in a chair amidst rubble, set against a sepia shot of pre-war Gaza. “The life of Yayha Sinwar, the leader of Hamas in Gaza.”