“Hostile” was the prevailing description of the relationship between Al Jazeera and the United States government for most of the past decade.
In the years after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the pioneering Arabic-language news network was lambasted by the United States as an outlet for anti-American propaganda. Its office in Kabul, Afghanistan, was leveled by a American missile strike. One of the network’s cameramen was detained in Afghanistan and held at Guantánamo Bay for more than six years. Bush administration officials complained heatedly about inflammatory broadcasts about Iraq, and once insinuated that the network’s correspondents had been tipped off to bombing attacks there in advance.
So it is notable that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made time to meet with the news network’s senior management during her tour of the Middle East this week.
The network said in a statement Monday that Ms. Clinton met with its director general Wadah Khanfar “and the network’s senior editorial staff for a meeting to further dialogue with Al Jazeera.”
The meeting was held on the Carnegie Mellon University campus in Doha, Qatar, the city where Al Jazeera is based. It lasted for about one hour.
The meeting was “quite frank” as Al Jazeera managers “put their frustrations on the table,” according to a network employee who was briefed on the meeting.
“Over all, the meeting was very positive,” the network employee added.
After the meeting, Ms. Clinton was interviewed by Al Jazeera’s Washington bureau chief, Abderrahim Foukara, before a group of 300 college students. The interview was shown on Al Jazeera on Tuesday.
Al Jazeera executives have made it clear that they seek a more stable working relationship with the United States. They continue to seek wider cable carriage in the United States, for instance.