PETER'S PRINCIPLES anybody who covers the Arab world as long as Peter did would run into these charges. You pick up the local color, just as you would in Wash- ington. "But I don't believe that Peter's anti-Israel. He's a good journalist and a very generous journalist. Many times, when I went to the Middle East, Peter would be there because that was his beat. And he would always help me with sources, even though we worked for corn- peting networks. You can't say that about everybody. "When Peter had his sudden rise," recalled Mr. Kalb, "and people accused him of being anti-Israel, I was perplexed." Beirut to Munich uspicion about the ABC an- chor dates as far back as 1969, when he opened an ABC bureau in Beirut, the first for any U.S. network in the Arab world. Several critics point to this as evidence that Mr. Jennings yearned to tell the Arab side of the Middle East story to the detriment of the Israeli side. But the newsman denies that he set out to report any one version of the Mideast story. Or that he has done so. "Listen," he said, "you send me to Asia and part of my job is to under- stand the various Asian mindsets. You send a responsible reporter to the Middle East and part of his or her job is to inform the audience about what the mindsets are in that culture, what the mores are and what the national and individual aspirations are of the people you're covering. "I didn't set out to correct any `imbalance' (in reporting from that region). I just happened to physically be on 'the other side' from some people's point of view." Mr. Jennings has said he was "ecstatically happy" while working the Middle East full-time for ABC. Contributing — for a while, at least — to this ecstasy was his marriage in 1974 to photographer Anouchka Malouf, a Lebanese Christian schooled in Switzerland and fluent in French, English and Arabic. Mr. Jennings' critics still say that the marriage, which lasted only about two years, reflects the newsman's supposed pro-Arab lean- ings. But does anyone now claim he is pro-Israel because his third wife, author Kati Marton, is Jewish? "They may," guessed Mr. Jenn- ings. "But the suggestion that my wife, whatever she may be, should have that kind of influence on me as a journalist is an inaccurate estimate of my own intellectual capabilities. "It's also slightly spurious to sug- gest that because one is married to someone, one has a bias one way or the other." Even more incriminating, to some people, was Mr. Jennings' reportage from the 1972 Munich Olympics. Earlier that year, Roone Arledge, head of ABC News, had asked Mr. Jennings to handle the interna- tional news stories that would be coming out of that year's Olympics. Neither man knew that Mr. Jenn- ings' Mideast expertise would be in- dispensable in Munich. On Sept. 5, Palestinian terrorists seized 11 Israeli athletes in Building Jennings, with his wife, Kati Marton: "It's spurious to suggest that because one is married to someone, one is biased either way." 40 FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991 31 in the Olympic Village. For much of the drama, Mr. Jennings posi- tioned himself in a dormitory direct- ly across from the besieged building. He was often able to peer directly into the room where the terrorists held the Israelis. He reported for ABC through a walkie-talkie. What he reported — and how he reported it — is still disputed. In The Evenings Stars: The Making of the Network News Anchor, media critic Barbara Matusow wrote that his broadcasts were "among the most "Jennings didn't like the Iraqis," said Martin Peretz. "That muddled my view of him just a little bit." gripping . . . ever shown on live tele- vision." ABC won an Emmy for its coverage of the athletes' massacre. But the New Republic's Martin Peretz would probably be delighted if the award was rescinded. Mr. Peretz recently recalled that "a young and callow Peter Jennings explain(ed) away the terrorism (in Munich) as an example of despera- tion. "Jennings came on the screen," Peretz wrote six years ago in the New Republic, "quite cool about the victims, . . . but eager to explain the act from the victimizers' point of view: the massacre was a demon- stration of the misunderstood .. . Palestinians' frustration at an unappeased grievance .. . "With authoritatively clipped speech and a mannequin-handsome face," wrote Mr. Peretz, "I thought, here was someone whose banalities were destined to be with us for years." To determine what Mr. Jennings said from the Olympics, the Baltimore Jewish Times viewed tapes of the Sept. 5, 6 and 7, 1972 "ABC Evening News." It also view- ed tapes of all the live news specials broadcast on the network on Sept. 5 and 6 regarding the attack on Building 31. On these, Mr. Jennings said the terrorists had come from "an ex- treme left-wing group," which he speculated (correctly, as it turned out) was the then-little known Black September. And at a memorial ser- vice for the slain athletes the day after their murder, he reported that "hearts and minds were heavy with