You know, some of us are sick of "the media" and its incessant attacking of the current government. What has just happened in Iran and the peace, albeit as tenuous as it may be, are significant achievements and should be recognized. Similarly, the achievement of getting all but one of the NATO nations to commit to a 5% of GNP defense budget is something never done since NATO was founded... yet there is nearly nothing in the traditional press.
On that later subject, the NYT talks about NATO defense budgets "below the fold" (two pages down on the website) in the context of a criticism of the way the agreement was worded rather than in a recognition of something never even closely achieved since 1949!
Maybe if you agreed with the statement that the leaked data came from people who were not near the actual action and which came out well before "the smoke had cleared" over the site allowing for satellite photography and "other sources" to better picture what had been achieved.
Or maybe the press is editorializing by taking any negative or partial aspect of this story and emphasizing it.
Again, using the New York Times article on the NATO GNP allocations, they say:
"NATO leaders agreed on Wednesday to a goal of spending 5 percent of their gross domestic product on defense. But that doesn’t mean each member nation will actually spend that much.
The difference lies in a bit of mushy diplomatic language that lets the NATO secretary general, Mark Rutte, claim that he delivered on President Trump’s spending demand. The brief and unanimously approved communiqué that NATO issued after leaders wrapped up their annual summit says that “allies” — not “all allies” — had agreed to the 5 percent figure."
So, instead of recognizing a major international achievement that will reduce NATO's dependence on the U.S. for funding, the NYT leads its article with an argument about "word meaning" where it calls the terminology "mushy".
"Mushy" is an opinionated word in the maximum degree. Yet it is used in the opening paragraphs of the New York Times article. Let no good deed go unpunished.