President Trump’s new US ambassador to the Netherlands just got caught in a lie, and tried to use the phrase “fake news” to get out of it. It didn’t go well.
Watch Trump’s ambassador to the Netherlands get caught in a lie about anti-Muslim comments
The diplomat accuses a Dutch journalist of “fake news.” Then he’s proven wrong on the spot. It’s awkward.
Pete Hoekstra, whom Trump nominated in July and was sworn into office earlier this month, made a Dutch reporter’s head spin on Thursday with a series of denials about controversial remarks he’s made about mythical “no-go zones” in the Netherlands — parts of the country allegedly run by jihadists and hostile to any non-Muslims.
Hoekstra, a Republican and former Michigan congressman known for his xenophobic and Islamophobic rhetoric, was being interviewed by a Dutch journalist when this exchange happened:
“You mentioned in a debate that there are no-go zones in the Netherlands and that cars and politicians are being set on fire,” Wouter Zwart, a correspondent for a Dutch television news program Nieuwsuur, says in an interview published Thursday.
“I didn’t say that. That is actually an incorrect statement. We would call it ‘fake news.’ I never said that,” replies Hoekstra.
The journalist then apparently shows Hoekstra a clip of him saying the very thing he’d just denied ever saying.
But here’s the kicker: Hoekstra then denies his denial.
“You called it fake news,” the journalist says.
“I didn’t call that fake news, I didn’t use the words today,” Hoekstra says.
“No?” Zwart asks, incredulously.
“No,” Hoekstra responds. “I don’t think I did...” he adds, with a slight hint of self-doubt.
You can watch the whole exchange here:
No-go zones are not a real threat to Europe
There’s a popular right-wing narrative about the alleged spread of violent, Islamist-controlled “no-go zones” in cities in Western Europe where even police are afraid to go. It’s used to illustrate the notion that Western Europe — and, by extension, white Christian civilization — is being invaded and corrupted by radical Muslim immigrants.
But while there are high-crime areas in Europe that are predominantly Muslim, there is no evidence that European governments are actually ceding territory to Islamists controlling Muslim-only enclaves.
Hoekstra has long peddled this false narrative. The clip the journalist shows him features Hoekstra speaking on a panel at a conference sponsored at the David Horowitz Freedom Center, a far-right think tank, in 2015. And in that clip, Hoekstra is saying exactly what the journalist accused him of:
The Islamic movement has now gotten to a point where they have put Europe into chaos — chaos in the Netherlands, there are cars being burned, there are politicians that are being burned.
[...]
And yes, there are no-go zones in the Netherlands.
Trump’s nomination of Hoekstra over the summer caused a great deal of controversy in the Dutch press due to his ultra-conservative record on issues like gay rights and immigration.
Hoekstra’s early misstep doesn’t bode well for his time in the Netherlands — it shouldn’t be so easy to tell when a diplomat isn’t telling truth.











