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April 2026 editorial profile for Haaretz. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in April 2026. Tap any tile to jump to the detailed card.
One tile per entity (country or public figure) covered enough times this month to draw a confident editorial-stance read. Colour from red (hostile) to green (supportive); intensity scales with headline volume. Tap to jump to the detailed card.
The outlet consistently treats Trump as a problematic actor, not as a credible spokesperson. Even when quoting him, the framing is critical. The entity's own aggressive statements are reported as threats, not authoritative positions.
Headlines 4, 21, and 25 are neutral or mixed, but the overwhelming majority are negative; the outlet's own voice is consistently critical, not merely quoting critics.
The outlet's stance is toward the US as a country, not just the Trump administration; coverage is consistently critical of US foreign policy and domestic politics, but the criticism is directed at policy and leadership rather than the nation itself. Some headlines are neutral factual reports, but the overall selection and framing skew negative.
The outlet's stance toward Lebanon as a country is neutral; coverage focuses on Israeli actions and Hezbollah, not on Lebanon itself. Headlines 13 is an opinion piece advocating for Israeli disarmament, which reflects a critical view of Israeli policy rather than stance toward Lebanon. The entity is a country, not a spokesperson, so stance is assessed on how the outlet treats Lebanon as a state actor—mostly factual reporting without evaluative language toward Lebanon itself.
The entity is 'IL' (Israel as a country), but coverage overwhelmingly focuses on Netanyahu's government and military actions, not the state itself. Stance is critical of the government's policies and leadership, not of Israel as a nation. Some headlines are neutral factual reports (e.g., flights resuming, arms deal).
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