The Guardian Revealed Its True Face in
Sacking a Columnist for Criticising US Military
Aid to Israel
By Jonathan Cook
February 13, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The revelation that a
leftwing journalist, Nathan J Robinson, has been
sacked as a Guardian US columnist for
criticising Israel on Twitter – and that he was
pressured to keep quiet about it by Guardian editors
– should come as no surprise. He is only the latest
in a long line of journalists, myself included, who
have run foul of the Guardian’s unwritten but
tightly policed constraints on what can be said
about Israel.
In the tweet below, I have listed a few of the
more prominent – and public – examples of
journalists who have suffered at the Guardian’s
hands over their coverage of Israel. The thread can
opened by clicking on the tweet:
The unspoken Guardian rule we broke was to
suggest one of the following: that there might be
inherent contradictions between Israel’s claim to be
a democracy and its self-definition in exclusivist,
chauvinist, ethnic terms; or that Israel’s
self-declared status as a militaristic, ethnic,
rather than civic, state might be connected to its
continuing abuses and crimes against Palestinians;
or that, because Israel wishes to conceal its ugly,
anachronistic ethnic project, it and its
defenders might act in bad faith; or that the US
might be actively complicit in this ethnically
inspired, colonial project to dispossess
Palestinians.
Equivocating editorial
Paradoxically, the Guardian is widely seen as the
“mainstream” English-language publication most
critical of Israel. It has long shored up its
reputation with the left by publishing seemingly
forthright, uncompromising material on
Israeli-Palestinian issues.
Part of that is a historic credit it earnt. There
was a time, long ago, when the Guardian’s pages
were, for example, the only place in the mainstream
to host – if rarely – the late, great Palestinian
intellectual Edward Said. The paper even once
allowed its former South Africa correspondent, who
had transferred to Israel, to
compare in detail the two countries’ systems of
apartheid. It caused a furore – much of it
instigated by the Israeli embassy in London – that
made the paper even more shy of taking on the Israel
lobby.
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That is reflected in the perverse fact that today
Israeli human rights groups are far more courageous
in speaking plainly about Israel than the Guardian.
When B’Tselem recently
published a report stating that Israel operated
an apartheid system oppressing Palestinians not just
in the occupied territories but in the whole area
under its rule – including inside Israel where
officials
falsely claim 1.8 million Palestinian citizens
have equal rights with Jewish citizens – the paper
published a mealy-mouthed editorial whose
equivocations contrasted starkly with B’Tselem’s
passionate and clear critique of a racist system of
separate rights.
Even then, the Guardian would never have conceded
what it reluctantly did in the editorial had
B’Tselem not forced its hand.
Low bar on Israel
The other reason why the Guardian looks so good
on Israel and Palestine is that the rest of the
corporate media is far, far worse. The bar is so low
that the Guardian has to do very little to impress.
Its unwavering support for Israel – and we will get
to the reasons for that in a moment – only becomes
clear when someone prominent steps forward to speak
as clearly about what’s really wrong with Israel as
B’Tselem recently did.
That invisible line on Israel was crossed by
Jeremy Corbyn too, of course – one of the many
aspects of his socialist-lite platform the corporate
Guardian could not abide. That was why the Guardian
was only too ready to join – and often lead – the
campaign of smears against him and the Labour party
under his leadership that conflated trenchant
criticism of Israel (anti-Zonism) with antisemitism.
One has to be naïve indeed to believe that the
Guardian’s treatment of Corbyn – its simplistic
regurgitation of the Board of Deputies’ talking
points – was done in good faith.
In fact, the Guardian’s relations with Israel and
Zionism date back to the founding editor of the
modern paper, C P Scott. A staunch Zionist, Scott
was critically important in liaising between the
British government and the Zionist movement in the
drafting of the 1917 Balfour Declaration – the
colonial document that effectively committed Britain
to dispossessing the native Palestinians, who
weren’t even named in it, of their homeland.
The Guardian acted effectively as midwife both to
the self-declared Jewish state of Israel and to the
Nakba – the mass programme of ethnic cleansing –
that was necessarily required to create a Jewish
state on the Palestinians’ homeland. And, as
documented in the book
Disenchantment, the Guardian has indulged Israel
ever since, much as a parent would a wayward child.
It can be critical, even sharply sometimes, but it
is resolutely protective of Israel’s image and the
interests Israel has defined for itself as a Jewish
state.
And for that reason, the Guardian historically
developed close ties to the liberal Jewish community
in the UK, much of it in London and Manchester. Many
liberal Jewish journalists found the paper a natural
home and an ideological fit in contrast to the rest
of the UK’s corporate media, which was highly
conservative and often openly antisemitic. A culture
of critical but unerring support for Israel was
always the Guardian’s default position.
Antisemitism smears
But to understand why Robinson became the latest
victim of the Guardian’s tough policing of speech
around Israel, we need to dig a little deeper.
Robinson is also editor of a small, independent,
socialist magazine called
Current
Affairs. As such, the issues he highlights
invariably break with the US corporate media’s
craven coverage on a wide range of issues.
His sarcastic, but pointed tweet criticising the
billions of dollars the US is sending to Israel so
it can buy more weapons to kill Palestinians – and
during a pandemic in which Americans are being
denied the full promised $2,000 checks – was treated
by the Israel lobby, as most criticism of Israel is
nowadays, as evidence of “antisemitism”. This was
the same kind of antisemitism that Corbyn, Ken Loach
and many others on the socialist left have been
accused of indulging.
The tweet, which Robinson deleted under Guardian
pressure, was only antisemitic if you choose
to see it that way – which, of course, is exactly
how Israel’s apologists would like you to see it.
Understandably, the nearer critics get to the nub of
what is wrong with a self-declared Jewish state
ruling over Palestinians, or with the US blank
cheque for that Jewish state, the more this lobby
goes into overdrive.
An email to Robinson from US editor John
Mulholland, who I worked under for a time when he
was editing the Observer, the Guardian’s Sunday
sister paper, included a line below the main body of
text complaining about Robinson’s tweet:
“Saying that the only Jewish state controls the
most powerful country in the world is clearly
antisemitic. The myth of ‘Jewish power’ informs
murderous hatred. Delete this and apologise.”
It is unclear who this instruction came from – an
influential reader, Mulholland himself or someone
even more senior in the Guardian hierarchy. It
matters little. Mulholland is the very embodiment of
what the Japanese call a “salaryman”. He has scaled
the greasy pole effortlessly by absorbing and
loyally enforcing the corporate values of the
Guardian business model.
Silencing socialist critiques
But the problem with the Guardian’s
interpretation of Robinson’s tweet is that there is
precisely nothing in the tweet to indicate that this
was its meaning. It is pure projection. Robinson’s
tweet critiqued a relationship in which the US
indisputably pours huge sums of military aid into
Israel – money desperately needed at the moment by
US citizens hit financially by the pandemic. That
“aid” is going to a state described by its own human
rights groups as an apartheid regime and one that
may soon be investigated by the International
Criminal Court for war crimes. That should not even
count as an opinion. It is a fact.
It is the Guardian’s own antisemitic
interpretation of the tweet that suggests this is
because Israel “controls” the US. More likely,
Robinson believes that the US sends the aid because
Israel serves the west’s ugly colonial interests in
the Middle East. Israel “earns” that aid – money for
armaments – from the US by acting as its regional
colonial “heavy”. (And, let’s note, Egypt originally
earned its similarly generous US aid for ending its
state of hostilities with Israel in 1979 by signing
a peace agreement.)
The deeper question in assessing the Guardian’s
sacking of Robinson – as well as its campaign to
smear Corbyn – is this: what line do we as the left
cross when we critique Israel? Is the Guardian
really protecting Israel from an antisemitic tweet,
as Mulholland appears to believe? Or is it policing
leftwing speech that highlights the continuing
imperialist, colonial nature of our western
societies and their economic models of exploitation,
domestic and foreign, on which corporate media like
the Guardian depend?
What we have here, disguised as a defence of
Jews, is a gradual outlawing of socialist critiques
of western states and their crimes. This is
happening as those critiques gain ever greater
visibility and purchase, assisted by social media
and its brief democratisation (for good and bad) of
public discourse.
Consistent worldview
Socialists like Robinson, Corbyn and Loach have a
worldview. It is their way of analysing societies
and geopolitics that makes sense of how state power
operates, and how elites maintain and expand their
control of resources to the detriment of others and
the planet. Socialism demands change. It requires
the reordering of society to ensure much more equal
relations between individuals and states to end
pervasive poverty and suffering.
We cannot therefore believe both that the US is
an imperial, colonial power sponsoring Arab
dictators, religious extremism and war crimes in the
Middle East to control access to the region’s oil
reserves – and also believe that Israel,
which assists some of those dictators and attacks
others, cultivates its own forms of religious
extremism, commits its own war crimes, and is
heavily subsidised by the US, has nothing to do with
any of that.
Socialists see Israel as integral to how western
states, especially the sole global military
superpower headquartered in Washington, continue to
project their power into the Middle East. They see
Israel as a proxy for a western colonial project
that never went away. Thinking that doesn’t make
socialists antisemitic. It makes them consistent, it
means their worldview makes sense of all those
seemingly disparate events going on around the globe
– disparate only because that is the way corporate
media presents its narratives to prevent readers
from joining up the dots.
Passive media consumption
This kind of analysis may well look
antisemitic to those – liberals and conservatives –
who have no worldview, no values beyond the
dog-eat-dog, social Darwinism our western societies
have cultivated in them through years of passive
media consumption. Robinson’s tweet doubtless looked
antisemitic to Mulholland, to Guardian editor Kath
Viner, to senior columnist Jonathan Freedland, the
paper’s resident antisemitism witchfinder general.
But that is because none of them are socialists.
They can read Robinson’s tweet only through the
limited perspective of their own entrenched
liberalism. If they were socialists, they would
never have been allowed anywhere near the senior
editorial positions they hold at the Guardian. And
the tiny number of Guardian journalists who claim to
be leftwing working under them – figures like Owen
Jones and George Monbiot – have learnt where the
invisible trip-wires are that they must avoid not to
lose their employment and their platforms. Which is
why you will not see any solidarity from Guardian
staff either over Robinson’s mistreatment or over
the threat his sacking poses to the speech rights of
the left.
This has long been the beauty of the “free” press
model for the corporate media. It has allowed
journalists to say anything they want so long as the
corporate media decides whether they are given a
platform from which to say it. And the corporate
media has only given a platform to those journalists
who have demonstrated that they can be trusted not
to stray too far from what is today’s neoliberal
orthodoxy at home and neoconservative orthodoxy
abroad.
Illusion of freedom
Socialism has begun to revive – if often only as
a growing disillusionment with late-stage,
planet-destroying capitalism – because for the first
time there have been large platforms from which
socialists can speak. Paradoxically, those new
platforms, like Twitter, have been corporate-run
too.
Our plutocratic governments, run in the interests
of a corporate elite, and the media, owned by a
corporate elite, are battling hard to end that
right. They would prefer to maintain the illusion of
western freedom. And so they have been trying to
silence socialists in ways that make it look like
they have the public’s consent. They are recruiting
us to silence ourselves. They are, as ever,
manufacturing consent for our expulsion from the
public square.
We must fight back. We need to understand that
old corporate media like the Guardian are not an
ally to the left, they are the enemy. And that the
new social media platforms to which we have briefly
been given access will soon be snatched away from us
unless we fight tooth and nail to keep them.
The battle itself is our weapon. Because if we
allow ourselves to be swept from the public square
without a struggle, if our story is written for us,
not by us, none of the onlookers – the wider public
– will ever grasp what was really at stake. They
will remain blissfully unaware not only of what
socialism might have achieved, but certain that we
are all far better off now that those “antisemites”
will never again be allowed a voice.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha
Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His books
include “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations:
Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East”
(Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s
Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His
website is www.jonathan-cook.net.
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