Hasbara
Happenings: US Media Again Propagandises For
Israel
The US media, conservative or liberal, has
become a loudspeaker for the Israeli
government
By CJ Werleman
February 01, 2015 "ICH"
- "MEE"
- Last week, Israel carried out a
deadly drone strike inside the Syrian
controlled portion of the Golan Heights,
killing six Hezbollah fighters and an
Iranian general. In response to Israel’s
aggression, Hezbollah fired two anti-tank
missiles that killed two Israeli soldiers as
they drove in a occupied area along the
Lebanese border. In turn, Israel responded
with artillery fire, shelling several
targets in southern Lebanon that killed a
Spanish UN peacekeeper.
This is the irrefutable
timeline of events in the latest
Lebanon-Israel border clash. These are the
facts, and facts do not possess a
pro-Lebanon bias, nor do facts lean
pro-Israel. Facts are facts, and the rest,
as they say in the classics, is
conversation. It’s the role of responsible
and objective journalism to report the
facts. The public should expect the facts,
but in America facts are superseded by
agenda-driven spin and self-serving opinion,
and this dynamic is never more evident than
when the centre of the story is Israel.
So that we are all clear
and on the same page: Israel attacked
Hezbollah in Syrian-controlled territory.
Hezbollah responded with a strike against
Israeli army military positions inside
occupied territory. The Israeli army then
kills a Spanish UN peacekeeper.
Here’s how the US media
reported the above timeline of events:
CNN:
“Israel under attack.”
The New York Times:
“Hezbollah kills Israeli soldiers near
Lebanon.”
Fox News:
“Netanyahu blames Iran for Hezbollah attack
on Israel’s border.”
The Washington Post wins
the prize for delivering a headline that
best represented the facts - “Deadly border
clashes stoke fears of war in Israel,
Lebanon” but then totally blew its
commitment to objectivity by reporting a
totally phoney account of the clash.
“The clashes, which began
with a Hezbollah attack that killed two
Israeli soldiers, marked one of the most
serious flare-ups of violence in the area
since a month-long
war in 2006 and raised tensions in a
volatile tri-border zone close to positions
held by Syrian rebels, including Islamist
factions. A UN peacekeeper was also killed,
although it was unclear how he died,” states
the Washington Post.
The US media, conservative
or liberal, has become a loudspeaker for the
Israeli government. When it comes to
unfolding events in the Holy Land, Americans
are told wholly and solely what the Israeli
government wants them to hear. It’s
astonishingly bizarre. It’s even more
astonishing and more puzzling when you
consider that even the Israeli press reports
these periodical skirmishes in a more
even-handed manner. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz, for
instance, reported: “Hezbollah considers the
attack an adequate retaliation to the
airstrike in Syria last week, attributed to
Israel, that killed seven Hezbollah
operatives.”
It’s also striking when
you compare the US coverage of the latest
Israel-Lebanon clash with coverage from
other international media outlets:
The Guardian:
“Spain calls for UN inquiry into death of
Spanish peacekeeper in Lebanon.”
Al
Jazeera America: “Hezbollah offers
Israel a draw but will Netanyahu accept?”
Sydney Morning Herald:
“Israel threatens Hezbollah with full scale
conflict.”
All in all, these non-US
media outlets have reported in a way that
entirely squares with the facts.
In America, it’s not just
a case of the media shining a positive light
on the Israeli government’s military
actions, it’s that outlets actively
propagandise for Israel. The cable news
giant CNN is largely the primary source from
where a majority of Americans are fed their
international news.
On Wednesday, as breaking
news of the clash was reported, CNN brought
on five pro-Israeli spokespeople, and not a
single pro-Lebanon guest. Even more
concerning is that CNN ran
a piece on its website that propagandised
against Hezbollah by blaming the group for
the 1983 bombing of US barracks in Beirut.
“Hezbollah has claimed responsibility for
numerous terrorist attacks. It is blamed for
a 1983
bombing that killed 241 US service
personnel at a Marine compound in Beirut,
Lebanon, the deadliest attack against US
Marines since the Battle of Iwo Jima in
World War II,” writes CNN.
The thing is Hezbollah has
always denied
responsibility for the bombing of the
Beirut barracks. It has never been proven
that Hezbollah carried out the attack, but
CNN reports it as an irrefutable fact.
Similarly, the US media
has always reported the Israeli bombing of
the USS
Liberty as a “grave mistake,” which is a
remarkable piece of linguistic gymnastics
given Israeli messages intercepted on 8
June, 1967 make it clear that the Israeli
army absolutely intended to “destroy the USS
Liberty and kill its entire crew”. 2014 was
the 47th anniversary of this
unprovoked attack and as was the case of the
46 anniversaries that came before that,
nowhere in the US media was this “act of
war” against the US reported.
This is not journalism.
This, instead, is agenda-driven spin:
pro-Israel spin. It’s an effort to carry
forth the Israeli hasbara (propaganda)
narrative into the domain of American public
opinion. Since the 1990s, Netanyahu
skillfully and assiduously “cultivated
Israel’s image as a Fort Apache on the
frontlines against the Muslim menace - and
the United States as a larger Fort Apache
that could learn from the Israeli model,”
writes Max Blumenthal in Goliath:
Fear and Loathing in Israel.
With the former public
relations director of the Israeli lobby (AIPAC),
Wolf Blitzer, at the head of CNN’s news
desk, the cable news network has played the
willing hasbara accomplice. The day after
last November’s Jerusalem synagogue attack,
which left four Rabbis dead, CNN hosted
seven pro-Israel guests: Harvard Professor
Alan Dershowitz (twice); Israeli historian
Michael Oren; Israel UN representative Ron
Prosor; chief spokesperson for the Israeli
Prime Minister Mark Regev; Israeli
politician Nir Barakat; and chief
spokesperson for the Israeli police Mickey
Rosenfeld, and not a single Palestinian to
comment on the violence in Israel.
Each CNN guest presented
the synagogue as a religiously motivated
attack; despite the fact the families of the
killers said they were motivated by the
Israeli killings of Palestinian teenager
Mohamed Abu Khadeir and the death of
31-year-old Yusuf
Ramouni, a Palestinian citizen of Israel
who was found hanged in the bus he drove for
a living. While Israeli authorities ruled
Ramouni’s death a suicide, most Palestinians
believe darker forces were at play.
Remi Kanazi is a
journalist and editor of Poets for
Palestine. Yesterday, Kanazi fired off a
couple of tweets that highlighted the
blatant double standard in the US media as
it pertains to covering the Israel-Lebanon
clash. Kanazi tweeted a picture of Israeli
children writing “from Israel with love”
onto the sides of Israeli army missiles
during Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon.
“Media covered this as ‘this photo makes
Arabs angry.’ But if it was Lebanese
children, the media would have said "Look at
these barbarians!" tweeted Kanazi.
This one-sided narrative
and double standard is what help drives
Islamophobic sentiment in the US. It
presents Israel as besieged by religious
fanatics, rather than Israel being embroiled
in conflict with people who have legitimate
political, social and economic grievances
against Israel. A newly published Pew
Research Centre poll shows
that 67 percent of Republicans and nearly
half of all Democrats believe Islam is more
likely than other religions to encourage
violence.
It is any wonder such fear
of Muslims percolates in the collective
American conscience given that US media
presents Israel as a “Fort Apache”
constantly besieged by radical Muslims on
their doorstep?
CJ Werleman Is
the author of Crucifying America, God Hates
You. Hate Him Back, Koran Curious, and is
the host of Foreign Object. Follow him on
twitter: @cjwerleman
© Middle East Eye 2014 - all rights reserved