Why Are Journalists Surprised That Israel Kills
Children?
By Amena Saleem
June 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "EI"
- There was nothing surprising about
Israel finding itself not culpable for the killing of
four boys on a Gaza beach in July last year, as it did in a
military judgment released a few days ago.
Israel’s investigations into its own crimes aren’t
known for delivering guilty verdicts.
What was interesting, however, was the reaction of
some mainstream journalists — journalists who felt they had a vested
interest in this case because they had witnessed the strikes which
killed the four boys from the Baker family as they played football
one afternoon during Israel’s 51-day assault on Gaza.
Articles by Peter Beaumont in
The Guardian and Robert Tait in
The Daily Telegraph give off a sense of disbelief and
indignation that the investigation by the Israeli army into the
attack cleared all personnel involved and declared the incident “a
tragic accident.”
Both these journalists, and Paul Mason in his
blog for Channel 4 News, describe how their own observations,
both during and after the attack, refute Israel’s allegations that
it was targeting Palestinian fighters.
But the sense that there has been a miscarriage of
justice by a reputable organization, rather than an outright
cover-up by a rogue army, remains.
Struck in error?
This journalistic respect for Israel’s army is
highlighted in Tait’s article, as he writes that the slaughter of
the boys was “surely an indication that something had gone badly
wrong in Israel’s military procedures for such a deadly strike to
have been aimed at what were clearly children.”
By which he indicates his belief, shared by many
mainstream journalists, that, unlike the killing of the Baker
boys, the rest of Israel’s military procedures in Gaza last summer
were not acts of indiscriminate slaughter.
Bombardments which leveled homes, mosques and
entire neighborhoods, massacring whoever was in the vicinity, babies
and children included, weren’t, according to Tait’s reasoning,
deliberate acts of terror, but acceptable military activity.
The BBC, true to form, goes one step further in
the esteem in which it holds the Israeli army. Its
online article into Thursday’s findings does nothing but quote
chunks from the Israeli army report and is headlined “Gaza beach
attack: Israel ‘struck boys in error.’”
There is no attempt to critically analyze the
report’s conclusions, as Tait, Beaumont and Mason all did for their
respective news organizations, and no Palestinian comment.
Instead, the BBC simply provides a platform for
Israel’s self-exonerating report to be aired, free from the
inconvenience of journalistic scrutiny.
And it ends, of course, in typical BBC fashion, by
giving Israel’s excuse for attacking Gaza last July and August — “to
put an end to rocket-fire and remove the threat of attacks by
militants tunneling under the border” — with no mention of the
Palestinian reality of occupation, siege and resistance.
Damage limitation
It is this high regard in which many mainstream
journalists hold the Israeli army which explains, perhaps, their
shock that its soldiers could deliberately target children and then
their disbelief that its commanders could dub that deliberate
targeting an accident.
The question then is, why are mainstream
journalists so easily taken in by Israeli propaganda, appearing to
believe Israel’s refrain that it has “the most moral army in the
world?”
The truth they ignore, and consequently fail to
convey to their audiences, is that Israel kills Palestinians at will
and
with impunity.
Its army only announces investigations into a
killing or killings on the rare occasion that Western journalists or
politicians become agitated about Palestinian life being taken
— usually because the
killing has been caught on camera and can’t be hidden.
Those same journalists seem unware of the reality
that an Israeli announcement of an “independent investigation” is
nothing more than a damage limitation exercise, an exercise in
“public relations” to quieten the critics, and that the word
“independent” is meaningless in these cases.
It is meaningless because the outcome of an
Israeli investigation into Israeli crimes will almost exclusively be
a finding of Israeli innocence. There is nothing independent about
the process, and it shouldn’t be reported as such.
Wake up to reality
The military’s absolution of blame for the
slaughter of the Baker boys wasn’t a one-off, as the resultant
mainstream reporting seemed to suggest. It was part of a pattern
which will be repeated over and over until the occupation ends.
Israel is a colonial power. It will kill whoever
it has to (Palestinians,
US activists,
British media workers,
Turkish humanitarians,
UN staff) to make its
colonial goals a reality. And it will lie, cover up and
propagandize in exactly the same way that all colonial powers did in
centuries past to get away with its crimes.
Mainstream media journalists need to wake up to
these facts. They need to be sharper, more intelligent and more
astute in the way they cover Israel and the occupation. They need to
read and understand history, especially European colonial history,
and they need to embrace, rather than dismiss, context in their
reporting.
Israel didn’t just kill those four young boys last
summer. Its warplanes, warships and tanks wiped out
89 entire Palestinian families, wiped out
504 Palestinian children at an average rate of 10 a day, wiped
out a total of more than 2,200 Palestinians.
Its politicians and military should be tried for
all these crimes. And they should be tried in a properly independent
manner — or as independently as the world allows — at the
International Criminal Court. This is what the mainstream media
should be clamoring for. Not expressing polite surprise that an
“independent” Israeli inquiry acquitted Israel of deliberately
slaying four little Palestinian boys who dared to play football in
Gaza.
Amena Saleem is a journalist and activist,
working with Palestine Solidarity Campaign in the UK. She has twice
driven on convoys to Gaza with PSC. More information on PSC’s
solidarity work is available at www.palestinecampaign.org
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