The New
York Times’s (and Clinton Campaign’s) Abject
Cowardice on Israel
By Glenn
Greenwald
May 27,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
-
In January, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon
delivered a speech to the Security Council
about, as he put it, violence “in Israel and the
occupied Palestinian territory,” noting that
“Palestinian frustration is growing under the
weight of a half century of occupation” and that
“it is human nature to react to occupation.” His
use of the word “occupation” was not remotely
controversial because multiple U.N. Security
Resolutions, such
as 446 (adopted unanimously in 1979 with 3
abstentions), have long declared Israel the
illegal “occupying power” in the West Bank and
Gaza. Unsurprisingly, newspapers around the
world – such as
the Wall Street Journal, the
Guardian,
the BBC,
the LA Times – routinely and
flatly describe Israeli control of the West Bank
and Gaza in their news articles as what it is:
an occupation.
In fact, essentially the entire
world recognizes the reality of Israeli
occupation with the exception of a tiny sliver
of extremists in Israel and the U.S. That’s why
Chris Christie had to
grovel in apology to GOP billionaire and
Israel-devoted fanatic Sheldon Adelson when the
New Jersey Governor neutrally described having
seen the “occupied territories” during a trip he
took to Israel. But other than among those
zealots, the word is simply a fact, used without
controversy under the mandates of international
law, the institutions that apply it, and
governments on every continent on the planet.
But not the New York Times. They are
afraid to use the word. In
a NYT article today by Jason Horowitz
and Maggie Haberman on the imminent conflict
over Israel and Palestine between
Sanders-appointed and Clinton-appointed members
of the Democratic Party Platform Committee, this
grotesque use of scare quotes appears:
A
bitter divide over the Middle East could
threaten Democratic Party unity as
representatives of Senator Bernie Sanders of
Vermont vowed to upend what they see as the
party’s lopsided support of Israel.
Two
of the senator’s appointees to the party’s
platform drafting committee, Cornel West and
James Zogby, on Wednesday denounced Israel’s
“occupation” of the West Bank and Gaza and
said they believed that rank-and-file
Democrats no longer hewed to the party’s
staunch support of the Israeli government.
They said they would try to get their views
incorporated into the platform, the party’s
statement of core beliefs, at the Democratic
National Convention in Philadelphia in July.
The refusal to use the word occupation
without scare quotes is one of the most cowardly
editorial decisions the New York Times
has made since
refusing to use the word “torture” because
the Bush administration denied its validity (a
decision they reversed
only when President Obama in 2014 gave them
permission to do so by using the word
himself). This is journalistic malfeasance at
its worst: refusing to describe the world
truthfully out of fear of the negative reaction
by influential factions (making today’s
article even stranger is that
a NYT article from February on
settlers’ use of Airbnb referred to “illegal
settler outpost deep in the occupied West
Bank”). And the NYT‘s editorial
decision raises this question, posed this
morning by one man in the West Bank:
The cowardice of the NYT regarding
Israel is matched only by the Clinton
campaign’s. Clinton has
repeatedly vowed to move the U.S. closer not
only to Israel but also to its Prime Minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu. Pandering to Israel – vowing
blind support for its government – is
a vile centerpiece of her campaign.
The changes to the Democratic Party platform
proposed by Bernie Sanders’ appointees such as
Cornel West, Keith Ellison and James Zogby – which
Israel-supporting Clinton appointees such as
Neera
Tanden and Wendy
Sherman are certain to oppose – are incredibly
mild, including echoing the international consensus
in condemning the Israeli occupation. As the Israeli
writer Noam Sheizaf
put it this morning, the NYT’s use of
scare quotes is “just as pathetic as the Democratic
fear that their platform would actually say
Palestinians deserve civil rights.”
This craven posture is particularly appalling as
Israel just this week has taken
an even harder turn toward extremism, prompting
its former Prime Minister, Ehud Barak,
to warn that Israel has been “infected by the
seeds of fascism.” While the former Israeli Prime
Minister issues warnings that grave, establishment
Democrats are petrified of even the most tepid
stances.
But Democratic Party cowardice on Israel is nothing
new. In 2003, the
pre-lobbyist-money-infected Howard Dean
was publicly mauled by top Democrats – led
by Nancy Pelosi – for the crime of saying the U.S.
should be “even-handed” in its attempts to forge a
peace agreement between the Israelis and
Palestinians.
Even worse was the
disgraceful scene from their 2012 Convention:
the Platform Committee had omitted any reference to
“God” and, worse, had decide not to say that
Jerusalem is the eternal capital of Israel. Obama
campaign officials were eager to rectify this
blasphemy, so arranged for an “amendment” to the
Platform to be introduced to the full Convention,
which required 2/3 approval from the delegates.
When Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa came to
the podium to ask delegates to vote, it was obvious
that the majority was opposed. Confused and
bewildered at the refusal of delegates to obey the
script of party leaders, he asked for a vote three
separate times, and on the third time, even when it
was clear that they did not have the votes, he
simply lied and proclaimed the pro-Israel and
pro-God amendment passed with 2/3 approval:
That is
the level of Orwellian distortion needed to maintain
the blatantly false narratives about Israel that
have prevailed for so long as bipartisan U.S.
orthodoxy. As today’s article demonstrates, the
New York Times not only submits to that
propagandistic orthodoxy but plays a leading role in
sustaining it.
* * * * *
For anyone who wants to claim that Israel only
occupies the West Bank but not Gaza (a point
irrelevant to the critique in this article), see
this outstanding two-minute video.
UPDATE:
After publication of this article, the NYT
edited their own to remove the scare quotes around
“occupation,” though did so quietly, with no
editorial explanation or note. The original version,
however, appeared on A1 of this morning’s print
edition.
Correction: This article was corrected to reflect
that the events depicted in the YouTube video took
place at the 2012 Democratic Convention, not the
2008 Convention as originally noted.
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