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Communique: 23 September 2003
HIZBULLAH TIME WARP
Dear HonestReporting Subscriber,
Negotiations are underway between
Israel and Hizbullah for a large-scale
prisoner exchange. Israel is reportedly willing to release hundreds of
Palestinian and Lebanese prisoners in exchange for Israeli businessman
Elchanan Tannenbaum and the bodies of three missing IDF soldiers.
Two news agencies took this opportunity to provide short ― but misleading
― synopses of the Israel-Hizbullah conflict.
― Agence France-Presse states only
that Hizbullah "was instrumental in the guerrilla war that led to the May
2000 Israeli troop pullout from southern Lebanon after 22 years of
occupation."
While this statement is factually accurate, it completely misrepresents
the nature of the Israel-Hizbullah conflict by drawing upon an earlier
historical period and encouraging an understanding of Hizbullah as freedom
fighters.
In fact, Hizbullah was
formed in 1982 not merely to resist IDF presence in Lebanon, but to
destroy Israel and extend radical Islamic control over the entire
region, as stated in Hizbullah's
official manifesto, and as repeated
publicly by every Hizbullah leader for the past
twenty years.
Moreover, Hizbullah has continued to rain down Ketusha rockets on northern
Israel even after the IDF's 2000 withdrawal from southern Lebanon.
This, after UN secretary general
Kofi Annan determined the IDF withdrawal
to be "in full compliance with Security Council resolution 425."
Just last month, an Israeli teenager in northern Israel was
killed by a Hizbullah rocket.
So why does AFP reach back to the earlier timeframe of IDF presence in
Lebanon? This maneuver ignores the more germane and telling facts
regarding Hizbullah's ongoing terror against Israeli citizens.
The more relevant time frame to provide background for today's news report
is post-Israeli withdrawal, when the actual Israeli prisoner and
soldiers who stand to be released were abducted.
Comments to AFP: contact@afp.com
― Associated Press summarized the
conflict in a similar manner: Hizbullah merely "fought Israeli troops
during the 1980s and 1990s in south Lebanon."
In an apparent response to critical feedback, AP added an additional line
in later editions: "Since Israel's
withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000, Hezbollah has occasionally shelled Israel
and attacked Israeli troops because of a remaining border dispute."
The "border dispute" justification mentioned by AP is Hizbullah's claim to
Shabaa Farms, a region in the northern Golan Heights that even the
UN recognizes to stand outside of any
legitimate Lebanese claim. Shaaba Farms is clearly used by Hizbullah,
therefore, as a mere pretext for ongoing anti-Israeli terror.
By granting this pretext
legitimacy, AP further obscures the ferocity of Hizbullah's actual
campaign ― to wipe Israel off the map.
Comments to AP: feedback@ap.org
Let's not forget that American officials consider Hizbullah one of the
most dangerous terrorist groups in the world ― one that has killed, over
the past 20 years, more than 300 Americans, and served as model for world
terror. As writer
Jeffrey Goldberg states, "Al Qaeda
learned the value of choreographed violence from Hizbullah."

Thank you for your
ongoing involvement in the battle against media bias.
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