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Communique: 2 October 2003
THE MEDIA'S MIDEAST
RELATIVISM
Dear HonestReporting Subscriber,
Media coverage of the Mideast conflict is plagued not only by specific
episodes of bias, but also by a dangerous set of more subtle, underlying
assumptions. To the typical Westerner, the media has generated the
following desert mirage:
In this
small stretch of arid land dwell two stubborn peoples, led by two even
more stubborn elected leaders, and locked in a seemingly endless cycle of
tit-for-tat violence. If only the two inflexible sides could be convinced
to lay down arms and settle border differences, they could co-exist and
the world could put this matter behind us.
The problem is that this depiction
ignores what Western observers now recognize, after years of Palestinian
violence, to lie at the heart of the conflict ― a deep political and
cultural clash between a free, Western democracy on the one hand, and a
dictatorial thugocracy, fueled by radical Islam, on the other. As
Jerusalem Post editor-in-chief Bret
Stephens recently stated: "The principal problem in the Middle East is not
the unsettled status of our borders. It is the unsettling nature of Arab
regimes ― and of the bellicosity, fanaticism, and resentments to which
they give rise."
In their overarching effort to "remain neutral," the media have settled
into a pattern of distorting this objective reality ― simultaneously
beating Israel over the head with Israel's own organs of democracy, while
granting "democratic" legitimacy to a corrupt and dictatorial Palestinian
regime. For example, Associated Press recently quoted Yassir
Arafat defending his ongoing rule:
"(Bush) has to remember that he had been elected by the Americans and he
is representing the Americans, and I have been elected by the Palestinians
and I am representing the Palestinians."
The democratic equivalency claimed by Arafat is absurd, yet AP supplies no
qualifying statement such as "Arafat was elected with no legitimate
opposition, and his term of office expired years ago."
By allowing such a statement to pass without comment, AP flattens key
political-cultural differences, and distorts objective reality in favor of
the Palestinian regime.
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Some recent news items further illustrate
the problem:
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The Israeli Supreme Court |
On September 30, an Israeli court
sentenced three Israeli men to extended prison terms for plotting to bomb
a Palestinian school. Newspaper
editors and ombudsmen have written
scores of articles to justify their refusal to call Palestinian suicide
bombers "terrorists" ― yet news outlets such as
AFP and
BBC were quick to label the convicted
Israelis a "terrorist network."
Striking in its absence was any contrast between Israel's system of
justice for controlling extremists, and the utter lack of internal
prosecution on the Palestinian side. Consider:
On Sept. 27, two Palestinian teenagers, aged 15 and 16, were apprehended
by IDF troops near the Egyptian border with a suitcase filled with weapons
and ammunition. The teenagers had been sent to pick up the suitcase by an
adult who paid them each a small sum of money. [This, a week after a
similar incident in Northern Gaza mentioned in a recent
HonestReporting communique]. The kids,
fortunate to escape alive after being sent on a nighttime stealth mission
to an active war zone, were released by the IDF.
It goes without saying that the adults responsible for this act will never
be tried in a Palestinian court for child abuse, let alone for
anti-Israeli terror. This clear indication of a lack of internal
Palestinian policing is sorely underreported by the same Western sources
that were quick to broadcast the conviction of the Israeli "terrorist
network."
The result: The media flatten key political-cultural differences, and
distort the objective reality in favor of the Palestinian regime.
* *
*
Or consider these recent news
items:
On September 29, the Israeli State
Comptroller submitted his annual
internal review of security service and governmental practices. The
400-page report covered a wide range of issues, but the only item
emphasized by the world press dealt with occasional lapses in IDF crowd
control. The AP report begins as follows: "Israeli
soldiers sometimes fire live ammunition at Palestinians in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip because of a shortage of non-lethal weapons, according to a
state comptroller's report released Tuesday."
Buried deep in the story ― and shrugged off by the AP reporter ― was the
comptroller's report of Israeli restraint, i.e. the waiting until
nightfall to strike so as to limit casualties. Indeed, countless Israeli
anti-terror operations have been called off, delayed, or
lessened so as to avoid civilian
casualties. Sheik Yassin of Hamas chooses a mosque full of worshippers for
public appearances, because, as the
LA Times reports, "Yassin's security
team believes that the presence of worshipers would deter an Israeli
attack."
Contrast this with a Palestinian culture that
continues to glorify the killing of
Israeli civilians.
Perhaps a more interesting angle (one wholly ignored by the media) would
be to use the comptroller's report to illustrate Israel's democratic
process of internal critique and the spirit of safe, open debate ―
completely unique in the region.
This, in stark contrast to a Palestinian society that squelches dissent
and open debate. For example, when would-be Palestinian interior minister
Nasser Yusuf criticized Arafat in a meeting last week,
Arafat cursed at Yusaf, spat in his
face, and stormed out of the room.
Further, an op-ed in the
Washington Post (Sept. 28) points out
how the Palestinian press regularly toes the party line at the cost of
accuracy:
"One of the victims of the Cafe Hillel bombing in Jerusalem on Sept. 9 was
a waiter, Shafik Karam, from Beit Hanina, a Palestinian Christian. The
Palestinian press does not speak of acts of Palestinian terrorism, even
when the terrorism hits Palestinians. The obituary [in El Kuds, the
East Jerusalem daily] said Karam, 27, had been 'called by G-d' as a result
of 'an accident at his place of work,' as though a tray had fallen on his
head."
This lack of an open Palestinian press (and the mass psychological
repression it causes) is sorely underreported by the same Western sources
that were quick to pick up on the highly critical Israeli comptroller's
report.
By skewing coverage of matters central to democratic process, the media
give the impression of a level playing field. Far from achieving "media
objectivity," this instead projects a distorted image of the heart of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict ― a conflict of political cultures to which
Western media consumers are increasingly left in the dark.

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