101Scout
07-30-2006, 04:07 PM
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Israeli Censor Wielding Great Power
Thursday July 20, 2006 12:31 AM
By BENJAMIN HARVEY
Associated Press Writer
JERUSALEM (AP) - Here's some news you may never hear about Israel's war against Hezbollah: a missile falls into the sea, a strategic military installation is hit, a Cabinet minister plans to visit the front lines.
All these topics are subject to review by Israel's chief military censor, who has - in her own words - ``extraordinary power.'' She can silence a broadcaster, block information and put journalists in jail.
101Scout
08-03-2006, 08:07 PM
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One-sided reporting on the Middle East
By GEORGE CURRY
NNPA
Until Israeli bombers leveled a three-story building in the tiny Lebanese village of Oana, killing at least 55 people, most of them children, the U.S. media has been anything but even-handed in covering Israels three-week assault on southern Lebanon. The area is a stronghold of Hezbollah.
Israel initiated a 48-hour pause in the aerial attacks, in the face of international condemnation, and later resumed its effort to cripple the military capability of rebel groups intent on destroying Israel. If the past is any indicator, the U.S. media after its Sunday pause will return to its mission of blaming Hazbollah and Hamas for all the strife in the Middle East.
Of course, both groups have blood on their hands, but they are not alone.
Fair and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), the media watchdog group, reported prior to Sundays fatal assault:
The portrayal of Israel as the innocent victim in the Gaza conflict is hard to square with the death toll in the months leading up to the current crisis; between September 2005 and June 2006, 144 Palestinians in Gaza were killed by Israeli forces, according to a list compiled by the Israeli human rights group Btselem; 29 of those killed were children. During the same period, no Israelis were killed as a result of violence from Gaza.
But you would never know it by reading U.S. newspapers.
On July 24, the day before Hamas cross-border raid, Israel made an incursion of its own, capturing two Palestinians that it said were members of Hamas (something Hamas denied L.A. Times, 7/25/06). This incident received far less coverage in the U.S. media than the subsequent seizure of the Israeli solider; the few papers that covered it mostly dismissed it in a one-paragraph brief (e.g., Chicago Tribune, 7/25/06), while the Israeli taken prisoner got front-page headlines all over the world.
The nations three leading dailies published one-side, overly simplistic comments on the Middle East violence.
In the wake of the most serious outbreak of Israeli/Arab violence in years, three U.S. papers the Washington Post, New York Times and Los Angeles Times have each strongly editorialized that Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon were solely responsible for sparking violence, and that the Israeli military response was predictable and unavoidable. These editorials ignored recent events that indicate a much more complicated situation, FAIR observed.
Under the headline, Hamas Provokes a Fight, (6/29/06), the New York Times editorialized that the responsibility for this latest escalation rests squarely with Hamas and that Israeli military response was inevitable.
In another editorial two weeks later (7/15/06), the Times said: It is important to be clear about not only who is responsible for the latest outbreak, but who stands to gain most from its continued escalation. Both questions have the same answer: Hamas and Hezbollah.
The media monitoring group suggests that the fighting did not begin with the capture of two Israeli soldiers. It began earlier.
A major incident fueling the latest cycle of violence was a May 26, 2006 car bombing in Sidon, Lebanon, that killed a senior official of Islamic Jihad, a Palestinian group allied with Hezbollah. Lebanon later arrested a suspect, Mahmoud Rafeh, whom Lebanese authorities claimed had confessed to carrying out the assassination on behalf of Mossad (London Times, 6/17/06).
Israel denied involvement with the bombing, but even some Israelis are skeptical
But that wasnt the only precursor to the current conflict. In a July 21 column, FAIRs Alexander Cockburn pointed out:
On June 20, an Israeli aircraft fired at least one missile at a car in an attempted extrajudicial assassination attempt. The missile missed the car and killed three Palestinian children and wounded 15;
One June 13, 2005 Israeli aircraft fired missiles at a van in another extrajudicial assassination attempt, nine innocent Palestinians were killed and
Israel shelled a beach in Beit Lahiya on June 9, 2006, killing eight civilians and injuring 32.
FAIR says, While Hezbollahs capture of two Israeli soldiers may have reignited the smoldering conflict, the Israeli air campaign that followed was not a spontaneous reaction to aggression but a well-planned operation that was years in the making.
Of all of Israels wars since 1984, this was the one for which Israel was most prepared, Gerald Steinberg, a political science professor at Israels Bar-Ilan University, told the San Francisco Chronicle (7/21/05). By 2004, the military campaigned scheduled to last about three weeks that were seeing now had already been blocked out and, in the last year or two, its been simulated and rehearsed across the board.
FAIR posed a sobering question: If journalists have been told by Israel for more than a year that a war was coming, why are they all pretending that it all started on July 12?
Thats a good question. I wish we had some good answers.
George E. Curry is editor-in-chief of the NNPA News Service and BlackPressUSA.com.
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