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Contributors
Bruce S. Thornton - Contributor
Bruce Thornton
is a professor of Classics at Cal State Fresno and co-author
of Bonfire
of the Humanities: Rescuing the Classics in an Impoverished
Age and author of Greek
Ways: How the Greeks Created Western Civilization (Encounter
Books). His most recent book is Searching
for Joaquin: Myth, Murieta, and History in California (Encounter
Books). [go to Thornton index]
THE
RIGHT BOOKS: Equipping the Conservative
Covering
the Intifada
A review of Joshua Muravchik's book on the media and
the Palestinian Uprising
[Bruce S. Thornton] 2/4/05

|
Covering
the Intifada
How the Media Reported the Palestinian
Uprising
by Joshua Muravchik (The Washington Institute for
Near Eastern Policy).
|
How a beleaguered,
tiny Israel has been turned into a pariah state is a fascinating
historical question. The answer lies
in the many cultural pathologies of the Western democracies-anti-Semitism,
sentimental Third-Worldism, Marxist anti-colonialism, and anti-Americanism
are just a few of the irrational prejudices, bankrupt ideologies,
and moral idiocies that have rendered the Middle East's only
full-fledged democracy and free society into an international
villain, the gnat the U.N. and the international left obsessively
strain even as they swallow an endless number of murderous
totalitarian camels.
Of the many transmitters of these pathologies, the Western electronic
and print media have been the most destructive, shaping as they
do the perceptions of the everyday voters who ultimately determine
their countries' policies. The ideological bias, sloppiness,
and often the sheer ignorance of the reporters, editors, and
news anchors who fashion the news for Americans have created
a distorted view of Israel and her predicament, one that frequently
compromises American foreign policy in the Middle East.
Documenting specifically this charge is the important task Joshua
Muravchik has undertaken in Covering the Intifada. Muravchik
is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and
the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, where he writes
on U.S. media coverage of foreign nations. He also has authored
several books, including Heaven on Earth, a history of socialism
that lays bare its dangerous utopian ambitions.
In Covering
the Intifada Muravchik examines ten key events of
the Palestinian uprising that began in September of 2000, a mere
two months after Arafat turned down Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak's offer at Camp David to give the Palestinians almost all
of what presumably they wanted. Muravchik limits his analysis
to the coverage of the most influential news outlets in America:
the New York Times, the Washington Post, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN,
and Fox News. This narrow focus on the words and images purveyed
by these sources allows for an analysis that is specific and
precise and thus devastating in its documentation of how many-certainly
not all------journalists distorted the facts of the uprising.
The first event Muravchik analyzes is Ariel Sharon's
visit to the Temple Mount, which Arafat used as the pretext
to launch
the intifada, even though previous Israelis had visited the site
without incident. That the visit was a pretext for starting the
uprising was admitted later by Marwin Barghouti, who said that "the
explosion would have happened anyway" but that "Sharon
provided a good excuse." At the time, however, many in the
media accepted the Palestinian claim that the rioting was merely
a response to Sharon's provocative visit. As Muravchik examines
the media coverage of the riots, he reveals how distortion of
fact often results from the contamination of news stories by
interpretations expressed on the editorial page, creating a feedback
loop of bias. In the New York Times, for example, an editorial
chastised Sharon for behaving "provocatively," a subjective
interpretation subtly picked up a few days later when a news
story labeled the visit "defiant," both descriptions
confirming the Palestinians' self-interested, if not duplicitous,
take on the event.
This smuggling of biased interpretation into
presumably objective reporting is helped by selective omission
of information that
would help contextualize the event. In the same New York
Times story that called the visit "defiant," the Temple Mount
is called "the most sacred Islamic site in Jerusalem" without
saying a word that the site is even more important to Jews, as
important to Judaism as Mecca is to Islam. By leaving out that
fact, the reporter creates the impression that "Sharon's
aim was to set foot gratuitously on a Muslim shrine when in fact
it was to assert Israel's claim to a Jewish shrine."
More important, much of the media ignored completely
or played down a "vitriolic and incendiary sermon" preached by
an anti-Semitic imam opposed to any negotiations with Israel.
The imam stirred up the crowd with claims that the Israelis were
going to turn the mosque into a synagogue and threats that Muslims "are
ready to sacrifice their lives and blood to protect the Islamic
nature of Jerusalem.'" Yet, as Muravchik points out, "None
of the television news broadcasts . . . carried any mention of
the sermon. Nor did any explore the larger question to which
it pointed about the role of the Palestinian leadership in instigating
the violence." The result was the impression that Sharon
was completely responsible for the violence because of his brutish
insensitivity to Islamic sensibilities.
The worst case of journalistic malfeasance due to omission,
however, occurred on ABC in its stories about the Israeli police
charge up the mount to clear away Arabs who had besieged a police
post and were raining down rocks and bottles on Jews praying
at the Wailing Wall, an assault that left four Palestinians dead.
ABC's Gillian Findlay-- like anchor Peter Jennings a repeat offender
throughout Muravchik's study--described the assault on the mount
without mentioning the siege of the police post or the Wailing
Wall. Their report that day also ignored the death of an Israeli
soldier who was gunned down by his Palestinian partner in a joint
patrol. The net result of these omissions was the impression
that trigger-happy Israelis were using disproportionate force
against a people justifiably angry over the disrespect to their
holy place.
Perhaps the worst habit that compromises the media's coverage
of this crisis is the moral equivalency it grants to both sides
of the conflict. Such equivalency is attractive to journalists
who then can pretend that they are merely being objective and
treating both sides the same. Yet both sides aren't morally the
same: there is a right and a wrong, an aggressor and a defender
in this conflict, a distinction supported by the facts of history.
Thus to treat an inadvertent death caused by self-defense the
same as a premeditated murder is not objectivity but a despicable
moral idiocy akin to considering a surgeon and a knife-wielding
mugger morally the same because both cut with edged weapons.
This pose of moral equivalency runs throughout
Muravchik's analysis of the ten events. Sometimes it works
by granting equal credence
to claims by Palestinian spokesmen, claims that over and over
turn out to be false propaganda. Several media outlets, for example,
reported a claim that a Palestinian man had been tortured and
murdered by Israeli settlers, when in fact he was the victim
of an automobile accident used as a grisly propaganda prop in
order to inflame the Palestinians and the whole Arab world. Even
after reporting the Israeli government's correct explanation
of the man's death, a CNN report showed pictures of the body
and statements from Palestinian doctors deriding the Israeli
claim that the injuries resulted from a car wreck. As Muravchik
concluded, "The net effect was to cast doubt on the Israeli
version, not the Palestinian version, although it was the latter
that was almost certainly fictitious."
Such examples recur with depressing regularity
in Muravchik's study. Peter Jennings, reporting on the horrific
murder of two
Israeli Army reservists (they were dragged from a Palestinian
Authority police station and then murdered; the Israelis responded
by rocketing the empty police station after they gave the PA
advanced warning), announced, "There are Israelis and Palestinians
who do not want this peace plan to succeed. Yasir Arafat is vulnerable
to those forces and so is Prime Minister Barak." This statement,
of course, is ridiculous: Arafat was an autocrat and terrorist
who had run the Palestinian movement for three decades, whereas
Barak held his post through a legal election and was accountable
to the citizens. Worse, Barak had staked his whole political
future on a peace that he believed most Israelis wanted, offering
concessions beyond those approved by the Israeli parliament;
Arafat had turned down a peace settlement, failed to offer an
alternative, then returned to launch the intifada, and refused
to call for a halt to the violence. "So," Muravchik
concludes, "while Jenning's words were literally true, the
impression they conveyed that the continuing violence was equally
the will of the two sides was false."
Repeatedly this sort of distortion mars the media's
coverage. "'Various
Palestinian factions as well as Jewish settlers in the territories
are calling for another day of rage,'" Jennings reported.
But while Palestinians frequently called for "days of rage," the
settlers never did. Or consider the New York Times's equivalence
of Sharon's visit to the Temple Mount with the Palestinian destruction
of Joseph's tomb: in what moral universe is a visit to the holiest
shrine of your religion the same thing as destroying a holy shrine
of someone else's? And are the writers and editors at the Times so ignorant of history that they don't know the Jewish Temple
sat on the site for over a millennium before the conquering Arabs
built the al-Aqsa mosque on its ruins? Or what explains the Washington
Post's report that paralleled Arafat's reaching out to Hamas,
a group of terrorist murderers devoted to the destruction of
Israel, with Barak's reaching out to Ariel Sharon, a politician
constrained by the laws of democracy, one who had explicitly
stated he was prepared to make compromises for peace?
Perhaps the worst example came in a Washington
Post report that
paralleled the shooting of the twelve-year-old boy with the murder
of the Israeli reservist whose body was dumped out a window and
mutilated. By what moral calculus is an accidental death during
a gun-battle--a death the distressed Israelis hadn't caused,
but took responsibility for anyway--the same as a sadistic murder
gleefully committed by a lynch mob that pranced in joy before
the cameras? Such equivalences reflect not even-handed objectivity
but rather a profound moral failure or an animating bias. Thus
the moral equivalency is often a pose, for many reporters have
already decided which side is the aggressor and which the victim
deserving sympathy and the benefit of the doubt.
The coverage of the so-called Jenin massacre, Muravchik's last
example, encapsulates best the failures of the media to distinguish
between the defensive actions of a democratic army and the murders
of an autocratic terrorist gang. The Israeli army entered Jenin
to clean out a nest of terrorists who had booby-trapped the city's
homes and narrow streets and who used Palestinian civilians as
shields. Rather than bombarding the city from the air, as most
militaries would have done, the Israelis entered on foot to protect
civilians. After losing 13 soldiers in a booby trap, the Israelis
then used armored bulldozers to destroy buildings, warning residents
with megaphones.
The Palestinians, of course, immediately began
alleging a "massacre" had
taken place with casualties in the several hundreds, a lie helped
along by the despicable comments of UN representative Terje Roed-Larsen.
The media in turn reported uncritically the Palestinian claims,
which turned out to be grossly inflated. In fact, the subsequent
UN investigation arrived at a casualty figure roughly the same
as the one the Israelis gave at the time, but that the media
only cursorily reported--52 dead, 38 of whom were terrorists.
This meant that the Israelis lost more soldiers, 23, than civilians
inadvertently killed because their own people endangered their
lives. As Muravchik concludes, "These numbers clearly bespeak
a military operation at pains to avoid civilian casualties, the
opposite of the picture that Roed-Larsen was eager to paint."
The problem with the media's distortions, whether
they result from professional sloppiness, ideological bias,
ignorance, or
fear of reprisal from Palestinian terrorists, is that first impressions
are created that last beyond the later corrections. The "Jenin
massacre," for example, lives on in a "documentary" circulating
on college campuses, including shamefully my own. But as Aaron
Klein recently reported on WorldNetDaily (www.worldnetdaily.com),
the producer of the film has admitted in court to fabricating
many of the scenes suggesting Israeli atrocities. Yet the lie
lives on, fueled in part by the first impressions created by
a media that failed in its primary journalistic duty, to uncover
the truth.
If there is a silver lining to Muravchik's generally gloomy
study, it comprises the reporters and media outlets that have
done a fairly good job of accurately reporting the conflict,
and Muravchik gives them their due throughout his book. But the
fact remains that the negative effects of unbalanced coverage
are not outweighed by those fewer balanced reports. The result
is a distorted picture of the Israeli-Arab conflict that shapes
the perceptions of voters and politicians alike. One destructive
consequence has been the legitimizing of terror most clearly
evident in the way the late terrorist thug Yasir Arafat was treated
as a legitimate head of state, addressing the UN and sleeping
at the White House. And even now that Arafat is gone, the distorted
coverage of Israel's response to Palestinian violence prevents
us from grasping the central dynamic of the whole conflict: the
passionate hatred of Israel and the equally passionate desire
to destroy her that drives the murderers. For that failure of
moral clarity much of the American media must share the blame. tOR
copyright
2005 Bruce S. Thornton
Searching for Joaquin
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Greek Ways
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Bonfire of the Humanities
by Victor Davis Hanson, John Heath, Bruce S. Thornton
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Plagues of the Mind
by Bruce S. Thornton
|
Eros: The Myth of Ancient Greek
Sexuality
by Bruce S. Thornton
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