Here's Soccer Dad's Middle East Media Sampler for Tuesday, March 12.
Mendacious Max Beyond Iron Dome
Max Fisher, the blogger for the Washington Post who publicized the
picture of Jihad Mishrawi has now responded to a new United Nations
report that concluded that the rocket that killed Mishrawi's son was
likely fired by Hamas. Originally he was reticent to follow up with the
new information available.
.@max_fisher A real reporter would ask the UN. Oh, wait: one did .freebeacon.com/u-n-hamas-rock… MT "not sure UN report is talking about Mishrawi"
— ElderOfZiyon (@elderofziyon) March 11, 2013
Unfortunately, Fisher's followup is full of evasions. In United Nations report suggests Hamas may have killed Palestinian infant Omar Mishrawi, Fisher writes:
But it turns out that, according to a new United Nations
draft report from the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights,
the explosive that killed Omar Mishrawi may have actually been fired by
the Gaza-based militant group Hamas, which has a reputation for missing.
Though the initial report was less than clear on the matter (more on
this below), the Associated Press now reports that a representative from
the UN says the explosion “appeared to be attributable to a Palestinian
rocket.” If true, this would be a significant shift in our
understanding of Mishrawi’s death, which became a symbol of that month’s
conflict.
I returned from vacation this morning with more than a few reader notes
alerting me to the UN report and asking me to append my earlier post. I
held off because the draft report was a bit sketchy, as draft reports
can sometimes be. It does not name Mishrawi or his family, stating only,
“On 14 November, a woman, her 11-month-old infant, and an 18-year-old
adult in Al-Zaitoun were killed by what appeared to be a Palestinian
rocket that fell short of Israel.” That’s the right time and location,
but the wrong family relationship: Omar’s aunt, not his mother, was
killed in the strike. While it was reasonable to wonder if this might
still refer to the strike that killed Mishrawi, this single sentence was
far from conclusive. The citation, which reads only “Case monitored by
OHCHR,” didn’t offer many clues.
What's wrong with this?
1) The word "suggests" in the title.
2) Hamas is called a "militant" group, not a terrorist group.
3) Fisher here is concerned with minutiae. The relationship of the woman
is one of those things that gets misreported. Initially there were
doubts that the damage to Mishrawi's house was consistent with an
Israeli missile, but that didn't lead Fisher (or anyone) to raise the
doubts then.
And of course, instead of writing "the evidence strongly suggests that
it wasn't an Israeli missile," Fisher cites the BBC's Jon Donnison:
A BBC story expresses some doubt about the UN report. The
BBC’s Jon Donnison writes, “The Israeli military made no comment at the
time of the incident but never denied carrying out the strike.
Privately, military officials briefed journalists that they had been
targeting a militant who was in the building.” Donnison adds, “The
Israeli military had reported no rockets being fired out of Gaza so soon
after the start of the conflict.”
Donnison is from the BBC, not exactly known for its objectivity
concerning Israel. Furthermore the person involved is an employee of BBC
so questions of objectivity come up. (After the death, the BBC editor
for the Middle East said, "We are all one team...")
Fisher accepts Donnison's claim about the IDF not reporting any rockets
so early in the conflict is dubious. Check the timestamps on the
following tweets.
The IDF has embarked on Operation Pillar of Defense.
— IDF (@IDFSpokesperson) November 14, 2012
Initial reports indicate that the Iron Dome has intercepted a number of rockets above a major Israeli city. #Gaza #PillarOfDefense
— IDF (@IDFSpokesperson) November 14, 2012
Within three hours the IDF had already reported a number of rockets had
been fired into Israel.
Why is this important? Fisher was initially skeptical of the UN report
because it misidentified one of the dead. Then when Jon Donnison made an
easily verified (or disproved) claim, Fisher accepted it uncritically.
This is a microcosm of the problem of Middle East reporting: claims that
blame Israel are accepted by purportedly objective journalists without
any checking, but claims that exonerate Israel are treated with the
utmost skepticism if they aren't ignored altogether.
Consider what was reported at the time, by Fisher.
An Israeli round hit Misharawi’s four-room home in Gaza
Wednesday, killing his son, according to BBC Middle East bureau chief
Paul Danahar, who arrived in Gaza earlier Thursday. Misharawi’s
sister-in-law was also killed, and his brother wounded. Misharawi told
Danahar that, when the round landed, there was no fighting in his
residential neighborhood.
“We’re all one team in Gaza,” Danahar told me, saying that Misharawi is a
BBC video and photo editor. After spending a “few hours” with his
grieving colleague, he wrote on Twitter, ”Questioned asked here is: if
Israel can kill a man riding on a moving motorbike (as they did last
month) how did Jihad’s son get killed.”
There was no fighting in the neighborhood. Israel, unlike Hamas, doesn't
target civilians. Israel, of course, makes mistakes. However the fact
that there was no fighting, means that there was no reason for Israel to
target that neighborhood. Instead the absence of fighting was used by
Fisher's interlocutors as a reason to suggest that Israel had targeted
innocents. (If they could pick out a specific terrorist, how could they
miss so badly and kill an innocent?)
Fisher was taking the BBC and Mishrawi family's attitudes and using
those attitudes to frame the story. Now he steps back and tells us:
The question of which “side” bears responsibility for
Mishrawi’s death is of course important, if at the moment not fully
known, in its own right. It’s also, in some ways, part of a larger
battler over symbolism and narrative in the Israel-Palestine conflict.
As I wrote at the time, the much-circulated photo of Mishrawi was
championed by critics of Israel’s policies toward the Palestinian
territories, held up as a microcosm of what they argued was an unjust
conflict that disproportionately affected Palestinians. A small but
troubling minorities of those critics suggested the Israeli military
does not care about, or even willfully targeted, Palestinian children.
Meanwhile, some observers sympathetic to the Israeli strikes pointed
out, with what may have been prescience, that Hamas rockets often miss
and might have landed on Mishrawi’s house. They argued, as they are
again arguing today, that the media attention on the photo underscores
their suspicion that the world does not give Israel a fair shake.
Blame was an important part of his original narrative. While attributing
part of the argument to "critics of Israel's policies toward the
Palestinian territories," it appears that Fisher himself agrees with
said "critics." (He validates the general "critics" by noting "small but
troubling minorities" of that group. Of course, he quoted Paul Danahar
one of that smaller group, uncritically.)
In 2012, prior to Pillar of Defense, rockets were fired into Israel every month.
Most months it was more than ten rockets and in three of them it was
more than 100 rockets. In November (including Pillar of Defense) over
1000 rockets were fired into Israel.
When assigning blame, this was not part of Fisher's calculus. Hundreds
of thousands of Israeli civilians were under threat of attack. Many
thousands were regularly attacked and Israel refrained from any major
response.
Fisher poses as an objective observer; one above taking sides. Clearly,
the tragedies of the Middle East, to Fisher, are caused by both sides.
So one side is a liberal Western style democracy; the other is a
terrorist organization running an increasingly oppressive religious
society.
One side deliberately targets civilians; the other does its best to avoid them.
One side declares its genocidal aims; the other has made significant,
concrete concession to advance the cause of peace. (That's right Hamas
came to power after Israel disengaged from Gaza.)
One side seeks to kill the other; the other side, despite threats, attempts to keep up humanitarian aid to its enemies.
The problem with Fisher's dispassionate even-handedness is that it is
applied to a manifestly uneven situation. Rather than helping people
understand the Middle East, Fisher's efforts effectively perpetuate the
grievances that fuel the conflict.
His efforts to play down the UN report stand in contrast to the way he
hyped the story. Let me ask the question I asked yesterday again:
If it had been known for certain at the time of Omar
Mishrawi’s death that he had been killed by a Hamas rocket, would it
have been front page news?
Reading Max Fisher's belated equivocations, I can only conclude that it
was the apparent culpability of Israel that made the picture newsworthy.
The use of the word "militant" to describe terrorists is an amoral way of pretending to be "journalistically neutral". IMO, it's a manifestation of moral cowardice.
ReplyDeleteMohandis Gandhi was a "militant". Martin Luther King was a "militant". Yasser Arafat was a terrorist. Ahmed Yassin was a terrorist. The difference is blatantly obvious to any objective thinking person.