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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - Ran HaCohen (Dept of Comparative
Literature) wants to be elected Mideast Tokyo Rose?
Not many atrocities can be less controversial
than Israel's attack on the Turkish-based flotilla heading to Gaza
yesterday. Like Somali pirates, Israel attacked the boats in
international waters. Like the darkest regimes, Israeli forces
opened fire on unarmed civilians who had not posed a threat to
anybody, except to the siege that Israel (with Egyptian co-operation
and U.S. backing) imposes on Gaza.
http://original.antiwar.com/hacohen/2010/06/01/the-flotilla-in-the-israeli-press/
The Flotilla in the Israeli Press
by Ran HaCohen
June 02, 2010
Not many atrocities can be less controversial than Israel’s
attack on the Turkish-based flotilla heading to Gaza yesterday. Like
Somali pirates, Israel attacked the boats in international waters.
Like the darkest regimes, Israeli forces opened fire on unarmed
civilians who had not posed a threat to anybody, except to the siege
that Israel (with Egyptian co-operation and U.S. backing) imposes on
Gaza. Condemnation of what the Turkish prime minister rightly termed
“an act of state terrorism” has been global, except for the shameful
mumbling of the American government (but what can you expect from
the complicit?).
In any normal place, you would expect masses to take to the
streets and protest. Indeed, precisely this happened all over the
globe. Not in Israel. A few hundred people did demonstrate in Tel
Aviv and in several other towns, but then again a few hundred
gathered to throw eggs at the Turkish embassy. On the internal
front, the Israeli government has nothing to worry about.
How is this consensus achieved? How can you turn millions of
fairly educated citizens into silent lambs, or worse, into
supporters of their own state’s terrorism? If we concentrate on the
short term, leaving aside, for the sake of brevity, decades of
indoctrination, one can spot a few themes in the Israeli propaganda,
which emerged during the first hours after the incident.
Recurrent Themes
The first theme was “weapons.” The peace activists were quickly
portrayed by Israel as “armed.” The details changed with the minute:
some media channels claimed they snatched a gun from an Israeli
soldier, others said an empty ammunition magazine was found on
board, others simply repeated the words “armed” or “carrying
weapons” without bothering to explain. The adjective “cold”
disappeared from yesterday’s Hebrew dictionary: every knife, stick,
stool, or cushion turned their holders into dangerous killers –
especially when facing Israel’s elite soldiers, who entered the boat
peacefully and bare-handed (except for their unmentioned pistols,
revolvers, hand grenades, tear gas, shockers, noise bombs, smoke
bombs, protective vests, etc., etc.).
Soon after, an Israeli military spokesperson came out with the
most lunatic theme of all: “lynching.” The Israeli soldiers, so
official Israel shamelessly claimed, had to save themselves from
being lynched by the activists. This is a direct continuation of the
previous theme: when unarmed demonstrators are turned into armed
killers, when armed elite soldiers kidnapping a boat become
benevolent guests, one can describe the former as “lynching” the
latter.
One has to be quite insane to describe armed soldiers as being
lynched by unarmed civilians; it’s an insult not only to
intelligence, but to the soldiers themselves. This is why an
alternative theme was introduced: “battle.” The confrontation on the
boat has been explicitly termed “a battle,” as if the poor Israeli
army (vessels, helicopters, electronic thwarting, etc.) was facing a
raging Turkish battalion. Obviously, all three themes – “weapons,”
“lynching,” and “battle” – imply the Israeli soldiers were obliged
to open fire; they were the victims of the ruthless attack of the
Turkish grand armada.
A fourth theme was “trap” (or “ambush”). This, again, enables
Israel to portray those who set the trap – the flotilla – as
aggressors, while the Israeli army was, quite unfortunately, a
passive, innocent victim of the hostile conspiracy.
Let’s see how Tuesday’s Israeli newspapers recycled these
propaganda themes.
Tabloid One
The right-wing daily Ma’ariv put its headline in the
middle of a blurred photo supplied by the Israeli army, worded “the
harsh attack on the fighters: cudgels, axes, and a fighter thrown
off the deck.” So now we know who the real victims are. The headline
read: “The Failure (nine demonstrators killed, global rage, mumbling
government, and exchange of accusations at the top) – And The
Heroism (in spite of the intelligence failure and the hard violence,
the commando fighters managed to take over the ships).” Criticizing
the government is instrumental only to uniting behind the army, and
the soldiers who spilled civilian blood are not less than “heroes.”
At the bottom of the page there were two interchangeable pictures,
one showing demonstrators tearing an Israeli flag, the other
depicting police arresting a demonstrator next to a great fire.
Titles, respectively or otherwise: “Turkey is boiling” and “The
[Israeli-Arab] Section Runs Wild.” Both subtitles mentioned
“Palestinian and Hamas flags everywhere,” “torn Israeli flags,”
“furious mob,” “Molotov cocktails, fire, and injured policemen.”
Once again, note who’s the aggressor and who’s the victim in this
story. None of Israel’s newspapers, by the way, reported the
demonstrations against the operation within Israel; at best, “riots”
in Israeli-Arab towns were reported.
In addition, Ma’ariv gave six opinion and analysis
columns, all starting on page 1. A whole spectrum of opinions.
Journalist Ben Kaspit, under the hyper-critical title “Absolute
Stupidity,” opened his column with the following sentence: “First of
all, let it be clear: We are on the right side in this story.” The
Israeli Daniel Pipes, demagogue Ben-Dror Yemini, scolded what he
termed “A Leadership of Fools” for its “defeat in a battle against a
ship of Hamasniks” – thus the activists were portrayed as Hamas
terrorists and Israel’s piratical invasion as a battle, in line with
official propaganda. Ofer Shelach, a critical columnist, added a new
aspect to the soldiers’ victimhood: “From this day, the hands of the
best unit in this army, whose combatants honestly join it in order
to defend the state of Israel, are smeared with civilians’ blood.”
That’s as far as criticism goes. Beneath him, Alan Dershowitz urged
“Do Not Rush to Pass Judgment,” then immediately rushed to pass
judgment that attacking the vessels outside Israel’s territorial
waters was a legitimate act. What can you expect from this
discredited joker? Still, Dershowitz’s imperative was polite
compared to the two Israeli columnists beneath him, who directly
commanded the readers to “Salute and Shut Up!”: “The pictures will
not persuade the hypocritical world, but they should persuade every
Zionist Israeli, right or left, to thank the fighters….” At the
bottom, journalist Shalom Yerushalmi made political calculations.
“But what about the lynching?” you may ask. Don’t worry: Ma’ariv’s
page 1 ended with a big headline at the very bottom: “Netanyahu:
‘Israeli Soldiers Were Defending Themselves From a Lynching.’” All
the propaganda themes are here.
Tabloid Two
The right-wing daily Yediot Achronot took a completely
opposite line, as far as placing the “lynching” theme is concerned.
Here it wasn’t at the bottom, but at the very top of the page: “The
Ambush: ‘We Felt Like in a Lynching,’ the Fighters Said.” The big
headline was a single word: “The Trap,” theme number four. Within a
big picture taken by Reuters (euphemistic wording for the
kidnapping: “the marine commando boats escort one of the
ships”) three smaller pictures were printed: one worded “a soldier
thrown off the deck,” one worded “the weapons: knives and sticks,”
and a third one depicting a green cloth with Arabic inscription,
upon which two dozen knives were scattered, some of them small
kitchen knives; no wording, no credit. Ma’ariv had the same
picture on page 8, with credit to “IDF spokesperson,” who probably
put the green cloth as a suggestive background.
Seven columnists made it to the front. Journalist Nahum Barnea
said the “takeover” ended in “frustration”: “Israel yesterday made
an effort to prove that the people awaiting the commando on board
were not human rights activists but violent thugs. I assume this is
true. Still, the question is why Israel gave those thugs precisely
what they wanted.” Journalist Sima Kadmon paraphrased an Israeli
cliché: “Where are the days when we were a bit less righteous but a
bit wiser,” implying the action was perfectly right but simply
unwise. Extremely militaristic journalist Alex Fishman said the same
differently: “the takeover was right and necessary, and will be
right and necessary next time too.” Analyst Sever Plotzker urged
Defense Minister Ehud Barak to resign, not failing to name the true
agent behind the maritime bloodbath: “the trap of Hamas
provocation.” Senior columnist and political adviser Eitan Haber
opened on a good note: “one could have tried to solve this problem
peacefully.” Reading the rest of his article (page 8), one learns
that he had been consulted in advance, but “I had no doubt that my
suggestion as for how to deal with the flotilla of villains would be
rejected.” Haber’s concern is in no way moral: he is just worried
about Israel losing Turkey as an ally. Next, journalist Amnon
Avramovitz explained that Netanyahu was repeatedly “unlucky,” and,
last but not least, right-wing columnist Hanoch Daum concluded: “It
wasn’t Israel that initiated the confrontation at sea, it wasn’t
Israel that attacked fighters with cold and warm weapons. And it’s
not Israel that should be held accountable. It’s Hamas’ fault.
Instead of rejecting the world’s ludicrous claims, we all start a
session of self-accusation.”
Quality Paper
How about Ha’aretz, Israel’s liberal quality daily? The
headline revealed the focus: “IDF’s Failed Action Creates
International Mess.” Underneath it, four small pictures, one taken
by the army – “throwing a soldier off the deck,” the very same as in
both tabloids (but decently smaller) – one by Reuters (same as in
Yediot), one taken by the Israeli police, and one showing the
defense minister with two uniformed generals. Quite unlike the
tabloids, the word “lynch” here is neither at the top nor at the
bottom, but in the small print in the center of the page: “Defense
minister … said yesterday the soldiers confronted extreme violence,
and justified the decision to open fire in order to protect the
fighters who, they said, were facing the risk of lynching.” Four op-eds
reached the front page of the Hebrew print edition: the
editorial, columnists
Ari Shavit and Amos Harel, and writer David Grossman. The former
two can be found in English on the Internet; the latter two are
missing as I write this. All of them were critical to some extent:
the editorial demanded an investigation; Shavit drew an
unoriginal historical analogy to the raid on the Exodus
ship; Harel wrote that the army representatives had no real
difficulty explaining the action to the Israeli public: given the
“extreme violence” they met, the soldiers “had no other choice,”
being “exposed to injury and surrounded by a violent mass hitting
them with sticks; under these circumstances, no wonder they fired
live ammunition to defend themselves.” What all three columns,
though, highly regretted was the damage to Israel’s image. Not a
word about morality or legitimacy: it’s Israel’s image which is at
stake. Because of this single flaw, the world might err to think
that Israel is no longer the peace-seeking, law-abiding, sane,
moderate, and benevolent country it actually is.
The one mild exception was David Grossman, who used the word
“crime” for the crime, and even though he too recycled the “trap”
metaphor, he did distinguish between the “small, fanatic Turkish
organization” behind the flotilla and the “hundreds of activists for
freedom and justice” on board. Grossman also equated the action
carried out outside Israel’s territorial water to an act of piracy.
He saw the action in the broader context of Israel’s “outrageous”
siege on Gaza, and his final paragraph can summarize not only his,
but my own column as well:
“More than anything else, this crazy operation is evidence for
the place that Israel has reached. There is no point in elaborating.
Whoever has eyes in his head sees and feels it. No doubt, within
hours some swift minds would find a way to turn the (natural,
justified) feelings of guilt of many Israelis into a vociferous
accusation against the entire world. The shame, however, would be
more difficult to come to terms with.”
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