America's One-Eyed View of War:
Stars, Stripes, and the Star of David
There are two sides to every conflict
- unless you rely on the US media for information about the battle
in Lebanon. Viewers have been fed a diet of partisan coverage
which treats Israel as the good guys and their Hizbollah enemy
as the incarnation of evil.
by Andrew Gumbel and Donald Macintyre
Independent / UK, August 15, 2006
http://www.commondreams.org/
If these were normal times, the American
view of the conflict in Lebanon might look something like the
street scenes that have electrified the suburbs of Detroit for
the past four weeks.
In Dearborn, home to the Ford Motor Company
and also the highest concentration of Arab Americans in the country,
up to 1000 people have turned out day after day to express their
outrage at the Israeli military campaign and mourn the loss of
civilian life in Lebanon. At one protest in late July, 15,000
people - almost half of the local Arab American population - showed
up in a sea of Lebanese flags, along with anti-Israeli and anti-Bush
slogans.
A few miles to the north, in the heavily
Jewish suburb of Southfield, meanwhile, the Congregation Shaarey
Zedek synagogue has played host to passionate counter-protests
in which the US and Israeli national anthems are played back to
back and demonstrators have asserted that it is Israel's survival,
not Lebanon's, that is at stake here.
Such is the normal exercise of free speech
in an open society, one might think. But these are not normal
times. The Detroit protests have been tinged with paranoia and
justifiable fear on both sides. Several Jewish institutions in
the area, including two community centres and several synagogues,
have hired private security guards in response to an incident
in Seattle at the end of July, in which a mentally unstable 30-year-old
Muslim walked into a Jewish Federation building and opened fire,
killing one person and injuring five others.
On the Arab American side, many have expressed
reluctance to stand up and be counted among the protesters for
fear of being tinged by association with Hizbollah, which is on
the United States' list of terrorist organisations. (As a result,
the voices heard during the protests tend to be the more extreme
ones.) They don't like to discuss their political views in any
public forum, following the revelation a few months ago that the
National Security Agency was wiretapping phone calls and e-mail
exchanges as part of the Bush administration's war on terror.
They are even afraid to donate money to
help the civilian victims of the war in Lebanon because of the
intense scrutiny Islamic and Arab charities have been subjected
to since the 9/11 attacks. The Bush administration has denounced
40 charities worldwide as financiers of terrorism, and arrested
and deported dozens of people associated with them. Consequently,
while Jewish charities such as the United Jewish Communities are
busy raising $300m to help families affected by the Katyusha rockets
raining down on northern Israel, donations to the Lebanese victims
have come in at no more than a trickle.
Outside Detroit and a handful of other
cities with sizeable Arab American populations, it is hard to
detect that there are two sides to the conflict at all. The Dearborn
protests have received almost no attention nationally, and when
they have it has usually been to denounce the participants as
extremists and apologists for terrorism - either because they
have voiced support for Hizbollah or because they have carried
banners in which the Star of David at the centre of the Israeli
flag has been replaced by a swastika.
The media, more generally, has left little
doubt in the minds of a majority of American news consumers that
the Israelis are the good guys, the aggrieved victims, while Hizbollah
is an incarnation of the same evil responsible for bringing down
the World Trade Centre, a heartless and faceless organisation
whose destruction is so important it can justify all the damage
Israel is inflicting on Lebanon and its civilians.
The point is not that this viewpoint is
necessarily wrong. The point - and this is what distinguishes
the US from every other Western country in its attitude to the
conflict - is that it is presented as a foregone conclusion. Not
only is there next to no debate, but debate itself is considered
unnecessary and suspect.
The 24-hour cable news stations are the
worst offenders. Rupert Murdoch's Fox News has had reporters running
around northern Israel chronicling every rocket attack and every
Israeli mobilisation, but has shown little or no interest in anything
happening on the other side of the border. It is a rarity on any
of the cable channels to see any Arab being tapped for expert
opinion on the conflict. A startling amount of airtime, meanwhile,
is given to the likes of Michael D Evans, an end-of-the-world
Biblical "prophet" with no credentials in the complexities
of Middle Eastern politics. He has shown up on MSNBC and Fox under
the label "Middle East analyst". Fox's default analyst,
on this and many other issues, has been the right-wing provocateur
and best-selling author Ann Coulter, whose main credential is
to have opined, days after 9/11, that what America should do to
the Middle East is "invade their countries, kill their leaders
and convert them to Christianity".
Often, the coverage has been hysterical
and distasteful. In the days following the Israeli bombing of
Qana, several pro-Israeli bloggers started spreading a hoax story
that Hizbollah had engineered the event, or stage-managed it by
placing dead babies in the rubble for the purpose of misleading
reporters. Oliver North, the Reagan-era orchestrator of the Iran-Contra
affair who is now a right-wing television and radio host, and
Michelle Malkin, a sharp-tongued Bush administration cheerleader
who runs her own weblog, appeared on Fox News to give credence
to the hoax - before the Israeli army came forward to take responsibility
and brought the matter to at least a partial close.
As the conflict has gone on, the media
interpretation of it has only hardened. Essentially, the line
touted by cable news hosts and their correspondents - closely
adhering to the line adopted by the Bush administration and its
neoconservative supporters - is that Hizbollah is part of a giant
anti-Israeli and anti-American terror network that also includes
Hamas, al-Qa'ida, the governments of Syria and Iran, and the insurgents
in Iraq. Little effort is made to distinguish between these groups,
or explain what their goals might be. The conflict is presented
as a straight fight between good and evil, in which US interests
and Israeli interests intersect almost completely. Anyone who
suggests otherwise is likely to be pounced on and ripped to shreds.
When John Dingell, a Democratic congressman
from Michigan with a large Arab American population in his constituency,
gave an interview suggesting it was wrong for the US to take sides
instead of pushing for an end to violence, he was quickly - and
loudly - accused of being a Hizbollah apologist. Newt Gingrich,
the Republican former House speaker, accused him of failing to
draw any moral distinction between Hizbollah and Israel. Rush
Limbaugh, the popular conservative talk-show host, piled into
him, as did the conservative newspaper The Washington Times. The
Times was later forced to admit it had quoted Dingell out of context
and reprinted his full words, including: " I condemn Hizbollah,
as does everyone else, for the violence."
The hysteria has extended into the realm
of domestic politics, especially since this is a congressional
election year. Republican have sought to depict last week's primary
defeat of the Democratic Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut,
one of the loudest cheerleaders for the Iraq war, as some sort
of wacko extremist anti-Semitic, anti-Israeli stand that risks
undermining national security. Vice-President Dick Cheney said
Lieberman's defeat would encourage "al-Qa'ida types"
to think they can break the will of Americans. The fact that the
man who beat Lieberman, Ned Lamont, is an old-fashioned East Coast
Wasp who was a registered Republican for much of his life is something
Mr Cheney chose to overlook.
Part of the Republican strategy this year
is to attack any media that either attacks them or has the temerity
to report facts that contradict the official party line. Thus,
when Reuters was forced to withdraw a photograph of Beirut under
bombardment because one of its stringers had doctored the image
to increase the black smoke, it was a chance to rip into the news
agency over its efforts to be even-handed. In a typical riposte,
Michelle Malkin denounced Reuters as "a news service that
seems to have made its mark rubber-stamping pro-Hizbollah propaganda".
She was not the only one to take that
view. Mainstream, even liberal, publications have echoed her line.
Tim Rutten, the Los Angeles Times liberal media critic, denounced
the "obscenely anti-Israeli tenor of most of the European
and world press" in his most recent column.
It is not just the US media which tilts
in a pro-Israeli direction. Congress, too, is remarkably unified
in its support for the Israeli government, and politicians more
generally understand that to criticise Israel is to risk jeopardising
their future careers. When Antonio Villaraigosa, the up-and-coming
Democratic Mayor of Los Angeles, was first invited to comment
on the Middle East crisis, he sounded a note so pro-Israeli that
he was forced to apologise to local Muslim and Arab community
leaders. There is far less public debate of Israeli policy in
the US, in fact, than there is in Israel itself.
This is less a reflection of American
Jewish opinion - which is more diverse than is suggested in the
media - than it is a commentary on the power of pro-Israeli lobby
groups like Aipac, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee,
which bankrolls pro-Israeli congressional candidates. That, in
turn, is frustrating to liberal Jews like Michael Lerner, a San
Francisco rabbi who heads an anti-war community called Tikkun.
Rabbi Lerner has tried to argue for years that it is in Israel's
best interests to reach a peaceful settlement, and that demonising
Arabs as terrorists is counter-productive and against Judaism.
Lerner is probably right to assert that
he speaks for a large number of American Jews, only half of whom
are affiliated with pro-Israeli lobbying organisations. Certainly,
dinner party conversation in heavily Jewish cities like New York
suggest misgivings about Israel's strategic aims, even if there
is some consensus that Hizbollah cannot be allowed to strike with
impunity.
Few, if any, of those misgivings have
entered the US media. "There is no major figure in American
political life who has been willing to raise the issue of the
legitimate needs of the Palestinian people, or even talk about
them as human beings," Lerner said. "The organised Jewish
community has transformed the image of Judaism into a cheering
squad for the Israeli government, whatever its policies are. That
is just idolatry, and goes against all the warnings in the Bible
about giving too much power to the king or the state."
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