Ten years ago this month, British and other European media outlets launched an assault on Israelâs character that was noteworthy for both its viciousness and staggeringly low journalistic standards. By March 2002, the second intifada had been raging for 19 months. But Israelis remember that month in particular for the carnage on their streets â a 30-day bombing campaign by Hamas, Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades and Islamic Jihad in 13 separate attacks, including the bombing of Netanyaâs Park Hotel during a Seder, which left 30 people dead and 140 wounded, and the murder of 16 people four days later at the Matza restaurant in Haifa. Israelis were horrified by the attacks and their own loss of any sense of personal security. On March 29, the Israel Defense Forces took the fight to the West Bank in an operation dubbed Defensive Shield, designed to stop the terrorists before they got into Israel. On April 2, the IDF reached Jenin, from which 23 of the 60 terror attacks in 2002 had emanated. There, the army waged a pitched battle, involving house-to-house fighting with Palestinian gunmen in the cityâs refugee camp. Booby-trapped houses were primed to collapse on the Israeli forces. By the time the fighting ended, 23 IDF soldiers and 52 Palestinians (of whom 14 were civilians) were dead. Ultimately the Palestinian Authority, Human Rights Watch and the United Nations corroborated these figures. BUT FROM the smoke and smell of battle, sections of the press created a different narrative, one in which Israeli soldiers had committed a heinous massacre of Palestinians, in what came to be known as the âmyth of Jeningradâ â a phrase coined by Tom Gross, a leading Middle East commentator and former Jerusalem correspondent for The Sunday Telegraph. As Gross writes, for two weeks, they âdevoted page upon page, day after day, to tales of mass murders, common graves, summary executions, and war crimes. Israel was invariably compared to the Nazis, to al-Qaeda, and to the Taliban. One report even compared the thousands of supposedly missing Palestinians to the âdisappearedâ of Argentina. (No Palestinians were in fact missing.) A leading columnist for the Evening Standard, Londonâs main evening newspaper, compared Israelâs actions to âgenocide.ââ Gross spent hundreds of hours poring over the material. He writes that âAmerican reporters in Jenin reported accurately. Molly Moore of The Washington Post wrote there was âno evidence to support allegations by aid organizations of large-scale massacres or executions.â... By contrast the Jerusalem correspondent for the (London) Independent, Phil Reeves, began his report from Jenin: âA monstrous war crime that Israel has tried to cover up for a fortnight has finally been exposed.â âHe continued: âThe sweet and ghastly reek of rotting human bodies is everywhere, evidence that it is a human tomb.ââ Gross adds that âeven the right-wing Daily Telegraph ran headlines such as âHundreds of victims âwere buried by bulldozer in mass grave,âââ and cites Britainâs Guardian as saying in a lead editorial that âIsraelâs actions in Jenin were âevery bit as repellentâ as Osama bin Ladenâs attack on New York on September 11.â Arafatâs Palestinian Authority PR operation had sold a massacre that wasnât. Segments of the press eagerly bought it. I GAINED a brief insight into some of this reporting one evening a couple of years later over a drink with the photographer who was in Jenin for British paper The Times. He told me of having been holed up in a house in Jenin with some colleagues. A dead donkey was nearby, slowly decomposing. Hard to believe, but in a classic case of mistaken groupthink, they chose to mistake it for the smell of bodies. But that barely explains the vitriol that sections of the UK press poured on Israel at that time, and the alacrity with which they were prepared to believe and then report so colorfully on massacres and mass graves that simply did not exist, based on the testimony of one single witness â Kamal Anis. The reserve paratrooper unitâs doctor articulated on Army Radio what many Israelis knew. He said, âDo you believe something as horrible as this could happen in front of a reserve Israeli army unit? Reserve soldiers would be on their cellphones in a second to every Israeli reporter and politician they could find.â The IDF did not exactly cover itself in glory on the information front. Drafted into reserve duty during the operation as an officer in the IDF Spokespersonâs Office, I recall well the mistakes that were made. In particular, information was not coming in from the field. Into the communications vacuum fell malreporting, based on stories of butchery from the Palestinian Authority. The IDF Spokespersonâs Office is a different organization today â professional, responsive and far better trained to respond quickly. There are other changes as well: My own organization was founded during this period to ensure that the facts reached the press. One can only hope that 10 years on from the battle of Jenin, the media, too, is different; that journalists have learned the lessons of Jenin. The writer is executive director of The Israel Projectâs Israel office. http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=266795
One day the truth will out regarding the "massacre" on the Mavi Marmara, another case of propoganda perpetrated by a willing press who see only one side of the story, usually the Palestinians and their allies. Good article.
I'm not that knowledgable about all this but I do know that the UN, Amnesty International and various other international bodies called it a massacre and the Israelis wouldn't allow international observers into the area for weeks afterwards. Here's the BBC report at the time - no vitriol here http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/1937048.stm A quick google search shows that the maker of the film "jenin jenin" has been ordered to pay Israeli soldiers (who didn't appear in the film) money for "emotional distress" - I'm not sure how much compo was paid to anyone who lost their home - I don't suspect very much.
Both sides are at fault and it'll take forever to sort out. Give the Falkland Isles to the Jews and nuke Israel. That way nobody gets their 'holy land' and the US will invade Argentina.
Aye, but when is the movie coming out so I can get historically educated by Hollywood. Did you know the Titanic was a real ship?
As opposed to an aeroplane masquerading as a ship? Or do you mean that the ship in the film was a real ship?
I don't know. I'll have to watch the mobie again. Did you know the American won the second world war because they stole the enigma machine from a gerry submarine?
It was a real ship in the film. They also used a giant tank of water. Honestly. No, really. That's why it was so expensive. The yanks always save the day. They stopped Jesus being crucified too.