James
Muecke (27 June 2005)
"Israel Soldier Refuses to
Beat Settlers"
From: imra@netvision.net.il
Subject: [Text of soldier's comments]Construction of
Illegal Outpost
June 26th, 2005
[IMRA: From Israel Television Mabat tonight:
Off camera: You refuse an order?
Soldier: Refuse an order
Off camera: Refuse an order my brother?
Soldier: Yes
Off camera: What happened?
Soldier: Jews are being beaten here. Tat's what's happening.
Off camera: Where are you from, what's your name?
Soldier: Avi Biber. I live in the Tekoa community and
this isn't right. This isn't right and this isn't justice.]
IDF SPOKESPERSON ANNOUNCEMENT
Construction of illegal outpost prevented in Southern
Gaza Strip.
As a result of security assessments and information indicating
the intent of extremists to use uninhabited structures in the southern
Gaza Strip to construct an outpost prior to the disengagement the IDFdemolished
11 uninhabited structures this afternoon, near the Israeli community of
Shirat HaYam in the southern Gaza Strip. According to IDF assessments,
the construction of this outpost could have led to possible confrontations.
The activity was completed quickly and decisively. During
the activity,dozens of civilians illegally entered the closed military
zone that wasdeclared, in an attempt to interfere with the IDF activity
and vandalizeIDF equipment and vehicles. As a result of this rioting, scuffles
brokeout between the civilians and the IDF force at the scene, during which10
Israeli civilians, an Israeli Policeman, 4 Border Policemen, and 5IDF soldiers
were lightly wounded and were taken to hospital for furthertreatment.
During the activity an IDF soldier shouted out a political
statement inpublic. He was taken from the scene and will be tried by a
seniorofficer.
The IDF remains obligated to protect the Israeli civilians
living inGush Katif and will ensure the preservation of law and order whenevernecessary.
The IDF strongly rejects violent behavior against IDF
its soldiers byextremist elements.
------------------------------
From: imra@netvision.net.ilTo: imra@imra.org.ilSubject:
On CAMERA: Responding to Bias -- Fight or Flight?
June 26, 2005Responding to bias - fight or flight? by
Andrea Levin
The stunning power of headlines, photographs, daily newspaper
reports and television footage to skew public sentiment has deeply shaken
those concerned about Israel's fate. In all too many media outlets, jaw-dropping
disregard of existential threats and lack of awareness of Israel's restraint
in the face of terrorist bloodletting have prompted near-panicked efforts
in some quarters to win public understanding.
The great debate underway is how best to counter media
shortcomings and reach citizens of the world and government policymakers
with a full, accurate picture of the Jewish state.
Numerous efforts seek to present the good face of Israel
to audiences – the normal face beyond the conflict. Look, say proponents
of this approach, at how much Israel gives to mankind: medical advances,
agricultural invention, high-tech brilliance. Look at the value added to
world culture and comfort by the resourceful Israelis. All that has to
be done, according to this thinking, is to change the paradigm; to separate
Israel from its tainted association with the endless conflict involving
the Arabs by injecting stories about Israeli innovation and good works
into the news stream.
Such efforts may, indeed, engender positive feelings
in some news consumers. Likewise, publicizing (as other endeavors
have) the fact that Israel's Arab citizens, including Arab women, participate
in its democracy can add in a constructive way to appreciation of the country's
commitment to pluralism and tolerance.
But there are profound strategic flaws in any efforts
to advance public understanding of Israel's circumstances that do not tackle
and defeat false and damaging information about the Jewish state.
The notion that telling the world how clever and beneficent
Israel is will garner public affection founders on the grim evidence of
Jewish history. The Jews of Germany won 37% of the Nobel prizes for science
and literature awarded to German citizens between 1905 and 1936, even though
they were only 1% of the population. Needless to say, their accomplishments
won few hearts or minds.
In late 19th and early 20th century Vienna, a time and
place renowned for dazzling achievement in music, Jews were central. Composers
Gustave Mahler and Arnold Schonberg were Jewish, as were many of Vienna's
other composers, librettists, musicians, performers, patrons and audiences
in a population where Jews were less than 10% of the population. But Austrians
welcomed the Nazis, and soon constituted 40% of those engaged in Hitler's
exterminations.
The lesson then and today is that denigration and defamation
are likely to nullify any positive images of Jewish generosity, creativity
and good works if the epithets and misinformation are left unchallenged.
When Chris Hedges, for instance, wrote in Harper's in
the fall of 2001 that Israeli soldiers in Gaza "entice [Palestinian] children
like mice into a trap and murder them for sport," the incendiary, baseless
charge became a feature of anti-Israel comment. National Public Radio's
Fresh Air promptly enlisted Hedges for an interview in which he spread
the smear across the air waves.
Consider: would those who read or heard Hedges recite
his false charges of child murder be persuaded to like the Jewish state
on the basis of learning that it leads in nanotechnology?
When basic facts such as the terms of UN Security Council
Resolution 242 are misreported to claim that Israel is required to cede
the entire West Bank and Gaza, and is therefore violating core principles
for settling the conflict, what are news consumers to think but that Israel
is obstructing peace? When the terms of the so-called "road map" are continually
misrepresented to cast Israel as a violator and the Palestinians as the
aggrieved, what is the cumulative effect on readers?
When Hamas and Islamic Jihad are depicted as seeking
an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza - reasonable goals in the
minds of many - rather than working to extinguish Israel, Israeli measures
in self-defense appear excessive.
All these are cases in which serious errors and distortions
must be and have been extensively challenged. The end result has been to
correct errors and halt their repetition in key media; or, where no correction
has been forthcoming, to widely expose and debunk the misinformation.
Yes, there are lessons to be learned from the world of
public relations, but they come from such instructive examples as the "war
room" of former president Bill Clinton's election campaign. There, media
coverage was monitored intensively, and every news account deemed incorrect,
distorted or incomplete was swiftly challenged. The strategy worked so
successfully that it was later applied to promoting president Clinton's
policy initiatives.
No less an effort is necessary in defending the facts
about Israel. Just as all that is required for evil to triumph is for good
people to do nothing, so too distortions and lies about Israel triumph
when they go unchallenged. Those who argue that there is an easier
way, a shortcut to making Israel's case, are simply ducking the essential
task.
www.camera.org
Andrea Levin is Executive Director of CAMERA, the Committee
for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America.