by Michael Berenhaus
The Washington Post
front page article "Anti-Semitism erodes France's Fraternite" (6/21/14)
reports on an escalation of anti-Semitism in France that some say is
linked "to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict." The article doesn't claim
that the linkage is due to biased reporting about the conflict, but a
second article inside the paper, with the headline "Palestinian teen,
man killed in Israeli raids", suggests that this may be the case. By
stating that Israelis killed these Palestinians in raids, without saying
what the Palestinians did to provoke the attacks, the headline is
libelous. Buried within the article we read that "both incidents
occurred during riots in which IEDS were directly hurled at Israeli
soldiers who felt their lives were threatened and returned live fire."
There were no Palestinian accounts cited to refute this IDF account.
More evidence of this bias is seen in a Washington Post article (June 27, 2014) entitled “Martin Indyk, U.S. envoy for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, to step down." The article states:
“As the latest round of talks fell apart, Indyk said that neither side had been prepared to make the compromises necessary to forge a deal. But he placed much of the blame for the failure on Israel, reportedly telling a Washington think tank last month that its settlements policy had had a 'dramatically damaging' effect on the negotiations.”
Upon
careful inspection of the quote, Indyk never “placed much of the blame
for the failure on Israel," as DeYoung espoused. He never said such a
thing at all - he just said that the settlements were damaging. It was
Deyoung herself who placed the blame on Israel by interpreting his quote
based on her biases. And she did it so insidiously, making it appear to
come directly from Indyk. Moreover, DeYoung never actually heard Indyk
even say that the settlement policy was “dramatically damaging.” She
said it was “reportedly” said. Why didn’t DeYoung say who “reportedly”
made the quote on which she used to base her opinion? Could it be
shoddy reporting, perhaps rumor, or even worse, that she made it up?
Michael Berenhaus
Source:
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment