by Benjamin Korn
Friedman sees no difference between Israeli and Syrian policy regarding civilian casualties. Israel drops warning leaflets in neighborhoods it plans to strike; individually telephones residents of apartment buildings in the area; and cancels bombing raids if civilians are likely to be harmed. Meanwhile, Syria slaughters people anywhere, anytime, with whatever weapons it has handy. But it’s all the same to Thomas Friedman.
Israeli Army
officials are reportedly furious that New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman
has accused the IDF of massacring Arab civilians. But what else is new? After
all, Friedman’s entire career has been built on lying about Israel — including
rewriting his own biography in order to smear the Jewish State.
In his August
12, 2015 column, Friedman wrote: “Israel plays, when it has to, by what I’ve
called ‘Hama rules’ — war without mercy…it will not be deterred by the threat
of civilian Arab casualties…”
The Times of
Israel notes that, “While the term ‘Hama Rules’ itself comes from Friedman’s
book, From Beirut to Jerusalem, in his new article he offered no history of the
event or explanation for the comparison, apparently assuming the reader would
understand the context.”
(For the
reader’s edification, this is the story of Hama that Friedman refers to and has
the gall to tell an absolute lie comparing it to the benign way in which Israel
treats its Arab citizens.)
“The Hama
massacre occurred in February 1982, when the Syrian Arab Army under the orders
of the country’s then-dictator, Hafez al-Assad, Bashar’s father, besieged the
town of Hama for 27 days in order to quell an uprising by the Muslim
Brotherhood against al-Assad’s government. Estimates vary, with the number
varying between 10,000 – 20,000 Syrians killed. About 1,000 Syrian soldiers
were killed during the operation and large parts of the old city were
destroyed. The attack has been described as one of “the single deadliest acts
by any Arab government against its own people in the modern Middle East”. The
vast majority of the victims were civilians.)” From: Wikipedia
Friedman’s
sense of self-importance is legendary; evidently he assumes that everyone has read and
memorized his book. But for those who have not, the term “Hama Rules” was his
little nickname for the policy of then-Syrian tyrant Hafez Assad, when he
massacred tens of thousands of civilians in the Syrian city of Hama in 1982.
So, Friedman
sees no difference between Israeli and Syrian policy regarding civilian
casualties. Israel drops warning leaflets in neighborhoods it plans to
strike; individually telephones residents of apartment buildings in the area;
and cancels bombing raids if civilians are likely to be harmed. Meanwhile,
Syria slaughters people anywhere, anytime, with whatever weapons it has handy.
But it’s all the same to Thomas Friedman.
But such lies
should not surprise anyone familiar with Friedman’s track record.
He was a junior
reporter on the New York Times staff when he was sent to cover the Israel-Lebanon
war in 1982. He was catapulted to fame by a series of articles blaming Israel
for the Lebanese Christians’ killings of Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatilla
refugee camps, (itself a gross lie long ago discounted) which
he then parlayed into a best-selling book, the aforementioned From Beirut to
Jerusalem.
The major theme
of the book, and of the many interviews he gave about his time in Lebanon, was
disillusionment. He set out, he claimed, as a passionate supporter of Israel
(“insufferably so”). He believed “that all the right [was] on one side, and all
the wrong on the other, that Israel always behaves in a way that’s morally
upstanding…I had seen Israel as a sort of utopian society…” But these illusions
were shattered: “In my experiences as a reporter…I went through a period of
disillusionment during my experience of Lebanon and Sabra and Shatilla.”
According to
Friedman, it was Israel’s immoral behavior in Lebanon in 1982 that transformed
him from a supporter of the Jewish state to one of its most outspoken critics.
He bravely discovered the truth about the Israelis, and that gave him the moral
credentials to pass judgement on Israel from then on — which is exactly what he
proceeded to do, first as the Times‘s bureau chief in Jerusalem from 1984-1988,
and from then on as a Times op-ed columnist.
But that was a
lie.
Friedman did
not become a critic of Israel in 1982. He was strongly pro-Palestinian at least
eight years earlier, as a leader of a Brandeis University student organization
called the “Middle East Peace Group.”
When the arch-terrorist
Yasser Arafat, gun on his hip, spoke at the United Nations that fall,
then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin strongly protested and hundreds of
thousands of outraged New Yorkers held a “Rally Against Terror.” Friedman
and his Peace Group colleagues published an open letter in The Brandeis Justice
(the student newspaper) on November 12, 1974, to denounce the rally and oppose
Prime Minister Rabin’s stance.
Friedman and
company declared that the anti-terror rally would “only reinforce Jewish
anxiety and contribute to Israel’s further isolation.” They demanded that Prime
Minister Rabin “negotiate with all factions of the Palestinians, including the
PLO.” Keep in mind that this was at a time when the PLO was not even
pretending to be moderate or willing to live in peace with Israel. Earlier that
year, PLO terrorists had proudly slaughtered dozens of Israeli schoolchildren
in the towns of Ma’alot and Kiryat Shemona.
When Friedman
graduated from Brandeis, he left the Middle East Peace Group — but the Middle
East Peace Group never left him. His news articles for the Times, and later his
op-ed columns, consistently exhibited the same negative tilt against Israel.
Secretary of
State James Baker, (of “F–k the Jews. They don’t for us anyway” infamy
and now Jeb Bush’s foreign policy advisor!) in his autobiography,
described how he and Friedman were tennis partners, and Friedman would give
him suggestions on how to pressure Israel. He credited Friedman for the
notorious episode in which Baker publicly humiliated Israel by announcing the
White House phone number and declaring that the Israelis should call when they
get serious about peace. No wonder the editors of The New Republic, in 1992,
characterized Friedman as “the New York Times‘s State Department spokesman” and
as part of “the James Baker Ministry of Information.”
Ultimately, all
of Friedman’s writings on Israel are anchored in the myth of the “Disillusioned
American Jewish Journalist.” All of his credibility as a commentator on
Israeli-Palestinian affairs rests on the image he concocted in Lebanon. Brian
Williams recently lost his job as anchor of the NBC Nightly News because he
falsified his war correspondent experiences. Thomas Friedman should be judged
according to precisely the same criteria.
Benjamin Korn, chairman of the Philadelphia Religious Zionists, is former executive editor of the Philadelphia Jewish Exponent and the Miami Jewish Tribune.)
Source: http://israel-commentary.org/?p=11753
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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