November 29, 2012

Falling for Hamas’s media manipulation

By Michael Oren, WaPo

What makes better headlines? Is it numbing figures such as the 8,000 Palestinian rockets fired at Israel since it unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and the 42.5?percent of Israeli children living near the Gaza border who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder? Or is it high-resolution images of bombed-out buildings in Gaza and emotional stories of bereaved Palestinians? The last, obviously, as demonstrated by much of the media coverage of Israel’s recent operation against Hamas. But that answer raises a more fundamental question: Which stories best serve the terrorists’ interest?

Hamas has a military strategy to paralyze southern Israel with short- and middle-range rockets while launching Iranian-made missiles at Tel Aviv. With our precision air force, top-notch intelligence and committed citizens army, we can defend ourselves against these dangers. We have invested billions of dollars in bomb shelters and early-warning systems and, together with generous U.S. aid, have developed history’s most advanced, multi-layered anti-missile batteries. For all of its bluster, Hamas does not threaten Israel’s existence.

In Gaza, attempted warning failed to protect civilians:?The Israeli Defense Forces often calls the militants whose homes it intends to strike minutes before doing so, a way of minimizing the deaths of any women and children who might be inside. But the phone calls are no guarantee that innocents will be spared.

But Hamas also has a media strategy. Its purpose is to portray Israel’s unparalleled efforts to minimize civilian casualties in Gaza as indiscriminate firing at women and children, to pervert Israel’s rightful acts of self-defense into war crimes. Its goals are to isolate Israel internationally, to tie its hands from striking back at those trying to kill our citizens and to delegitimize the Jewish State. Hamas knows that it cannot destroy us militarily but believes that it might do so through the media.

One reason is the enlarged images of destruction and civilian casualties in Gaza that dominated the front pages of U.S. publications. During this operation, The Post published multiple front-page photographs of Palestinian suffering. The New York Times even juxtaposed a photograph of the funeral of Hamas commander Ahmed Jabari, who was responsible for the slaughter of dozens of innocent Israelis, with that of a pregnant Israeli mother murdered by Hamas. Other photos, supplied by the terrorists and picked up by the press, identified children killed by Syrian forces or even by Hamas itself as victims of Israeli strikes.

In reporting Palestinian deaths, media routinely failed to note that roughly half were terrorists and that such a ratio is exceedingly low by modern military standards — much lower, for example, than the NATO campaign in the Balkans. Media also emphasize the disparity between the number of Palestinian and Israeli deaths, as though Israel should be penalized for investing billions of dollars in civil-defense and early-warning systems and Hamas exonerated for investing in bombs rather than bomb shelters. As in Israel’s last campaign against Hamas in 2008-09, the word “disproportionality” has been frequently used to characterize Israeli military strikes. In fact, during Operation Pillar of Defense this year, Hamas fired more than 1,500 missiles at Israel and the Israeli Air Force responded with 1,500 sorties.

The imbalance is also of language. “Hamas health officials said 45 had been killed and 385 wounded,” the Times’ front page reported. “Three Israeli civilians have died and 63 have been injured.” The subtext is clear: Israel targets Palestinians, and Israelis merely die.

The media perpetuated Hamas propaganda that traced the fighting to Jabari’s elimination and described Gaza as the most densely populated area on earth. Widely forgotten were the 130 rockets fired at Israel in the weeks before Jabari’s demise. For the record, Tel Aviv’s population is twice as dense as Gaza’s.

In Gaza, attempted warning failed to protect civilians:?The Israeli Defense Forces often calls the militants whose homes it intends to strike minutes before doing so, a way of minimizing the deaths of any women and children who might be inside. But the phone calls are no guarantee that innocents will be spared.

Hamas is a flagrantly anti-democratic, anti-Semitic, anti-Christian, anti-feminist and anti-gay movement dedicated to genocide. The United States, Canada and the European Union all consider it a terrorist organization. Hamas strives to kill the maximum number of Israeli civilians while using its own population as a human shield — under international law, a double war crime. Why, then, would the same free press that Hamas silences help advance its strategy?

Media naturally gravitate toward dramatic and highly visual stories. Reports of 5.5?million Israelis gathered nightly in bomb shelters scarcely compete with the Palestinian father interviewed after losing his son. Both are, of course, newsworthy, but the first tells a more complete story while the second stirs emotions.

This is precisely what Hamas wants. It seeks to instill a visceral disgust for any Israeli act of self-defense, even one taken after years of unprovoked aggression.

Hamas strives to replace the tens of thousands of phone calls and text messages Israel sent to Palestinian civilians, warning them to leave combat zones, with lurid images of Palestinian suffering. If Hamas cannot win the war, it wants to win the story of the war.

Veteran journalist Marvin Kalb, writing for Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government on the terrorists’ successful media strategy against Israel, warned that “the trajectory of the media, from objective observer to fiery advocate,” had become “a weapon of modern warfare.” Kalb quotes a U.S. military expert who describes how perception has replaced reality on the battlefield and that the terrorists know it.

Israel will take all legitimate steps necessary to defend our citizens. We know that, despite our most painstaking efforts, tragic stories can emerge — stories that the enemy sensationalizes.

Like Americans, we cherish a free press, but unlike the terrorists, we are not looking for headlines. Our hope is that media resist the temptation to give them what they want.

Posted by Ted Belman @ 9:36 pm | 6 Comments »

6 Responses to Falling for Hamas’s media manipulation

  1. Yidvocate says:

    Our hope is that media resist the temptation to give them what they want.

    Time to stop hoping already. No matter what Israel does the international media will condemn it.

    So as the song goes – “if you can’t please everyone, please yourself”.

    Time to annex J&S once and for all and to send our implacable Arab enemy to their Arab state – Jordan.

    And as the song goes – “bomb, bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran”

    Mr. nice guy hasn’t worked out so well for the Jewish state. A new strategy is highly in order.

  2. Bernard Ross says:

    But Hamas also has a media strategy.

    And Israel does not! Just as PA has a legal strategy and Israel does not. Perhaps a better strategy than trying to save enemy civilians and constantly apologizing and appearing guilty: being defensive; perhaps it would be better to declare loudly to the media and at the UN that any entity who allows attacks from their territory against Israeli civilians will be mercilessly attacked and that anyone who does not wish this outcome should cease to attack Israel. That there will be no apologies or excuses for enemy civilian deaths. Only one solution to civilian deaths would have to be considered: don’t attack! But then the reactive Israeli leadership is always forced to play the game by the enemy’s rules by default. A Govt that never appears to have a plan “we’ll wait and see what happens”; hows that working out? Oren, the author, is part of this debacle of constant apology and reacting, part of the govt that has no plans. Perhaps the right should come up with plans in phases so that they can get support for a first step of annexing C as Israel appears to completely ignore annexation of YS as legally obtainable(even though internationally legally guaranteed). The way things are going it doesn’t look hopeful.

  3. Arthur says:

    @ Bernard Ross: I agree with your comment. Israel is always on the defensive, forgetting that a strong offense is your best defense. Succinctly put, Israel must take the initiative to present its case to the world community in a forceful manner. Whether they buy it or not, action is required and required now!

  4. steven l says:

    Terrorists putting IL in the dock is great news for the Left, the Muslim world & mass media.
    The jealousy towards the Jews need no more incentive!
    As Syria example demonstrates, Muslim crimes against humanity is meaningless in the eyes of the Muslims since they are by definition material for death.
    They care less about the human rights charter; but the West cares a lot and does not miss one opportunity to attack IL or to fabricate accusations against IL.
    This is part of the Christian and post-Christian (seculars)war against the Jews.
    The “free” press is bound by sensationalization and its perverted ideology. It has joined Islam, the Qur’an, the Sharia etc.It is willing to self-destroy as long as it brings down the Jews too.

  5. William Papke says:

    The media is not manipulated. It is a willing conspirator in the propaganda campaign.

  6. Shmuel HaLevi says:

    Lack of Jewish leadership and complete ignorace on how to act in WAR.
    Unless if the Jewish peoplw as whole changes gears and diskette, the furuto not remote at all is going to be tarrible.
    Please do not name drop isolated and never completed so called wars. Nor tell us how “they did no let us win”… I am sick an tired of those excuses.
    We have very little time to truly removed the unJewish leadership.
    a new system of government and freely elected now leaders, NEW and not one general, colonel, “ex” this or that, NEW.
    Unless we do that we have no future left.