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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: maceng2 who wrote (104075)7/4/2003 6:28:13 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Good column on BBC coverage from the Jerusalem Post:

Anti-Semitism in three steps, By Bret Stephens

Dear Sir,
I would like to protest against your use of the pronoun "we" in reference to the coalition forces fighting to liberate Iraq....

Zionists are not part of the "we" of the freedom-loving English-speaking world. They are a curse on it, who bribe and morally blackmail our politicians and media. The vicarious glee at the defeat of the Arabs in The Jerusalem Post reads like medieval bigotry.

Please move into the twenty-first century, and start advocating democracy and self determination for all. It behooves Israel, from its position of strength, to magnanimously offer a generous peace, as the Americans wisely did to the Axis in 1945....

I am a principled conservative who actually believes justice and democracy should be extended at every opportunity. George W. Bush is not, and nor it seems are you. I don't like the Palestinians, but I am dispassionate enough to realise that their misconduct, which is driven by desperation, does not deprive them of their inalienable rights. Please stop to think whether aggression without justice will ever provide you with security. I pity the Israelis who will continue to be killed for as long as your government refuses to be just.

With kind regards

Yours sincerely,
[SIGNED]
London, England


I love the "kind regards." It is correct, earnest, blithe. Most of the anti-Semites who write me aren't sticklers for good form: "F-- you! Jewboy" is more typical. Then again, my Tory correspondent plainly doesn't think of himself as an anti-Semite. He is pro-self determination, pro-democracy, pro-justice, pro-freedom. He despises bigotry and aggression. If this makes him an anti-Zionist, it is because Zionism is bigoted and aggressive. How could he be an anti-Semite?
Here's how: By watching, on a semi-regular basis, the BBC.

EARLIER THIS week, the government of Israel decided that it would refuse BBC interviews, impose visa restrictions, refuse practical assistance and otherwise make life difficult for BBC personnel stationed in Israel.

The immediate cause of this decision was the airing of "Israel's Secret Weapon" on BBC Correspondent, an hour-long segment on BBC TV World News. Hosted by journalist Olenka Frenkiel, the show purports to be an expose both of Israel's non-conventional capabilities and of its treatment of Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli technician who laid bare those capabilities to the Sunday Times in 1986 and has been in jail ever since.

Sinister-sounding Klezmer music sets the tone of the program. Frenkiel describes Vanunu as a "nuclear whistleblower" who has been "buried alive" in a tiny prison cell. She quizzes Shimon Peres over Israel's policy of nuclear ambiguity: "Isn't it just a euphemism for deception?" she asks. She travels to Dimona, site of Israel's nuclear reactor, and trains her camera through a chain link fence: "Israel," she says, "is an inspection-free zone." She rehearses the history of Dimona's construction: American inspectors were "hoodwinked" in the early '60s into believing the reactor was for power-generation purposes only. She rails against the unwillingness of Israelis involved in the program to discuss it openly: "If this was the Soviet Union or Iraq or North Korea I would understand why people are so scared to talk. But this is Israel, it's supposed to be a democracy."

Much of what Frenkiel reports is old news. She rehearses the story of Vanunu's abduction in Rome by the Mossad - complete with a staged "re-enactment" involving blurred images and syringes - and of his subsequent secret trial and imprisonment. She investigates claims that the Dimona reactor has leaked radiation, in part by secretly filming or recording the voices of her interview subjects without their consent.

Every now and then Frenkiel commits an error of fact. She states that Israel has nuclear submarines. In fact, it has three diesel-powered subs that, like most weapons' platforms, are theoretically capable of launching nuclear cruise missiles. She tells us that Ariel Sharon was held "personally responsible" by the Kahan Commission for the Sabra and Shatilla massacres. Actually, the commission found that "no Israeli was directly responsible for the events which occurred in the camps." She also takes at face value Palestinian claims that Israel used unknown and presumably forbidden gas agents against Palestinian civilians.

Still, none of this would matter very much were it not for Frenkiel's larger purpose: To paint Israel as the Middle East's real rogue regime, and Ariel Sharon as a Jewish Saddam Hussein.
"There is a cry going up which is talking about a double standard," she says. "The world has to check Iraq's nuclear installations but not Israel's." She captures Israeli nuclear-disarmament activists in conversation: Israel, says one, "is the number-one privileged state on earth"; "Counter to the argument that the whole world is against us, it is the exact opposite," says another.

THIS IS not the first time the BBC has produced this kind of documentary: The Accused, which made its own indictment of Ariel Sharon for war crimes by combining half-truths, innuendo, one-sided testimonies and manipulated footage, aired on BBC Panorama in June 2001. But that was about one man only; "Israel's Secret Weapon" points a finger at nearly an entire country.

"How can you compare it?" an exasperated Shimon Peres replies to Frenkiel's suggestion that Israel's nuclear designs are as suspect as Iraq's. "Iraq is a dictatorship. Saddam Hussein is a killer. He killed a hundred thousand Kurds with gas bombs. How can you compare that at all?"

Frenkiel rejoins: "But some in Israel do. The current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon directed the invasion of Lebanon in 1982. Thousands of innocent civilians were killed."

Notice Frenkiel's method. "But some in Israel do" - a statement that is true in the sense that, as in any free society, you can always find someone willing to make the most lurid comparisons. The line has the added benefit of citing unnamed Israelis to supply an anti-Israel slant. "The current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon directed the invasion of Lebanon in 1982" is another true statement, albeit one shorn of all context to explain the invasion. As for "Thousands of innocent civilians were killed," this too is true, though Frenkiel might have added that the bloodletting was mainly at the hands of warring Christian, Muslim, Syrian and Palestinian factions.

In other contexts, this would be known as checkout-line journalism. Frenkiel makes three statements that in the narrowest sense are true and puts them in the service of one terrific lie. It's a tactic that's been honed to perfection by outfits like National Enquirer. With the Enquirer, however, its targets are usually Hollywood celebs, and the innuendo can be shrugged off as so much tabloid trash. With the BBC, the target is the Jewish state, and the charges come with the imprimatur of one of world's most venerable news-gathering organizations. No wonder my London pen pal believes it and forms his views accordingly. No wonder he thinks Zionism is a "curse."

INDEED, IT is tempting to give him a pass. And perhaps the same goes for Oxford University pathology professor Andrew Wilkie, who late last month turned down an Israeli student's application to work in his lab on grounds of nationality. (Wilkie has since apologized following a university investigation.) One might say that since he is opposed only to Israeli government policy, not to Jewishness per se, he should be acquitted of charges of anti-Semitism. But this is true only if one also assumes that he is otherwise an imbecile.

Imagine that all Wilkie knew about Israel is what was shown in Frenkiel's documentary. However shocking Frenkiel made Vanunu's prison conditions seem, Wilkie would still have to ask why this "traitor to Judaism" was not instantly put to death and will, in fact, soon be released from prison. He would have to ask why Frenkiel relies openly on Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman for technical information, or on Israeli doves for some of the choicest criticisms of Israeli policy, or on Vanunu attorney Avigdor Feldman for a critique of Israel's legal procedures. He would have to acknowledge that every Western government, not just Israel's, has state secrets and harshly punishes those who betray them. He would have enough of a grasp of Middle East history to acknowledge that Israel's security concerns aren't completely baseless.

In other words, Frenkiel's documentary itself gives the lie to her idea that Israel is a police state. Imbeciles, as I said above, might be forgiven for not seeing this. But not this Oxford professor, who seems to be animated by a deeper prejudice. Or has Wilkie turned down Ph.D. candidates from China, whose repressive policies with respect to Tibet he must also surely disapprove of? I doubt it. Only the policies of the government of Israel inspire his ire against its citizens.

If this isn't anti-Semitism, quite, it is remarkably well aimed at a great many of the world's Jews. The same goes for the BBC. By sponsoring documentaries such as Frenkiel's, and through its tendentious coverage of Israel, the BBC today is doing more than championing the cause of the Palestinians. It is inciting against Israelis. When the next Jew gets beaten on London's streets, I, for one, will know whom to blame.
jpost.com



To: maceng2 who wrote (104075)7/4/2003 10:41:57 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Respond to of 281500
 
Alistair Cooke supported the war on Iraq, more or less, and doesn't support this chorus of "you lied about WMDs!", but he meanders all over the place and is strangely ambivalent in each case. Not usual for him.



To: maceng2 who wrote (104075)7/6/2003 1:18:17 AM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Tony Blair ups the stakes in war between his administration and the BBC. Meanwhile, Greg Dyke seems ready to go the wall for his story,

A senior BBC official said: "Greg will tell the governors in no uncertain terms that if there is any attempt to retreat from the story or to apologise for what has been said it will be the end of BBC News. It's do or die.

This should prove interesting. Now both the Conservatives and New Labour hate him! Say, doesn't the government pay his salary?

______________________________________________________

Blair: BBC must pay for its attack on my integrity
By Colin Brown and Chris Hastings
(Filed: 06/07/2003)

Tony Blair has demanded that the BBC retract its claim that Downing Street "sexed up" material provided by the intelligence services for a dossier presented to Parliament on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction in an effort to persuade public opinion to support the war. He said the charge was "as serious an attack on my integrity as there could possibly be".

The Prime Minister dramatically entered the fray last night just as the battle between the corporation and the Government was coming to a head, with the publication tomorrow of a Commons report into claims that Downing Street exaggerated the threat posed by Saddam Hussein.

In a sign that Number 10 is confident of being cleared, Mr Blair appeared to stake his reputation on the issue in a newspaper interview. "The idea that I or anyone else in my position frankly would start altering intelligence evidence or saying to the intelligence services, 'I am going to insert this', is absurd," he told The Observer. "There couldn't be a more serious charge: that I ordered our troops into conflict on the basis of intelligence evidence that I falsified. You could not make a more serious charge against a Prime Minister. The charge happens to be wrong. I think they [the BBC] should accept it."

This morning Greg Dyke, the director-general of the BBC, was preparing to take an equally defiant tone, telling the corporation's governors that they cannot afford to back down in what has become a "do or die" battle.

Mr Dyke will tell an emergency meeting of the governors, who are meant to be entirely independent, that they must stand behind the original news story, broadcast in May, even if the MPs now investigating the allegations judge that it was incorrect.

The Telegraph understands that he will give the 11 governors new information that he insists substantiates the original claims made by Andrew Gilligan, the defence correspondent on Radio 4's Today programme. Mr Dyke will also provide them with copies of Gilligan's broadcast and the open letter sent to Alastair Campbell, Tony Blair's communications director, in an effort to prove that Mr Campbell's complaints bear no relation to the original news item.

The director-general will then urge the governors to issue a statement unambiguously endorsing the BBC's story tomorrow - the day that the Commons foreign affairs select committee publishes its findings into the allegations.

The report by the Labour-dominated committee is widely expected to clear Mr Campbell of the central allegation that he "doctored" the dossier to highlight a warning that Saddam Hussein could deploy chemical or biological weapons within 45 minutes.

The BBC, however, is hoping that some members of the committee may be publicly critical of Mr Campbell, or even refuse to sign up to the final conclusions. One BBC executive claimed yesterday that committee members were still split on the report's findings. The conclusion that there was no evidence to suggest Mr Campbell had altered the dossier contrary to the wishes of the intelligence services was passed only with the casting vote of the chairman.

A senior BBC official said: "Greg will tell the governors in no uncertain terms that if there is any attempt to retreat from the story or to apologise for what has been said it will be the end of BBC News. It's do or die.

"Greg will tell them it's not just about standing by Andrew Gilligan. It's about standing by the original source who is both well placed and well informed. He will also point out that Mr Campbell's complaints are about issues which were not even included in the original broadcast."

The Telegraph understands that Mr Dyke's warning will be delivered with the blessing of Mr Davies, who is a close friend of Gordon Brown, the Chancellor. It is believed that the chairman has already briefed his fellow governors and warned them of the need to stand firm.

The BBC governors include Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, a former diplomat and deputy secretary of the Cabinet Office who has already expressed publicly her concern at the use of intelligence information by the Government during the war. Other governors include Baroness Hogg, the head of John Major's policy unit between 1990 and 1995, and Sir Robert Smith, the vice-chairman of Deutsche Asset Management.

One governor told The Telegraph last night that it was likely that they would back Gilligan: "I think that Alastair Campbell has been involved in a highly successful diversionary tactic. It seems pretty clear to me that the September document [the first Iraq dossier] was a pretty thin affair and was scraped together from a number of sources."

Friends of Richard Sambrook, the head of BBC News, say that he will apologise for the handling of the story only if the Commons report provides an outright condemnation of the story.
telegraph.co.uk