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PALESTINIANS
VERSUS ISRAEL IN THE MEDIA
Why the Palestinians
Are Winning the Media War
An Interview with
David Bedein
David
Bedein has run the Jerusalem-based Israel Resource News Agency, which
provides news services for the foreign media, since 1987. He has also
worked on special assignment for BBC, CNN Radio, the Los Angeles Times,
and the weekly Israel news magazine Makor Rishon. He was interviewed by
RJ editor Aron Hirt-Manheimer.
Do you agree with those
who say that "the Palestinians have been doing a better job than the
Israelis on the public relations front"?
Yes. For the past
twenty years, the Palestinians have outmaneuvered the Israelis in
framing the conflict for the world media. The turning point came during
the 1982 Lebanon War, when the Palestinians initiated a propaganda
campaign to cast themselves as the defenders of human rights and the
Israelis as the violators of human rights. At the same time, Yasser
Arafat's brother, Dr. Fatchi Arafat, exploited his position as director
of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society to release grossly inflated
casualty figures. On June 10, 1982, for example, Dr. Arafat issued a
statement declaring that "10,000 Palestinians have died and 600,000
have become homeless in the first few days of the war"--a lie
calculated to portray the Palestinians as the victims of a genocidal
assault in Lebanon. In fact, the total population in the war zone
numbered fewer than 300,000. Yet the International Red Cross and Middle
East Action Committee of the American Friends Service Committee spread
the 10,000/600,000 figure to every media outlet in the world, and the
major American networks picked up the story. NBC's Jessica Savitch
reported, "It is now estimated that 600,000 refugees in south Lebanon
are without sufficient food or medical supplies."
Palestinian media
professionals have no qualms about deceiving the media for political
advantage. In their attempt to convince the world that the IDF
massacred hundreds of civilians in the Jenin refugee camp during
Operation Defensive Shield, they used animal carcasses to fill the air
with the stench of rotting flesh in places where reporters and UN
officials were likely to visit. The IDF caught that ploy on video, as
they did a staged funeral in which "the body" jumped out of the coffin
and ran for cover when an Israeli surveillance plane flew over the site.
Are you suggesting that
such tactics have been counterproductive?
Not at all. Such
bloopers are the exception. The Palestinians have an excellent track
record in manipulating images that appear in the world media. They
achieved an enormous propaganda windfall at the beginning of the second
intifada, when a Palestinian film crew working for a French television
network recorded the shooting of eleven-year-old Mohammed al-Dura as
his father tried in vain to shield him during a battle at a road
junction near Gaza. The video, edited to portray the IDF as heartless
child killers, fit the Palestinian story line perfectly. The Israeli
government fell into the trap, issuing an apology even before
investigating the incident. Mohammed al-Dura, the "poster boy" of the
second intifada, will go down in history as a celebrated martyr of the
Palestinian people--and yet, the Palestinian version of al-Dura's death
is a lie, an invention of Palestinian P.R. professionals. A thorough
IDF investigation, which was issued three weeks after the incident and
confirmed by a German TV crew, showed that the bullets fired at the boy
had come from the direction of Palestinian gunmen who had attacked an
Israeli guard post. But the world had "witnessed" the shooting of
al-Dura, as the media scripted it--an atrocity committed by Israeli
troops--and the damage could not be undone. It is impossible to put the
toothpaste back in the tube.
When
did these Palestinian P.R. professionals first come onto the scene?
Back in March 1984,
Ramonda Tawill, a media professional (who six years later would become
Yasser Arafat's mother-in-law), helped the PLO establish the
Palestinian Press Service (PPS) to provide assistance to visiting
journalists and conduct training seminars in media relations. The PPS
then joined forces with the Palestine Human Rights Information Center
(PHRIC) to change the image of the PLO from that of a sixties-style
liberation movement to an organization fighting to protect the victims
of Israeli human rights abuses. PHRIC seminars instructed their
"students" to steer every media interview to the same themes--Israeli
occupation, illegal settlements, human rights abuses, and the right of
the Palestinian refugees to go home. Regardless of the question, these
themes were to be repeated over and over again. I know this firsthand,
because our agency made it a policy to assign our journalist interns to
take Tawill's courses.
One of her great
"accomplishments" came in May 1985, after Israel released more than a
thousand convicted PLO terrorists in exchange for seven Israeli
soldiers. As a way of diverting media attention from their crimes,
Tawill coached these freed terrorists to stress that they were tortured
in Israel jails for "political activism" and "support of Palestinian
nationalism." I learned about this tactic from several of Tawill's
students in a media course I took in May 1986. They explained that by
monopolizing the reporters' time with stories of torture, the
journalists would invariably have to complete the interview before they
had time to ask the terrorists about the actions that had led to their
capture and imprisonment. At the time, Israeli intelligence did not
allow reporters to look at the prison files of security detainees, so
the crimes of these terrorists went virtually unreported.
Was
the PHRIC widely perceived as a credible human rights organization?
Absolutely. By mid-1989,
international human rights organizations routinely reproduced
information developed by the PHRIC, which by then had secured funding
from the Ford Foundation and had established offices in Chicago and
Washington. Addressing the media in Jerusalem in November 1989, Amnesty
International spokesman Richard Reoch acknowledged that his
organization regarded the PLO, which works with the PHRIC, as an
objective information source. "Since the PLO is not a government body,"
he said, "we feel comfortable with Amnesty using them as a source." And
a U.S. embassy spokesman told me in February 1989 that the PHRIC had
"impeccable" credentials.
How
do Palestinian P.R. professionals get their training today, and who
funds it?
The Palestinian Academic
Society for the Study of International Affairs (PASSIA) provides
courses and more than thirty how-to manuals on public relations, media
relations, fundraising, communications, lobbying, and public speaking.
PASSIA trains Palestinian academics who will be teaching abroad on how
to promote their cause on university campuses; in addition,
Palestinians in the U.S. are taught how to seek out the Arab
constituencies in each congressional district and how to lobby members
of Congress for political and financial support of the Palestinian
cause. And who picks up the tab for PASSIA? The United States Agency
for International Development (USAID), a program of the U.S. State
Department, grants PASSIA and eighteen other Palestinian media
relations firms in Jerusalem more than $1 million annually. It was only
this past March, after a U.S. House International Relations Committee
staffer discovered that USAID was providing allocations for Palestinian
media relations, that members of Congress became aware of this aid. A
surprised Congressman Eliot Engel (D-NY) looked at PASSIA's advocacy
manual and said incredulously: "Here we are in Congress paying them to
lobby us."
How
have the Israelis countered this Palestinian strategy of portraying
them as human rights violators?
The Israelis constantly
find themselves on the defensive. They can't seem to get out of the box
into which the Palestinians have put them. By framing the conflict as a
human rights issue, the Palestinians have succeeded in convincing many
journalists, on some level at least, that every act of terrorism
against Israeli civilians is not a crime, but a legitimate response to
human rights abuses.
What
is the organizational structure of the Palestinian public relations
program, and how does it differ from Israel's?
The major Palestinian
media organization, known as the Jerusalem Media and Communications
Center (JMCC), is heavily subsidized by the European Union and the Ford
Foundation. Headed by Dr. Ghassan Khatib, a close associate of Yasser
Arafat, JMCC provides the foreign media with topnotch professional
services--affordable camera crews, translators, photographers, and
transportation, as well as daily press bulletins, briefing papers, and
people to interview.
The Israeli government
provides the visiting press with bushels of bulletins, but leaves the
provision of camera crews and translation services to the private
sector. No Israeli TV crew can compete with the heavily subsidized
JMCC, which essentially has cornered the market on media services for
the foreign press. The foreign press is totally dependent on
Palestinian technical support personnel, who have a strong influence on
the narrative and images that appear in the Western media.
Do
the Palestinians have a P.R. presence in Washington, DC?
Their man in Washington
is Edward Abington, who served as U.S. consul in Jerusalem when USAID
began to finance PASSIA in the '90s and is now registered as a paid
foreign agent for the PLO in Washington. Abington coordinates
information from JMCC, PASSIA, and other Palestinian information
agencies and puts a moderate face on the Palestinian cause, which often
means damage control. For example, each time one of Arafat's militias
takes credit for a terror attack, Abington's office quickly issues a
statement to the media denying Arafat's involvement. A case in point:
on November 20, 2000, the PLO's Fatah was quoted on official PBC radio
and PBC TV as taking credit for an attack on a school bus near Cfar
Darom, where two schoolteachers were murdered and three siblings were
maimed for life. Yet CNN reported that the PLO had condemned the
attack. I called the international desk of CNN in Atlanta to inquire
about the contradictory statements. The person on the desk, a
nineteen-year-old intern, told me that she had received a call from
Abington's office in Washington, followed by a fax, denying PLO
involvement.
Abington also provides
the press and the U.S. government with "translations" of Arafat's
speeches. On May 15, 2002, Arafat delivered a speech to the Palestine
Legislative Council in which he compared the Oslo accords to the
ten-year peace treaty between Mohammed and the Jewish tribe of Qureish,
a treaty the founder of Islam tore up two years later, when his forces
had the power to slaughter the Jewish tribe. President Bush declared
that Arafat had been speaking the "right words." When our news agency
asked the U.S. embassy in Israel if the entire speech had been sent to
Bush, embassy officials responded that Bush had not yet received any of
the speech. We then called Abington's office, which told us that they
had supplied the translated speech to the president. Clearly, the text
supplied by Abington's office arrived before any official dispatch from
the ambassador's information office. The "right words" conveniently
excluded Arafat's bellicose message.
Are
Palestinian medical and relief organizations involved in the "media
war"?
Like the so-called
Palestinian human rights organizations, the Union of Palestine Medical
Relief Committees (UPMRC), run by Dr. Mustafa Al-Bargouti (brother of
jailed Fatah Tanzim leader Marwan Al-Bargouti), coordinates its
strategies with Dr. Fatchi Arafat's Palestinian Red Crescent Society in
disseminating wild reports of Israeli medicalneglect and torture of
Palestinians. There have also been numerous incidents in which false
information issued by UPMRC sources has been picked up by U.S. media.
On July 11, 2001, for example, the Associated Press reported that a
pregnant Palestinian woman was shot to death at an Israeli roadblock.
In fact, she didn't die, and the doctor who had told the AP reporter
she'd been shot and killed hadn't even seen her. He was in a different
town at the time. AP reversed itself the next day, reporting that
"Israeli soldiers did not bar a Palestinian woman in labor from passing
an Israeli checkpoint, refuting initial claims by two Palestinian
doctors." Another incident: in late May, National Public Radio aired a
parallel report of a Palestinian suicide bombing at an outdoor
restaurant near Tel Aviv that killed a toddler and her grandmother, and
the shooting of a Palestinian grandmother and child that the IDF
mistook for terrorist infiltrators. Palestinian doctors told the NPR
reporter that the Palestinian victims' bodies were burned, dismembered,
and crushed by an Israeli tank. NPR included these unsubstantiated
accusations in its coverage. When I asked the IDF spokesman about these
accusations, he laughed with disbelief that mainstream reporters would
give credibility to such outrageous inventions--but they did.
How
is the UPMRC funded?
It receives $300,000
annually from the United States for P.R. And Dr. Arafat's Palestinian
Red Crescent Society receives $215,000 a year in U.S. assistance. Both
agencies are on the list of the fifty-nine non-government Palestinian
organizations that have shared $100 million in U.S. aid since 1997.
Do
you believe the United Nations plays a role in advancing the
Palestinian P.R. agenda?
Definitely. The United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) maintains a professional media
relations department and a news service called the UNRWA television
network, both based in the Ain el-Helweh UNRWA refugee camp in Lebanon.
UNRWA cooperates with the media services of the PLO and the Palestine
Broadcasting Corporation (PBC) to provide the visiting press with
information and services. Its literature focuses largely on the plight
of the refugees who are being housed in camps until they can "return to
their homeland"--which, according to their literature, includes not
only the territories captured by Israel in 1967, but also all the areas
that Israel annexed after Israel's War of Independence in 1948.
The UN's agenda is to
present the Palestinian Arabs as victims. In Witness to History: The
Plight of the Palestinian Refugees, one of several primers distributed
by UNRWA and published by MIFTAH, the Palestinian media agency run by
well-known Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi and commissioned by
the Canadian government, the UN asserts, on page 13, that all "refugees
and their descendants have a right to compensation and repatriation to
their original homes and land...."
How
do the Palestinians and Israelis different in their methods of media
relations?
Professionally trained
and disciplined Palestinian spokespeople usually present themselves as
a ragtag bunch of amateurs. They meet Western reporters in modest
Jerusalem or Ramallah hotels or against the backdrop of refugee camps.
This tactic has been very successful in reinforcing the stereotype of
their side as the aggrieved underdog. An interview with a Palestinian
in an alleyway with burning tires and bullets flying overhead captures
the imagination of editors who place a premium on entertainment
value--the human drama unfolding.
In contrast, when
foreign correspondents meet with Israeli officials, they are often
greeted by slick government spokespeople at fancy hotels,
state-of-the-art media centers, or modern offices. Israeli spokespeople
labor under three false notions: first, that formal, professionally
packaged P.R. is persuasive; second, that lengthy explanations of the
history of the conflict will be more effective than sound bytes in
convincing the public of the rightness of their cause; and third, that
the moral correctness of their action and cause is self-evident to any
rational, fair-minded human being. Along these lines, Israel's Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres once said: "Good policies are good P.R.; they
speak for themselves." Unfortunately, Peres was wrong. A lie can be
more powerful than the truth, if you market your lie well enough for
people to believe it.
Another problem with
Israeli P.R. is that it is woefully uncoordinated and sometimes
contradictory. News originates from at least four different
offices--the IDF, the Foreign Ministry, the Israeli Prime Minister's
Office, and the Defense Ministry--and at times each conveys a different
message. On October 28, 2001, for example, Israel Foreign Minister
Shimon Peres gave numerous interviews to Israeli and foreign news
bureaus stating that Arafat was not responsible for the current wave of
terror, and produced as proof the fact that the PA had recently
arrested several Hamas terrorists. Yet on that same day, IDF
intelligence met with more than a hundred journalists to present
evidence linking Arafat and his Fatah organization to Hamas terror
activity. Explaining how Hamas terror groups train and operate in the
full view of the Palestinian Authority security services, an Israeli
military spokesman furnished the media with documentation that the
Hamas wing operates as an official, integral part of Arafat's
Palestinian Authority security forces in Gaza; he also pointed out that
two wanted Hamas terrorists working for the Palestinian security
services had murdered four women and wounded fifty civilians at the
Hadera bus station that very morning.
In contrast to the
seemingly uncoordinated messages coming from Israel, spokespeople of
the autocratic Palestinian Authority adhere to a party line with
practiced discipline, simply reciting the standard litany of complaints
about their "oppression," the "occupation," "human rights abuses,"
"racism," etc.
Why
do you think the Israel government has had such difficulty in recent
years getting its point of view across to the Western media?
I think Israel made a
major mistake in 1986, when Israel Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and
his deputy Dr. Yossi Beilin revised the way in which the government
would relate to the PLO. They asked the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to
cease distribution of the PLO covenant, which has never officially
changed the provision calling for the destruction of the State of
Israel. They also asked that the ministry stop defining the PLO as an
enemy. In countless briefings that the ministry held in the late 1980s,
both Peres and Beilin explained that the time had come to put the fight
with the PLO in the past. The 1986 Peres/Beilin policy change paved the
way two years later for the U.S. government to recognize the PLO.
The Israeli government
also gave the Palestinians a free ride from 1993- 2000, during the
seven-year Oslo process, by downplaying terrorist attacks and the
two-faced message of the Palestinian leadership, which presented a
message of peace in English and a message of war in Arabic. To keep the
Oslo process from collapsing, both Israeli and U.S. leaders decided in
1993 to ignore the PA's daily radio and TV calls for a renewed war
against Israel. Indeed, in 1995, when the Institute for Peace Education
Ltd., which our agency helped to facilitate, produced videos of
Arafat's speeches promoting jihad (holy war), then Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres asked
Israel TV not to air any of Arafat's speeches in Arabic. In September
1995, Peres went so far as to ask Representative Ben Gilman, the
chairman of the U.S. House International Relations Committee, not to
hold a special hearing in which these videos of Arafat's speeches were
to be screened. The House committee ignored the request.
The "don't tell" policy
continued during the Netanyahu administration from 1996 to 1999. While
Netanyahu's office churned out weekly reports on PA incitement for
Likud Party members, a senior official of the Netanyahu administration
confirmed to me that the reports were deliberately withheld from the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Israeli media. In October 1998,
during my coverage of the Wye conference, I asked the Israeli embassy
why they did not distribute this material. They answered, "The Israeli
government downplays the reality of Arafat's PA in order to not
alienate the U.S. government." The Barak government, which assumed
power in May 1999, went so far as to quietly eliminate the clause in
the Oslo accords that required the PA to cease incitement against
Israel.
How
do the Palestinians and Israelis compare in their treatment of foreign
journalists?
The Israeli army often
declares areas to be off limits to the media, which is like flashing a
red flag before a bull. The first thing a reporter assumes is that
Israel is trying to hide something. One foreign reporter, who wishes to
remain anonymous, told me that Israel had made a "horrible mistake"
when "the IDF closed the whole West Bank to reporters during Operation
Defensive Shield and left the area wide open to wild rumors planted
skillfully by Palestinian spokesmen. We had no way to check out the
rumors, and so many of us had to report it in a he-said, she-said
format. And, of course, when TV networks put Palestinian spokesmen on
live to make their charges, then it's out there and we have to deal
with it."
In contrast, the PA
rarely engages in confrontation with the foreign press. A rare
exception occurred in October 2002 when two IDF soldiers were lynched
in the Ramallah police station. The gruesome scene was captured by an
Italian TV crew and sent abroad without going through PA censors. The
PA demanded an apology and a promise never to do it again--or lose
permission to cover Palestinian territory. The Italians said mea culpa
and promised never again to embarrass their hosts. We asked our staffer
to fly to Rome to interview this Italian crew, who told us, on the
record, how they had been browbeaten by PA security officials into
providing a letter of apology.
What
advice would you give the Israeli government to improve its image in
the Western media?
Instead of barring
reporters from "closed military places," the IDF and the Israeli
government should facilitate press coverage of every event, no matter
how delicate or dangerous. Preventing journalists from doing their
jobs, in some rare cases even shooting in their direction, does little
to win friends in the media.
I think the best way for
Israel to improve its public relations is to improve its human
relations. On the positive side, Israel has finally begun to provide
correspondents with more concise and useful background information,
such as kits, CD roms, and profiles of Israel's enemies. But rather
than providing reporters with the means to get to the scene of an
attack, Israel still prefers to keep them away. In short, Israel needs
to treat journalists with less suspicion and more respect.
Do
you believe that many Western journalists harbor an anti-Israel bias,
or are there other factors which work in favor of the Palestinian point
of view?
I agree with the
assessment of Dr. Mike Cohen, a Jerusalem-based strategic
communications analyst and IDF reserve officer, who says that most
foreign journalists are not inherently anti-Israel, antisemitic, or
pro-Palestinian. They are, however, easily swayed by Palestinian
manipulation, which relies on the reporters' and editors' lack of
background knowledge, combined with the lack of time and desire to take
a deep look at the facts. Another factor is the fear of losing access
to Palestinian sources and logistical support if their stories are
perceived as hostile. Moreover, non-Palestinian reporters are
deliberately impeded and intimidated when trying to cover news that may
embarrass the PA. I know of several foreign journalists who had
reported incidents of Palestinian incitement and were thereafter barred
from PA briefings.
Are
there dissenting Palestinian voices in the Palestinian media?
One rarely hears a
dissenting voice among the Palestinians because anyone who publicly
criticizes the PA can be imprisoned or even executed. The foreign media
is told, and dutifully reports, that the person in question was a
"collaborator." A case in point: in early March 2002, BBC reported the
execution of two Palestinians who had been accused by the PA of
collaboration. When the BBC crew met with the families of the two
victims, they discovered that both had a history of opposition to the
PA and that both had openly criticized Arafat. The BBC correspondent
told me that these were dissidents, not collaborators, but BBC World
Service chose not to report the story.
In
the final analysis, how important is the P.R. factor in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict?
Absolutely crucial. So
long as Western journalists project an image of the PA as a defender of
human rights and Israel as a brutal occupier, development funds from
the United States and the European Union will continue to flow into the
PA's coffers with little public protest about some of that money being
used to bankroll the intifada, including suicide bombers, as documents
seized from Arafat's office during Operation Defensive Shield prove. So
long as Palestinian P.R. professionals continue to dictate the story
line to the media, Israelis will continue to be portrayed as the
villains and the Palestinians the victims. It's time to change the
script.
Courtesy Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, Reform Judaism Online (pdf format)
See also Media Coverage Of Israel And The Israeli Palestinian Conflict,
Wikiverse.
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