Thursday, 4 March 2010


 

Isi
Leibler


March 3, 2010

 
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Those bleeding-heart journalists

by Isi Leibler
March 3, 2010
http://wordfromjerusalem.com/?p=2101

 

In recent weeks, our media has indulged 

its penchant for masochism, depicting 

every incident in the most 

self-deprecating manner. 

This is exemplified in  a column 

by Bradley Burston on the current homepage 

of the English edition 

of Haaretz. Titled "I envy the people who 

hate Israel," he relates to real and imaginary blunders committed by our political 

leaders, and concludes with the breathtaking comment that "my father did not flee the 

Soviet Union just so that his son could one day have the chance to live in a place just like

 it."

I would submit that the publication of such wacky remarks in a purportedly serious 

Israeli paper highlights the need for soul searching by our bleeding-heart editors.

Burston's principal example of malfeasance was "our apparent violation of the 

basic conventions of all civilized states in the Dubai murder." It is unlikely that the true

 facts concerning the assassination of the vicious Hamas killer Mahmoud al-Mabhouh 

will ever be revealed. The information disclosed by the Dubai police smacks 

of disinformation. It sounds somewhat bizarre for the Mossad to risk 27 agents and then

 send some of them on to Iran.

Initially, Israeli media reports of the assassination were exuberant. However, when 

it transpired that foreign passports belonging to Israeli dual nationals had been used, 

the euphoria evaporated and commentators who had portrayed Mossad chief Meir Dagan 

as "superman" began calling for his head.

Ideally, intelligence agencies should be invisible. The use of forged passports from 

friendly countries is unacceptable, but has been common practice by all Western 

intelligence agencies. Indeed, one is entitled to ask why the Dubai authorities failed to 

notice false passports employed by Mabhouh. We might also ask whether there would 

have been such a brouhaha over passports had it been one of Osama bin Laden's l

ieutenants who was killed.

Our media critics discounted the fact that our intelligence agencies may have succeeded 

in eliminating a murderer whose sole occupation was to bring death and destruction upon 

us. Furthermore, the goal was achieved with no civilian casualties and all 

participants returned safely. So let's stop beating ourselves up and be thankful that we are 

rid of a cruel and evil fiend.

ANOTHER ISSUE covered in a distorted manner was the alleged mishandling of J Street 

and visiting US congressmen. After the incident with the Turkish ambassador, many of 

us viewed Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon as somewhat of a fallen star. But in 

this matter, he behaved impeccably, and it was those in the media who permitted 

themselves to be manipulated by J Street who should be condemned.

Five democratic congressmen visited Israel as part of a delegation organized by Churches 

for Middle East Peace - a group notorious for its anti-Israel agenda. J Street coordinated 

the visit, and the Foreign Ministry undertook to arrange meetings. However, it declined 

to invite representatives of J Street, an organization renowned for lobbying the 

Obama administration against the government. There was no boycott of the US 

congressmen, merely a decision by the Foreign Ministry to exclude J Street and Churches 

for Middle East Peace from those meetings.

I recollect numerous occasions when I accompanied high-level Australian and 

international legislators to Israel. Even though, unlike J Street, I felt obliged as a 

Diaspora leader to support the policies of the government, I was never offended when 

I was not invited to partake in direct meetings between the government and 

visiting lawmakers.

Yet, true to form, J Street saw this as an opportunity to bash the government, and held a

 press conference attended by the congressmen, falsely condemning the Foreign Ministry 

"for refusing to allow meetings with congressmen." It is noteworthy that of the

 five congressmen depicted by J Street as "staunch friends of Israel," Mary Joy Gilroy was 

the only one who voted in favor of a House resolution (overwhelmingly passed) 

condemning the Goldstone Report and reaffirming Israel's right to self-defense. 

That says something about J Street's definition of "pro-Israel."

Despite media accusations that Ayalon indulged in McCarthyism and damaged the 

reputation of Israel, the Foreign Ministry behaved entirely appropriately, and was justified 

in condemning J Street for "putting self-aggrandizement ahead of the interests of the State

 of Israel."

YET ANOTHER example of media self deprecation was its attack on the decision by 

the government to include the Cave of the Patriarchs, Rachel's Tomb and the walls 

of Jerusalem's Old City in a list of national heritage sites marked for restoration 

and preservation. The first condemnation, not surprisingly from the UN, was on the 

grounds that the sites are over the Green Line and have "historical and religious 

significance not only to Judaism but also to Islam and to Christianity." This is absurd. 

It is only since these sites have been under Israeli jurisdiction that they have been 

accessible to all faiths. The interests of Christians and Muslims are surely not served if 

these locations are permitted to deteriorate.

Of course, the UN was merely preempting the predictable response of the Palestinians 

who, true to form, expressed outrage that Israel could even view the walls of Jerusalem 

as a national heritage site. Hamas called for a third intifada. Palestinian Authority 

President Mahmoud Abbas threatened a religious war.

Unfortunately, the US administration, which should appreciate the symbolic connection of 

the Jewish people to these sites and was aware that the decision does not affect the 

political status quo of the areas in which the sites are located, chose to issue 

statements echoing the sentiments expressed by the UN.

This US response must be viewed against the backdrop of the negative Israeli media 

coverage of this issue, which has had a major influence in molding the perception of 

the international community.

However, rather than condemning the Palestinian threats and focusing on the 

irrevocable connection of the Jewish people to these sites, much of the media criticized 

the government. Such self-defeating attitudes, deliberately downplaying our moral and 

legal rights to avoid offending the Palestinians, merely embolden extremists. It is surely

 time to cease apologizing for our national heritage. If we are to be precluded from 

identifying Jerusalem, the Cave of the Patriarchs or Rachel's Tomb (three of the 

most important symbols of Judaism) as sites of national heritage, we undermine the

 entire concept of Jewish nationhood.

While we condemn Europe for caving in to Islamic fundamentalists, we cannot afford to 

make the same mistake in Israel, where the stakes are so much higher.

It is regrettable that during these troubled times many of our journalists 

emphasize the negative, using every possible opportunity to demean and deride

 the positive aspects of our nation. 

It is surely time to urge them to at least begin displaying a modicum of 

respect for our achievements.

ileibler@netvision.net.il

This column was originally published in the Jerusalem Post