By RICHARD LANDES, AUGEAN STABLES
One of the major weaknesses of Westerners in the current cognitive war with Islamic imperialism is a seemingly boundless commitment to being fooled. It’s almost as if, on principle, we need to accept lies from the other side as true, lest we be accused of being racist. There are two aspects to this, one, an honor-shame reflex that worries primarily about what others think of us (i.e., we’re not racist, but we’re worried others will think us so), and another, that spending our time suspecting others of deception strikes many of us (justifiably) as a huge waste of time. First let me go over some key examples here, and then come back to these two points.
Exhibit A: Andrea Koppel and the “Jenin Massacre.” During the period that the Israeli army conducted Operation Defensive Shield, reports came from Palestinian sources, especially from Saeb Erakat, accusing Israel of massacring over 500 innocent civilians in “execution-style” murders and burying them in mass graves. It turns out that, not only were they exaggerated, they were invented out of whole cloth. In fact, Israel sacrificed 21 soldiers in an operation that went from door to door in order to avoid civilian casualties and, in the end, of the 56 Palestinian casualties, the great majority were combatants. In other words, the situation was precisely the opposite of what the Palestinians claimed and the press reported an inversion of reality. In the middle of these events and reports, David Bloomberg reported witnessing the following exchange in Tel Aviv between Andrea Koppel, daughter of Ted, and reporter for CNN, and Adam Ruskin, an American-born Israeli:
While we [Bloomberg and Koppel] were chatting, an American-born Israeli joined us to tell Andrea about his perception of media distortion in that the press that stresses moral equivalence between Israeli civilian deaths caused by Palestinian terror and Palestinian civilian deaths caused by Israeli military actions. He argued that Israel has tried to engage in a peace process since Camp David and has been double-crossed over and over by the Palestinian Authority. Further, he argued the civilian deaths caused by Palestinians are intentional, whereas the deaths caused by Israel are mostly the tragic, unintentional results caused by Israel trying to defend itself.
Andrea replied, “So when Israeli soldiers slaughter civilians in Jenin, that is not equivalent?”
Israeli: “What are your sources? Were you in Jenin? How exactly do you know there was a slaughter?”
Andrea: “I just spoke with my colleagues who were there, and they told me of the slaughter.”
Israeli: “Did they actually see the shooting, the bodies?”
Andrea: “Palestinians told us about the slaughter.”
Israeli: “And you believe them without evidence. Could they possibly be lying and distorting facts.”
Andrea: “Oh, so now they are all just lying??” [sic]
The Israeli became emotional in describing that his children are afraid, his friends have been murdered, and if this goes on, “We could lose our lives or we could lose our country.”
Andrea, “Yes, you will lose your country.”
At this point, I interrupted the two of them and asked Andrea Koppel, “Did I just hear you correctly– that you believe the current crisis will lead to the destruction of the State of Israel?”
Andrea: “Yes, I believe we are now seeing the beginning of the end of Israel.”
Koppel later denied this report, which led to reponses by both Bloomberg and Ruskin. I think the latter two are telling the accurate story for a number of reasons, including the nature of their recollections. I think, however, that it illustrates the huge gap between the kind of DurahJournalism that was already dominant among the media stationed in Israel, and the residual ethical commitments of the mainstream news media to proper journalistic procedure.
In an unguarded moment, Koppel spoke like so many of her colleagues on the scene, not merely adopting Palestinian lethal narratives uncritically, but adopting the Palestinian “moral” narrative aimed at the destruction of the state of Israel. Once reported to her superiors in the USA, not yet overcome by DurahJournalism, she quickly backtracked, trying to deny what she had said, forcing Bloomberg to reveal the name of his other protagonist for corroboration.
What interests me most in this exchange is the remark with which Koppel replied to the possibility Ruskin raised about whether her Palestinian sources might be lying: ”Oh, so now they are all just lying??” This reply exemplifies the politically-correct attitude that rejects accusations that Palestinians lie, with the implied (“they… all”) that somehow it’s prejudiced, even racist to accuse Palestinians of lying.
This is pure liberal cognitive egocentrism, in which we are not allowed to pay attention to cultural differences. There are cultures in which lying (especially to outsiders) is openly embraced as a virtue. Motivations range from the purely self-interested (giving directions when you don’t know just to save face and not admit ignorance), to malice (deliberately misleading an outsider because you don’t like outsiders) to waging war.
Taqiyya goes well beyond Shias protecting themselves from Sunni oppressors, and involves extensive disinformation to infidels, especially in cases of covert Jihad. Those among the shabab who play Pallywood would laugh at some Westerner’s rebuke that it’s “not right” to do such things.
So why do we, as a matter of principle, refuse to consider the possibility (high likelihood) that we’re being lied to by our “Palestinian sources”? Because it makes us feel like good, decent, honorable human beings who believe that everyone is like us? Or, more darkly, because it gives us narratives that make us feel emotions we welcome, moral superiority to and even revulsion at Israeli behavior? After all, the same journalists who are principled dupes to Palestinian lies have no problem accusing the Israelis are lying and propaganda.
Exhibit B: Muhammad al Durah One of the more fascinating aspects of the al Durah Affair concerns the attitude towards Talal’s testimony. It lies at the heart of the matter, since he’s the one to claim a) that the Israelis fired continuously for over 40 minutes, targeting the boy, and b) that the boy died before his camera.
Enderlin based his report on this testimony, and all subsequent accounts follow his narrative, if not in its extreme form – cold blooded murder – at the very minimum, in his claim that the boy died on camera. Indeed, the power of this footage, its riveting quality, and the inability of people to view it as anything but the scene of a boy dying under a hail of bullets, all traces back to Talal’s first claim.
The widespread reluctance of people who have seen the full evidence to go any farther than stating that the Israelis most likely did not kill him, stems from a double resistance to a) seeing Talal (and the Palestinian street) as deliberate liars, and b) seeing Charles Enderlin (and the journalist’s street) as dupes to so obvious a fake. I personally think the “conspiracy theory” is actually (in a addition to being Charles Enderlin’s only effective defense), an unconscious admission on the part of those who accept Enderlin’s version that only some massive conspiracy involving the staffs of both Shifa Hospital in Gaza City and the King Hussein Hospital in Jordan as well as even the king himself (who allegedly – in these matters one never knows – gave blood to Jamal), and all the journalists who stepped in line… ridiculous. Therefore it couldn’t be a fake. QED.
The alternative is to imagine the possibility that a) cooperation with the fake was widely received, even by people who hadn’t been brought in to start (e.g., the Jordanians), and b) the number of willing dupes was numberless, including so many of the journalists who didn’t bother to ask any hard questions.
Exhibit A: Susan Goldenberg, writing for the Guardian, comes to the site, observes a dozen bullet holes behind the barrel, some so close to the barrel they could not have come from the Israeli position, all with direct entry trajectories rather than the 30 degree angle they would have had coming from the Israelis, and not nearly enough to corroborate Talal’s claim that the Israelis were firing “bullets like rain” for over 40 minutes, and concludes:
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[T]he 12-year-old boy and his father were deliberately targeted by Israeli soldiers.
Exhibit B: Robert Fisk, who didn’t even need to show up to conclude:
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When I read the word “crossfire”, I reach for my pen. In the Middle East, it almost always means that the Israelis have killed an innocent person.
While I don’t think that the entire field of Middle-East journalism was committed to the kind of lethal journalism here illustrated, I think that after the al Durah story broke, the rest of the field either got in line, or, perhaps more depressingly, did not dare to say a word.
Rumors have it that Talal sent his footage to Mike Hannah at CNN (not sure of the timing here, since he was allegedly – I trust Enderlin on nothing in this story – on the phone to Enderlin during the day), and Hannah told him he wouldn’t run it. This story makes a great deal of sense: Hannah wouldn’t turn down a story as explosive as this unless he had strong suspicions it was faked (as was most footage of clashes between Israelis and Palestinians at that time: it’s one thing to run fake footage of minor injuries, another to run the on-camera death of a child). He, like I think anyone not under the spell of the desire to see a dead child would, looked at the footage and thought: “There’s no way I can run this footage. Way too many holes in this story, critics will tear it to pieces.”
Enderlin’s “genius” was to realize that if he packaged this right, gave everyone in the JCS building a copy of the footage, and warned everyone they were about to see something terrible, he could create a stampede in which, eventually, even CNN would run the story. And he was right. Shades of Charlie Sheen creating a run on Wall Street.
Maybe I’m missing something here, but I think the widespread belief that Muhammad al Durah died on camera is obviously false, and the fact that the Enderlin cut it from his news report, is virtually an open and shut case against the “boy died on camera” claim.
“Take 6? in which the boy, rather than clutch his stomach wound, holds his hand over his eye, slowly lifts up his elbow, looks out and slowly lowers his elbow, lifting up his feet in counter-weight. Enderlin explained that he cut the footage because, as the boy’s death throes, it was too painful for the audience to see. The “audience” can judge whether this looks like the spasmodic death throes of a child, or deliberate and controlled actions.
When asked by Esther Schapira why he called the boy dead while showing earlier footage when he’s clearly not dead, Enderlin responded:
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“I’m very sorry but the fact is the boy died. Maybe not at the precise moment I showed. But this is how I do a story. ‘The boy is dead’ is a statement. What’s your problem with that?”
And the fact that every news station that got the footage from Endlerlin did not find this final scene suspicious and use it to question Enderlin’s account, means that, far from a serious independent work, the Middle Eastern desks lined up behind their colleague, even though the damage caused by this footage was immediately evident. As Pierre Taguieff noted about the kind of anti-Zionism that emerged in the wake of al Durah and the Intifada he inspired: “When all the fishes swim in the same direction, it’s because they’re dead.”
All of this brings us back to the discussion of the process of auto-stupefaction I’ve referred to as rekaB Street. Rather than note the clues and the anomalies and pursue them fearlessly, most prefer not even to view the evidence, to dismiss it as a conspiracy theory, or, in some cases, to take a couple of fearless steps and then demur from reaching any further conclusions. Heaven forbid we call Talal a liar and Enderlin a(n apparently willing) dupe! Better we remain stupid.
On the contrary, I think that anyone who approaches the evidence not from the point of view in which “‘the boy is dead,’ and only 110% proof to the contrary will get me to change my mind,” but rather, “what’s going on in this tape? what are the odds it’s about a boy being killed by fire coming from the Israeli position, and what are the odds that it’s been staged?” will find the odds overwhelmingly favor staged (conservative estimate: 95-5?). If we thought about crimes the way most now think about this footage, we could close down our detective agencies and police departments.
My comment in moderation
I think that in this article Dr Landes is attempting to give an account of what motivates the journalists and the editors and their bosses to disseminate lies about Israel, lies that allow them to present the conflict in their preferred narrative, that of an Israeli Goliath oppressing an innocent Palestinian David.
He identifies three possible motivations for this stance of the media. The first one is the following:
This is quite straightforward, the journalists succumb to the prevailing paradigm of the conflict (Palestinian David vs Israeli Goliath), which he calls the Politically Correct Paradigm (PCP1) out of fear that their peers or the academic elites will label them as racists if they don’t report in accordance to this paradigm. And that’s why they ignore the Hamas strategy of using human shields, or why they take at face value the number of fatalities that the Palestinians are disseminating, or…
The result of such implicit moral intimidation is that the journalists have to invert the reality of the conflict by ignoring or distorting any information that does not fit into the politically correct paradigm.
A second possible motivation for such journalistic behavior is provided by the following:
This is closely related to the first motivation, it is the opposite side of the coin which Dr Landes has called “moral narcissism”: we want to give to people the impression that we are decent persons with high moral standing. And given that the Politically Correct Paradigm demands that we view all cultures as equally worthy, we cannot play the role of the moral saint in the eyes of our peer group unless we comply with the prevailing trends of what counts as moral, and one of those trends is to accept that all human beings are basically thinking and feeling in the same way – Dr Landes has called this cognitive stance “Liberal Cognitive Egocentrism”.
Therefore we must not reject the Palestinian sources as liars, because this would mean that we violate the requirements of Liberal Cognitive Egocentrism by admitting that the Palestinian culture is radically different from ours, that it is a culture full of such a genocidal hatred that lying comes very easy to it if it serves its hateful purposes. And if we violate this requirement of Liberal Cognitive Egocentrism (i.e. the requirement not to see the Palestinian mindset as alien compared to our own western mindset) we cannot be members of the morally enlightened liberal/progressive elites.
The third possible motivation for accepting at face value the Palestinian lies is the following:
When Dr Landes refers to “emotions we welcome”, i think he alludes to the moral schadenfreude that westerners experience when they have the chance to blame the Jews.
He has given the following reasons for the presence of such a predilection in westerners: some Christians feel this way because they are theologically insecure with regards to Judaism, and some secular progressives feel this way because they a) want to wipe away the European shame of having let the Jews perish in the Holocaust and what better way to wipe this stain by morally bringing down the Jews through condemning alleged moral misdeeds of the Israelis. And b) the progressives feel moral jealousy towards Israel because she has managed under very difficult conditions to remain a democratic state, and this comes as a stark contrast with the behavior of Lefty countries or Leftist movements which turned totalitarian.
In a nutshell, Dr Landes seems to be making the point that the journalists feel pleasure if they have the chance to morally degrade the Israelis.
All the three possible explanations that he has offered as to why the journalists propagate the Palestinian lies (fear of moral intimidation, moral narcissism, susceptibility to experience moral schadenfreude when blaming Israel) could be all present at the same time, they are not mutually exclusive.
A final point is that in his other writings Dr Landes has offered one more explanation, namely that the journalists are simply afraid of the Palestinians, in case they do not report the stories as the Palestinians want them to.
Israeli planes taking off from Eilat will be armed with anti-missile systems due to anti-aircraft threat. http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/167277 – Thanks to the surrender of Gaza and Sinai. ~~~ But only two days ago PM Netanyahu reiterated his goal of partitioning Israel for the creation of Two-States. So, where will you place your main airport then?
While nobody was looking and being now distracted Obama sent to Congress his proposal for the Fiscal Year 2014 US federal budget containing crippling cuts in both medicare and social security, the two mainstays of the remaining US social safety net.
For the first time since the passage of the Social Security Act of 1935, a democratic president has dared to launch a frontal attack on the most important economic rights of the American people, the fruits of centuries of political and labor struggles.
Social security and medicare are widely regarded by the American middle class as benefits which have been earned and paid for by a lifetime of contributions, These are social insurance policies which belong to beneficiaries and are their personal property as much as their homes and other possessions. They are considered as sacred promises. Support for keeping these programs intact, and not cutting them under any pretext, is generally in the range of 75% to 80% in public opinion polling. A poll just released by the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) found that, among likely voters aged 50 and over, 91% of Democrats and 80% of Republicans are totally opposed to the device for chiseling Social Security known as the Chained CPI.
Since public approval for Medicare and Social Security is so overwhelming, it is widely assumed that, if these programs can be successfully attacked by Wall Street, then no other economic right or entitlement currently enjoyed by the American people can be considered safe.
Message to all the Koppels
Rabbi Meir Kahane debates Ehud Olmert on Nightline
@ Laura:
Laura, besides being a worthless bitch, the bitch and her father the bastard are disgusting anti-Semites.
They are the media type who orchestrates so called hate towards Israelis with false accusations.
Where are they when rockets are raining into Israel.
Where are they when Israelis are picking up injured terrorist and treating them in Israeli hospitals.
The bitch and bastard are silent.
The worthless bitch Andrea Koppel takes after her father.
Israeli govt to “gift” Israeli citizenship to thousands of Arabs living in outskirts of Jerusalem. http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/167260
Well, at least they waited until all the recent speeches by the leadership with such moving words about Israel were over. ~~~~~ The Inside Israel section of Israel National News had these other headlines this week: Netanyahu committed to Two-States Solution ~~~~~ Temple Mount Jews stripped-searched to avoid Israeli flags ~~~~~ President Peres says he does not regret Oslo. (Visit INN for more jawdropping news stories about Israeli govt decisions)
BTW, I think this page’s headline by Richard Landes is absolutely great. Should be emblazoned somewhere – like the Knesset, perhaps? Followed by this: “To be liked by Goyim is our Goal – No Price Too High”.
Our perceptions are colored by our preconceived notions. When to this we add antisemitism, we end up with the Jenin Massacre and Al Durha. It’s really that simple.