Deconstructing Israel’s Propaganda Machine
by M.
Reza Behnam Posted on June 06, 2023
https://original.antiwar.com/Reza_Behnam/2023/06/05/deconstructing-israels-propaganda-machine/
Most mornings as I prepare for my run, I tune in to
BBC news. Of late, the newscaster has presented, in sober British-fashion, the number
of Palestinians killed the night before by the Israeli army in its near-nightly
raids on homes and refugee camps in the occupied Palestinian Territories. When
I canvass American news sites to learn more, there is no mention of these
atrocities. The airwaves are replete, however, with news of the Russia-Ukraine
war and the death of civilians.
What many Americans won’t hear from these
"news" sources is that in 2022, the Israeli army killed more than 170
Palestinian civilians, including 30 children, in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem; and that since the start of 2023, Israel’s occupation army has
already killed 158 Palestinians, including 26 children.
They won’t hear that Israel controls the lives and
resources (access to safe clean water) of approximately 7 million Palestinians,
and that Palestinian cities, towns, homes, orchards and businesses have been
systematically destroyed and repopulated with upwards of 750,000 illegal Jewish
squatters ("settlers").
They won’t hear of the 56 years of Israeli occupation,
dispossession, house demolitions, curfews, checkpoints, walls, blockades,
permits, night raids, targeted killings, military courts, administrative
detention, thousands of political prisoners, tortured Palestinian children, and
56 years of oppression and humiliation.
What explains the "exceptional" deferential
treatment Israel receives, while other human rights violators are condemned or
sanctioned by the United States and its allies?
Much of the explanation has to do with Israel’s
powerfully effective state-run public relations industry reliant on myths and
duplicity. Since its establishment in 1948, Israel has successfully created a
new illogic of its own; an illogic that has made the illegal seem legal, the
immoral appear moral and the undemocratic sound democratic. It has masterfully
marketed a number of myths that have become a part of the political and
mainstream media narrative.
From the outset, Israel’s Zionist founders cloaked
their true goal of creating a "Greater Israel" – a Jewish state not
just in Palestine, but in Jordan, southern Lebanon and the Syrian Golan Heights
– in heroic terms.
Fabricated history and tropes about the
"good" Israelis developing an unpopulated land, creating agrarian
miracles in the desert and reclaiming an historic promised land have become
deeply embedded.
In reality, Zionists, like Israel’s first prime
minister, polish-born David Ben-Gurion, saw the 1948 U.N. General Assembly
partition plan for Palestine as the first step toward future expansion.
Benny Morris in his book, Righteous
Victims, writes that Ben-Gurion in a letter to his son in 1937, framed
the Zionist plan for colonizing Palestine: "No Zionist can forego the
smallest portion of the Land of Israel. [A] Jewish state in part [of Palestine]
is not an end, but a beginning….through this we increase our power, and every
increase in power facilitates getting hold of the country in its entirety.
Establishing a [small] state….will serve as a very potent lever in our
historical effort to redeem the whole country."
That Israel would have to forcibly transfer and remove
the indigenous Palestinian population to realize its colonization plans was
erased from the Israeli narrative.
As a consequence of its effective disinformation
campaign, many Americans have come to believe that Israel is a democratic,
progressive and humane state; a small but brave nation defending itself against
"foreign" violence and terrorism.
To realize its "Greater Israel" annexation
mission, Israel created another fiction to legitimize its war of choice in
1967. Although the Six-Day War, which began on June 5, 1967, has proved to be a
crucial turning point in the modern history of the Middle East, the Israeli
myth of vulnerability and "nation under siege" inventions remain
largely unchallenged.
Fifty-six years ago, the Israeli air force attacked
air bases in Egypt, Syria and Jordan, destroying over 80 percent of their
warplanes on the ground. Israeli troops swiftly occupied Egypt’s Sinai
Peninsula, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank of Jordan and the Syrian Golan
Heights. According to Israeli government minutes, its attack was not defensive,
but a planned preemptive strike.
The Israelis were fully aware of the need to initiate
a disinformation campaign alongside their planned first-strike military
operations to allay adverse reactions from Washington and other Western powers.
The Israeli myth that the Jewish state was fighting
for its physical survival against a more powerful Arab enemy has had a powerful
hold on America’s political leaders and the public. In fact, Arab leaders had
no plans to invade Israel and Israel’s leaders knew the war was easily
winnable. The annihilation fallacy has become unassailable dogma in Washington
– the "right to defend itself" mantra – has allowed Tel Aviv to continue
its illegal annexation of captured Palestinian land.
Zionist myth makers got busy again in the 1980s. To
counter the criticism it received following its indiscriminate bombing of
Lebanon and massacre of Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee
camps in Beirut in 1982, Israel birthed the Hasbara ("explaining"
in Hebrew) Project in 1983.
In that year, the American Jewish Congress sponsored a
conference in Jerusalem of top executives, journalists and academics from
Israel and the United States, to devise a strategy to resell Israel, to cement
U.S. economic and military support and to make it extremely difficult to
critique Israel’s actions.
Hasbara established
permanent structures in the United States and Israel to influence how the
world, especially Americans, would think about Israel and the Middle East in
the future. The talking points they developed are recognizable in current
rhetoric; among them: Israel’s strategic importance to the United States; its
physical vulnerability; its shared cultural values with the West; and its
desire for peace. Israel now labels its continuing hasbara propaganda
"public diplomacy."
News organizations, journalists, academics,
politicians and entertainers have come to expect pressure if they go outside
the level of acceptable discourse established by Israel and its supporters.
Alternative narratives that expose Israel’s abuses are dismissed as anti-Israel
or given the feared label of anti-Semitic. Israeli propagandists have made
certain to fuse criticism of the regime – anti-Zionism – to anti-Semitism. The
anti-Semitic accusation has proven to be a powerful rhetorical device to shield
Israel from fault. It has destroyed careers and reputations.
The late-Helen Thomas, noted journalist; Norman
Finkelstein, prominent Jewish intellectual, political scientist and author; and
Fatima Mohammed, 2023 graduate of CUNY law school are among those who have been
willing to brave the onslaught of criticism they would inevitably face for
"daring" to challenge Israeli myths.
Helen Thomas, national icon and senior White House
correspondent for UPI, was forced to end her 57-year career in 2010 because she
persisted in publicly questioning US support for Israel. Thomas later remarked,
"You cannot criticize Israel in this country and survive."
In 2007, DePaul University denied tenure to Norman
Finkelstein because of his criticism of Israel. In his books, Finkelstein
claimed that anti-Semitism has been used to stifle critics of Israeli policies
toward Palestinians, and that the Holocaust is exploited by some Jewish
institutions for their own gain and to cover Israel’s illegal occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza. Because his name had been sullied, Finkelstein was never
able to teach again.
Fatima Mohammed, in her recent commencement address to
fellow graduates, condemned Israel for perpetuating the Nakba (catastrophe);
stating that "our silence is no longer acceptable….Palestine can no longer
be the exception to our pursuit of justice." Predictably, Mohammed faced
immediate public condemnation from US politicians and pro-Israel groups, who
have accused her of anti-Semitism, and have called for the university to be
defunded over her speech.
In December 2008 and January 2009, as before, Israel
marshaled its public relations machine. This time it was to counter the
criticism it was receiving for its massive 22-day bombardment of the Gaza
Strip, in which 1,398 Palestinians were killed.
The Israel Project (TIP), a pro-Israel
Washington-based group, hired Frank Luntz, a Republican operative and political
strategist, to shore up its image. Luntz conducted an extensive study to
determine how to integrate Israel’s narrative into mainstream media. His
findings were reported in a document titled, "The Israel Project’s 2009
Global Language Dictionary."
Language from Luntz’s primer, with its scripted
discourse for Israeli supporters, has seeped into the thinking, vocabulary and
comments of American, Israeli and European politicians, academics and
mainstream media.
In his 18-Chapter primer, Luntz coaches Israeli
supporters on how to tailor answers for different audiences, outlines what
Americans want to hear and what words and phrases to use and to be avoided. It
provides guidance on how to challenge statements from and to feign compassion
for Palestinians. Luntz advises to always emphasize Israel’s desire for peace,
although he initially states that it does not really want a peaceful solution.
Supporters are enjoined to give the false impression
that the so-called "cycle of violence" has been going on for
thousands of years, that both sides are equally at fault and that
Palestine-Israel catastrophe is beyond their understanding. He urges advocates
to stress Israel’s need for security, emphasizing that Americans will respond
favorably if Israeli civilians are portrayed as the innocent victims of
Palestinian "terrorism."
Luntz states that when Americans are told that Iran
supports Hezbollah and Hamas, they will be inclined to be more supportive of
Israel. Therefore, when talking about them to repeatedly say
"Iran-backed" Hamas and Hezbollah.
On the rare occasions the mainstream media reports on
Israel’s abuses, it conforms to the official lexicon outlined in Luntz’s
dictionary. Israel’s army of occupation, for example, is referred to as
"defense" or "security" forces, Zionist colonizers,
(squatters), are termed "settlers," Zionist colonies are called
"settlements" or "neighborhoods," Palestinians
"attack," while Israelis merely "retaliate."
Among the more glaring fabrications is the
characterization of the Israel-Palestine quagmire as a "conflict"
between two peoples with equal political and military resources and equal
claims; when it is, in reality, a conflict between the colonizer, Israel, and
the colonized, Palestinians.
For 75 years, Israeli propaganda has allowed it to be
the exception – to flout international norms and laws with impunity. Because of
the myths, Israel has been extremely influential in determining US policy in
the Middle East. The country’s unremitting and methodical disinformation
campaigns from 1948 to the present have allowed Israel to plant the Zionist
flag on Palestinian land and in the hearts and minds of Americans.
Tel Aviv is, however, finding it increasingly
difficult to whitewash its entrenched apartheid system and ongoing genocide,
especially in light of the openly racist policies and practices of the current
right-wing regime cobbled together by its legally-plagued prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel’s hasbara industry, however,
remains undaunted. TIP folded in 2019 after its funding dried up, but the
Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) continues to carry on Israel’s hasbara mission.
Israel knows that the narratives it tells itself and
the world are apocryphal and the Jewish state, in its present form, is unlawful
and unjust. Hence, in an attempt to make the apocryphal real and the fraudulent
legal, Israel continues its ongoing ideological war to normalize the abnormal
in Palestine.
Dr. M. Reza Behnam is a political scientist
specializing in the history, politics and governments of the Middle East and
U.S. foreign policy in the region.
2023 M. Reza Behnam, Ph.D.
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