
Action Alert from Media Lens:
On December 27, 2008, Israel launched Operation
Cast Lead, a massive assault on Gaza. 22 days later, around 1,400 Palestinians,
including over 300 children, and 13 Israelis were dead; about 5,000 Palestinians
were wounded. Israeli forces bombed and shelled schools, medical centres,
hospitals, ambulances, United Nations buildings (including UN schools), power
plants, sewage plants, roads, bridges and civilian homes. This was described in
much of the press as hitting "Hamas targets" (e.g. David Gardner, 'U.S. accused
of white phosphorus against Taliban', Daily Mail, May 11, 2009).
Earlier this month, the UN announced the results of an inquiry into attacks
on its buildings and personnel in Gaza. It concluded that the Israeli Defence
Forces (IDF) were:
"involved in varying degrees of negligence or recklessness with regard to
United Nations premises and to the safety of United Nations staff and other
civilians within those premises, with consequent deaths, injuries, and extensive
physical damage and loss of property." (Donald Macintyre, 'UN retreats after
Israel hits out at Gaza report', Independent, May 6, 2009)
Incidents for which Israel was held responsible by the UN inquiry
included:
* The deaths of three young men killed by a single IDF missile strike at
the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Asma school in Gaza
City.
* The firing of heavy mortar rounds into the UNRWA Jabalia school, injuring
seven people sheltering in the school, killing up to 40 people in the immediate
vicinity and injuring a further 50.
* Aerial bombing of the UNRWA Bureij health centre on the same day, causing
the death of a patient, serious injuries to two other patients and injuries to
nine of the health centre's employees.
* Artillery firing by the IDF into the UNRWA field office compound in Gaza
city, combined with the use of white phosphorus, causing injuries and
considerable damage to it and the surrounding buildings, and leading to the
disruption of the UN's humanitarian operations in Gaza.
* Artillery firing by the IDF into the UNRWA Beit Lahia school, again with
the use of white phosphorus, causing the deaths of two children, aged 5 and 7,
and injuries to 13 others.
Contrary to Israeli claims, the UN inquiry found no evidence that "Hamas
militants" had used UN property to attack Israel or Israeli forces. Indeed, the
report demanded that the UN urge Israel to retract its allegations to that
effect.
The inquiry's narrow remit was restricted to UN property and personnel; a key
recommendation was that $11m compensation should be sought from Israel for
damage to UN property in Gaza. But the final recommendation was that +all+
killings, injuries and damages in Gaza "should be investigated as part of an
impartial inquiry mandated, and adequately resourced, to investigate allegations
of violations of international humanitarian law." (Julian Borger, 'UN chief
rejects further inquiry', Guardian, May 6, 2009)
Shamefully, however, when UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon presented the
inquiry results, he rejected its authors' call for such an investigation. He
even decided not to release the full 184-page report. According to a brief item
on the BBC Arabic news website, the BBC was informed by "a diplomatic source"
that the United States "informed Ban's office that the report should not be
published in full due to the damage that that could cause to the Middle East
peace talks." (Cited in Hasan Abu Nimah, 'Ban Ki-moon's moral failure', The
Electronic Intifada, May 6, 2009; http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10511.shtml)
The sophistry of these words - "the damage that that could cause to the
Middle East peace talks" - is newspeak for "dangerous truths that would further
damage the reputations of Israel and the United States."
Ban, no doubt aware of these dangers, conveniently produced his own 27-page
summary. Inter Press Service reported that the original report was thus
"meticulously stripped down . mostly due to [alleged] political sensitivities
and on security grounds." (Thalif Deen, 'UN chief defends "watered down" Gaza
report', Inter Press Service, May 5, 2009; http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46733)
The report supposedly contained "secret information supplied by Israel" about
its attacks on Gaza. (Abu Nimah, 'Ban Ki-moon's moral failure', op. cit.)
Ban then issued this summary together with a covering letter to the UN
Security Council. In the letter, Ban said he was "carefully considering" what
actions, "if any", to take on the 11 recommendations by his own inquiry team.
But he had already appeased both Israel and its powerful backers in the UN
Security Council, notably the United States, by stating that he "did not plan
any further inquiry."
True to form, the Israelis had called the report "tendentious, patently
biased" even before the summary was published. ('UN rejects UN probe under
Israeli pressure', Palestine Chronicle, May 6, 2009; http://www.palestinechronicle.com/news
.php?id=897c5f65b4ad8fdde3f03 527039af4e0=details) Ban took his cue
adroitly. While noting the Israeli government's "significant reservations and
objections", he bent over backwards to praise them for their cooperation. He
also spoke out, reportedly urged by Israeli ministers and officials, against
"continued and indiscriminate" attacks by Hamas.
Of Circus Dogs And Whips
In effect, then, the UN Secretary General rejected his own inquiry which
had been lead by Ian Martin, a former head of Amnesty International. Moreover,
Ban's effective suppression of the full report was doubtless an attempt to draw
a line under the inquiry, minimising damage to Israel and the United
States.
Noam Chomsky commented on the possible role of US-Israeli "diplomacy" in the
Secretary-General's decision not to publish the full report or to proceed with a
wide-ranging inquiry:
"as far as I know there's no direct evidence about what happened [behind
the scenes], though it's not hard to guess. Ban knows as well as any other
Sec'y-General that criticism of the US (hence its offshoots [such as Israel])
will undermine what little there is of a UN." (Email to Media Lens, May 13,
2009)
In other words, direct pressure is not always required. Indeed, it is often
more efficient to have an amenable person in place who will do the master's
bidding without being told what to do. As George Orwell once observed:
"Circus dogs jump when the trainer cracks his whip. But the really
well-trained dog is the one that turns his somersault when there is no whip."
(Orwell, 'As I Please', Tribune, 1944)
Ban Ki-moon has already demonstrated his gymnastic prowess. When he visited
Gaza in January 2009, he was justifiably "appalled" at Israel's "outrageous and
totally unacceptable attack." But his critical remarks were restricted to the
attack on UN installations and personnel; not Gaza as a whole.
Hasan Abu Nimah, Jordan's former UN ambassador, noted astutely that Ban's
"courage only went so far":
"[His] flash of anger was limited however only to UN facilities. He spoke
as if the rest of Gaza — where more than 7,000 people lay dead or injured, and
thousands of homes, schools, mosques, universities, police stations and
government buildings were destroyed — did not exist, or were not of UN concern."
(Abu Nimah, 'Ban Ki-moon's moral failure', op. cit.)
He continued:
"Whisked around in his convoy, he did not bother to stop and talk to any of
Israel's victims — the families who had just dug the remains of their loved ones
from the rubble or those with horrific injuries in Gaza's overstretched
hospitals. These are the very people, the Palestinian refugees, that the UN is
in Gaza to help, but there was it seems no time for them."
Ban did condemn "the excessive use of force" by the Israelis in its massive
assault on Gaza. As Abu Nimah noted, presumably the UN Secretary-General "found
Israel's attack on Gaza perfectly acceptable, but he disagreed only with the
tonnage of high explosives that should be dropped by Israeli planes." While
correctly condemning Hamas rocket attacks on Israel as "violations of basic
humanitarian law", Ban neglected to say the same of Israel's ongoing massive
violations.
Richard Falk, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian
territories, said Ban's response to the new UN report was "disappointing". He
was clear that the inquiry had produced a "very serious and very scrupulously
argued report that's based on very careful analysis of the available evidence."
(Al Jazeera, May 5, 2009; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oORAuHY1y-Y)
Yvonne Terlingen, Amnesty International representative at the United Nations,
also expressed her concern at Ban Ki-moon's stance. She told Inter Press Service
[IPS]: "We are very disappointed with the Secretary-General's reaction to what
we have come to know [from the report]."
Terlingen called for a broader inquiry into the Israeli attacks by the
15-member UN Security Council. But one unnamed Arab diplomat told IPS he did not
expect any investigation by the Security Council because three of the permanent
members, the US, Britain and France, are "far too protective" of Israel. The
secretary-general, he said, "will not pursue a broader inquiry because he is
under pressure and beholden to the big powers in the Security Council."
"It's a lost cause," he added, pointing out that "Israel knows that it can
get away with murder." (Deen, 'UN chief defends "watered down" Gaza report', op.
cit.)
Although the UN Secretary General refused to launch a full, wide-ranging
investigation under his direct mandate, Israel's leaders have not entirely
evaded scrutiny. A four-person team lead by Justice Richard Goldstone has
already been appointed by the UN Human Rights Council to investigate alleged
breaches of international law, and possible war crimes, in Gaza. But this will
not have the same stamp of authority as a full-ranging, impartial investigation
carried out by direct authority of the UN Secretary-General himself.
Moreover, the Goldstone investigation is likely to be severely hobbled by
Israel's refusal to cooperate and the time that has already elapsed since the
assault on Gaza. Falk believes Israel is taking an obstructive stance "because
it knows deep down that it made serious human rights violations." He refutes
Israel's assertions that efforts to establish the truth are "one-sided attempts
to demonize Israel" and "tarnish its reputation":
"The real reason [for Israel's non-cooperation] is that the facts
overwhelmingly support allegations that Israel is understandably concerned that
any objective inquiry would indeed confirm the allegations and create a
situation in which the international community would be obliged to seek some
kind of procedure for accountability." (Press TV, 'Falk tells why Israel
stonewalls Gaza probe', April 30, 2009;
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?
id=93136§ionid=351020202)
The Media's Shrug Of Indifference
While some elements of the above account could be pieced together from a
handful of media reports in the corporate press, the coverage was largely
fragmented, often confusing and the tone muted. Significantly, we could not find
a single editorial in the British press expressing outrage, or even discomfort,
at the subversion of the UN, and the evident contempt for the organisation, by
Israel and the US.
The most extensive coverage was in the Guardian with two articles totalling
under 1200 words. (Rory McCarthy and Ed Pilkington, 'UN report accuses Israel
military of negligence and urges reparations for Gaza deaths'; Julian Borger,
'UN chief rejects further inquiry', both on May 6, 2009)
An Independent article devoted just 654 words to the report and Ban Ki-moon's
rejection of it. (Donald Macintyre, 'UN retreats after Israel hits out at Gaza
report', Independent, May 6, 2009)
Meanwhile, the Times exerted itself by expending all of 99 words on the
story. (James Bone, 'UN condemns Israel over phosphorus', Times, May 6,
2009)
And nobody could accuse the Daily Telegraph of avoiding the matter. It
granted the story two lines; a total of 47 words. (Alex Spillius, Daily
Telegraph, 'You must accept the goal of a Palestinian state, Biden tells
Israel', May 6, 2009)
In the days since Ban Ki-moon came to the defence of Israel and its powerful
backers in the UN Security Council, the British news media has shrugged off any
disquiet it might have had.
While there have been UN investigations of war crimes committed in Rwanda,
Sierra Leone and the former Yugoslavia, somehow war crimes committed in Gaza do
not deserve the same scrutiny and accountability. The omission is not unique, of
course. There has never been a UN inquiry into war crimes committed by the
United States in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. The UN would surely be destroyed if
such a move were ever seriously contemplated.
For the corporate media, then, there is no need for forensic analysis of this
latest cynical sidelining of the UN, a body set up to promote world peace after
all. There has been no rottweiler unearthing of this UN capitulation which, once
again, effectively covers up major atrocities committed by Israel with heavy
backing from its allies in the UN Security Council. But then, they are 'our'
allies and, by definition, 'the good guys'. The media instinctively know this is
the script they must follow.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge you to maintain a
polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Richard Beeston, foreign editor at the Times
Email: richard.beeston@thetimes.co.uk
Ian Black, Middle East editor at the Guardian
Email: ian.black@guardian.co.uk
Katharine Butler, foreign editor at the Independent
Email: k.butler@independent.co.uk
Will Kinnaird, foreign editor at the Daily Telegraph
Email: will.kinnaird@telegraph.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org