The problem with mainstream media’s reporting on the Middle East is exemplified by an interesting article that appeared in the “Week in Review” in Sunday’s New York Times by their Jerusalem bureau chief, Ethan Bronner. Bronner, an old hand at reporting from the region- he has been on the beat off and on for twenty-five years-has now suffered the slings and arrows of hostile reader reactions to his coverage of the Gaza war.
Bronner claims that as a skilled reporter, he attempts only to tell the story, and to inform readers how the fight appears to all those who live in the region. That means that he seeks to be objective. As he writes, his attempt has resulted only in vicious attacks and e-mails from those who support Israel and those who support Hamas. He doesn’t say it, but clearly he thinks that “if both sides are angry at me, I must be doing something right.”
Thus, he writes, the problem is that there are two narratives about the Middle East- one Israeli, the other Arab. If his reports appear to give ammunition to one side or the other, one party to the conflict will find him to be anathema. “Trying to tell the story so that both sides can hear it,” he writes, “…feels more and more like a Greek tragedy in which I play the despised chorus.” The voices of each partisan side become so loud, Bronner says, “that it drowns everything else out.”
Bronner’s complaint is that if he writes about what Israelis feel and think, and does not condemn Israel’s attack on Hamas as a massacre, he is pro-Israel. And if he reports on the suffering on innocent Gaza residents, those who support Israel see him as putting forth Hamas propaganda. Bronner’s answer to his critics is simple. He will tell the “whole story,” not just parts of it that serve either Palestinians or Israelis. His problem is that he knows “it doesn’t matter,” because whatever he writes, anything that contradicts one or another of the two narratives will lead someone to attack him for his objectivity.
He does have a quandary. And he seems to have dealt with it by writing two kinds of stories, one that can be interpreted by some as pro-Palestinian, the other as pro-Israel. Thus, he penned one story on Israel’s use of white phosphorous, “a weapon that militaries use widely to obscure the battlefield but that is also limited under an international convention that bans targeting civilians with it.” Hamas claims that the phosphorous was intentionally used, and Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, among other groups, condemned Israel for war crimes.
Bonner’s report reads as if Hamas and its Gaza sympathizers are right in their outrage, and that the suffering from the phosphorous is typical of Israel’s use of extreme military measures meant to harm civilians and that cannot be justified in any way. He did not in the article, or later, print the many reports exonerating Israel of the charge of committing war crimes. Times readers did not learn of this report from The Jerusalem Post, for example, that showed the International Red Cross concluded that its use “was legitimate under international law” and that it was “not consciously putting civilians at risk” by its use. Without access to articles like this, Israeli supporters understandably would be angry that Bonner’s piece helped the campaign to depict Israel as a violator of human rights and a perpetrator of war crimes. His article certainly fits in with the narrative of the Palestinian side.
After reporting in a way that inflamed Israel’s supporters, he wrote a column that appeared more sympathetic to Israel’s plight, and that conveyed the way most Israelis saw the war. He quoted one peace activist who told him “in this case, the entire Israeli public is angry at the immoral behavior of Hamas.” In his own words, he wrote: “Because Hamas booby-traps schools, apartment buildings and the zoo, and its fighters hide among civilians, it is Hamas that is viewed here as responsible for the civilian toll. Hamas is committed to Israel’s destruction and gets help and inspiration from Iran, so that what looks to the world like a disproportionate war of choice is seen by many here as an obligatory war for existence.”
In trying to be even handed his reporting has become almost schizophrenic. To deal with his evident need to appear even-handed, he has obviously dealt with the problem by writing one report that is appreciated by the Hamas supporters, and then another that is welcomed by Israel’s supporters.
The fact is simple: one of the narratives is right; the other one is wrong. One side seeks to live in peace aside a Palestinian nation that accepts Israel’s existence. Indeed, Israel is willing to give substantial economic aid to rebuild the Palestinian’s new state once peace is attained, as well as using its own armed force to remove its own extremist settlers from land deemed to be part of the new Palestinian state- as it did to settlers in Gaza when Israel gave it up in 2005.
The other side operates by a charter dedicated to destroying Israel. When one side refuses to accept the others right to exist, looking for moral equivalence is ridiculous. Mr. Bronner has a quandary only because he is on a fool’s errand.





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6 Comments
1. Chris in Toronto:Political correctness and moral equivalence are the cowards’ way of having to choose sides. Not choosing sides, that is not saying that right is right and wrong is wrong is simply denying the law of identity. May his head explode from the deserved cognitive dissonance his cowardice evokes.
Jan 27, 2009 - 4:58 am 2. David Thomson:Ethan Bronner feels placed in a no-win situation. The hateful Palestinians possess dark skin and therefore are perceived by the politically correct left-wing culture as inherently victims of white Israeli exploitation. It would make all the difference in the world if the Arabs were blue eyed and blond haired Aryans. A few freckles on their face could also be helpful. Anti-Semitism plays a secondary role. Of far greater importance is race guilt. Try imagining the Palestinians as looking like a bunch of red neck bubbas living in the Old South some 45 years ago. Now ask yourself the inevitable question: What difference would it make? I believe the answer is obvious.
Jan 27, 2009 - 5:13 am 3. Pajewmas tuba teakettle of fish:Justifying reasons to preserve life and be reasonable, easier than they look.
Jan 27, 2009 - 7:09 am 4. goy:Ron, this affair seems analogous to Soderbergh’s pretense of “objectivity” regarding his film Che. As is true of covering anything involving Hamas, the notion that one must be “objective” in telling the story of a common thug is not the position of a serious person. The transparent flaws in moral equivalence arguments needed to support such a notion are glaring.
Kudos for your contribution in today’s Times piece that exposes Soderbergh’s and del Toro’s agenda: glorifying a communist murderer as a “cowboy”.
Jan 27, 2009 - 8:49 am 5. robotech master:While I haven’t finished reading this story…
“He does have a quandary. And he seems to have dealt with it by writing two kinds of stories, one that can be interpreted by some as pro-Palestinian, the other as pro-Israel. Thus, he penned one story on Israel’s use of white phosphorous, “a weapon that militaries use widely to obscure the battlefield but that is also limited under an international convention that bans targeting civilians with it.” Hamas claims that the phosphorous was intentionally used, and Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, among other groups, condemned Israel for war crimes.”
This hugely jumps out at me… first link doesn’t open to anything that I can read so I can’t even see the purposed info… however from my knowledge of the supposed sources of this piece its complete and utter BS. The whine that israel is using white phosphorous is 100% no debate a lie. The claim is that somehow white phosphorous flares are a deadly “weapons system”(of which even PJ media had a story about it) being used vs the ppl of gaza… flares are perfectly legal and every freaking country in the whole freaking world as far as I know uses white phosphorous flares…
The fact that he would even use sources from groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch without questioning or researching the information clearly already shows a lean toward printing and justifying typical anti-israel FAKED PROPAGANDA. So already in one case it has been clearly shown that he has knee-jerk propaganda anti-israel publisher syndrome.
I’ll review the rest of the piece however the white phosphorous propaganda is just such a blanet and childish lies that only a news reporter could fall for it.
Jan 27, 2009 - 3:58 pm 6. JUST A NORMAL GUY:WELL ETHAN BONER IS ONE OF THE GOOD GUYS LIKE BILL ORIELLEY, I MEAN HE IS GETTING ATTACKED BY THE LEFT AND BY THE RIGHT CONSTANTLY BUT HE STICKS TO HIS GUNS AND IT JUST GOES TO SHOW THAT YOU CA’NT PLEASE PEOPLE ALL THE TIME. BUT ANYWAYS I MEAN, BILL O IS OBJECTIVE AS THEY COME AND YOU SEE HE IS GETTING HATE MAIL FROM THE LEFT WINGERS MOONBAY AND THE RIGHTIES TOO, I GUESS THATS WHAT YOU GET TRYING TO TELL A STRAIGHT STORY IN THESE TRYING TIMES.
Jan 27, 2009 - 7:18 pm