Freedom of the press is one of the liberties one
must truly cherish as an American. In many other democracies, the
right to put pen to paper requires a license or other governmental
intrusions. There are many countries in the world where the state
retains a monopoly on the press.
Controlling or ‘managing’ press coverage has
become as powerful an instrument of power as controlling the Police.
In China, initial reports about recent explosion at a public school
correctly reported that the teachers were running an elaborate
Chinese fireworks factory that included productivity quotas for the
students. The reports were quickly amended to deny these allegations
and suppress the story. Predictably, the journalists covering the
story were quick to comply with official denials.
Philip Pan of the Washington Post reported that
"For a week, officials have been denying that the third-graders
in Fanglin village had been forced to make firecrackers for poor
teachers seeking extra cash". He also noted that the Chinese
Prime Minister, Zhu Rongji, had attempted to blame the explosion on
a suicidal villager armed with explosives. A few days later Zhu was
apologizing to the Chinese and promising to make amends. He was
quoted as saying that he wanted to "emphasize that no one can
cover up historical facts".
Now imagine what it must be like to be one of the
"journalists" who initially reported the truth and then
quickly reversed the account due to governmental coercion and then
had to turn around and report the undeniable truth and wisdom of the
Prime Minister. Phillip Pan’s analysis of this event is worth
mentioning. "Zhu’s statements underscored the power of China’s
increasingly independent news media and the government’s inability
to control information in a society with access to the Internet.
China has covered up disasters involving tens of thousands of deaths
in the past, but news of the explosion and children making
fire-works spread quickly on Internet sites and through local
newspapers. When the government issued its official account, many
Chinese viewed it with skepticism and even scorn."
Which brings me to a disturbing incident in another
elementary school yard in another country. That same week, In
Hebron, Palestinian school kids demonstrating against Israeli army
repression where assaulted with stun grenades, injuring six
students. Imagine the New York Times reporter given the task of
reporting this incident in a manner that would not cause readers
alarm about Israeli tactics in confronting Palestinian children.
In five months of reporting on the Palestinian
uprising, Deborah Sontag has perfected the art of the cover-up. Next
time the Chinese want to bury a story, they should send their press
releases directly to Deborah. All the New York Times would need to
do is to accord Prime Minister Zhu the same printing privileges
granted to Ariel Sharon’s occupation army. The Sulzberger clan, on
43rd street, specializes in tampering with historical
facts.
If the Prime Minister is interested in Sontag’s
peculiar "spin" talents, here is a sample (NYT, March 16,
2001):
"The army sees the removal of children from the
circle of violence as extremely important," an army statement
said. The army "will continue to act against anyone trying to
compromise the security of Israeli citizens". Sontag’s whole
report is attributed to "Israeli officials" and the
"Israeli Army" and "Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s
office" and "news reports".
It never occurred to Sontag to interview one of the
kids who was wounded in the demonstration. In her estimate, that
would be giving aid and comfort to the enemy. From her account it
appears that she spent the day in the company the Israeli Army who
escorted her to the Prime Minister’s office for a daily briefing
and an obligatory bounce on Arik’s knees and then got the rest of
her story by listening to Israeli Army Radio. As always Security is
something that is deemed important for Israelis, whereas
Palestinians are
Unworthy of protection and the right of self-defense
against a land-thieving occupying army.
The suffocating siege around Palestinian towns and
villages intensifies with each passing day taking its toll on the
three million civilians who must daily endure the institutional
violence of the Israeli occupation regime. Israelis have elected a
notorious war criminal as their Prime Minister. Overtly racist
politicians who advocate the expulsion of Palestinians from their
ancestral homes sit in comfortable cabinet seats in the ruling
Israeli coalition government. The death of hundreds of Palestinians
resisting Israel’s strangulation policies is something New York
Times reporters and editors are trained to fix, ignore, or
challenge. Indeed American Jewish and Christian Zionist zealots have
once again demonstrated their ability to paint the Israeli canvas
with Teflon. They seem quite satisfied that a recent poll they
commissioned has shown that their intensive campaign has succeeded
in minimizing any public sympathy for the Palestinians.
Let us give this much credit to the Chinese
journalists who flip flopped on the disaster at a fireworks factory
that moonlighted as a school house. At least they were initially
inclined to tell the truth. Before they flopped, they delivered an
honest account. The power of coercion of the Chinese government
should not be under estimated. Like the criminal school teachers,
these journalists had mouths to feed.
At the New York Times the lack of veracity is much
more sinister. It is an attempt at coercing the state, our Federal
government, into extending an indefinite carte blanche to each and
every Israeli policy, regardless of the degree of repression that
government is willing to mete out to the Palestinians. Sulzberger
and his crew set the standard for how to conduct Israel’s public
relations campaigns.
For the last six decades, successive Polish
governments have managed to blame the slaughter of 1600 Jews at
Jedwabne on the Nazis. Today, Poland is being forced to deal with
the reality of what really happened in 1941; Poles killed their
Jewish Neighbors. Adam Michnik, reflecting on the revelation that
Poles would commit such a crime, wrote these words in another NYT
article (Poles and the Jews: How Deep the Guilt, NYT, March 17,
2001).
"I do not feel guilty for those murdered, but I
do feel responsible. Not that they were murdered – I could not
have stopped that. I feel guilty that after they died they were
murdered again, denied a decent burial, denied tears, denied truth
about this hideous crime, and that for decades a lie was repeated.
This is my fault. For lack of imagination or time, for convenience
and spiritual laziness, I did not ask myself certain questions and
did not look for answers. Why? After all, I was among those who
actively pushed to reveal the truth about the Katy massacre of
Polish soldiers, I worked to tell the truth about the Stalinist
trials in Poland, about the victims of communist repression. Why
then did I not look for the truth about the murdered Jews of
Jedwabne?"
Mr. Michnik’s noble sentiments were published in
the midst of a campaign to actively cover up Ariel Sharon’s
participation of the massacre of Palestinians in 1982. The slaughter
of Jews at Jedwabne in 1941 is different from the events at Sabra
and Shatila only in that Ariel Sharon has received a full
dispensation from Deborah Sontag and her colleagues at the New York
Times and other American media outlets. The stain of Qibya will
never be erased from Sharon’s record, regardless of what
influential American Jewish journalists report.
While Adam Michnik makes a plausible denial of any
prior knowledge of the cover-up of Jedwabne, there is no denying the
activists in the American Jewish community who incessantly and
shamelessly advocate the continued repression of the Palestinians.
No other American ethnic community would openly flout their bonds
with a war criminal and try to pass him off as just another
"conservative" politician.
There is no denying American Jewish political clout.
A review of the list of 400 largest donors in campaign 2000
(available at