What do President Bush's endorsement of the Sharon
Plan and ongoing Israeli strikes against Hamas leaders mean for Palestinians?
The answer is complex, but media
outlets are focusing overwhelmingly on one factor alone ― raw Arab rage. This
week, accompanying pictures of angry Palestinians, were ubiquitous headlines such as:
-
Reuters: 'Furious Palestinians Reject Bush Pledges'
- The Scotsman:
'Hamas Vows Bloody Revenge'
-
Arizona Daily
Star: 'Arab World Seething over U.S.'
-
BBC: '...Wounded,
Humiliated, Threatened'
The subtext in these reports is that Palestinian/Arab emotions are of
utmost significance, and that this Arab fury will likely result in a backlash of
terrorism.
Sometimes this is explicitly stated ― the
Washington Post rationalized a Palestinian rocket attack against Israeli
civilians on Wednesday (Apr. 21) as
motivated by
'Palestinian rage against Israel and the United States [that] has
escalated since the assassination of Rantisi and President Bush's endorsement
three days earlier of an Israeli plan.' The
Toronto Star editorialized that by killing terror leaders, Sharon is
'more likely to radicalize people, set Arabs against America and Israel, and
cost Israel more lives.'
But while the media are obsessed with Arab emotion,
an entirely rational process has been taking place on the Arab street:
● The IDF anti-terror policy is working:
Israel's stepped-up campaign against terrorist leaders since early 2003 has
resulted in a
50-percent decrease in the number of Israeli terror victims. Palestinian
deaths have likewise decreased significantly.
● Terror groups are in disarray, their
leaders in hiding: Senior Hamas official
Ismail
Haniyeh told a reporter this week, 'Hamas might have a crisis on its
hands after losing its leaders.' Another terror leader said people are 'unaware
of the limitations and amount of pressure imposed against the Palestinian
combatants.' And as opposed to
Rantisi's
bravado ("I prefer to die by Apache"), Hamas'
new
leader is
afraid to reveal his identity or location.
● Palestinian leaders are getting the message:
Yassir Arafat today expelled 21 Fatah fugitives from safe haven in his
compound.
And after the Yassin strike, 60 Palestinian leaders urged restraint in a
prominent newspaper ad, arguing that the suicide bombings have backfired and calling for 'a
peaceful, wise intifada.'
It seems that the stereotype of Arabs as 'rash'
and 'emotional'
― as opposed to 'calculating' and 'rational' Westerners ― is coloring media coverage of
this conflict. This is a variation on the 'soft bigotry of low expectations'
that excuses the lack of
Palestinian democracy by presuming Palestinians are incapable of reform.
In fact, there are plenty of indications that
Palestinians and their leaders are thinking with their heads,
not only their hearts.
Daniel Pipes
notes:
Mr. Sharon's tough policies have established that terrorism
damages Palestinian interests even more than it does Israeli ones.
This has led some analysts deeply hostile to Israel to recognize
that the "second intifada" was a grievous error. Violence "just went
haywire," says Sari Nusseibeh, president of Al-Quds University. An
"unmitigated disaster," journalist Graham Usher calls it. A "crime
against the Palestinian people," adds an Arab diplomat.
Ordinary Palestinians, too, are drawing the salutary conclusion
that murdering Israelis brings them no benefits. "We wasted three
years for nothing, this uprising didn't accomplish anything," says
Mahar Tarhir, 25, an aluminum-store owner.
Moreover, the over-emphasis on Arab anger deters essential anti-terror efforts.
An analysis by
Craig Weiss in the Arizona Republic states:
The accepted worldview is that when fighting terror, one must avoid actions that
are liable to enrage the Arab world, however effective and justified those
actions might otherwise be. Under this principle, however, Muslim extremists
have veto power over any effective counterterrorism policy.
To summarize, while it is accurate for news outlets to report on Palestinian
anger, other concurrent trends are integral to this story, yet rarely covered
― Israel's effectiveness in disabling terrorist
groups and the growing Palestinian realization
that three and half years of terror has been futile. HonestReporting encourages subscribers to
contact
local editors, requesting they include all aspects of this important
issue.
Thank you for your ongoing involvement in the battle against media bias.
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