For over three years, in continual updates and
through TerrorPetition.com, HonestReporting has led the campaign to insist that
news outlets call Palestinian terror "terror." Now, as the scourge of
Islamic terrorism continues to spread throughout the globe, it is more
important than ever that Israel's struggle against Palestinian terror be
properly identified as part of the larger battle to preserve civil, democratic
society against militant Islam.
Definition of terrorism:
Though a number of definitions exist, the
United States Government's
definition has gained broad acceptance:
Title 22 of the US Code, Section 2656f(d):
The term "terrorism" means premeditated,
politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by
subnational groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an
audience.
The term "international terrorism" means
terrorism involving the territory or the citizens of more than one country.
The term "terrorist group" means any group
that practices, or has significant subgroups that practice, international
terrorism.
Under this definition, the
US State
Department and
Even Yasser Arafat, writing in The New York Times on February 3, 2002,
described Palestinian attacks against Israeli civilians as "terrorist."
Media use of term "terrorism":
Media outlets however, especially in news reports, will
oftentimes shy away from the use of the term "terrorism" when describing
deliberate attacks on civilians worldwide. This, in the effort to maintain
journalistic neutrality, which some journalists believe is jeopardized when
using the pejorative term "terrorism."
HonestReporting's position is that a deliberate
attack against a civilian target, anywhere in the world, is most accurately
referred to as a "terrorist attack," for
two fundamental reasons:
▪ It has become common English usage to use "terrorism" to describe these horrific events (as per
the definition above), and it therefore is the most accurate term available.
▪ The post-9/11 political climate is characterized by a struggle between radical
Islamic groups and western democracies. The repeated Islamist targeting of
innocent western civilians to further jihadist goals is understood by the great majority of
world to lie beyond the pale of legitimate political struggle. The term "terrorism" is
therefore necessary to differentiate between this wholly illegitimate
method of warfare and legitimate methods, as defined by the
Fourth Geneva Convention.
When media outlets refuse to use the term
"terrorism" to describe what are clearly terrorist acts, they both depart from
common usage, and in effect (if not in intent) embolden those who use the mass
murder of civilians to further their ideological goals. And since the language
of news coverage has an extremely powerful effect on popular opinion, this
refusal to call terror "terror" confers a degree of legitimacy to the horrific
acts, in the minds of millions of media consumers.
Double standards in media coverage:
As HonestReporting has repeatedly documented,
while media outlets often use the accurate term "terrorism" in other world contexts,
when it comes to Palestinian terrorist attacks on Israelis the term is rarely used. This double standard is particularly evident when comparing
terrorist attacks in Israel and elsewhere that occurred nearly simultaneously,
or in very similar physical circumstances. A few recent examples:
▪ In the beginning of
April, 2003 an Iraqi army officer killed five American soldiers by blowing
himself up in a taxi. In Netanya that week, a Palestinian ignited his explosive
belt at the entrance to a cafe, injuring 50 Israelis. The Associated Press
listed the Iraqi attack among other historical "terror attacks against the U.S.
military," but AP coverage of the Netanya blast referred to the bomber as
a Palestinian "militant."
▪ In
May, 2003 the New York Times launched a new, special section of their news site
called "Threats and Responses: Targeting Terror." Recent deadly terror attacks
in Chechnya, Saudi Arabia and the Philippines were included, but absolutely no
reference was made to two terrorist attacks in Israel during that period.
▪ In
October, 2003 suicide bombers killed a number of American soldiers in Iraq,
and 19 Israelis in a Haifa cafe. The San Jose Mercury News reported on Iraq: "Suicide
bombers unleashed a wave of terror in the Iraqi capital Monday..." But in
Israel, the Mercury News reported no "terror."
Editors' positions:
On Jan. 4, 2004, the executive editor of the
Miami Herald expressed his paper's commitment to call terror "terror,"
despite the overriding concern for evenhandedness:
It's Herald policy to use the most neutral
language available in a given situation. We, too, label those who fight for a
cause as militants. But unlike some of our colleagues, we see a line where a
militant becomes a terrorist and we don't shy away from the latter word. When
a suicide bomber blows up a bus carrying innocent civilians, it's an act of
terrorism, not militancy.
The Herald is the latest in a string of papers
to recently address this issue head-on, however belatedly.
Here's an overview of the positions that ombudsmen and editors at various papers have expressed (Note
particularly the distinction between al Qaeda and Hamas that the Orlando
Sentinel, Boston Globe and Washington Post attempt to make):
|
Name,
newspaper |
Date of
article |
Should
we call Hamas 'terrorists' in news reports? |
Should we call
al Qaeda 'terrorists' in news reports? |
Reasons for
double standard |
|
Manning Pynn,
Orlando Sentinel |
August 24,
2003 |
No |
Shouldn't
have, but it's too late now, so yes |
Americans'
shock; US wasn't at war, Palestinians are resisting occupation |
|
Philip Gailey, St. Petersburg Times |
August 31,
2003 |
Yes |
Yes |
n/a - double
standard should end |
|
Christine Chinlund, Boston Globe |
Sept. 8, 2003 |
No; but their
acts can be called "terrorism" |
Yes |
Only Qaeda
fits def. of "groups that have no clearly
identifiable or explicitly articulated political objective"; Hamas' social
service functions; Israel is "far flung" |
|
Michael Getler, Washington Post |
Sept. 21, 2003 |
No |
Yes |
Hamas'
territorial ambitions, nationalism, social work; al Qaeda is everywhere, but
Hamas is regional; al Qaeda does random attacks, but Hamas part of war |
|
Tom Fielder, Miami Herald |
Jan. 4,
2004 |
Yes, when
describing act at least |
n/a |
n/a |
The quite similar claims by the Orlando
Sentinel, Boston Globe, and Washington Post demand attention, since both attempt
to justify the non-use of the term "terrorism" in the specific context of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. These editors posit that since Palestinian
terrorist groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad are "resisting occupation," "at
war," and have "nationalistic ambitions," the term "terrorism" may not apply to
their actions ― even brutal attacks on Israeli civilian buses and restaurants.
At the same time, the editors are willing to accept the use of the term to
describe al Qaeda terrorist acts.
Their logic is faulty for a number of reasons:
▪ Palestinian Arab terrorism against Jews ― in the decades before and after 1948
― long
preceded the 1967 war that created the disputed (or "occupied") territories.
▪ Hamas and Islamic Jihad have repeatedly clarified, in official documents and
statements, that their goal is not the creation of an independent
Palestinian state, but rather the genocidal elimination of all Jewish presence
in the region.
▪ Palestinian terrorist groups have strong affiliations with global Islamist
terrorist groups and regimes, and are not merely "regional" in scope.
▪ Even in the context of warfare, deliberate attacks against civilian targets
are illegal under the Fourth Geneva Convention, and therefore demand being
described as terrorism.
Conclusion:
The latest wave of Palestinian terrorism, including over
100 suicide bombings since
September 2000, has caused the brutal murder of 664 Israeli civilian lives.
Israeli policy and action regarding the Palestinian people and leadership must
be understood in the context of this unprecedented assault on a Western
democracy.
As the West unites against barbaric Islamic
terrorism that now also haunts continental Europe, it is essential that Israel's
struggle against Palestinian terror be properly identified as part of this
larger battle (which many now consider nothing less than World War III). When
news outlets differentiate between attacks in Israel and those elsewhere, they
expose an editorial
decision that Palestinian attacks are not part of that larger
battle between Islamist terrorists and democratic civilization, but rather, more
justified acts of nationalistic "resistance." This journalistic act is factually
wrong, morally dangerous, and a far cry from "neutral reporting."