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Posts Tagged ‘ethan bronner’

Al Jazeera’s ‘Listening Post’ Covers Bronner Controversy

Friday, February 19th, 2010


I was a guest on Al Jazeera TV’s Listening Post program, which discussed the ongoing controversy over Ethan Bronner’s conflict of interest due to his son’s voluntary IDF service.  My comments are in the first segment which goes roughly from the 1 minutes mark up to the 9 minute mark in the program.  My remarks were considerably condensed from the overall video footage I provided them.  But that’s what happens on TV. I was just happy to be there. Thanks to Bill Alford of ScanTV’s Moral Politics for production assistance.

I understand that Clark Hoyt will do another follow up on the Bronner story in his public editor column this coming Sunday including letters from readers responding pro and con. It’s good to keep this story alive.

Jonathan Cook has some terrific additional insight into the Bronner affair.

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N.Y. Times Public Editor: Reassign Bronner

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

I feel like I’ve just read a lightning bolt in the pages of the N.Y. Times.  Clark Hoyt, the public editor, has just called for the reassignment of Ethan Bronner as Israel bureau chief because of what Hoyt terms the “appearance” of a conflict of interest that will impede the trust that readers should place in the objectivity of the newspaper’s reporting.

He quotes a journalist academic who characterizes the issue entirely correctly:

Alex Jones, director of Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy and a former Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for The Times, took a different view. “The appearance of a conflict of interest is often as important or more important than a real conflict of interest,” he said. “I would reassign him.” Jones said such a step would be an injustice to Bronner, “but the newspaper has to come first.”

I felt that Hoyt was largely dismissive of the genuine and justifiable substantive criticisms levelled by critics like myself against Bronner’s often shabby reporting.  But I really don’t care that much because in the end Hoyt made the right judgment (but for different reasons than mine).  To be clear, the public editor is not a decision-maker.  He influences the tone and environment.  But Bill Keller is the one calling the shots and Keller is 110% behind Bronner.  Keller was likely the one who decided the Times could afford to stiff-arm the external critics like Ali Abunimah who asked whether Bronner’s son was serving.  And it was Keller who made this absolutely lame defense of Bronner’s transparency and lack of conflict of interest:

Keller said that if Israel launched a new assault into Gaza and Bronner’s son were a foot soldier, “I don’t think I’d have any problem with Ethan covering the conflict.” It would be a tougher call if the son rose to a commanding role, he said, and if the son’s unit were accused of wrongdoing, Keller said he thought he would assign another reporter.

This is preposterous.  Israel conducts yet another war on Gaza in which Bronner’s son serves & the former can still remain objective and unconflicted?  The only eventuality that would cause Bronner to substitute another reporter (but not rotate Bronner out of Israel) would be an accusation of war crimes against the son’s unit and then only if the son were an officer?  And I’ve got news for Keller: the last Gaza war involved virtually all Israeli units engaging in savage acts that Goldstone has characterized as possible war crimes.  What the Times’ senior editor does not understand about Israel and its military strategy is that it has become all-out war against military and civilian targets.  And this is a global doctrine for the entire army.  It’s not a question of a rogue unit here or there.  So with Bronner Jr. fighting in the IDF and killing Palestinians, there is simply no way that the Israeli army will escape general scrutiny for war crimes.  That’s why Keller’s distinction is a false one.

In his own defense of Bronner, Keller once against shows how tone-deaf he is.  In his view, reassigning Bronner  would mean giving in to the so-called terrorism of Israel and Bronner’s critics:

…We are reluctant to capitulate to the more savage partisans who make that assignment so difficult — and who make the fairmindedness of a correspondent like Ethan so precious and courageous.

That is so not the point I can’t begin to explain.  While some critics of Bronner may be unreasonable and have it in for Israel and deliberately conflate the two, I am not one of those.  The Times has had excellent reporters covering Israel in the past.  It will no doubt have excellent ones in future.  But Bronner is not one of these.  His writing, as I’ve written here many times is hopelessly conflicted.  He sees only one narrative much of the time.  He goes through the motions in an attempt to be fair to the other side, but he has so little understanding and empathy for the Palestinians that he fails almost every time.

I am not arguing that Ethan Bronner is not a good reporter.  I am arguing that he is not a good reporter when covering this issue.  His ideological biases, as subtle as they might be (and I know many of my readers find this too sympathetic to Bronner), are readily evident and compromise his work.  Keep in mind that not only is his son now in Tzahal, but his wife is Israeli as well.

Again, there is no reason why generally a reporter should not be able to overcome these two conflicts.  Good Israeli reporters like Gideon Levy and Larry Derfner do it and succeed in maintaining the necessary distance required.  But Bronner is American and not Israeli.  And for some reason he fails to maintain that distance in his reporting.

Here’s another confused and convoluted argument from Keller in defense of non-capitulation to the ideological hordes:

It is, in addition to those things, a sign of respect for readers who care about the region and who follow the news from there with minds at least partially open. You seem to think that you ( and Alex Jones) can tell the difference between reality and appearances, but our readers can’t. I disagree.

Beware of an editor who claims he won’t do something out of respect to the intelligence of his readers.  That editor is a coward.  My mind has been open to the NY Times coverage of Israel and other topics for decades.  I value the newspaper heritage it represents.  My mind is open.  But not to Ethan Bronner.  And I think Bill Keller insults the intelligence of the tens of thousands of Times readers who do not believe Ethan Bronner can fulfill his assignment satisfactorily.

Keller then lists a series of distinguished TImes reporters who have had putative conflicts of interest which, on closer examination, Keller doesn’t find to be so.  Here is one in which Keller neglects to understand the difference between Bronner and the reporter under discussion:

Anthony Shadid, who currently covers Iraq for us, is an American of Lebanese descent. He covered the Israeli invasion of Lebanon for the Washington Post, and he wrote with distinction and fairmindedness. Again, I don’t know his politics and can’t discern them in his work, but I know that his background — what you and Alex Jones might call his appearance of a conflict of interest — enriches his work with a deep appreciation of the language, culture and history of the region.

First, Shadid is not covering Lebanon for the Times. Second, he is not Lebanese but an American of Lebanese descent.  Third, he does not have a son serving in the Lebanese or Iraqi army nor in any of the local militias.  If he did and he was covering this story the Times would reassign him.  Bronner is Jewish and clearly a Zionist supporter of Israel, married to an Israeli with a son in the IDF.  Combining all these elements with the actual quality of his analysis gives you no choice but to see Bronner in a different category than Shahid.

Here’s another Times reporter who he exploits in a false manner:

Nazila Fathi, our brave Tehran correspondent, was hounded out of her native country and into exile by the current regime. Does that “conflict of interest” disqualify her from writing about Iran?

If Nazil Fathi were married to an Iranian hardliner who was a member of the government or if she was married to a leader of the Iranian opposition or if her son was in the Basij or Revolutionary Guards (in which many Iranian youth enlist) then the Times would reassign her because she clearly would have a conflict that, no matter how superb her reporting (which is superb by the way), would create an appearance of a conflict.

Here’s another bit of disingenuousness:

…To prevent any appearance of bias, would you say we should not send Jewish reporters to Israel?

This misses the point by a mile.  The Times usually sends Jewish correspondents to cover Israel: David Shipler, Tom Friedman, Deborah Sontag, etc.  The problem isn’t that they or Ethan Bronner is Jewish.  The only question that matters is can they overcome whatever prejudices they may’ve built up in the course of a lifetime of being raised as a Jew and supporting Israel as this Zionist education is inculcated in American Jews.  All of the Jewish reporters I mentioned (yes, even Friedman at the time), managed to do so–except Bronner.  It is not a question of being Jewish, but rather what kind of Jew and reporter you are.  Can you rise above your upbringing when that is required of you?  Bronner tries but ultimately cannot.  The others could.

Poor Bill Keller, he just doesn’t get it:

My point is not that Ethan’s family connections to Israel are irrelevant…How those connections affect his innermost feelings about the country and its conflicts, I don’t know. I suspect they supply a measure of sophistication about Israel and its adversaries that someone with no connections would lack. I suspect they make him even more tuned-in to the sensitivities of readers on both sides, and more careful to go the extra mile in the interest of fairness.

This guy is clueless.  Why would the fact that Ethan Bronner is married to an Israeli and has a son serving in the IDF “supply a measure of sophistication about” the Palestinians, which I presume is also supposed to be his beat?  Note, Keller himself can’t be bothered to call the Palestinians by their real name, but they become the generic “Israel’s adversaries.”  Why would Bronner be “tuned in to the sensitivities” of readers critical of Israel, or Arab or Muslim readers?  What would give Keller the right to make such a foolish, unfounded claim?  The truth is Ethan Bronner is tuned in to Israel and Israelis.  He represents their views and sentiments fairly well.  But he fails miserably when it comes to understanding the other side.  And this is simply unacceptable in the pages of a sophisticated newspaper of the world like the Times.

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FAIR Questions Bronner’s Objectivity

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

The progressive media watchdog group, FAIR, has published a statement joining Electronic Intifada and Tikun Olam in questioning the stonewalling approach the NY Times has taken to the issue of whether Ethan Bronner’s son’s induction into the IDF raises questions about his objectivity and conflict of interest:

What the Times needs to ask itself is whether it expects that its bureau chief has the normal human feelings about matters of life or death concerning one’s child.

Might he feel hostility, for example, when interviewing members of organizations who were trying to kill his son? When the IDF goes into battle, might he be rooting for the side for which his son is risking his life? Certainly such issues would be taken very seriously if a Times reporter had a child who belonged to a military force that was engaged in hostilities with the IDF; indeed, there’s little doubt that a reporter in that position would not be allowed to continue to cover the Mideast conflict.

Having a conflict of interest, it should be stressed, is not the same thing as producing slanted journalism; rather, it means that a journalist has outside motivations that are strongly at odds with his or her journalistic responsibilities. That a journalist has been “scrupulously fair” in the past does not excuse an ongoing conflict of interest; journalists should not be placed in a position where they have to ignore the well-being of their family in order to do their job, nor should readers be expected to trust that they can do so.

FAIR goes on to note that Bronner’s reporting has certainly not been known to be “scrupulously fair” in the past, which strengthens the level of concern among progressive readers of the Times.  I wrote here that Bronner’s last report on a new IDF offensive against the Goldstone Report claims that “virtually all Israelis” and even human rights NGOs agree there was no wholesale attack on civilian infrastructure in Gaza as Goldstone claims.  This is a patently false statement and has no right being in a newspaper claiming to represent a neutral perspective on this issue.

Please take FAIR’s advice and write or call Clark Hoyt, the Times’ public editor.  If he covers this at all publicly, he’ll doubtless side with Bronner and his editors, but it’s still worth trying to keep ‘em honest:

CONTACT:
New York Times
Clark Hoyt, Public Editor
public@nytimes.com
Phone: 212-556-7652

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Times Israel Correspondent Bronner: Son Likely Serving in IDF

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Why does the NY Times refuse to verify whether Ethan Bronner's son serves in the IDF?

In July, I heard a rumor which claimed that Ethan Bronner’s son was serving in the IDF.  I published the item and promptly forgot where I’d read it.  Phil Weiss followed my lead, but Antony Loewenstein queried Bronner, who denied it.  Since I couldn’t remember my source I apologized to Phil and we both retracted my report.

Now word comes from Electronic Intifada that the rumor may indeed be true (and this may be the first time I’ve sourced a story from EI):

Over the weekend, EI received a tip suggesting this had been the case and wrote to Bronner to ask him to confirm or deny the information and to seek his opinion on whether, if true, he thought it would be a conflict of interest.

Susan Chira, the foreign editor of The New York Times wrote in an email to The Electronic Intifada this morning:

“Ethan Bronner referred your query to me, the foreign editor. Here is my comment: Mr. Bronner’s son is a young adult who makes his own decisions. At The Times, we have found Mr. Bronner’s coverage to be scrupulously fair and we are confident that will continue to be the case.”

There are several astonishing things about this passage.  First, when contacted Ethan Bronner refused to respond directly and passed the message to his boss, which has the effect of turning this into an adversarial bureacratic exchange.  Second, Susan Chira, instead of answering directly as a professional editor should, chose the “refuse to confirm or deny” approach which her own reporters hate when government officials use it with them.  Again, this is a “stick it in your eye” response which dares EI and other blogs to do the scut work to confirm the rumor.  When we do confirm it this will make the Times look even lamer than it already does.  Third, and most astonishing is that Chira is absolutely tone deaf to the apparent conflict of interest that such news would reveal.

There’s another reason I believe this story to be true.  The first time Loewenstein asked Bronner about the rumor, the latter denied it because then it wasn’t true.  The second time EI asked Bronner he didn’t deny it as he did the first time.  Instead, he kicked it upstairs as if it was a hot potato (which it is for him).  Ergo, I’m persuaded it’s true.

In a normal situation, whether or not a reporter’s child serves in a country’s armed forces would be irrelevant to the professional standing of the reporter.  But this is not a normal situation.  In his job as Israel correspondent virtually all of his work involves covering the IDF.  I would say there is almost no story that he will file that will not involve the Israeli military in some fashion.  Conceivably, there could come a time when Bronner covers an Israeli war in which his son is fighting or even a battle in which his son participates.

This wouldn’t necessarily be a problem in a normal situation like Iraq or Afghanistan.  But again, this isn’t that.  Bronner has a duty to report about two nations at war with each other.  Since the Times has no full correspondent in Gaza or the West Bank, Bronner is in effect the editor covering all those theaters.  As such he MUST be able to report dispassionately from the Palestinian as well as Israeli perspective.

Many of my readers have followed my ongoing critique of Bronner’s reporting, which shows decided, though perhaps not fully conscious bias towards Israel’s narrative.  Given this, the possibility that his son serves in the army that maintains the Occupation and is the locus of injustice raises glaring questions of conflict of interest.

Abunimah quotes this important section of the N.Y. Times rules on the subject:

The New York Times’ own “Company policy on Ethics in Journalism” acknowledges that the activities of a journalist’s family member may constitute a conflict of interest. It includes as an example, “A brother or a daughter in a high-profile job on Wall Street might produce the appearance of conflict for a business reporter or editor.” Such conflicts may on occasion require the staff member “to withdraw from certain coverage.”

The IDF is the premier national institution in Israel.  There is no way you can escape its influence either as a reporter or an Israeli.  It is the equivalent of the Wall Street firm and Bronner Jr. is an employee.  His dad is the business reporter and he simply can’t escape the conflict.  It is clear to any reasonable person aside from Bronner and Chira.  He HAS a conflict if his son is serving.  At the least, he should no longer be allowed to report on the IDF (which nullifies his usefulness as a reporter there).

The N.Y. Times owes it to its readers to get down from the high horse Chira exhibited in her reply and deal seriously with this issue.  It  isn’t likely to go away and it will further tarnish the newspaper’s claim to objectivity in reporting the conflict.

The Chicago Reader raises an interesting ethical hypothetical: could an Israeli reporter covering Beirut continue doing so if his son served in a militia, say Hezbollah?  Think about it.  It’s a problem.  The Reader blogger aptly states:

I hope the Times doesn’t deny it has a situation on its hands, even if it’s confident that Ethan Bronner can successfully negotiate it.

If he’d read Chira’s reply, he’d have realized the Times is doing precisely what he hoped it wouldn’t.

I’ve circulated the rumor to some of my Israeli sources and am eager to hear from anyone who can confirm or deny the rumor.

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Bronner’s Mischaracterization of Hamas Continues

Saturday, September 5th, 2009
Ethan Bronner gets it wrong on Hamas

Ethan Bronner gets it wrong on Hamas (Center for Study of Ethics, Utah Valley University)

Not an article Ethan Bronner writes goes by without the obligatory claim that Hamas is dedicated to Israel’s destruction.  Today’s story about the tension in Gaza between Islamizers and moderates within the Islamist movement is true to form:

It [Hamas] rejects Israel’s right to exist and remains doctrinally committed to its destruction. However, its leaders have said several times that if Israel were to leave all land taken in the 1967 war, Hamas could accept a Palestinian state limited to the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem…

If Hamas would accept a Palestinian state consisting of the current Occupied Territories, then ipso facto it does not reject Israel’s existence nor can it be committed to its destruction.  In fact, many Israeli political, military and intelligence analysts concede that Hamas’ acceptance of a hudna is a tacit acceptance of Israel’s existence.

In fact, no senior leader of Hamas for several years has put forward the incrementalist notion that it may accept a hudna as a creeping process leading to Israel’s destruction and absorption into Palestine.  Are there Palestinians who wish this outcome?  Certainly, just as there are many Israeli Jews who wish Israeli Palestinian Arabs could be expelled from Israel.  But the notion that Israel’s Arab citizens will be transferred out of the country is as far-fetched as the notion that Hamas will or can cause Israel’s destruction.

It’s long past time for Bronner to get with the program and acknowledge the myriad interviews of senior Hamas officials like Khaled Meshaal and others who have documented the moderating of the movement’s positions on these matters.  Let’s put it plain and simple for him: Hamas currently does not reject Israel’s right to exist nor is it committed to its destruction (and for those of you out there who are anti-Palestinian partisans clamoring to bring up the Hamas charter, please point me to any evidence that any Hamas leader pays any attention whatsoever to it).  The fact that Bronner stays stuck in the past is yet another proof that his reporting is neither careful nor balanced.

Yet another proof of this is a recent profile he wrote about the weekly Bilin demonstrations at the Separation Wall.  He interviewed IDF officers and peace activists about their respective views of both the Wall and the demonstrations.  But curiously, he noted the IDF claim that 170 soldiers had been wounded over time there (part of the claim that the demonstrators are not non-violent peace activists, but violent hoodlums).  But Bronner somehow forgot to mention the Palestinian casualties at the Wall, which include one murdered Palestinian and one American left in a vegetative state by IDF fire in the past four months alone.  Altogether, 19 Palestinians have been killed during demonstrations against the Wall.  Why wasn’t this fact even whispered in Bronner’s article?  Because he wanted his readers to focus on the flesh wounds suffered by Israeli soldiers when a few odd rocks are thrown their way by young Palestinians who violate the discipline invoked during these protests?  Why did Ethan Bronner forget Palestinian suffering?

Israel’s Freeze Fraud

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Ethan Bronner writes in today’s NYT that senior Israeli officials say Ehud Barak will come to Washington Tuesday and offer what I’m calling “freeze-lite.” That is, a partial, temporary (as in, the blink of an eye) settlement freeze which Israel is naturally calling, according to Bronner’s formulation, “a complete freeze.” The problem? It isn’t complete. Not by a long-shot. Just note this sentence from Bronner’s second paragraph:

The freeze would not affect construction that was already under way, nor include East Jerusalem.

Well, that’s a loophole big enough to drive a Mack truck through. A settlement freeze that omits East Jerusalem is like Peter Stuyvesant purchasing Manhattan from the Indians, excluding Central Park.

Bronner is clearly a “believer” in this offer, as he characterizes it thus:

While such an offer falls short of President Obama’s demand that Israel halt all settlement building now, it is the most forthcoming response that senior Israeli officials have given to date and suggests that American pressure is having some effect.

Again, the phrase “some effect” is so vague as to be almost meaningless. Unless Israel agrees to a full settlement freeze that includes all portions of the Territories including East Jerusalem, then American pressure is not having enough of an effect. The same holds true of freezing all current construction.

In the report, the Israelis tell Bronner that 2,000 housing units are under construction and would be completed. That’s not a drop in the bucket. And it’s likely many of those units are in Maale Adumim, a prime area of contention, whose ‘thickening’ by Israeli builders and planner is a primary impediment to a territorially-contiguous Palestinian state.

I realize that Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem poses particular political problems for an Israeli government since, if it did agree to a freeze in East Jerusalem, it would be tacitly conceding that East Jerusalem is the same as the rest of the Territories. But this is Israel’s problem and not ours. It annexed East Jerusalem against the explicit wishes of the U.S. and most of the rest of the world. So now it will have to eat that crow if it wishes to get on board with the Obama administration.

Barak himself is always good for sheer chutzpah and effrontery and doesn’t disappoint here:

“Many Israelis fear that what Palestinians want is not two states but two stages,” meaning an end to Israel in phases. He also said that by focusing solely on settlement building and not on what the Arab countries should also be doing for peace, Israel felt that it was being driven to its knees and delivered to the other side rather than asked to join a shared effort.

He’ll have to pardon our collective jaws dropping at that whopper.  Israel “being driven to its knees?”  By a settlement freeze?  Puh-leeze.  Barak conveniently forgets that the Arab League has already offered simultaneous mutual recognition to Israel if it withdraws to 67 borders.  But what has Israel offered that anyone can take seriously?  Gorsnisht.

I don’t even know whether Bronner realizes that in this passage, discussing Israel’s conquest of the Territories in the 1967 war, he reveals himself as a Revisionist:

…Taking the West Bank, previously held by Jordan, fired the collective imagination in Israel because so much of it — including the cities of Hebron, Nablus and Jericho — was part of the biblical Jewish homeland that Zionism sought to reclaim.

Parse that carefully:  Zionism sought to reclaim the “biblical Jewish homeland.”  That’s pure Jabotinsky.  In truth, David Ben Gurion accepted Partition, which meant precisely the opposite of what Bronner is claiming.  Not to mention that aside from the Revisionists, mainstream Zionism never felt it needed the entirety of the “biblical Jewish homeland” in order to establish the State of Israel.  I suppose one could argue that Bronner phrased this awkwardly and didn’t mean to say that Zionism wanted to reclaim the “biblical Jewish homeland,” at least not necessarily in its entirety.  But when you write about a subject as freighted as this, you must be careful and nuanced.  If not, you leave yourself open to all sorts of mischief, which is what this journalist does regularly in his reports.

And lest anyone claim that Bronner is not an apologist for Israeli policy, read this passage:

Israel says the real problem is Arab rejection of its existence in any borders at all…

Excuse me?  The 2002 Saudi offer explicitly offered Israel Arab recognition.  Syria is practically clamoring to recognize Israel if it returns the Golan.  The PLO has for several decades recognized Israel.  So what is Bronner “on” about??  Once again I ask in vain–if Bronner doesn’t want to write more carefully about these delicate issues isn’t there an editor in the house to do so for him?

Ever the cheeky one, Barak has more.  Here he touts Israel’s ‘generosity’ toward the Palestinians:

It has formed a ministerial committee headed by Mr. Netanyahu aimed at starting economic projects in the West Bank.  It has also given the Palestinian security forces greater freedom of action in the past couple of weeks.

Mr. Barak presented such steps as examples of concessions Israel had already made that deserved recognition from Washington and Arab leaders.

Wow, you set up a government committee and hand over a few IDF roadblocks to PA security forces and all of a sudden you’re ready to make peace with the Palestinians.  Israel has zero credibility on these issues and so will have to do much better before the Arab states will risk being burned by offering anything to Israel in response to such alleged “good faith.”

Bronner Sticks His Foot in It Again

Saturday, June 27th, 2009
Israeli anti-Occupation activist, Ezra Nawi builds shelter for Palestinian villagers (Rina Castelnuovo/NYT)

Israeli anti-Occupation activist, Ezra Nawi, builds shelter for Palestinian villagers (Rina Castelnuovo/NYT)

I don’t know what it is with Ethan Bronner, the NY Times’ Israel correspondent. He’s clearly intelligent. He knows the issues fairly well. But his problem is he’s conflict about the politics of the Middle East. With a child in the IDF and married to an Israeli it’s almost as if he has to pull his punches [correction: Ethan Bronner denies he has a son in the IDF and I can't for the life of me remember where I read this. So I stand corrected on this particular matter and apologize to Bronner and Phil Weiss, who picked this up from here. But Bronner's wife IS Israeli.]

It’s not that he’s a horrible journalist. After all, as I said he’s articulate and intelligent and knows the issues. But rather than come right out and say something definitive, he beats around the bush and tempers his judgments. He wants everyone to like him and is shocked when many don’t.

The thing that irks me most about his reporting is that he ALWAYS manages to include a real howler in almost every major report that he writes. It usually something so condescending toward the Israeli peace movement or the Palestinians or something so twisted or distorted that it leaves you scratching your head how an otherwise intelligent human being can say something so out there, so…dumb.

In today’s report, he chose a worthy subject in Israeli peace activist Ezra Nawi, who has “adopted” the Palestinian villages of the south Hebron Hills, defending them from the marauding neighboring settlers. In addition, Ezra does come up for sentencing on Wednesday so the scrutiny on Israeli justice from a major U.S. media outlet is quite welcome.  Please sign this Jewish Voice for Peace petition to pressure Israeli authorities to end this sham judicial process.  For more on Nawi’s case, see this report by Neve Gordon.

But it’s as if he somehow has to mollify his right-wing readers in choosing such a progressive topic that he adds the following howler:

Since the Israeli left lost so much popular appeal after the violent Palestinian uprising of 2000 and the Hamas electoral victory in Gaza three years ago, its activists tend to be a rarefied bunch — professors of Latin or Sanskrit, and translators of medieval poetry. Mr. Nawi, however, is a plumber.

A note before I go on: later in this story he DOES quote an Israeli peace activist, David Shulman, who IS a professor of Sanskrit at the Hebrew University. But it’s as if this single source has somehow become emblematic of the entire Israeli peace movement. Not just emblematic, but in Bronner’s eyes the entire Israeli left has been reduced to David Shulman. While Prof. Shulman, a leader of Ta’ayush, IS an extraordinary scholar and human being, it is s deep disservice to him and the Israeli left to imply there aren’t many tens of thousands of others doing work equally valuable.

Bronner: have you forgotten about B’Tselem, Gisha, Yesh G’vul, Combatants for Peace, Breaking the Silence, Rabbis for Human Rights, Hadash, Peace Now, the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions, Courage to Refuse, Parent’s Circle, Anarchists Against the Wall (just to mention organizations)? And individuals like Uri Avnery, Rabbi Menachem Froman, the Sheministim, Michael Sfard, Jeff Halper, Shulamit Aloni, Robbi Damelin, Yitzchak Frankenthal, Rabbi Arik Ascherman, Dov Kheinin. Are these all nothing but effete European professors of obscure humanist subjects? The very notion is absurd and offensive.

Now, as always with Bronner’s howlers–there is a kernel of truth there. The organized Israeli left has shriveled and failed in a massive way since the first Intifada and especially during the Lebanon and Gaza wars. Note I said the “organized” left. I say this deliberately because Israeli NGOs and individual peace activists are doing work as vital as any done by the Israeli left when it was a more powerful political force. So for Bronner to dismiss the constituency of the Israeli left as he has done is deeply insulting and false.

He owes these courageous groups and individuals an apology. But will they get one? Don’t hold your breath.

David Shulman provides this bit of sad news from the anti-Occupation forces:

Yesterday was a tough day in the Territories…The whole group of some 30 Taayush activists, including 2 Palestinian drivers and some of our Palestinian colleagues, was arrested on arrival at al-Safa to accompany the farmers to their lands. The arrests were carried out [by the IDF] very brutally, there was one broken leg and one apparently broken arm.

As far as the IDF and the Occupation goes, plus ca change plus la meme chose. Oh I forgot, that’s going to mark me as yet another effete western intellectual do-gooder.

Ethan Bronner’s Mediocrity and Ir David Land Grab

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Neil Young once wrote that rust never sleeps and neither does Phil Weiss. For nearly two days I’ve been intending to write a post about the pro-settler plot to encircle Arab East Jerusalem with parks in order to reinforce a Jewish territorial claim to the land. The $120-million project which Akiva Eldar, Peace Now and Ir Amin have “outed” would serve a dual purpose of surrounding Arab neighborhoods with parkland, which would also inhibit any potential expansion or development in these communities and prevent them from linking to each other.

Wouldn’t you know that Phil got to the post before me and reported essentially the “take” that I had on Ethan Bronner’s execrable coverage of the same story in which the latter seemed oblivious to the fact that the plan is not only secret, but that it wasn’t vetted by the usual governmental planning authorities. Pro-Israel liberals like to talk about Israeli democracy, but conveniently forget that when certain political figures operate the levers of power and decide that conventional democratic oversight is “inconvenient” it somehow slips through the cracks; and no one on the Israeli Jewish side seems to notice or care much. Except, that is for Akiva Eldar.  And what is he but the typical crybaby Israeli leftist, right? Democracy? We’ve got more important things to worry about like combating the Arab population menace.

Ir David shiny happy billboard promoting its park land grab (Rita Castelnuovo/NYT)

Ir David shiny happy billboard promoting its park land grab (Rita Castelnuovo/NYT)

Returning to Bronner’s problematic approach, it is typically aimless reportage, which refuses to take a stand or analyze what is clearly right in front of his nose.  Instead of Eldar’s forthright term “secret” describing the nature of the plan and its execution, which confronts you in the Haaretz headline, Bronner buries the lede using the term “quiet” instead.  He also seems to adopt the turn of the century Zionist narrative that any territory not directly controlled by Jews is barren wasteland:

As part of the plan, garbage dumps and wastelands are being cleared and turned into lush gardens and parks, now already accessible to visitors who can walk along new footpaths and take in the majestic views, along with new signs and displays that point out significant points of Jewish history.

I guess one Arab’s piece of territory is another Jew’s “wasteland.”  And note the approving terms “lush gardens,” “new footpaths,” and “majestic views.”  Doesn’t it sound like those old Zionist brochures boasting how the halutzim have made the desert bloom??  This is inadequate journalism and what’s especially sad about it is that Bronner, if he bothered to respond to e mail sent to him by critics like me (which he doesn’t) would be entirely credulous and not have a clue why this is terribly slanted.

Further, the right-wing pro-settler private group which is both surreptitiously buying up Arab land or forcibly expelling Arab inhabitants from it is twice labelled by Bronner simply as a “private group.”  The fact that it refused to be interviewed for his article reflects merely how “delicate” the subject is, rather than a desire to continue to veil its actions in a cloak of secrecy (which is the real reason).  Only toward the end of his story does Bronner provide any context about the extremist leanings of Ir David (get a load of the money and sophistication behind this group’s website).

Bronner allocates three entire paragraphs to Israel’s bogus hasbara touting the merits of its plan:

As an official in the prime minister’s office put it in his answer: “Jerusalem has been the eternal capital of the Jewish people for some 3,000 years and will remain the united capital of the State of Israel. Under Israeli sovereignty, for the first time in the history of Jerusalem, the different religious communities have enjoyed freedom of worship and the holy sites of all faiths have been protected.

He continued: “The government will continue to develop Jerusalem, development that will benefit all of Jerusalem’s diverse population and respect the different faiths and communities that together make Jerusalem such a special city.”

Israeli officials point out that when East Jerusalem was in Jordanian hands from 1949 to 1967, dozens of synagogues in the Jewish Quarter were destroyed, Jewish graves were desecrated and Jewish authorities were largely denied access to the Western Wall or other shrines. By contrast, in Jerusalem today Muslim and Christian authorities administer their holy sites in a complex power arrangement under Israeli control.

No word from the prime minister or Bronner on precisely how this land grab will “benefit all of Jerusalem’s diverse population and respect the different faiths…”  Of course, a proper reading between the lines which you should never expect Bronner to provide would lead one to understand that Ir David’s activities will benefit one part of Jerusalem’s population and will respect one faith, and only one: Jews.

Bronner typically relegates the views of progressive Israelis on the topic to the end of the article where fewer readers will have an opportunity to read them.  Such an journalistic decision also consciously or unconsciously reveals Bronner’s editorial emphasis (or “bias” as some would have it).

Anyway, Phil got there first, darn that guy. He’s good, and I’ve got to stay one step (well, maybe a half step) ahead of him or he’ll eat my lunch. Seriously though, last weekend I was in DC and had a chance to meet Phil, Adam Horowitz and my other peace blogging buddies including Jerry Haber, Dan Sisken, Jim Lobe, Dan Luban and Ali Gharib. We had a blast over dinner at Busboys and Poets. In further conversations, we decided to try to maintain an organized presence at the J Street October conference. So if you’re on the east coast (or even Midwest) stay tuned for developments. I’m hoping J Street might be interested in dedicating part of its agenda to some panel discussions about pro-peace blogging/media and furthering the I-P peace message.

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