Israel’s army of spin-doctors is doomed to defeat
Israel’s army of spin-doctors is doomed to defeat
By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth
The
Israeli government believes it is locked in an epic struggle
to save Israel from the growing movement calling for an
international boycott. Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu
warns that Israel must quickly “rebrand” itself to avoid
pariah status.
Ordinary Israelis are therefore being
conscripted into an army of spin-doctors in a campaign
termed hasbara – Hebrew for “public diplomacy”,
or more literally “propaganda”.
Selling the
occupation
In the latest offensive, the Education
Ministry has launched a compulsoryhasbara course for
Israeli students travelling abroad. All youth delegations
are now required to learn how to justify to outsiders
Israel’s policies in the occupied territories. According
to officials, the students must challenge those who “seek
to delegitimise Israel”.
Some 85 per cent of
Israelis tell pollsters they are keen to become hasbara
ambassadors for the Netanyahu government.
It is yet
more evidence that hasbara has become a national
obsession in Israel – and that the line between support
for one’s country and support for the subjugation of
another people has been erased. Some 85 per cent of Israelis
tell pollsters they are keen to becomehasbara
ambassadors for the Netanyahu government.
A
hasbara ministry already targets the international
media with good news, while cultural events from food fairs
to Israeli entries at film festivals are designed to prove
that Israel has another, hidden side.
For years the
Israeli government has relied on paid workers – and
thousands of volunteers in Israel and abroad – to surf the
internet posting pro-Israel comments.
At Israel’s
international airport, Israeli holidaymakers are offered
brochures explaining the importance of persuading those they
meet that Israel is misunderstood. Advice suggests
emphasising successes such as Israel’s invention of drip
irrigation and popular varieties of the cherry
tomato.
And yet the latest hasbara drive is as
unlikely to reverse Israel’s slow slide into ignominy as
its predecessors.
Slow slide into ignominy
The
hasbara industry’s chief flaw, as Israeli political
scientist Neve Gordon observes, is its assumption that
“the merchandise is fine, and only the packaging needs to
be replaced”.
But rapid developments in information
technology mean Israel has less control over its image than
ever before.
First it was 24-hour rolling news, then the
internet. Now cheap smartphones make every Palestinian a
potential documentary-maker, ensuring that moments of
cruelty and oppression are captured and available for anyone
who cares to look.
Palestinians post online videos of
their everyday abuse: from demolition of homes to
stone-throwers being shot with live ammunition; from
settlers burning crops to children being dragged by soldiers
from their beds in the middle of the night.
Last week
56-year-old Zaki Sabah, a familiar cake vendor in
Jerusalem’s Old City, starred in one such video.
Bystanders filmed him being savagely beaten by Israeli
police on a busy road. Denied a permit for many years by the
occupation authorities, Sabah has been repeatedly fined and
jailed.
Iraeli police
violently beat Palestinian cake vendor Zaki
Sabah
Meanwhile, another video exposed Israel’s
deceitful account of its supposedly peaceful interception of
a boat trying to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza. As more
than a dozen passengers were held captive over the weekend,
footage was smuggled out showing that Israeli commandos had
electrocuted some of them with tasers during the
takeover.
Israeli
commandos use tasers to electrocute passengers of the Gaza
aid ship Marianne av Göteborg
Troubling imagery is
not restricted to the occupied territories. Film of the
charred interior of a historic church next to the Sea of
Galilee highlighted last month the latest hate crime by
Jewish extremists against Israel’s large Palestinian
minority.
The charred
interior of the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves,
where Jesus is believed to have performed the miracle of
feeding the 5,000
The futility of trying to staunch
the tide of evidence damning Israel on media old and new was
exemplified last week by Moshe Yaalon, the defence
minister.
“There is no humanitarian distress in
Gaza,” he averred, while the media illustrated reports of
his speech with pictures of mountains of rubble and children
still homeless a year after Israel’s massive assault on
the besieged enclave.
Yaalon’s sophistry may placate
Israel’s diehard supporters but the rest of us are more
often incensed by such insults to our intelligence.
The
hasbara offensive is doomed for another
reason.
Blaming the messenger
With the Palestinians’
case substantiated by evidence, rather than Israel’s, the
evangelists of hasbara have only one recourse: to
blame the messenger.
Critics of Israel, it is implied,
are either inveterate dupes or unabashed anti-Semites.
Either they have been deceived by the Israel-haters, or they
are haters themselves.
As the hasbara industry
moves into overdrive, such slurs are becoming all too common
– including against those Israel most urgently needs to
cultivate as allies.
Judith Nir Mozes, the wife of
Interior Minister Silvan Shalom, a Netanyahu confidant,
possibly reflected high-level thinking in Israel when she
tweeted last month a racist “joke” about President
Barack Obama. “Do u know what Obama Coffee is? Black and
weak,” she wrote, ridiculing the leader of Israel’s most
important ally.
Similarly, the Israeli Foreign Ministry
hurried to mock foreign journalists, even though they are
hasbara’s target audience.
In a short animated
video, a naïve reporter is shown claiming that the people
of Gaza simply want peace as militants fire rockets just
behind him. Next the reporter misidentifies Hamas’s
tunnelling as the “first Palestinian subway system”. The
video ends with a warning: “Open your eyes, terror rules
Gaza.”
Michael Oren, Israel’s recently departed
ambassador to the US, has joined the fray too, castigating
American Jewish journalists as “self-haters” for their
critical coverage of the Israeli prime
minister.
Hasbara’s cartoon version of reality
is not only unconvincing but, in alienating friends as much
as foes, self-defeating. Netanyahu may hope to repackage
Israel, but his product – ongoing oppression of
Palestinians – is one few can be persuaded to
buy.
ENDS