It’s really quite simple.
If it is critical of Israel, it is a myth. If it gives Israel a pass, it
is fact.
Wolf Blitzer published a book, in
which he promoted one piece of Zionist propaganda after another and denounced
Palestinian views as “spurious myths.” It is a myth that Arab citizens were
“massacred” at Deir Yassin, a “myth” that Palestinian refugees “were major
victims of the 1948 war,” and a “myth” that “Jewish atrocities” caused the
Palestinians to flee.[1]
I read his book.[2] He
declares that “Arabs formed a majority of the population in Palestine in 1948
is a myth.” Then once he gets rid of the
Palestinian population, it’s anything goes; that Palestinians were the victims
of the establishment of the State of Israel, that the Palestinian question is
the core of the Arab-Israeli conflict, that Israel discriminates against its
Arab citizens, it’s all a myth.
In reality, at the founding of the State of Israel, numerous
acts of violence were designed to frighten Arabs into fleeing for their lives.
One of the best documented examples was the village of Deir Yassin . On April 9, 1948, the Stern gang, headed by
Yitzak Shamir, and the Irgun, headed by Menachem Begin, conducted the massacre
of the Arab village of Deir Yassin. Jews
claim only 100 people were killed, Arabs say it was 250. The commander of the Haganah, Zvi Ankori
described what he witnessed:
I saw cut-off genitalia and women’s
crushed stomachs. It was direct murder. Soldiers shot everyone they saw,
including women and children. Parents begged commanders to stop the slaughter,
to please stop shooting.[3]
No one denies that most of those slashed to death were women
and children. Jewish terrorist shot people in their homes and threw their
bodies into the streets as a message to neighboring Arab villages. Survivors of
the raid tell stories of Israeli soldiers starting to kill early in the morning
and continuing all day. They killed everyone they saw, including old people and
children. One pregnant woman had her stomach cut open with a butcher’s knife.[4]
Rather than hiding its face in shame, Israel’s leaders
promoted the massacre to frighten other villages into fleeing their homes and
leaving them for Israeli Jews to occupy, “free of charge.”
Yet, Blitzer claims that the massacre of innocent Arabs in Deir Yassin did not
happen, It’s all a myth.
Blitzer, pro-Israeli lobbyist for AIPAC-turned-news-anchor,
has become the face of CNN and CNN has become the propagandist for Israel.
The Day after the violent murders
of four Rabbis in a Jerusalem synagogue, CNN hosted eight Jewish Israelis,
three Jewish Americans but, not a single Palestinian to comment on the violence
in Israel… the next day, CNN hosted seven pro-Israel guests including Alan
Dershowitz, twice. While 15 pro-Israel guests were hosted in just two days, not
a single Palestinian or Arab was asked to comment on the violence in Israel-Palestine.
“This one-sided narrative allows the erroneous and self-serving assertions of
the most right-wing and hyper-nationalistic government in Israel’s history to
go unchecked.”[5]
I guess when Dershowitz said that Israel “has never attacked
a mosque,” he forgot about the 73 mosques in Gaza that were completely
demolished during Israel’s bombardment in 2014 and the 205 others partially
destroyed when they were deliberately targeted by Israeli bombers.
So, I say shame on CNN for committing itself more to
propaganda than to news. But, I say shame on us more if we allow CNN to dupe us
with Wolf’s world.
Thomas Are
September 26, 2017
[1] Charlottesville is Moment of Truth for
empowered U.S. Zionists (Who name Their Children after Israeli Generals.)
Mondoweiss, 8/18/2017.
[2] Wolf
Blitzer, Myth and Facts 1976, A Concise
Record of the Arab-Israeli Conflict., Near East Research, Inc. 1976
[3].Lanni
Brenner, The Iron Wall: Zionist Revolutions From Jabotinsky to Shamir,
(Zed Books, Ltd. 1984). P. 97. And Ralph Schoenman, The Hidden History of
Zionism, (Veritas Press, Santa Barbara, California, 1988) p.33.
[4].Quoted
in David Hirst, The Gun and the Olive
Branch: The Root of Violance on the Middle East, Faber and Faber, 1977) p.
141. Cited in Clifford Wright, Facts and
Fables: The Arab-Isreli Conflict, (London, Kegan Paul International. 1989)
p.19