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sonz
07-21-2006, 04:55 PM
War in Lebanon has once again become breaking news on television screens across the world, but a growing body of distorted reporting is being disseminated just as rapidly as the country is being destroyed.

In recent days, many American news programmes have demonstrated an exceptionally weak knowledge of Lebanese politics, skewed further by a lack of access to areas that have been attacked in the country and their victims.

Take Monday's coverage of the conflict on NBC's popular Today Show with anchorwoman Nathalie Morales, who in introducing a report on Hezbollah, rhetorically asks: "So just who is Israel at war with in this latest chapter of an ancient conflict?"

Not only does the reporter assume that Israel's war targets only Hezbollah (and not the Lebanese civilians, government, private businesses and the military, which have all been attacked) but even contradicts earlier reports on her own network indicating Hezbollah's founding to be in the early 1980s; hardly considered "ancient" times.

Equally misleading were reports on the Today Show defining Hezbollah solely as the mastermind of the 1982 attacks on US marines and possessor of long-range missiles.

Absent in the reporting was any reference to Hezbollah's role in defeating the 22-year Israeli occupation of the country and its support among up to a million Lebanese, with many benefiting from an intricate network of social services and political representation.

Of course, failing to report such details contributes to the view that Hezbollah acts as merely a renegade organisation rather than a movement that encompasses roughly a quarter of the country's population.

Thousands of Lebanese civilians
have been displaced

On the other hand, when it comes to reporting the situation in Israel, anchors on sister network MSNBC seem to boast an intimate knowledge of the population, even a bit of psychoanalytical skill.

During his show Hardball with Chris Mathews, the host describes the Israeli town of Haifa as being similar to a city in California, "very modern, very debonair".

Anchorwoman Rita Cosby, who freely dubs Hezbollah as "rag-tag" terrorists, would later describe an attack on "Holy Nazareth" as an assault on "the home town of Jesus", and erroneously as his birthplace - of course no reference to the multitude of biblical cities in Lebanon.

Many pundits are blatantly supportive of Israel's fight against "terror acts"
On Hardball, Mathews asks a reporter on the scene how Israelis are coping with "vacation plans" considering the war situation. Mathews concludes that a resilient character among the Israeli people, will "keep that country around for a very long time".

Later in the show there is analysis with field reporters and political pundits, many blatantly supportive of Israel's fight against "terror acts" and the "worldwide Islamic threat" - still no mention of the widespread devastation and human loss in Lebanon.

Mathew’s questions include: "How do you get Hezbollah to stop? Will Israel get the job done? How broad a goal is Israel setting?" And finally: "What’s a bigger threat to the United States? Al-Qaeda or Hezbollah?"

Lebanese have no warning of or
proper shelter from air raids
Mathews makes reference to the plight of the Lebanese only once during his show, when a reporter raises the possibility of a "bloody mess" for Israel.

Hours later, early on Tuesday, the casualty count in Lebanon stands at around 200 as cities and towns across the country are systematically pulverised, leaving hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians trapped and unable to escape the fighting.

A massive refugee crisis looms large while the country lies in complete disarray with its arterial roadways and bridges completely destroyed. Meanwhile, around a dozen are dead in Israel, with the last large attack occurring at a train depot on Sunday.

On Tuesday, 11 Lebanese soldiers are killed and a handful of rockets are launched at northern Israel with no casualties reported.

There is no indication of which side is doing the lion's share of the killing, perpetuating a false sense of balance on the battlefield
MSNBC decides to begin its newscast from Israel with a graphic that reads "breaking news: more than 250 killed in 7 days of fighting in Israel and Lebanon". There is no indication of which side is doing the lion's share of the killing, perpetuating a false sense of balance on the battlefield.

Over a live video feed, MSNBC anchorwoman Chris Jansen asks a reporter in North Israel about how average citizens there are coping with the short time lag between rocket attacks and air-raid sirens. The reporter describes a "quite frightening" situation for locals.

Jansen then speaks to a reporter in Lebanon over the phone, with a focus on the latest developments in the evacuation of foreign nationals. We are never told that average Lebanese citizens across the border have absolutely no warning of attacks and little access to well-fortified bomb shelters.

Before a commercial break there is footage of destruction across Lebanon, with swaths of the capital reduced to rubble. However, the graphics indicate that these are images of "Mideast Crisis" and not the result of round-the-clock Israeli air strikes.

Unlike the static clip of masked gunmen stomping on Israeli flags - images repeatedly attributed to Hezbollah and the Lebanese side - we see no equivalent attribution of burning cities and residences to Israel and its people.

The media myths continue unabated on Wednesday when an NBC reporter stationed on Cyprus tells a studio anchor that the American evacuation from Beirut will begin shortly and that the US embassy is providing a "safe haven" or "bomb shelters" for the thousands of US citizens as they wait.

But in truth, hundreds of Americans amass on an open-air seafront promenade near the embassy compound, where hundreds more crowd the streets and parking areas.

One US citizen, who gave her name only as Liliane, decided to return to her apartment after waiting out in the heat for several hours, disgusted she said by the disorganisation and curt attitude of US military personnel.

She described the plight of a woman with a newborn child sitting on the pavement with other children, pleading for help.

"They just didn't care," she said, drawing a contrast with television pictures of a smiling US ambassador escorting evacuees on to helicopters and while others were ferried away on chartered ships.

"They didn’t show what was happening outside the boats. On TV it looks like the situation is under control."

Habib Battah is the managing editor of Middle East Broadcasters Journal

AlJazeera
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Keltoi
07-21-2006, 05:03 PM
The U.S. media is given access to most anything in Israel, which adds to them having more coverage from Israel and with the Israeli people. In contrast, the media is given "guided" tours in Lebanon, with a Hezbollah spokeman giving out the information. It is obvious to the media that many Lebanese civilians are being killed, and they have stated that constantly. I've watched FOX news for quite awhile this morning, and I couldn't even begin to count the number of times they have mentioned and discussed the civilian deaths in Lebanon. I think that article was picking out circumstances and conversations on a 24 hour news network and using the ones that seemed less than concerned about civilian deaths, which isn't the general case.
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Dahir
07-21-2006, 05:03 PM
Just imagine living here, ugh! I'm repulsed by Fox and CNN. I can't stand the news anymore, its not even news, they don't report even half-truths, only biased, smart-pants remarks on the "bad side."

The only CNN reporters I like are the English reporters, they report news the way it should be, I also like Anderson Cooper, he does reporting on both sides, fairly.
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Keltoi
07-21-2006, 05:13 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Dahir
Just imagine living here, ugh! I'm repulsed by Fox and CNN. I can't stand the news anymore, its not even news, they don't report even half-truths, only biased, smart-pants remarks on the "bad side."

The only CNN reporters I like are the English reporters, they report news the way it should be, I also like Anderson Cooper, he does reporting on both sides, fairly.
Actually, you mean you don't like them because they don't have an agenda against Israel. You want them to condemn Israel, which isn't the job of the news. The BBC condemns the U.S. and Israel constantly, and is hardly an un-biased news source. I'm sure you don't see it that way, since you want to hear bias in reporting. The American media simply reports the news, and allow commentary by talking heads. If you don't like what Chris Matthews says, don't watch his show. It is a show about opinion and political conjecture, not news. I think that is one of things people don't seem to understand about CNN, MSNBC, and FOX. They report the news, then go to a show where people voice opinions and conjecture. That is why some people watch CNN and some FOX. They report the same news, but the commmentary is different.
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