With
the
dreadful
threat
of
yet
another
Israeli
war
in
the
Middle
East
looming,
Israeli
propaganda
machine
is
likely
to
go
into
full
gear.
In
fact,
trial
balloons
have
already
been
sent
out
bearing
supposedly
unrehearsed
comments
by
former
Israeli
Army
general
and
current
Minister
Yossi
Peled,
suggesting
that
another
war
is
on
its
way.
More
recently,
Israel's
ultra-right
and
unabashedly
racist
Foreign
Minister
Avigador
Lieberman
threatened
to
topple
the
government
of
Syrian
President
Bashar
Assad
in
case
of a
war.
And
so
it
begins.
Historically,
Israel
has,
with
one
understandable
exception,
determined
the
time
and
place
of
all
of
its
wars
with
the
Arabs.
The
only
time
Israeli
forces
were
attacked
in
1973
involved
an
Arab
attempt
to
regain
territories
that
were
captured
by
Israel
in
1967.
When
Lieberman
uttered
his
"message
that
should
go
out
to
the
ruler
of
Syria
from
Israel"
to
an
audience
at
Bar
Ilan
University,
he
was
effectively
saying
that
Israel
will
topple
the
Syrian
government
when
it
decides
the
time
was
ripe
for
war.
And
considering
Peled's
earlier
statement
that
war
was
imminent,
the
only
possible
conclusion
would
be
that
a
"regime
change"
in
Syria
is
high
on
the
Israeli
agenda.
It
also
perhaps
represents
the
last
chance
of
fulfilling
the
US
neoconservative
vision
-
that
of
"A
New
Strategy
for
Securing
the
Realm."
This
inference
should
have
been
evident
and
thus
sent
shock
waves
throughout
the
world,
and
especially
through
the
US
media
which
now
know
fully
the
price
of
the
Israeli-neocon
folly.
So
why
do
Western
mainstream
media,
especially
in
the
US,
continue
to
guard
Israel's
image
so
protectively,
at
times
even
devotedly,
when
the
country's
belligerence
is
so
blatant?
And
if
some
in
the
media
are
indeed
well
intentioned
in
their
coverage,
why
do
they
continually
miss
the
many
clear
signs
pointing
to
Israeli
criminality
and
aggression?
A
growing
reference
that
is
once
again
floating
among
political
and
media
analysts
is
that
Israel
has
greater
mastery
than
the
Arabs
over
fighting
media
wars.
Often
cited,
for
example,
is
the
National
Information
Directorate,
an
Israeli
propaganda
center
that
was
established
a
few
months
prior
to
the
devastating
war
on
Gaza
last
year.
Ironically,
the
center
was
established
after
recommendations
made
by
an
Israeli
inquiry
into
the
equally
bloody
Israeli
war
against
Lebanon
in
2006
-
ironically
because
independent
war
inquiries
often
chastise
the
army
for
violation
of
human
rights,
as
opposed
to
recommending
the
establishment
of a
"hasbara"
-
more
like
propaganda
-
body
to
justify
the
crimes
committed
against
civilians.
Still,
even
such
"hasbara"
should
have
had
little
impact
on
the
Western
media's
depiction
of
Israeli
crimes
and
hostilities
toward
its
neighbors.
One
could
possibly
consider
the
claim
that
Israel's
media
success
story
is
the
brainchild
of
Israel's
own
media
expertise
under
very
specific
circumstances:
That
Israeli
spokespersons
are
icons
of
articulation
and
charm;
that
Palestinian
retaliations
to
Israeli
crimes
in
Gaza
were
vile
and
gruesome;
that
the
Israeli
media
blackout
was
so
successful
that
Western
journalists
had
no
other
way
of
finding
any
credible,
decipherable
facts;
that
there
are
no
Arab
spokespersons
who
are
well-informed
and
articulate
enough
to
present
even
a
semblance
of a
coherent
narrative
to
challenge
the
one
offered
by
Israel.
But
none
of
these
scenarios
are
convincing.
Israeli
Defense
Minister
Ehud
Barak
is
as
faltering
in
English
as
he
is
in
his
mother
tongue.
The
Palestinian
resistance
merely
killed
13
Israelis,
10
of
whom
were
soldiers
-
and
recently
"regretted"
the
killing
of
the
three
civilians
-
while
Israel
killed
over
1,400
Palestinians,
mostly
civilians,
and
remains
unmoved.
The
Israeli
media
blackout
of
Gaza
during
the
war
-
which
continues
even
now
-
hardly
prevented
footage
and
reports
from
beaming
to
all
corners
of
the
earth,
thanks
to
the
valiant
efforts
of
Arab
media
and
independent
reporters,
photographers
and
cameramen
from
all
over
the
world,
supplemented
by
the
United
Nations
and
other
independent
groups'
findings.
All
of
this
made
the
scope
of
the
tragedy
known
to
all.
And
finally,
the
most
eloquent
and
involved
Palestinian
and
Arab
academics,
diplomats
and
activists
can
be
found
in
every
major
Western
city
and
reputable
university
or
research
institute.
Yet
somehow
it
was
Israel
that
"claim(ed)
success
in
PR
war,"
according
to
Anshel
Pfeffer
in
the
Jewish
Chronicle,
days
after
the
initial
Israel
attack
on
Gaza.
Pfeffer
quoted
Avi
Pazner,
Israel's
former
ambassador
to
Italy
and
France,
and
"one
of
the
officials
drafted
in
to
present
Israel's
case
to
the
world
media,"
as
claiming
that
"whenever
Israel
is
bombing,
it
is
hard
to
explain
our
position
to
the
world
...
but
at
least
this
time
everything
was
ready
and
in
place."
Utter
nonsense.
As
someone
who
has
been
grilled
and
challenged
in
the
media
for
making
such
outrageous
statements
as
"Israel
must
learn
to
respect
international
human
rights,"
I
cannot
take
seriously
the
media's
claims
to
"objectivity."
If
this
were
the
norm,
no
Israeli
hasbara
campaign
would
have
even
dented
public
perceptions
of
the
criminal
war.
No
unfeeling
Israeli
Army
spokesperson
could
possibly
explain
the
logic
of
the
wanton
destruction
of
Gaza,
as
hungry
civilians
were
chased
in
an
open-air
prison
with
nowhere
to
escape
and
no
one
to
come
to
their
rescue.
Israeli
officials
continue
to
congratulate
themselves
on a
job
well
done,
and
must
be
preparing
yet
another
marvelous
hasbara
campaign
to
justify
the
killings
that
are
yet
to
follow.
However,
there
are
some
things
that
are
becoming
increasingly
obvious,
at
least
to
the
rest
of
us.
First,
the
secret
of
Israeli
"success,"
if
any,
was
not
its
own
doing,
but
rather
stemmed
from
the
media's
decision,
made
years
ago,
to
protect
Israel's
image.
Second,
despite
the
fanfare
and
self-congratulating
commentary,
Israel
has
now
largely
lost
the
media
war,
and
the
tide
since
the
Gaza
war
has
been
turning,
thanks
to
the
underfunded,
but
solid
and
increasingly
determined
efforts
of
independent
media
groups,
intellectuals,
citizen
journalists,
civil
society
activists,
artists,
poets,
bloggers,
ordinary
people
and
those
in
the
media
who
possess
the
courage
to
challenge
Israeli
hasbara
and
its
devotees.
Ramzy
Baroud
(www.ramzybaroud.net)
is
an
internationally-syndicated
columnist
and
the
editor
of
PalestineChronicle.com.
His
latest
book
is
"My
Father
Was
a
Freedom
Fighter:
Gaza's
Untold
Story"
(Pluto
Press,
London),
now
available
on
Amazon.com.