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Historical Documentation Notice

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Last
week The Independent’s Robert
Fisk accused the BBC of
buckling to Israeli pressure
to drop the use of
“assassination” when referring
to Israel’s policy of
knocking off alleged
terrorists.

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/dynamic/news/top_story.html?in_review_id=453778&in_review_text_id=404342

London, September 5, 2001


[images added by
this website]

The
Middle East’s war of words

by Sam Kiley

It all seems a bit silly, at first — two foreign-reporting grandees locking horns over just one word.

Last week The Independent’s Robert
Fisk
accused the BBC of buckling to
Israeli pressure to drop the use of
“assassination” when referring to
Israel’s policy of knocking off alleged
“terrorists”. Not true, blustered John
Simpson
, auntie’s
[i.e., the
BBC’s] world affairs editor in
The Sunday Telegraph.

The corporation, he insisted, had simply reaffirmed its house rules that only prominent political figures could be assassinated — though he didn’t offer an alternative term for the killing of ordinary folk. He bitterly resented
Fisk’s allegation that the Beeb had been got at.

It is certainly true that the pro-Israel lobby has forced the BBC and
CNN in particular to agonise over the use of loaded terms. In war, words are a weapon, we all know that. And few belligerents have been so good at hijacking language to its own cause than
Israel. The Jewish State has deliberately set out to bend English to serve its own ends. It is entirely natural that it should.

Taking its prompt from its Big Brother, the USA, which coined Orwellian terms such as “collateral damage” for dead civilians, and “degrading the enemy” for slaughtering the oppo’, Israel has come up with a few choice terms for oldfashioned military tactics.

The Fisk-Simpson debate, however, has reached new levels of pomposity, as each of them flourished their professional standards like peacock plumes. Not since the bitter name-calling squabble over
Israel and the Palestinians between the
Telegraph’s proprietor Conrad Black
and Lord Gilmour in the pages of
Black’s Spectator, have readers had to endure such an apparently meaningless argument.

But I have a little experience of this sort of thing and, yes, words matter. In an 11-year stint for The Thunderer
[The
Times], I’d lived out a childhood ambition to be its Africa correspondent, served my time in the
Balkans and the Middle East, been shot, jailed, and had my ribs cracked. I’d faced (mock) execution twice and had more of a whizz-bang time than any young man could want. Then last month I threw it all in, because of the words I was asked to use, or not to use.

More than two score Palestinians have been bumped off over the past year on suspicion that they have, or might be, planning to kill Israelis. These operations have been described by the
European Union and Britain as
“assassinations” and “extra judicial killings”. Human rights groups call them murders by death squads.

The Israelis
call them “targeted killings”.
Palestinian towns and villages have
been subjected to various forms of what
we call siege. According to the
Israelis, a “breathing closure” allows
some movement in and out; a
“suffocating closure” speaks for
itself. Children shot dead by Israeli
snipers and ordinary soldiers at riots
are killed in “crossfire”.

Both sides manipulate the use and meaning of language, of course. As we have seen at the United Nations racism conference in Durban, Israel’s enemies have tried to rob the words “genocide”,
“racism” and “apartheid” of their real meanings by insisting that Israel is guilty of all three.

Fortunately the USA has walked out of the conference in protest at these grotesque libels of the Jewish State.
Still, for the Palestinians, every dead
Palestinian is a “martyr” on the West Bank and in Gaza — whether they chose to die or were killed by accident. And reporters often forget to mention that the
Palestinians are not just fighting to end the occupation of their land: most want to destroy Israel and drive all the Jews into the sea.

Both sides seek to censor their crimes and celebrate their causes. Under intense pressure from thousands of (mostly pro-Israeli) e-mail writers, PR pros and politicians, many of these ghastly non-terms have crept into the lexicon of
Middle Eastern news coverage.

But in the war of words, no newspaper has been so happy to hand the keys of the armoury over to one side than The Times, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News
International. Murdoch is a close friend of Ariel Sharon, Israel’s prime minister (right).

Knowing these details, and that Murdoch has invested heavily in Israel, The
Times’ foreign editor and other middle managers flew into hysterical terror every time a pro-Israel lobbying group wrote in with a quibble or complaint, and then usually took their side against their own correspondent — deleting words and phrases from the lexicon to rob its reporters of the ability to make sense of what was going on.

So, I was
told, I should not refer to
“assassinations” of Israel’s
opponents, nor to “extrajudicial
killings or executions”. The
professional Israeli hits in which at
least four entirely innocent civilians
have been killed were, if I had to
write about them at all, just
“killings”, or best of all —
“targeted killings”.

The fact that the
Jewish colonies on the West Bank in
Gaza were illegal under international
law because they violated the Geneva
Convention was not disputed by my
editors — but any reference to this
fact was “gratuitous”. The leader
writers, meanwhile, were happy to
repeat the canard that Palestinian
gunmen were using children as human
shields.

One story which referred to Sharon’s
“hard-line government” and to a
Palestinian village which was “hemmed in on three sides” by settlements was ripped out of the paper altogether after the first edition.

These terms were deemed unacceptable, even though Sharon would have sued had I called him a softie; even though the settlements have all been built as military camps, and that the thesis of the piece, on the eve of the Arab League summit in Jordan, was that support for
Yasser Arafat and participation in the “Al Aqsa Intifada” (another phrase
The Times hated, since they thought it romanticised the uprising) was dwindling.

No pro-Israel lobbyist ever dreamed of having such power over a great national newspaper. They didn’t need to. Murdoch’s executives were so scared of irritating him that, when I pulled off a little scoop by tracking, interviewing and photographing the unit in the Israeli army which killed Mohammed al-Durrah, the 12-year-old boy whose death was captured on film and became the iconic image of the conflict, I was asked to file the piece “without mentioning the dead kid”.

After that conversation, I was left wordless, so I quit.© Associated Newspapers
Ltd.

Source Information
Original Publication: 2001-09-08
Digital Archive: Focal Point Publications
Accessed: June 4, 2026