Coverage of the Middle East Crisis

In The Op-ed Pages

The Philadelphia Inquirer

 

 

10/6/2000 – 02/06/2001

 

 

 
A Palestine Media Watch Report

 

 

 

Dr. Ahmed Bouzid - President

Michael Lopez-Calderon – Analyst

 

 

Palestine Media Watch

http://www.pmwatch.org

 

 

 

 

© Copyright February 18, 2001

 

 

 

Introduction. 2

1.0     Definitions. 3

Pro-Israeli. 3

Balanced [next page]. 5

Pro-Palestinian. 6

2.0        Letters to the editor. 7

2.2     Analysis. 7

2.3     Staff accessibility and responsiveness. 8

2.4     Conclusions. 8

3.0     Editorials. 9

3.1     Editors and the editorial board. 9

3.2     Analysis. 9

3.2.1     Portraying the victims. 9

3.2.2     Adopting the official Israeli line. 11

3.2.3     Mentions. 13

3.3 Conclusions. 13

4.0     Columns. 14

4.1     The Editors and the editorial board. 14

4.2     The columns. 14

4.4     Column breakdown. 15

4.5     Analysis. 16

4.6     Staff accessibility and responsiveness. 17

4.7     Conclusions and recommendations. 17

5.0        Tony Auth Cartoons. 18

5.1     Tony Auth. 18

5.2           The Cartoons. 18

October 12, 2000. 19

October 15, 2000. 19

October 26, 2000. 19

December 29, 2000. 20

December 31, 2000. 20

January 7, 2001. 21

5.3     Analysis. 21

6.0     Trudy Rubin Columns. 22

6.1     Trudy Rubin. 23

6.2     Overall stand. 23

6.3 Analysis. 24

The victims. 24

Responsibility for crisis/violence. 26

The crackdown on uprising. 29

The Settlements. 30

The International community. 31

Peace Proposals. 32

Assassination Policy. 33

6.4 Mentions. 33

UN resolutions/findings. 33

Findings and reports by human right organizations. 33

Palestinian casualties. 33

That Israel is an occupying force. 34

6.5 Summary and conclusions. 34

7.0 Summary and conclusions. 35

 

Introduction

 

 

This report details the findings of an analysis conducted by Palestine Media Watch of how the Middle East crisis has been covered by the opinion pages of the Philadelphia Inquirer between October 6, 2000 and February 06, 2001.

 

Our aim in writing this report is to raise the Philadelphia Inquirer’s awareness of its own editorial coverage of the Middle East crisis.  Our aim is not to characterize or label the Inquirer, but to examine its product and the quality and variety of what it is offering its readership.

 

If you wish to contact Palestine Media Watch, please send email to:

 

pmwatch@zworg.com

 

If you wish to contact The Philadelphia Inquirer, please send email to:

 

Inquirer.letters@phillynews.com

 

1.0    Definitions

 

Three key terms will be used throughout this report to qualify editorials, columns, and cartoons: “pro-Israeli,” “pro-Palestinian,” and “balanced.”  This section spells out what we mean by the three terms.

 

By and large, it has been remarkably easy to classify any given column to one of the three categories.  “Pro-Israeli” columns are readily identifiable, since they reflect a well-defined worldview from which “pro-Israeli” columns very rarely deviate: (1) Palestinians are primarily to blame for the violence; (2) Barak has offered major concessions; (3) Palestinians should accept Barak’s concessions; (4) Palestinians have no right of return, etc.  Beyond that, “pro-Israeli” columns are striking in how they neglect mention of important issues, such as the killing of children; the forced expulsion of civilians from their homes; the use of live ammunition against civilians; the strain of Palestinian hospitals; the economic hardship endured by Palestinians, etc.

 

What is remarkable is how very little that is new, informative or original can be found in a  “pro-Israeli” column.  This is the more remarkable since more than 80% of opinion print space has been given to “pro-Israeli” expressions.  That is, the same narrow story has been told, again and again, throughout these thirteen (16) weeks, with little variation on the message, tone, the facts or the nature of the discourse.

 

“Pro-Palestinian” columns tend to stress some basic realities that “pro-Israeli” columns ignore: mainly, they highlight the illegal character of Israeli actions, the reality on the ground, and characterize Israel as the aggressor rather than the victim.

 

“Balanced” columns by and large avoid faulting either side, or when finding fault both sides are taken to task.  “Balanced” columns tend to stress the morally obvious, legally sound arguments, and factually given realities

 

Below are the stands taken by the three camps on some key issues.  Note that the “key issues” vary from one category to the other.

Pro-Israeli

 

Arafat:

 

Israel:

 

Peace Process: