The following letter by Noam Chomsky was published in: LIES OF OUR TIMES (LOOT), September 1992 as part of a regular column (_Letter from Lexington_) and is reprinted here with the magazine's permission. _Lies of Our Times_ is a magazine of media criticism. "Our Times" are the times we live in but they are also the words of the _New York Times_, the most cited news medium in the United States, our paper of record. Our "Lies" are more than just literal falsehoods; they encompass subjects that have been ignored, hypocrisies, misleading emphases, and hidden premises - all of the biases which systematically shape reporting. Published by Sheridan Square Press, Inc. Produced and distributed by Institute for Media Analysis, Inc. Subscription rate: $24 (US); $32 (Canada, Mexico, W. Europe); $36 (Other). Payable to the order of Sheridan Square Press. 11 issues a year (combined July-August issue) of 24 pages each, except December issue is 28 pages -- includes yearly index. Lies Of Our Times, 145 West 4th Street, New York, NY 10012, (212) 254-1061, Fax: (212) 254-9598 ================================================================= Letter from Lexington ===================== August 6, 1992 Dear LOOT, The front page of the _New York Times Book Review_, July 23, features the headline: "You Can't Murder History" -- a curious thought as we approach the anniversary of 500 years that have offered some lessons to the contrary. We might ask, for example, how the intellectual community has dealt with the fate of the native population (as for the _Book Review_, see my "Letter," May). Or the Atlantic passage and its aftermath. Or our record in Latin America, culminating in the Pol Pot-style terror of the past decade. Or the wars in Indochina. Or a few other questions that come to mind when thoughts about the murder of history are expressed in the Newspaper of Record, particularly at this historical moment. No fear, however. The article, by Frederick Starr, keeps to a safely narrowed perspective: "History in the old Soviet Union was like cancer in the human body, an invisible presence whose existence is bravely denied but against which every conceivable weapon is mobilized." He recalls "those all-powerful Soviet officials whose job it was to suppress the public's memory" of each "grisly episode" of "the cancer of history," but who, in the end, "could not hold back the tide." Unfortunate commissars, whose power base collapsed. The guardians of history in every society are acutely sensitive to the faults of officially-designated enemies. The crude way to murder history is to lie. A more effective device is to set the bounds of permissible discourse. In coverage of contemporary affairs, the practice is a virtual reflex, as has been extensively documented. It is also standard in media critique, ensuring that unacceptable truths are banished from the mind. Thus, it is child's play to demonstrate the docility of the media with regard to US depredations in the Third World. Accordingly, the question we must ponder is whether they went too far in their anti-establishment zeal. Typical is an academic study of the media on Central America and the Middle East, which focuses on a single question: Was the anti-US, anti-Israel bias of the media utterly uncontrolled, or kept within tolerable bounds? (Landrum Bolling, ed., _Reporters Under Fire_; see my _Necessary Illusions_ for a review). The technique requires lock-step loyalty, rarely a problem. An enlightening example is a recent book by Jim Lederman, who has reported from Israel for NPR for many years: _Battle Lines: the American Media and the Intifada_ (Holt, 1992). The _Times_ reviewer, Trudy Rubin, opens by noting that the book offers "some thoughtful insights" into the fundamental question: "whether American news media cover Israel impartially," or whether they are too critical and pro-Palestinian, perhaps even anti-Semitic (_NYT Book Review_, March 1, 1992). The bounds having been properly set, there is no fear that the real world will intrude. The media have afforded the PLO many victories, Lederman writes. One "tribute to the PLO's early media successes" is that Palestinian nationhood is "virtually unquestioned today" apart from "far right" extremists, while the US media refused to be "co-opted" into Israel's "nation-building enterprise." "Many journalists who met [Arafat] were mesmerized,...and bought [his secular democratic state] as a viable idea," though it "died a slow death" in the media. But Arafat's moderate image "has remained part of the media's vocabulary" -- an absurdity, as demonstrated by the murder of Leon Klinghoffer, Lederman notes with derision (in contrast, Shimon Peres is a true moderate, unsullied by the slaughter of 75 people when he bombed Tunis a week earlier). In the early '70s, Golda Meir tried "to entice the media...at least to carry the Israeli version of events _alongside_ that of the Arabs" (his emphasis). But it was a lost cause. By 1976 Palestinians in the territories became "a focus for foreign journalists' interviews," and the US media were soon succumbing to the "Palestinian system of press co-optation." The pro-Palestinian stance came naturally to journalists who "had matured during the period of the civil rights struggle in the United States," and hence viewed Palestinians "as the Middle East equivalents of the blacks in the United States," Israel being an Alabama sheriff. By the mid-'80s, "the foreign press was standing by, waiting to report, ready to become the Palestinians' communications pipeline to the world." Israel's efforts to gain at least some media attention had suffered a further blow in 1977, when Sadat travelled to Jerusalem, revealing an interest in peace for which Israeli officials were "totally unprepared"; they had "merely scoffed" when Lederman "told Israeli officials of my findings" after a visit to Egypt in 1974, learning "to my surprise" that Egyptians "wanted some sort of long-term political settlement with Israel." After 1977, "Israel had to compete more than ever before for newspaper space or broadcast time, for the privilege of having its positions relayed to the world by the foreign press." When the Intifada broke out in 1987, Israel was no longer even in the competition, as the pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel passions of the media hurtled out of control. This grim story of media bias includes some real horror stories, for example, the "favored technique" of ABC's Bill Blakemore, who regularly "took a classic Israeli symbol and either debunked its traditional meaning or used it to create a visual false analogy." Thus, he contrasted the living conditions of the Israeli settlers in the Gaza Strip with those of the local populace in one of the most miserable and oppressed corners of the world. And he revealed that "Israel's `redemption of the land' was predicated on the destruction of Arab villages and the dislocation of Arabs from their homes" 40 years earlier (not to speak of massacres). "One must question whether the intent was not to delegitimize the entity for which these symbols collectively stood -- in this case, the State of Israel." Such journalistic dishonesty illustrates the inveterate hatred of the media for the State of Israel, and their long-standing sympathy for the oppressed victims. We now understand why the media have so insistently proclaimed their enthusiasm for Arafat and a Palestinian state (if not a "secular democratic state"), focused laser-like on the denial of elementary rights to Israel's non-Jewish citizens and the racist repression in the territories, denounced Israeli terrorism while extolling Palestinian righteousness, and now revile the Bush-Baker "peace process" for rejecting the national rights of the Palestinians as a point of departure and barring their chosen representatives. Despite this somber record, Lederman urges a more nuanced view. Israel has not been entirely without resources: "Both the Israelis and the Palestinians had vocal supporters in Washington with easy access to the media [and] active media watch groups..." Furthermore, "A careful study of the nightly newscasts in the United States proves fairly conclusively that there was no universal, overt anti-Semitism or anti-Zionism in the coverage...," and Israeli charges "that some camera crews actually staged events never have been substantiated." "There is no evidence of collusion or conspiracy by the television networks." Though some journalists, notably Peter Jennings, used the TV "medium to pursue personal political agendas" (pro-Arab, anti-Israel), others, like John Kifner, were just "unprepared" (which accounts for his exposure of the truth about Beita, for example). And some journalists are capable of real "insight, analysis, and nuance," particularly _Times_ correspondent Thomas Friedman. Lederman's delivery is ex cathedra, untroubled by evidence except of the kind just illustrated -- a wise move, given what the facts would reveal; for example, about Friedman, whose record is particularly astonishing (for a review, see _Necessary Illusions_). Sometimes, a ray of light breaks through. Thus, before the Intifada journalists had "dismissed or ignored...charges of harassment or brutality by the Palestinians in the occupied territories." That is not quite true; when brutality reached extremes, as in 1981-2, there was some media attention, occasionally at other times. But this comment is essentially correct. To learn the facts, one had to turn to the Israeli press (which Lederman falsely claims was more of an Israeli government "partner" than the US media), human rights reports, and other sources. Lederman does not indicate how this brief flash of insight conforms with the rest of the story just outlined. Facts are not part of this game. The purpose, rather, is to shift the burden of proof, in the manner of the man who cries "Thief!, Thief!" when caught with his hands in your pocket. The importance of the task is illustrated by Lederman's tales about the "peace process." The officials who scoffed at his 1974 revelations were well aware that three years earlier, Sadat had proposed a full peace treaty to Israel (with nothing for the Palestinians); out of history for Lederman and his colleagues, because the US backed Israel's rejection of it. Also out of history is the January 1976 Security Council resolution calling for a two-state settlement, backed by Egypt, Syria, Jordan, the PLO, and virtually the entire world, flatly rejected by Israeli Prime Minister Rabin who stated that there would be no negotiations with any Palestinians on political issues, and vetoed by the US. Also murdered are the PLO initiatives in later years for negotiations with Israel leading to mutual recognition, inconsistent with US-Israeli rejectionism and therefore largely blanked out of the media. And a host of other examples. Keeping to the rules, Lederman offers us a "history" in which the US earnestly seeks political settlement, Palestinians insist on violence, and Israelis advocate "land for peace" -- which Lederman identifies with "Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories"; in reality, the phrase refers to the Labor Party's rejectionist Allon Plan and its descendants, which leave Israel in control of the resources and useful land of the territories. The PLO, he tells us, held firm to their "rejectionist positions" and "unwillingness to compromise" or to put forth any "political agenda," insisting on "snatching all of the cake" as all other "constants in the Middle East" became reasonable, and silencing any local voice by terror. The facts are dismissed to the proper oblivion. The PLO bombings of Israel in 1981-2 were in part "a war of attrition against the Israelis," but even more, "a military campaign against an idea," the idea of peace. Given doctrinal requirements, it is irrelevant that it was Israel that was regularly breaking cease-fires with heavy bombing while the PLO observed them, leading finally to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon to shut down the irritating PLO pursuit of peace -- as one can readily learn from mainstream Israeli sources. Lederman's account does have one merit: it reflects most US media coverage, then and since. Lederman tells us that the media missed the real story of the Intifada. True, Palestinians threw stones at Israelis, but that was only because they were there. They were "symbols of authority"; the real target was the PLO and the traditional society. Furthermore, the PLO "strangled" the Intifada and rang its "death knell" with its violent suppression of local organizations and initiatives and "old and bankrupt" rejectionism. This war between the Palestinians and the PLO (and traditional authority generally) is the real story, missed by the media. In fact, every competent observer agrees that 20 years of Israeli repression and its "creeping annexation" were "what finally sparked the Intifada" (Israeli journalist Danny Rubinstein). But at least in this case there is an element of truth embedded in Lederman's useful tales. The Intifada was, indeed, a social revolution, crushed by Israeli violence that was motivated in part by long-standing fears of secular nationalism and moderation. The story was indeed missed in the mainstream, though covered in the independent media, another unstateable fact. As for conflicts between local elements and the PLO leadership, they are as "surprising" as the Egyptian interest in peace, though the same local leaders who quite freely denounce the PLO tell you that for better or worse, it remains the political representative of the Palestinians. The popular committees and other local initiatives were real and important, but they had been organized by the PLO and the Communist Party, and repressed by Israel (for serious discussion, see Joost Hiltermann, _Behind the Intifada_ (Princeton, 1991)). Throughout, the PLO continued to propose the "political agenda" that the US and Israel reject and that Lederman-Friedman, et al., therefore cannot hear. To murder history, we must "mobilize every conceivable weapon" against the cancer of truth. The true commitments of the media are illustrated by the award to _Times_ columnist and former chief editor A.M. Rosenthal of the Defender of Jerusalem Award for his "extraordinary devotion to the protection of Jewish rights" as "a proud Jew, unafraid to speak his mind," serving "as a calm, reasoned and yet passionate voice on Jewish and Israeli affairs" (_Jerusalem Post_, Nov. 7, 1991). Or by the frank statements of its chief diplomatic correspondent, Lederman's hero Thomas Friedman, who tells us that "For me [Israel] is like an old flame... We're in love -- there's no two ways about it"; and his call for Israel to run the occupied territories by terror and repression, in the manner of South Lebanon, though if "Ahmed has a seat in the bus, he may lessen his demands" for national and human rights (_Jewish Post_, Dec. 18, 1991; see _Necessary Illusions_). Or by the casual contempt for "Palestinians...and other Third World detritus" (Joe Klein, _Esquire_, Nov. 1986), eliciting no comment. Or the regular use by quite witting journalists of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy to cloak Israeli propaganda as "objective reporting." But more significantly, by the actual practice, of which Lederman's constructions are typical. Lederman also offers a general theory of the media. "Free democratic societies" value the press "as a public watchdog..., raising issues for public debate" in a "competitive information marketplace." Americans "choose to buy their information" in "media department stores," so every niche is filled. As proof, he offers the debate over the Gulf war, when "dissenting voices" were freely heard and "a full-fledged national policy debate...carried out," ensuring that "most of the domestic political positions and points at issue had been brought to the fore for discussion before the final decision to go to war was made." "This slow, media-directed process played a critical role in unifying the vast majority of the American public around the war's aims and objectives." The miracle of the market could not be more wonderfully revealed. We see again the utility of confident pronouncement untroubled by disruptive fact. Clearly, the basic question was whether to pursue the peaceful means required by international law, or to resort to violence. The President had announced at once that diplomacy was excluded. Accordingly, the "media-directed process" simply suppressed the diplomatic options that had opened from mid-August 1990, lauding the President for rejecting negotiations because "there can be no reward for aggression," and barring discussion of the most crucial issue. Even the Orwellian invocation of High Principle, which should have evoked ridicule from a literate teenager, was greeted with awe and acclaim. As for "the American public," by about 2-1 its "choice" was the diplomatic option (negotiated Iraqi withdrawal with "linkage") rejected by the President, hence excluded by the media. One can only guess what the proportions would have been had people known that the position they advocated had been proposed by Iraq and rejected flatly by the US. The basic facts could be found in the independent media and Long Island _Newsday_, and there was occasional slippage elsewhere. But the public was effectively shielded from discordant facts or thoughts. In comparison with this episode of murder of history, the topics that dominate critique of media performance (Pentagon control, atrocity fabrication) pale into insignificance. Recall that this is the example that Lederman himself selects to demonstrate his free market theory of the media in a democratic society. History may Rest in Peace. Sincerely, Noam Chomsky