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Julia Gorin

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Conservatives Are From Mars, Liberals Are From San Francisco
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America Alone
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Covering
for Hamas
The cat is out of the bag, so to speak...
[Roger
Aronoff] 4/6/06
Ever since
Hamas won the most seats in the January Palestinian elections,
the world and the media have struggled to deal with this
development. Hamas has primarily been a terrorist organization,
openly committed to the destruction of Israel, though it
has also been engaged in providing social services to some
of its constituents. Should they be isolated, or given a
chance to prove themselves as representatives of their people
who are willing to live in peace with Israel? The question
for the media is, how should Hamas be identified and described?
Take the Washington
Post for example. According to the watchdog group
EyeOnThePost, the Post has been downplaying Hamas's stated
intentions toward Israel. The reports have stated that
Hamas "doesn't recognize Israel," and "seeks the creation
of a Palestinian state on land that now includes Israel," but
leaves out what Hamas has stated over and over again, and
which has been in their charter since the founding of the
organization in 1987—namely, that they are actively seeking
the destruction of Israel.
Their
covenant, or charter, says "Israel will exist and will continue
to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated
others before it." And that "There is no solution for the
Palestinian question except through Jihad. Initiatives,
proposals and international conferences are all a waste
of time and
vain endeavors."
According
to the U.S. State Department, Hamas started as an outgrowth
of the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, and "have
used both political and violent means, including terrorism,
to pursue the goal of establishing an Islamic Palestinian
state in place of Israel." Also, they have "conducted many
attacks—including large-scale suicide bombings—against Israeli
civilian and military targets, suspected Palestinian collaborators,
and Fatah rivals." Hamas is also known to have close ties
with the current Iranian government, led by a fanatical religious
zealot who believes he is destined to bring about the end
times.
In an exchange
of emails with Post correspondent Scott Wilson, EyeOnThePost criticized
Wilson for his unwillingness to use the word "destruction," or
even "elimination," when describing Hamas's intentions for
Israel. Wilson responded to EyeOnThePost by email, which
they posted on their site:
"Thank
you for your note and valid question. I use several phrases
to describe Hamas: does not recognize Israel, at war with
Israel, designated a terrorist organization by the United
States and European Union, and seeks the creation of a
Palestinian state on land that now includes Israel. These
usually appear all in the same story. I believe they give
a good description of the group; the last, in particular,
is in my opinion a more descriptive way of saying what
you are recommending. But I will certainly keep in mind
your recommendation and opinion on this as I continue refining
this description."
The fact
that Hamas won the parliamentary elections, and will probably
head up the next Palestinian government, has been viewed
as the dark side of President Bush's efforts to extend democracy
to the Middle East. What if, the critics say, they have free
elections and freely elect hard-line Islamists who are enemies
of the West and seek the destruction of Israel?
In fact,
in this case, Hamas is a more true reflection of what Israel
has faced for years. The cat is out of the bag, so to speak.
Under the decades of rule by Yasser Arafat, and to a lesser
extent, the few years of Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leaders
would say one thing in English to Western leaders and media,
and in Arabic they would be more honest about their real
intentions. The teaching of kids to hate Jews was common
in the schools and the media. Kids were brainwashed and sent
out as homicide bombers, with a promise of martyrdom, and
when Saddam Hussein was alive, $25,000 was sent by the Iraqi
regime to each family. Promises of peace were always designed
to mask the real objective: To "liberate" Palestine, for
which they include all of Israel, not just pre-1967, or 1948
borders.
The double-talk
was in action when journalist Lally Weymouth recently interviewed
Ismail Haniyeh, the man who is considered the favorite to
head a Hamas-led government in the Palestinian territories.
Weymouth quoted Haniyeh as saying that Hamas would recognize
Israel if Israel agrees to "recognize a Palestinian state
along the 1967 borders, release the prisoners and recognize
the rights of the refugees to return to Israel."
But in
an article in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Haniyeh denied
having said that Hamas would recognize Israel even if they
did meet certain conditions.
We believe
Weymouth's account. It seems clear that Haniyeh must have
had second thoughts about sounding "moderate." But
it is a useful example of the duplicity Israel faces.
Enough
of the double-talk. Our media should tell the brutal truth:
Hamas believes in the total destruction of Israel. That
is the group's official position. There is no reason for
our
media to sugarcoat the nature of this terrorist organization ONE
copyright
2006 Accuracy in Media www.aim.org
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