Buckling to Bigotry: The Newseum Dishonors Murdered Palestinian Journalists
by Nima Shirazi / May 14th, 2013
Just two days before Palestinians commemorate the 65th anniversary of the 
Nakba, the names of two Palestinian cameramen targeted and killed by Israeli 
airstrikes in Gaza last November were dropped from a dedication ceremony held 
to honor ”reporters, photographers and broadcasters who have died reporting the 
news” over 
the past year. The move followed an Israel lobby pressure campaign led by 
anti-Palestinian organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League, the 
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the American Jewish Committee, 
efforts that were openly supported by the Israeli government.
The Atlantic Wire‘s J.K. Trotter summarizes:
Two days after Washington, D.C.’s Newseum announced its intent to honor Hussam 
Salama and Mahmoud al-Kumi, who were killed in November while working as 
cameramen for the Middle East-based Al-Aqsa TV, the 
well-known temple of journalism has decided — for now — not to recognize Salama 
and al-Kumi, citing their employer’s deep ties to Hamas, a 
Palestinian organization currently designated by the United States as a 
terrorist group.
The Newseum, which honored 82 journalists on May 13, 2013, stated that it had 
“decided to re-evaluate their inclusion as journalists on our 
memorial wall pending further investigation,” even though just last 
week, in response to the hysterical reaction to Salama’s and al-Kumi’s 
initial inclusion, the museum had affirmed and defended their decision, noting 
that “the Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders and 
The World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers all consider 
these men journalists killed in the line of duty.”
Indeed, as Joe Catron notes on Mondoweiss, Reporters Without Borders has 
pointed out, “Even if the targeted media support Hamas, this does not in any 
way legitimize the attacks,” while the Committee to Protect Journalists ”found 
that the Israeli military’s official justifications for its attacks on 
journalists…’did not specifically address CPJ’s central question: how 
did Israel determine that those targeted did not deserve the civilian 
protections afforded to all journalists, no matter their perspective, 
under international law?’”
The World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers includes both Salama 
and al-Kumi on its list of “69 Media Employees Killed in 2012,” as does the 
International Federation of Journalists in its report, “In the Grip of 
Violence: Journalists and Media staff Killed in 2012.”
Human Rights Watch, in its December 20, 2012 report on “Unlawful Israeli 
Attacks on Palestinian Media,” concluded,
Four Israeli attacks on journalists and media facilities 
in Gaza during the November 2012 fighting violated the laws of war by 
targeting civilians and civilian objects that were making no apparent 
contribution to Palestinian military operations.
The attacks killed two Palestinian cameramen, wounded at 
least 10 media workers, and badly damaged four media offices, as well as the 
offices of four private companies. One of the attacks killed a 
two-year-old boy who lived across the street from a targeted building.
The Israeli government asserted that each of the four 
attacks was on a legitimate military target but provided no specific 
information to support its claims. After examining the attack sites and 
interviewing witnesses, Human Rights Watch found no indications that 
these targets were valid military objectives.
“Just because Israel says a journalist was a fighter or a TV station was a 
command center does not make it so,” said Sarah Leah 
Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Journalists who 
praise Hamas and TV stations that applaud attacks on Israel may be 
propagandists, but that does not make them legitimate targets under the 
laws of war.”
HRW added, “The two men’s families, interviewed separately, said the 
men were neither participating in the fighting nor members of any armed 
group. Human Rights Watch found no evidence, including during visits to 
the men’s homes, to contradict that claim. Hamas’s armed wing, al-Qassam 
Brigades, has not put either man on its official list of killed fighters – an 
unlikely omission if the men had been playing a military role.”
For the Newseum to be bullied into omitting Salama and al-Kumi from 
its rededication ceremony by avowedly Zionist groups and right-wing 
media outlets demonstrates that the institution itself is no less a 
propaganda outfit than Al-Aqsa TV. This shameful last minute decision 
effectively grants the U.S. and Israeli governments the ability to decide who 
is and who is not a journalist and who should and who should not be honored for 
their work.
But the decision also reeks of hypocrisy and Manichean double standards.
The Newseum is essentially suggesting that sycophantic journalists 
parroting government propaganda may be legitimate targets in military 
operations and should be labeled combatants, rather than civilians who 
enjoy press freedoms and are subject to protection.
Yet this only extends as far as the U.S. State Department says it does.
The ADL’s Abe Foxman called Salama and al-Kumi “members of a terrorist 
organization advancing their agenda through murderous violence” and “terrorist 
operatives” who “were 
working for a propaganda outlet, not a legitimate news organization.” 
The AJC’s David Harris echoed these sentiments, labeling Salama and al-Kumi as 
“brazen terrorists” and “two individuals who were integral to the propaganda 
machine of the Hamas 
terrorist organization,” that could not be considered “a legitimate 
media operation.”
Such terms as “terrorism” and “terrorist” are perhaps the most loaded, 
politicized, exploited and, consequently, meaningless words in our current 
lexicon, employed as a bludgeon against critical thinking in order to reinforce 
“us vs. them“ narratives.
Apparently, the Newseum has determined that our propaganda deserves respect and 
admiration, while their propaganda (in this case, documenting on camera the 
effects Israeli bombs and missiles have on the human flesh of Palestinian 
people at Gaza’s al-Shifa 
Hospital) should be condemned, targeted and investigated.
By this measure, plenty of alleged propagandists grace the memorial 
wall of the Newseum already, with more added during today’s ceremony.
Mohamed Al-Massalma, a freelance reporter for Al Jazeera, was killed by a 
sniper while covering the Syrian civil war in Busra Al-Harir in late 
January 2013. The Syrian journalist, working under the pseudonym Mohamed 
Al-Horani, was “an activist in the revolt against President Bashar 
al-Assad,” before joining Al Jazeera.
In January 2012, Mukarram Khan Aatif was gunned down in the Pakistani town of 
Shabqadar by members of the Pakistani Taliban. 
Aatif was a journalist working for Deewa Radio, the U.S. government’s 
Voice of America Pasto-language service. He was among those honored by the 
Newseum this year.
The taxpayer-funded Voice of America (VOA) and its affiliated services have 
been legally banned from broadcasting or distribution here in the 
United States for the past 65 years because of a Congressional act 
prohibiting the government from propagandizing to its own citizens. Only last 
year was this law reversed; the ban will be officially lifted this coming July 
2013. VOA is literally U.S. 
government propaganda, yet its reporters are accorded due protection from 
violence, as they should be.
Another VOA journalist, Mohammed Ali Nuxurkey, was killed in an al-Shabab 
bombing in Mogadishu, Somalia, this past March There is no doubt he will be 
added the Newseum’s wall next year.
If any distinctions are to be made among different categories of 
journalists caught in the line of fire or deliberately targeted for 
murder, international law does not, in fact, favor the Foxman’s and 
Harris’ of the world.
While war journalists who are not embedded with troops or themselves 
soldiers taking direct part in hostilities are legally protected by the 
law of armed conflict, embedded reporters are not necessarily similarly 
protected.
According to international law professor Sandesh Sivakumaran, writing for the 
Oxford University Press, embedded journalists, while civilians, may be 
“casualties of lawful 
attacks” as “[t]he law allows for the targeting of troops and that 
targeting may result in bystanders or embedded reporters becoming 
casualties.”
Still, embedded journalists who were killed while accompanying American 
occupation forces in Iraq and Afghanistan – a policy promoted by the U.S. 
military in order to ensure positive reporting on American actions (some might 
call that propaganda) – have also rightly 
been accorded a place in the Newseum’s memorial. Journalists like 
Spanish reporter Julio Anguita Parrado and German correspondent Christian 
Liebig, killed by Iraqi missiles in an April 7, 2003 attack on the U.S. Army’s 
3rd 
Division headquarters in Baghdad, are honored by the Newseum as is NBC News 
soundman Jeremy Little, killed in Fallujah in July 2003 while embedded with the 
Army’s 3rd Infantry.
Sivakumaran also explains that “[j]ournalists who work for media outlets or 
information services of 
the armed forces” are legally considered “members of the armed forces,” 
and therefore “don’t benefit from the protections afforded to civilians 
and their deaths don’t constitute a violation of the law.”
As such, the Newseum’s glaring duplicity is all the more evident when 
considering the case of James P. Hunter. A staff sergeant, reporter and 
photographer with the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Hunter 
was killed on June 18, 2010 by an IED while covering the massive U.S. offensive 
taking place in Kandahar, Afghanistan, for The Fort Campbell Courier, an Army 
newspaper in Kentucky. He was an active duty soldier and the first Army 
journalist to die in combat since 9/11. Still, the Newseum saw fit to honor 
Hunter on its memorial wall.
Yet in the case of Salama and al-Kumi, “Israeli officials sought to 
justify attacks on Palestinian media by saying the military had targeted 
individuals or facilities that ‘had relevance to’ or were ‘linked with’ a 
Palestinian armed group, or had ‘encouraged and lauded acts of terror against 
Israeli civilians,’” according to Human Rights Watch. “These justifications, 
suggesting that it is permissible to attack 
media because of their associations or opinions, however repugnant, 
rather than their direct participation in hostilities, violate the laws 
of war and place journalists at grave risk.”
If repellant statements, including the justification of and praise for acts of 
violence against civilians, are the benchmark of propaganda and thereby 
constitute legitimate targeting for death by 
those opposed to such statements, then countless American journalists 
and commentators from across the political spectrum would be subject to 
the same fate as Salama and al-Kumi.
Warmongering and incitement abound in the editorial pages of The Washington 
Post and Wall Street Journal. Liberal commentators like Joe Klein and former 
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs exhalt the extrajudicial executions by 
flying robot of countless civilians, including a 16-year-old American citizen 
in Yemen and hundreds of children in Pakistan. Right-wing pundits like Jennifer 
Rubin and her friends at Commentary and The Weekly Standard openly advocate for 
the murder of Iranian and Palestinian civilians, endlessly call for permanent 
war and occupation, support torture and indefinite detention, advocate for the 
assassination of whistleblowers, scientists and foreign officials, and justify 
the war crimes of their preferred military forces and governments.
Just days before the car in which Salama and al-Kumi were traveling, 
marked clearly as a press vehicle, was blown up by an Israeli bomb, 
Rubin published a post praising the IDF assault on Gaza. Hardly able to 
contain her glee, Rubin anonymously quoted “an old Middle East hand” declaring 
that, after weeks of sporadic Israeli airstrikes (“a form of messaging to 
Hamas”), “the Israelis escalated. But still they are avoiding 
infrastructure, hitting pinpoint high-level Hamas target.”
A recent B’Tselem report on Israel’s actions last November, however, 
“challenges the common 
perception in the Israeli public and media that the operation was 
‘surgical’ and caused practically no fatalities among uninvolved 
Palestinian civilians,” noting that, “in some cases at least, the 
[Israeli] military violated IHL [international humanitarian law] and in 
other cases there are substantial reasons to believe IHL was violated.” 
Israeli airstrikes killed 167 Palestinians in Gaza, at least 87 of whom were 
noncombatants, including 31 minors.
Two days after cheering Israeli war crimes, Rubin set her sights on a bigger 
target. “Israel can keep swatting down Hamas, using air power or, if need be, 
going into Gaza on land,” she wrote. “It has a solemn obligation to defend 
itself against what was a 
deliberate escalation by Hamas in the number and quality of weapons 
launched against Israel’s civilian population. But even with the most 
robust U.S. support this is not a long-term solution. That will only 
come when Iran is dealt with, either militarily or via regime change.”
Anyone arguing that Rubin could be targeted with violence for writing her 
opinions would be labeled sociopathic and lambasted for incitement, and for 
good reason. And there is no doubt that if correspondents from 
Israeli Army Radio or employees of the state-run Israel Broadcasting 
Authority were killed, they would be honored by the Newseum, without so 
much as a whiff of dissent, let alone outrage.
It is evident that, as always, Palestinians are subject to 
unparalleled scrutiny and suspicion due to the tireless defamation and 
lobbying efforts of big-moneyed Zionist organizations and ideological 
zealots.
But is it surprising that the Newseum should jump on this bias bandwagon?
In the late 1940′s, Bugsy Siegel’s former publicist Hank Greenspun was 
recruited by Jewish militias in Palestine to help them fight against both the 
occupying British and indigenous Palestinians. He hijacked a yacht and 
laundered $1.3 million through Mexico in order to smuggle machine guns 
stolen from the U.S. Navy in Hawaii to the prolific terrorist group Irgun, 
which had blown up Jerusalem’s King David Hotel the year before and 
would massacre the residents of Deir Yassin a year later. Soon 
thereafter, Greenspun was apprehended by the FBI while attempting to 
illegally ship surplus combat airplane engines to Haganah.
In 1950, he was convicted of violating the U.S. Neutrality Act and fined 
$10,000 for his arms deals. The same year, he purchased the Las Vegas 
Review-Journal and renamed it the Las Vegas Sun, serving as publisher for the 
next four decades.
Upon his death in 1989, former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres called 
Greenspun “a hero of our country and a fighter for freedom – a man of 
great spirit who fought with his mind and his soul; a man of great 
conviction and commitment.” In 1993, a one-acre plaza in the Jerusalem 
Botanical Garden of Hebrew University was dedicated to him.
In 2006, the Greenspun Family donated $7 million to the Newseum, which named a 
terrace in his honor. It overlooks Pennsylvania Avenue.
Nima Shirazi is a writer and musician from New York City. Contact him at: 
[email protected]. Read other articles by Nima, or visit Nima's 
website.

http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/05/buckling-to-bigotry-the-newseum-dishonors-murdered-palestinian-journalists-2/#more-48879


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to