Sekedar untuk disadari: dalam perang semua pihak melakukan propaganda, termasuk 
Israel...

----


 BBC NEWS
Propaganda war: trusting what we see?

By Paul Reynolds
World affairs correspondent, BBC News website

Israel has tried to take the initiative in the propaganda war over Gaza but, in 
one important instance, its version has been seriously challenged.

The incident raises the question of how to interpret video taken from the air.

Israel released video of an air attack on 28 December, which appeared to show 
rockets being loaded onto a truck. The truck and those close to it were then 
destroyed by a missile.

This was clear evidence, the Israelis said, of how accurate their strikes were 
and how well justified. A special unit it has set up to coordinate its 
informational plan put the video onto YouTube as part of its effort to use 
modern means of communications to get Israel's case across.

The YouTube video has a large caption on it saying "Grad missiles being loaded 
onto the Hamas vehicle." As of Saturday morning UK time, more than 260,000 
people had watched it.

Different version

It turned out, however, that a 55-year-old Gaza resident named Ahmed Sanur, or 
Samur, claimed that the truck was his and that he and members of his family and 
his workers were moving oxygen cylinders from his workshop.

This workshop had been damaged when a building next door was bombed by the 
Israelis and he was afraid of looters, he said.

The Israeli human rights group B'Tselem put Mr Sanur's account on its website, 
together with a photograph of burned out oxygen cylinders.

Mr Sanur said that eight people, one of them his son, had been killed. He 
subsequently told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz: "These were not Hamas, they 
were our children... They were not Grad missiles.".

The Israeli response was that the "materiel" was being taken from a site that 
had stored weapons. The video remains on You Tube.

But the incident shows how an apparently definitive piece of video can turn 
into something much more doubtful.

It is reminiscent of an event in the Nato war against Serbia over Kosovo in 
1999. In that case, a video taken from the air seemed to show a military convoy 
which was then attacked.

On the ground however it was discovered that the "trucks" were in fact tractors 
towing cartloads of civilian refugees, many of whom were killed.

Israel effort

The Israeli propaganda effort is being directed to achieve two main aims.

The first is to justify the air attacks. The second is to show that there is no 
humanitarian calamity in Gaza.

Both these aims are intended to place Israel in a strong position 
internationally and to enable its diplomacy to act as an umbrella to fend off 
calls for a ceasefire while the military operation unfolds.

Israel has pursued the first aim by being very active in getting its story 
across that Hamas is to blame. The sight of Hamas rockets streaking into Israel 
has been helpful in this respect.

It has also allowed trucks in with food aid and has stressed that it will not 
let people starve, even if they go short.

Israel appears to think its efforts are working.

One of its spokespeople, who has regularly appeared on the international media, 
Major Avital Leibovich, said: "Quite a few outlets are very favourable to 
Israel."

Ban on foreign media

Israel has bolstered its approach by banning foreign correspondents from Gaza, 
despite a ruling from the Israeli Supreme Court.

The Arab television news channel Al Jazeera is operating there and its reports 
have been graphic and have affected opinion across the Arab world. The BBC also 
has its local bureau hard at work.

But the absence of reporters from major organisations has meant, for example, 
that Mr Samur's story has not been as widely told as it probably would have 
been, or his account subject to an on-the-spot examination.

Meanwhile Israel has received good coverage of the threats and damage to its 
own towns and communities.

Whether Israel retains any propaganda initiative is not all certain. Pictures 
of dead and wounded children have undermined its claim to pinpoint accuracy and 
the longer this goes on, the greater the potential for world public opinion to 
swing against it, with diplomatic pressure building for a cessation.

Its presentational problems would be hugely increased if it engaged in a ground 
operation, which would bring with it more pictures of death and destruction.

Update: several readers have e-mailed to ask whether I believe Hamas. One said 
I had "bought into" Hamas propaganda. Another that I should have dealt with 
Hamas' claims: "What's missing speaks volumes about your one-sidedness."

I do not believe anyone's "propaganda." We seek to verify all claims, from 
whatever source. One of the main claims in Gaza at the moment is the serious 
situation for the population. Having reported from Gaza many times over the 
years, I know how crowded parts of it are and how dependent the people are on 
food aid from the UN. This means they have no other source of supply but 
equally, if the system is working, they should be getting enough to get by on. 
The problem is that foreign correspondents cannot get in to establish the exact 
situation for themselves.

paul.reynolds-inter...@bbc.co.uk
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7809371.stm

Published: 2009/01/03 14:20:30 GMT

© BBC MMIX

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