http://eatthestate.org/10-24/OuttoLunch.htm
(August 10, 2006)
Out to Lunch

by Remi Kanazi

The US media's biased coverage of the crisis in Lebanon should come 
as no surprise. While the White House and Congress claim a "special 
relationship" with Israel, our news outlets are not supposed to have 
a "special relationship" with anyone. Their job is to report fairly 
on the issues; anything less is a disservice to those watching their 
news programs and reading their newspapers.

Shockingly, Larry King Live has been "fair" in its coverage of the 
conflict consuming Lebanon in contrast to Fox News' O'Reilly Factor, 
MSNBC's Scarborough Country and yes, CNN's darling Anderson Cooper 
360. There is, however, much criticism to be doled out to CNN's 
"longest-running interview program." One need look no further than 
Larry King Live's first two guests, Republican Senator George Allen 
and Democratic Senator Evan Bayh. It was nice to see--in this nine 
minute segment--two senators putting their congressional partisan 
politics aside to stand together in solidarity with the state of 
Israel. When Larry King asked Senator Allen if the US should be a 
true broker in the region, Allen replied, "We support Israel, you're 
right Larry. Israel is a wellspring in the wilderness in the Middle 
East and we do support them and their right to protect themselves."

The next guest on the show was positioned as the "Lebanese side." 
Larry King Live passed off the nearly four minute interview with 
Chibli Mallat--one of the leaders of the Cedar Revolution, deep 
critic of Hezbollah and candidate for President--as the voice of the 
Lebanese people. When Larry King asked Mallat about Hezbollah 
Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah's remark that the conflict is an 
Israeli/American plot to control the Middle East, Mallat responded, 
"I'm afraid that I do agree with the senators. He [Nasrallah] 
initiated the conflict, and all this talk about a great plot between 
Israel and America is out of place. The conflict was initiated... by 
[Hezbollah's] reckless action through the Blue Line that separates 
Lebanon from Israel. That was a grave violation of international law 
and I think also a grave violation of Lebanese law." Like a true 
patriot, Mallat later urged "restraint" from Israel, echoing comments 
made by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice weeks earlier.

Now that the "Lebanese people" were heard, it was necessary to bring 
on the Israeli side, Israeli Consul General Ehud Danoch, to counter 
any "Lebanese" propaganda. For nearly four minutes, Danoch defended 
Israel and extensively illustrated its commitment to root out 
"terrorism." As icing on the cake, Danoch took softball e-mails from 
viewers and general questions from Larry King such as, "Why do you 
oppose a cease-fire now?" and "Are you optimistic?"

One would think that after Larry King Live came back from break, the 
show would cut to the carnage in Lebanon, the destruction of its 
infrastructure, or an analyst discussing the humanitarian 
implications the siege on Lebanon presents. Not exactly. When the 
program returned from the break, Larry King cut to Anderson Cooper in 
Northern Israel, who--given the amount of reporting he's doing in the 
North--may as well be looking for a second home. Larry King then cut 
to Dr. Sanjay Gupta in Haifa. While Gupta spoke of the horror 
Katyusha rockets exact (thousands have been fired, inflicting very 
little damage relative to Israel's 500 pound bombs and artillery 
shells), pictures crossed the screen of injured Israeli women and 
children. The producers, however, were still unsatisfied. Before 
going to commercial, Anderson Cooper needed another six minutes 
explaining that the "terrorist group," Hezbollah, is hiding within 
the civilian population. Cooper makes no mention of the fact that 
Hezbollah formed as a resistance group to fight off an Israeli 
military that slaughtered nearly twenty thousand innocent Lebanese 
and Palestinian civilians in 1982. To justify the mass murder of the 
Lebanese population today, Cooper makes clear to the viewer that 
while Israel is trying to be as accurate as possible, even "the most 
moral military in the world" can only be so precise. It's ironic that 
Cooper always has the exact number of Katyusha rockets fired on 
Israel, but the exact number of cluster bombs, artillery shells, and 
missiles used against the civilian population of Lebanon seems to 
evade his statistical charts.

A simple cut to commercial would not suffice; the producers of the 
program realized that any decent show must have a good outro. Larry 
King Live eased into the commercial with a "balanced" set of 
pictures: first, a young Muslim girl holding a picture of Hassan 
Nasrallah, followed by what is assumed to be a group of Lebanese 
burning American and Israeli flags, followed by a man carrying a 
blanket-covered lifeless body, succeeded by two young covered Muslim 
girls (one of them is in tears), and the sequence ended with three 
injured Lebanese boys (one of the boys is in tears). Apparently, when 
showing pictures of injured Israelis (they'd show dead ones, but it 
doesn't happen often) and "heroic" Israelis, the producers of Larry 
King Live misplaced the Associated Press pictures of little Israeli 
girls writing messages on missiles that were about to be fired on the 
civilian population of Lebanon. Ironically, the only person killed 
the day of this particular episode was a Palestinian-Israeli girl.

Estimates of dead Lebanese civilians surpassed 900, while the Israeli 
civilian death toll is at, as of this writing, twenty-seven. Although 
thirty-three Lebanese civilians die for every one Israeli, the US 
media deems it necessary to give the Israeli agenda ten minutes of 
airtime for every minute allotted to the Lebanese voice. The war 
crimes being carried out against the Lebanese and the Palestinian 
people by Israel should be newsworthy enough to receive proper 
coverage. As the conflict drags on, thanks to the US administration's 
"green light," the coverage is becoming ever more skewed, compounded 
with additional justifications for Israel's actions, the further 
villainizing of Hezbollah and now that the Lebanese-American 
community has been evacuated, the silence of the Lebanese voice. One 
civilian is one death too many; yet it looks as though thousands more 
will perish at the hands of Israeli forces, and once again, the US 
media will be out to lunch.

--Remi Kanazi is the primary writer for the political website 
www.PoeticInjustice.net. He lives in New York City as a Palestinian 
American freelance writer, poet and performer and can reached via 
email at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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