Gordon L. Weil
I have been a journalist, full-time, part-time, or sometime,
since 1967. The news this week has made
me deeply angry. Journalists have been
killed by the government of Israel as part of its war in Gaza. Innocent journalists have been killed for no
apparent reason other than that they reported on Israeli military operations
there.
After the outrageous Hamas attack on Israel on October 7,
2023, Israel understandably launched a punitive military operation against the
terrorists, vowing to eliminate it entirely. While the reaction was justified,
many have questioned whether it was proportionate. My purpose here is not to question what Israel
has done in responding to Hamas, except for one critical element.
To shield its operations from outside scrutiny, Israel has
prevented foreign journalists from entering Gaza. But Gaza journalists remained in the
territory and issued their reports to a wider world. They worked for Al Jazeera, a news
organization based in Qatar.
From its origin in the 1990s, Al Jazeera was condemned as
allegedly being aligned with terrorist groups.
The opposition came from Arab governments, targets of its revelations,
and Israel, mistrustful of Arab news sources.
But it persisted, largely overcame the criticism and has been generally
accepted, though not in Israel, as a reputable news organization.
One other element of the Israeli retaliation is relevant. It designates people as members of Hamas and,
being in a state of war, it feels no need to offer proof. Once an alleged Hamas figure is identified, they
are targeted for death. If they are in
the company of innocent people, the others are likely to be killed alongside them,
deaths known as collateral damage.
Israel has reportedly
killed over 200 journalists in Gaza, though many may have been hit in air
raids on civilian populations. But some
clearly have been intentionally targeted.
It is not a question of shooting the messenger; it is an attack on a
free press.
Last week, an Al Jazeera news team, reporters for its Arabic
and English services and their cameramen, were working out of an identified
tent near a Gaza food delivery point. Naming
one of them a Hamas operative, Israel killed all five people – one person whose
alleged Hamas affiliation had been widely denied and four admitted cases of
collateral damage.
The other slain reporter worked for the English service,
providing on-site evidence to the world that some Israeli military claims were not
true. His was surely a voice that Israel
would want to silence.
At one time, I appeared regularly on the New York public
television station. When you are on air,
you know and appreciate the camera and audio operators, who get scant public
recognition. They are just as important
to the story as the person in front of the camera. Israel killed three of them along with the Al
Jazeera reporters.
Almost any reporter is likely to find themselves in an
uncomfortable or dangerous situation, but that’s part of their responsibility. Like a soldier or a police officer, they may
knowingly put themselves in harm’s way.
My own experience is truly insignificant compared to the
heroic efforts of the Al Jazeera reporters, but a couple of times I put myself
in situations where I could suffer harm so I could get the story. To do the job, you may have to take risks.
Why do it? In any
society, the people deserve to know about events that can affect their
lives. The media is their representative
and ultimately is responsible to them.
Beyond that, the press is an essential part of the system of
government. In democratic societies, the
independent media holds officeholders accountable for their views and
actions. Power corrupts, and
officeholders grow to dislike the media scrutiny that can hold them responsible.
The arrogance of power resists accountability. When President Trump attacks publications
and individual journalists, he tears at the fabric of the political
system. Still, the media dutifully
reports his attacks on the media itself. The situation is even worse when a government,
accused of war crimes, defends itself by suppressing reporting and killing
journalists.
Americans may believe that any decent democracy has the kind
of freedom of speech and the press guaranteed by the First Amendment. The U.S. has traditionally supported
democratic countries. But you cannot
find freedom of the press or of speech in the Basic
Laws of Israel, claimed to be the democratic model in the Middle East.
I have never met a journalist from Al Jazeera. But what happened to its reporters makes me
despair, feel deeply sad for their fate and their families and angry that the
U.S. and our supposedly democratic allies readily abandon the enlightened
values of truth and justice in favor of untruths and brute force.