Geraldo Rivera, Palestinian-ist
Andrea Levin
Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America
April 12, 2002
Former talk show host and newly-minted Fox News "war
correspondent" Geraldo Rivera has once again made himself the center of
controversy. Although uninformed coverage of the Israel-Palestinian crisis is
common, Rivera's combination of inanity and incessant self-reference to his own
feelings, reactions and experiences has prompted particular audience disgust
and derisive criticism from other journalists.
In a jarring March 13 report, for example, filed barely a
week after his arrival in the Middle East, the reporter accused Israel of
descending to "evil" in its conduct against Palestinian terrorism. He
explained that:
the most insidious
evil about terrorism ... is that sometimes, because it's so darned difficult to
fight, you become something like you are fighting. You become someone who
violates some of the basic concepts of your own fundamental democracy, your own
who you are.
Without a hint of reference to the deliberately calculated
Palestinian campaign of murder against Israeli civilians what some would
consider "the most insidious evil"-- or to Israel's military
restraint in the face of such atrocities, Rivera declared theatrically:
when you use tanks
and F-16's, and these sledgehammers against thickly populated civilian towns
and cities, that's not fighting terrorism. That is inflicting terrorism.
Israel has not, of course, used its F-16's against
"populated civilian" targets. It has routinely responded to the
murder of its men, women and children with attacks, not on people but on
Palestinian buildings, the vast majority evacuated beforehand, very often with
Israeli forewarning.
To a Fox anchorman who asked if Rivera really thought
"Israel is intentionally killing civilians" and who inquired if the
losses are not "in a sense collateral damage," the reporter delivered
a rambling attack on Israel and Sharon.
He insisted that:
it's more than
collateral damage. There is an expectation when you use a jet fighter that
flies at 500 or 600 miles an hour to get a terrorist nest...there is an almost
inevitability that there's going to be civilian casualties.
Of course, again, the actual casualties in such attacks
entirely refute this contention.
Rivera's tune was altogether different only two weeks
earlier when he was covering American military action in Afghanistan. In
response to a question about criticism of the United States for having caused
civilian casualties, he declared emphatically:
this is a war. War
is violent, brutal, messy business, and accidents happen. Civilians do get
killed... The Afghans understand that war is not always precise. They
understand the need for violence to combat violence. Yes, a mistake happened.
Lots of mistakes happen
But the intrepid Fox correspondent permits no mistakes of
the Israelis. Even a harmless procedure involving writing temporary numbers on
Palestinian prisoners with ink pens fired him to loud reproach.
What in the world
does that remind the world of? That reminds the world, that reminds Jews of
what Hitler and those Nazi pigs inflicted on the Jewish race during the Second
World War.
He conceded that, "Maybe the comparison is not
precise."
As Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz wrote
the next day: "Maybe."
Like others commenting on Rivera's coverage, Kurtz was
struck by the strutting self- involvement, which included the reporter's
observation that "I have been a Zionist my entire life. I would die for
Israel. But watching the suffering of the Palestinian people, I'm also becoming
a Palestinian-ist."
(Actually, Rivera has previously made nearly identical
on-screen confessions about his Zionist commitment and his shocked epiphanies
about alleged Israeli mistreatment of Palestinians. In October 2000 he opined
on his talk show, Rivera Live: "Oh, my God, what are the people we
have adored and supported for so long doing in the name of -- of the State of
Israel?")
But Kurtz also rightly noted the more serious problem of
Rivera "focusing mainly on Israeli retaliation [which] tends to leave out
the horrible Palestinian provocations the suicide bombers that have
killed Israeli civilians that prompted the response in the first
place."
He added: "It would be like showing U.S. warplanes
hitting Afghan towns without mentioning that there was this episode called
Sept. 11."
A CNBC roundtable of Wall Street Journal editors,
commenting on events of that same week of March 13, ran a video of Rivera
delivering his Israelis-as-Nazis report and observed: "Sounds like Geraldo
lost his mind since he went over to Fox."
As to Rivera's protestations of being a life-long Zionist,
another remarked: "Then we know Zionism is in trouble!"
A USA Today column by author and actor Ben Stein also
blasted Rivera for "crystalizing exactly what is so infuriatingly
dishonest about media coverage of the war in Israel." He too was incensed
at the mindless moral equating of those Arabs who deliberately murder Israeli
civilians and Israelis who accidentally kill Palestinian civilians in an effort
to halt the wave of terror.
He wrote:
Mr. Rivera, you do
a disservice to humanity when you fail to understand the world as it is,
especially in its moral dimension...You are certainly not reporting or
analyzing news, but rather putting forth a confused and fundamentally evil view
of the world, where victim and killer have equal moral worth.
Andrea Levin is Executive Director of CAMERA - PO Box
35040, Boston, MA, 02135-0001.
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