In the Jerusalem Post, Mitchell Barak calls for an Israeli Al Jazeera English. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Israel
War 2.0: ‘Neutral’ observers, Blogs and SMS alerts
Mads Gilbert is a critic of US foreign policy and of Israel. He also happens to be a Norwegian emergency medicine specialist who is currently working inside Gaza.
As a doctor, he has shown up in TV reports describing the situation inside his medical facility. But as a critic of Israel/US policy he is under attack himself, from predictable quarters:
High-Profile Doctor in Gaza Called an ‘Apologist for Hamas’ — Fox News
Norwegian Doctors in Gaza: Objective Observers or Partisan Propagandists? — Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America
Mads Gilbert — Doctor, Pundit, Shill for Terrorism — Harry’s Place Continue reading
US Nets: Anchorless in Gaza
If you wondered whether declining viewers and corporate belt tightening had a real on-screen resourcing impact on network news coverage, check out Andrew Tyndall on the nets and Gaza:
In the summer of 2006, when the Israel Defense Force headed north to fight with the Hezbollah militia in southern Lebanon, all three networks found the conflict so newsworthy they dispatched anchors to the region. ABC’s Charles Gibson traveled to Jerusalem; NBC’s Brian Williams to Tel Aviv and Haifa; CBS’ Bob Schieffer in New York shared anchoring chores with Lara Logan in Israel. Continue reading
War 2.0: Israel’s post-journalism campaign in Gaza
Whatever ones views of the rights and wrongs, Israel’s media operation to accompany its Gaza offensive has been an object lesson in the uses and limitations of War 2.0.
Talking to a senior Middle Eastern diplomat yesterday, and to a friend reporting from (or stuck) in Jerusalem, there is a (very) grudging — respect is the wrong word, but it’ll have to do — for the perceived “success” of Israel’s Gaza media campaign.
So let’s unpick it a little. At the most fundamental level, Israel benefits from a very simple message: whatever happens in Gaza is simply the tragic but inevitable consequence of years of rocket attacks. Continue reading