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Sunday, September 9, 2007

[wvns] Norman Finkelstein Exposes MEMRI As Mossad Op

MEMRI Is A 'Propaganda Machine,' Expert Says And Why You Need To Know
About Them
By Lawrence Swaim
http://whtt.org/index.php?news=2&id=1520

The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) provides daily
English translations of film and print media stories originating in
Arabic, Iranian and Turkish media.

It also furnishes original analysis of cultural, political and
religious trends in the Middle East.

It sends its daily postings to every news outlet in the United States
and Europe, in addition to politicians and cultural leaders.

And it's free, which makes it a Godsend for journalists, editors and
policy analysts.

But according to its critics, it is also a dangerous, highly
sophisticated propaganda operation, disseminating hate and
disinformation on an unprecedented worldwide basis.

"They use the same sort of propaganda techniques as the Nazis,"
Professor Norman G. Finkelstein, a well-known scholar on
Israel/Palestine, told InFocus. "They take things out of context in
order to do personal and political harm to people they don't like."

Take the case of Professor Halim Barakat, a novelist and scholar
associated with the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies at Georgetown
University.

In 2002, he published an article on Zionism in London's Al-Hayat
Daily, but says that in certain instances, MEMRI selectively edited
what he wrote.

"I know how to make a distinction between Judaism and Zionism, but
they distorted the article," Barakat told InFocus. "They left out
certain things and tried to make it look anti-Semitic."

Shortly afterward, Campus Watch, the brainchild of notorious
Islamophobe Daniel Pipes, used the allegedly doctored translation in
an effort to smear Georgetown University.

Finkelstein, an outspoken critic of Israeli policies and the U.S.
pro-Israel lobby, also had a run-in with MEMRI.

In 2006, he gave a TV interview in Lebanon on the way the Nazi
Holocaust is used to silence critics of Israel.

Finkelstein later wrote on his Web site: "MEMRI recently posted what
it alleged was an interview I did with Lebanese television on the Nazi
Holocaust. The MEMRI posting was designed to prove that I was a
Holocaust denier."

Far from being a Holocaust denier, Finkelstein's own parents were
Holocaust survivors, a fact he has often spoken about.

But MEMRI was able to create the opposite impression, as Finkelstein
demonstrated on his Web site, by editing out large chunks of the
actual interview.

When some comments by the moderator were included, it appeared that
Finkelstein's interview was about nitpicking the number of Jews who
died in the Holocaust rather than about Israel/Palestine.

MEMRI's obsessive interest in protecting Israel derives from the
people and interests that founded, fund and manage the institute's
international operations.

It was founded in 1998 by Yigal Carmon, a former colonel in the Israel
Defense Forces (Intelligence Branch) from 1968 until 1988, acting head
of civil administration in the West Bank from 1977 to 1982; and
Israeli-born Meyrav Wurmser, an extreme rightwing neoconservative now
affiliated with the Hudson Institute.

Meyrav is married to David Wurmser, at one time an American Enterprise
Institute "scholar" and then a State Department apparatchik under John
Bolton.

Both participated in the collective writing of "A Clean Break: A New
Strategy for Securing the Realm," a seminal 1996 neocon document that
advocated an end to negotiations with the Palestinians and permanent
war against the Arab world.

They also worked with Douglas Feith, Elliot Abrams, Richard Perle and
other rightwing ideologues who promoted and embellished the fiction
that Saddam Hussein was behind 9/11.

MEMRI has offices in Jerusalem, Berlin, London, Washington and Tokyo,
and in a 2006 Jerusalem Post interview, Carmon claimed to have one in
Iraq.

It translates film and print into English, German, Hebrew, Italian,
French, Spanish and Japanese.

Tax returns for 2004 indicate American funding of between two to three
million dollars, much of it from conservative donors and foundations -
but those who have followed its far-flung operations suspect much
higher expenditures.

Besides Carmon, several MEMRI staffers are former Israeli intelligence
specialists. Especially troubling are suspected links between MEMRI
and the current Israeli intelligence establishment.

According to a 2005 article in Israel's Ha'aretz, the Israeli Defense
Forces plants fake stories in the Arab media, which it then translates
and tries to retail to Israeli journalists. How much of MEMRI is
simply an extension of such IDF operations?

The questions raised by the Ha'aretz story caused Proffesor Juan Cole
to write, "How much of what we 'know' from 'Arab sources' about
'Hizbullah terrorism' was simply made up by this fantasy factory in
Tel Aviv?"

British journalist Brian Whitaker, Middle East editor of the Guardian,
dismisses MEMRI as "basically a propaganda machine."

Ken Livingstone, mayor of London, accuses them of "outright
distortion," and former CIA case officer Vince Cannistraro has written
that "they (MEMRI) are selective and act as propagandists for their
political point of view, which is the extreme-right of Likud."

With characteristic bluntness. Norman Finkelstein has written: "MEMRI
is a main arm of Israeli propaganda. Although widely used in the
mainstream media as a source of information on the Arab world, it is
as trustworthy as Julius Streicher's Der Sturmer was on the Jewish
world." (Der Sturmer was a rabidly anti-Semitic newspaper, and
Streicher a notoriously cruel Nazi.)

In an e-mail to InFocus, Cole characterized MEMRI as "a Right-Zionist
propaganda organ, which usually does its propaganda unobtrusively, by
being very selective in what it translates."

Indeed , MEMRI appears to view the Arab world as a malevolent,
mind-numbing monsters' ball, populated almost exclusively by fanatics,
freaks and fundamentalists.

Every story that could possibly make Middle Eastern people look
deranged, hateful or diabolical gets translated; anything that could
make them look informed, talented or admirable is ignored.

MEMRI says it covers reformers in the Arabic-speaking world, but
longtime observers point out that people who make Islam or Arab
culture look attractive rarely get translated, regardless of their
position.

Nor does MEMRI feature stories about Palestinian suffering, Israeli
dissenters, moderate Islamists, Christians in Arab governments or the
growing nonviolent movement against the apartheid wall in the Occupied
Territories, especially around Bal'in.

Instead, it promotes highly-edited footage featuring people like Wafa
Sultan.

It was MEMRI that translated the sound bites from her famous
al-Jazeera debate with Dr. Ibrahim al-Kouly that ended up on YouTube,
making her an instant rock star to those who promote an international
clash of cultures.

It is said by TV viewers who watched the entire debate that al-Kouly
was rather patient with Sultan despite her extreme opinions.

(Among other things, Sultan has declared herself an atheist.) But
MEMRI never bothered to translate and promote the whole debate.

MEMRI President Yigal Carmon was contacted to ask why the entire
Sultan debate wasn't translated and circulated, at least in a print
version.

"MEMRI couldn't do the whole interview because of the limitations of
our resources," Carmon told InFocus. "And it was just our best
judgment of what was fit to translate." He said he thought there was
an "almost" complete version in the archives.

InFocus asked Carmon why MEMRI didn't post more stories about domestic
events in Israel and the OTC.

"Eighty percent of such stories are already in English," Carmon said.

Then why not buy a few every week and send them out in order to give a
more balanced picture of the Middle East, InFocus asked, "It probably
wouldn't be legal ," he responded.

That brought up the thorny issue of copyright, ownership and power.

Why, Carmon was asked, does MEMRI copyright all the stories it
translates, when most stories are written by Arab authors?

"Of course we copyright," Carmon told InFocus. "Once we translate a
story into another language, it becomes ours, because it's our work."

To test this theory in an American context, InFocus contacted The New
York Times.

"If you translate copy from the Times, it would still belong to us,
because we originated it," said an employee of the Rights and
Royalties Department who did not wish to be named.

When war and peace hangs on the translation of a single word or
phrase, nuance is everything.

But can we trust the translator?

According its critics, until MEMRI starts translating Hebrew stories
about the rightward drift of Israeli society, torture of Palestinians
in Israeli jails, the forced exile of Ilan Pappe and Azmi Bishara, and
the elevation of the neo-fascist Avigdor Lieberman to deputy prime
minister of Israel, they aren't really covering all Middle Eastern media.

"I think it's a reliable assumption that anything MEMRI translates
from the Middle East is going to be unreliable," Finkelstein said.

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