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From HonestReporting.com
Communique: 22 March 2004
SHEIKH YASSIN'S
'HAPPIEST DAY'
Dear HonestReporting Subscriber,
Early Monday morning, the IDF
struck and killed Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, the founder and leader of
Hamas. Since early media reports misrepresented the IDF strike in a
number of fundamental ways, HonestReporting
encourages subscribers to be on the lookout for these four myths, and
to respond appropriately with the facts:
Myth 1: The Yassin strike
will escalate the violence Nearly all news reports claimed
within the first two
sentences that the IDF strike is
"likely to escalate violence," and constitutes "an enormous gamble by Sharon" that
"risks triggering a dramatic escalation in bloodshed." (Associated
Press) This claim ― which belongs on the editorial
page, not in the same breath as the actual news report of the
event ― was so widespread that one almost forgets that it represents
only the Palestinian position: The official
PA statement
characterized the Israeli strike as inviting "more violence and further
escalation." The absent Israeli position: Though terrorist
efforts may increase temporarily, in the long run the elimination of
Yassin will upset Hamas' leadership and violent capabilities, and
serve as an essential deterrent to ongoing Palestinian terror. As
Israeli spokesman
Avi Pazner said:
His elimination will serve peace
in the long run. He is personally responsible for all the most
dreadful attacks in Israel. He was a dangerous extremist Islamic
ideologist. He was danger to the entire region. By eliminating this
threat to peace we will improve chances for a better Middle East.
Responsible news reports should either convey both
positions, or neither.
Myth 2: Yassin
was an impotent old man
BBC profiled Yassin as "a frail man who could
barely see. His voice was thin and quavering." The
Evening Standard prominently quoted the UK Foreign Secretary, who
said "he did not believe that Israel
would benefit from the killing of an old man in a wheelchair."
Actually, Yassin was in a wheelchair since age 12, when
a sporting accident left him paralyzed. It's self-evident, therefore,
that being wheelchair-bound never hampered Yassin's ability to
orchestrate unprecedented terror ― he founded
Hamas in 1987 and proved perfectly capable of building the
organization to its current strength from a sitting position.
Moreover, Yassin has had enough wherewithal in the recent years to
direct dozens of heinous terrorist attacks, leaving Yassin's hands
drenched in Israeli blood.
HonestReporting encourages readers to check that articles present this essential
information on Yassin's terror record.
AP completely omitted any reference to Yassin's connection to
terrorism until the final sentence of their report, and then only
referred to Israel "blaming" Yassin for "inspiring" Hamas bombers.
Myth 3: Yassin
was a 'spiritual leader' who deserved immunity
AFP, like most agencies, described Yassin as "the
Islamist movement's spiritual guide," which suggests to a western
audience that Yassin operated in a peaceful, contemplative realm aside
from the violence, and was therefore unfairly targeted by the IDF.
BBC went so far to say Yassin was "a
powerful inspiration for young Palestinians disillusioned with the
collapse of peace hopes."
CNN calls Yassin a spiritual leader
(unquoted), but then puts scare quotes around Israel's reference to him as
a
"terrorist."
Actually, Yassin's brand of 'spirituality' is the very ideological and
emotional fuel that drives Palestinian (and worldwide Islamic)
terrorism, the plague of our age. Yassin continually called for suicide
terrorism as a religious obligation, and even said about
himself that "the day in which I will die as a shahid [martyr] will
be the happiest day of my life." (Al-Quds, July 26, 1998)
As Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman
Mark Sofer
said:
[Yassin] was not a spiritual leader. This term does
injustice to the term 'spiritual leader' and an insult to real
spiritual leaders. He was a terrorist mastermind.
Myth 4:
Israel's strike creates a western threat of Islamic terror
After Hamas released a statement that threatened radical Islamic
retaliation beyond Israel's borders,
AP called this an 'unprecedented' threat, triggered by Israel:
For the first time, Hamas also threatened the United States, saying
America's backing of Israel made the assassination possible...In the past, Hamas leaders have insisted their struggle is against
Israel and that they would not get involved in causes by militant
Muslims in other parts of the world. Today's statement suggested that Hamas might seek outside help in
carrying out revenge attacks, since its capabilities have been limited
by Israeli military strikes.
This is simply untrue ― Yassin himself had long called upon world
Islamic terrorists to join with Hamas in global jihad.
MEMRI reported in March, 2003 that on the Hamas website, "Sheikh
Ahmad Yassin called on the Islamic nation 'to strike at Western
interests everywhere if Iraq is conquered.'" And just two weeks ago,
Hamas
announced its commitment to "the global level of
the Islamic world" as the reason for its choosing British suicide
bombers to murder Israelis at Tel Aviv's Mike's Place in 2003.
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