We’re living in an era when news coverage often involves plenty of
absurdity.
That’s the case with routine U.S. media spin about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. So, on the July 29 edition of NPR’s “All
Things Considered” program, host Robert Siegel and correspondent Vicky
O’Hara each recited scripts referring to a “security barrier” that
Israel’s government is building in the West Bank. The next day, many
news outlets -- including the Los Angeles Times, Baltimore Sun, New
York Times, Chicago Tribune and The Associated Press -- also used the
“security barrier” phrase without quotation marks, treating it as an
objective description rather than the Israeli government’s preferred
characterization.
Meanwhile, in contrast, a Washington Post article managed to be
more evenhanded. When the phrase “security fence” appeared, it was
inside a quotation from Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. And the
Post story explained that part of the barrier “divides farmers from
their fields, or other Palestinians from their neighbors.” It takes
varied form as a 20-foot-tall concrete wall and fortified stretches of
razor wire, trenches and electronic fencing.