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The Jewish Chronicle

Bowen, BBC and bias: a case of selective myopia

The BBC should be embarrassed by the bias revealed in its Gaza coverage.

December 30, 2008 16:29

ByStephen Pollard, Stephen Pollard

2 min read

This week’s JC is full of analysis of the background to the Gaza military operation. But I have to confess that there is one explanation for Israel’s air strikes we have not offered to our readers. It is that put forward by the BBC’s Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, on Saturday: “The failure of Israel, with its high-tech army, to stop relatively crude rocket fire has become a political embarrassment for Israeli leaders.”

So, according to the BBC, you can forget about the terror inflicted on a quarter of a million Israelis who live with daily fear of murder from the rockets. And don’t trouble yourself thinking about the Israeli government’s primary duty to protect its citizens. To Mr Bowen, none of that is relevant. The real story is that Israeli leaders were embarrassed.

Sadly, this level of analysis is all we can expect from the BBC’s Middle East editor. In January 2007, I obtained a private email briefing sent by Mr Bowen to some BBC colleagues. Palestinian society, he told them, was fragmenting because of “the death of hope, caused by a cocktail of Israel’s military activities, land expropriation and settlement building — and the financial sanctions imposed on the Hamas-led government which are destroying Palestinian institutions…” The “fragmentation” of Palestinian society had nothing to do with Palestinians — Hamas, for example — and was entirely Israel’s fault.

Mr Bowen seemed to express contempt for all the Israeli political figures he mentioned. Ehud Barak was “a former head of the Israeli army and its most decorated soldier. (Among his many exploits was disguising himself as a woman during a raid in Beirut to kill various Palestinians)”. As if he had randomly killed “various Palestinians” rather than carefully targeted terrorists.