Dan Arbell, deputy chief of mission for the Israeli embassy in Washington, agrees. In a letter to the editor, he writes:
Oddly, The Post devoted a massive front-page headline and two full pages of print not to the tens of thousands of terrorist rockets aimed at Israeli neighborhoods or to the rapidly nuclearizing Iranian regime that routinely threatens to wipe Israel off the map but to Israeli drones over the Gaza Strip.
More inexplicably still, most of the article deals with the drones’ impact on Gaza residents while mentioning only in passing the trauma and devastation wrought by the more than 13,000 rockets and mortars fired at millions of Israeli civilians since 2000. Not one of these Israeli victims was interviewed for the article — in contrast to the numerous quotes from Palestinians — nor was any Israeli government source cited. Rather, the article relies solely on the infamously biased Palestinian Center for Human Rights.
Israeli drones save lives. They protect Israelis from terrorist attacks and reduce the need for large-scale ground operations in Gaza. This fact, too, was overlooked in an article that failed to meet Post standards.
Dan Arbell, WashingtonDude's right about the "standards" thing.
The writer is deputy chief of mission for the Embassy of Israel.
Your favorite organization is kicking it with the Nation Just click the Code pink link.
ReplyDeleteJM,
ReplyDeleteJeremy Scahill is also associated with The Nation. If they paid me to talk about some bullshit on a cruise, I might consider it too.
Είναι πολύ εύκολο να μάθετε οποιοδήποτε θέμα στο διαδίκτυο σε σύγκριση με τα βιβλία, όπως βρήκα αυτό το κομμάτι της γραφής σε αυτό το site.|
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