It’s only Israeli lives that matter.

The killing of Palestinians is overshadowed in mainstream media, with emphasis on Israeli deaths and minimal coverage of Palestinian casualties. The media’s biased framing perpetuates distorted coverage of the conflict, fostering an environment of unequal suffering.

By Des Freedman

Right across the Anglo-American mainstream media, the killing of Palestinians is seen as normal.

Twenty-four Israeli soldiers were killed in two separate incidents in Gaza on 22 January. Mainstream media outlets around the world reacted in unison: that this was the “deadliest day” for Israel since 7 October.

This exact phrase was used in headlines on 23 January carried by news agencies such as Reuters and AFP, and major broadcasters including the BBC, CBS, NBC, CNN, ABC and ITV News. 

The exact same phrase was also used by leading news titles including the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, Daily Telegraph, the Sun, Jerusalem Post, Guardian, London’s Evening Standard, Financial Times, Independent and Yahoo News.

On the same day, Israeli forces killed almost 200 Palestinians in Gaza including at least 65 people in Khan Younis alone. 

These deaths received no headlines in the above outlets. Where they were reported, they were listed as part of the regular daily round-up of events in an unfolding genocide that has now seen more than 26,000 people killed in Gaza.

How is it possible that the world’s media could embrace exactly the same phrase in relation to Israeli victims but largely ignore the identities of the much higher number of Palestinians killed? 

Why would 22 January be described as “deadly” for one group of people but not for another?

Unequal value

You might expect that editors took the “deadliest day” phrase from press statements from the Israeli government or military. 

Yet Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Daniel Hagari did not use this phrase in his statement and neither did the IDF Chief of the General Staff, Herzi Halevi, who instead simply called it a “difficult day”.

Prime minister Benjamin Netanhayu also described it as “one of the most difficult days” while Israel’s President, Isaac Herzog, spoke of “an unbearably difficult morning”. 

He used the same language as both Knesset speaker Amir Ohana and minister Benny Gantz, both of whom referred to a “painful morning”.

Of course, it is possible the phrase was used in private and informal briefings to the press on the morning of 23 January. It is, however, equally conceivable that this was a trope that came “naturally” from a deep-rooted idea in the western media that the lives of Israelis and Palestinians are not of equal value. 

And, therefore, that measuring the “deadliness” of a particular day should only be done for Israelis (where every life matters) and not for Palestinians (whose individual lives clearly appear to count for less).

‘Deadliest day’

Indeed, a search of the Nexis database of UK national and local news (including BBC broadcast bulletins) reveals that there were 856 uses of the phrase “deadliest day” from 7 October 2023 until 25 January 2024, none of which directly referred to evidence of Palestinian deaths in Gaza

The only exception to this were some BBC bulletins on 25 October which mentioned “Palestinians reporting the deadliest day in Gaza” (emphasis added). 

Otherwise, there was not a single reference during this period across the British media to “the deadliest day for Palestinians” or “for the people of Gaza”.

The other approximately 850 references directly related only to Israeli casualties. Some 28 per cent of them focused on the killing of IDF soldiers on 22 January. 

The vast majority referred to the events of 7 October, described either as “the deadliest day for Jews” or “the deadliest day for the Jewish people” which accounted for some 25% of all references.

Many of these stories were focused on the words of US president Joe Biden who, in a much publicised speech to Jewish leaders at the White House, described the Hamas attack on 7 October as the “deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust”. 

Biden’s words alone make up 20% of all references to the “deadliest day” trope.

Perhaps Biden’s words were on the minds of editors across the world as they listened to Israeli spokespeople on the morning of 23 January and that the deaths of 24 IDF soldiers merited such a phrase when talking about Israeli lives.

Framing the war

But why has the phrase not been used in relation to Palestinians and, indeed, why is there so little preoccupation with days when particularly large number of Gazans are killed?

Precisely because the war is not framed in a way which recognises the equal worth of all those affected – in other words, a situation where every instance of significant Palestinian casualties would deserve a headline – it’s hard to be certain of which have been the very deadliest days for the residents of Gaza.

However, it’s clear that the period immediately after the temporary ceasefire in the last week of November saw particularly intense airstrikes and there were, according to Al Jazeera, at least 700 Palestinians killed on 2 December alone.

“Why is there so little preoccupation with days when particularly large number of Gazans are killed?”

Yet there was no mention in the UK media about this being the “deadliest day” for Palestinians. Instead, the Guardian simply ran with a headline of “‘Israel says its ground forces are operating across ‘all of Gaza’” while the Sunday Times wrote that “Fears for hostages as Gazans say bombardment is worse than ever”. 

According to the Mail Online, “Israel says it is expanding its ground operations against Hamas’ strongholds across the whole of the Gaza Strip as IDF continues to bomb territory after terrorists broke fragile truce”. 

The BBC’s TV news bulletins on 3 December carried distressing footage of casualties but also featured a quote from an adviser to Netanyahu saying that “Israel was making the ‘maximum effort’ to avoid killing civilians” without carrying an immediate rebuttal of this outrageous claim.

In other words, despite the fact that 30 times more Palestinians were killed on 2 December than when the 24 IDF soldiers were killed, there was no recognition of the “deadliness” of that day. 

Instead, the framing was all about the strategic plans of the Israeli military rather than the mass slaughter of Palestinians.

‘Intensive strike’

On 26 December, a further 241 people were killed by Israeli bombs. Britain’s “newspaper of record”, The Times, responded with the headline: “Israel-Gaza war: Palestinians hit by ‘most savage bombing’” with a sub heading that “Israel launches most intensive strike since Hamas attack on October 7”. 

You could be forgiven for thinking that there was nothing deadly about this episode because, after all, Palestinians were only being “struck” as opposed to brutally killed.

“There is clearly a brutal politics to counting the dead”

But this was hardly an exceptional day given that Oxfam reported earlier this year that Israel’s military was killing Palestinians at an average rate of 250 people a day, a figure it said exceeded the daily death toll of any other major conflict of recent years.

There is clearly a brutal politics to counting the dead. The New York Times ran an article on 22 January headlined “The Decline of Deaths in Gaza” arguing that average daily deaths across a 30-day period have now fallen below 150. 

For the NYT, it is “plausible that a lower percentage of deaths are among civilians now that Israel’s attacks have become more targeted and the [average] daily toll has declined”.

Not only, however, is there little evidence that the IDF is in any way opposed to killing civilians but the idea that casualties are declining at a time when we are soon likely to see a total of 30,000 Palestinian deaths is profoundly shocking. 

Any slowdown in the rate of killing is hardly a consolation to the millions who still live in fear of IDF raids and rockets.

The media consensus that only Israelis are the victims of the “deadliest days” in the region and not Palestinians, despite the latter accounting for 95% of deaths since 7 October, is one of the many illustrations of the unequal and profoundly distorted coverage of this war.

Until the South African government submitted its partially successful claim to the International Court of Justice, news organisations were unwilling even to investigate the genocidal language of Israeli political and military leaders. 

The media also routinely uses dehumanising and differential language where Israelis are “massacred” while Palestinians simply “die”. This illustrates the awful role of the mainstream media in paving the way for the ethnic cleansing we are currently seeing.

The real reason you don’t see or hear the media talk about a “deadly day” for Palestinians is that every day is deadly when you live in Gaza.


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Comments

10 responses to “It’s only Israeli lives that matter.”

  1. chrisirish67 Avatar
    chrisirish67

    The days of honoring themselves will soon end.

  2. Annairam Avatar
    Annairam

    True, msm articles give the impression Israel/Gaza history started on 7 October 2023 and hardly ever mention Jewish illegal settlements and settlers/IDF harassment and killing in the West Bank.
    The only news site that went back to 1948 is Hanoi, South Korean.

    1. Woopy Avatar
      Woopy

      I’ve seen Rabbis lament that it should be legal to kill Palestinians because they aren’t human. It upsets Israelis when it’s called murder. After all, the white supremacy of Israel are God’s chosen and can’t possibly do wrong.

      1. Dennis Merwood Avatar
        Dennis Merwood

        Not my “God”

        1. Susan Siens Avatar
          Susan Siens

          And those who worship a murderous villain they call God — the devil? — should not be surprised when their own viciousness is visited upon them. Apparently these are “rabbis” who carefully delete the prophetic voices in the Hebrew Scriptures. You should always experience for yourself what you are willing to do to others.

  3. Gene Avatar

    And what do you call President Putin when he recently called Ukrainian forces “terrorists”? Putin’s hypocrisy is so sickening that he had the gall to condemned Ukrainian forces calling them “terrorists” for allegedly “firing on ambulances” while at the same time cautioning Israel occupation forces (IOF) for using “disproportionate force” bombing hospitals, schools, Mosques and ambulances killing tens of thousands of innocent children, babies and women. In truth and supported by hard evidence, Jewish forces in Palestine are the true example of terrorists. Putin, the Zionist can not have it his way. Racism against Arabs and Jewish control are the primary reasons that countries with big leverage on Israel (e.g., Russia with 300,000 Russian extremist “settlers” in Israel) are turning blind eye to Jewish terrorism and the ongoing Palestinian Genocide.

    1. Woopy Avatar
      Woopy

      I’m happy that Russia is steadfast in maintaining their sovereignty, focused on eradicating the Bandera Nazis, protecting ethnic Russians from being murdered by Ukrainian terrorists backed up by the US and its taxpayers. Hopefully Russia drives the US and its war back to the US where it belongs.

  4. me, again Avatar
    me, again

    These IOF shouldn’t have been on stolen land, cleansed land, destroyed land, contaminated land. They shouldn’t have been killing on swathes of land, killing innocents on this land, destroy the agricultural of this land. Everyone has a right to defend themselves. Especially the Palestinians. This right is not reserved for the zio terrorists for they are terrorists of the worst kind – the kind that kill and cry victim in one breath.
    Everyone who has had been attacked by the zio savages has a right to retaliate. To steal from Jordan Peterson’s phrase to that satanic netanyahood “go get ’em”
    LONG LIVE RESISTANCE
    LONG LIVE PALESTINE

  5. C Walters Avatar
    C Walters

    No use just constantly telling us how the mainstream media lies about the wars, every time add and remind us of the name of the CEO, general manager, general editor etc who is personally responsible for the lies

    1. Woopy Avatar
      Woopy

      It’s mostly the think tanks such as New American Century and others that concoct the fake news then pass it to the MSM. Membership of the think tanks varies including Israeli military staff, US congressmen, people like William Krystol, etc.

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