(J71) Mossad na forum

IP: *.bc.hsia.telus.net 24.07.01, 19:09
Ten artykul z wczorejszego Jerusalem Post powinien przekonac
wszystkich "niedowiarkow" co do tozsamosci jednego z gosci tego
forum , niejakiego Wojo - Janusz Styber i jego aspiracji.
(Pelny tekst , znajdziecie pod spodem )


Izraelskie MSZ, rozpoczelo aktywne i systematyczne kontrolowanie (monitoring)
zagranicznych srodkow masowego przekazu . Celem akcji jest odwrocenie
negatywnych nastrojow antyzydowskich po za granicami Izraela.
Ministerstwo nie ukrywa , ze czesc ludzi pracuje takze w USA (NYC) ,
kontrolujac najwieksze stacje TV Ameryki ( ABC , CBS , NBC , CNN )
Jednym z pracownikow jest 25 letni Ze`ev Gross , ktory nadzoruje 6 roznych
zagranicznych stacji TV , w czasie swojej 8 godzinnej zmiany.

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Keeping the media
honest
By Herb Keinon

(July 23) - The Foreign
Ministry has finally begun to
systematically monitor foreign
television news reports and
respond to inaccurate
reporting about Israel. Herb
Keinon examines whether this
effort will help stem the tide of
negative coverage

Andrew Wilson''s two-minute Sky News clip last
Tuesday on Israel''s violence de jour was one of
thousands that have been broadcast on television stations
around the world since the beginning of the current round
of hostilities nearly 10 months ago.

Nothing spectacular, memorable, or controversial. Just
Israeli bulldozers demolishing homes in Rafah; an injured
soldier; an injured Palestinian woman; a settler kicking a
Palestinian and threatening a cameraman. The regular
stuff - the stuff that accumulates in the mind and creates
general impressions about who is right and who is wrong,
who is oppressed and who is oppressing.

"The result of another Israeli incursion into Palestinian
territory, this time in southern Gaza," Wilson opened his
segment, in that dramatic from-the-war-zone tone. "The
bulldozers came in the night. These homes were
destroyed because of a persistent firefight in the area, and
an attack by a suicide bomber yesterday. Last night the
fighting was some of the fiercest since mid-June, when
the US cease-fire deal was brokered. Five Palestinians
and three soldiers were reported wounded." There was
nothing stop-you-in-your-tracks anti-Israel about this
clip.

The one "talking head" who appeared was Ha''aretz
Palestinian Affairs commentator Danny Rubinstein, who
spoke generically about the hate and bitterness both sides
have for the other.

But for some Israelis and Jews, the report - with its
close-up of Palestinian suffering and the fact that it
captured a settler in a particularly ugly pose - would
leave a trace of "here we go again, another report
painting us as the Bad Guy." These traces accumulate to
the point where, if you mention Sky News, CNN, or
BBC to any number of Israelis or Jews who regularly
watch these networks, many of them will almost
reflexively respond, "Oof, their reporting is slanted
against us."

But these are impressions, gut feelings. Ask for an
example, and your conversant might remember one
particularly galling example from CNN''s Rula Amin in
Gaza, or one or two jarring turns of phrase on the BBC.
But the rest would be general impressions - because who
sits down with a pen and paper and actually keeps
score?

Well, as of about six weeks ago, the Foreign Ministry
does. Fifty-three years after the creation of the state, 30
years after television changed the way war is covered
during the Vietnam War, a decade after the first intifada
and continuous and dramatic footage of the Palestinian
David with sling-shot facing off against the Israeli Goliath
armed to the teeth, and 10 months after the recent
violence, a government body has finally taken upon itself
to systematically monitor and keep close tabs on what is
being reported about Israel on the major international
networks.

THE KEY words here are "government body" and
"systematic." There are organizations, both here and
abroad, which monitor the press, but generally they are
tainted in the eyes of the media they are monitoring as
being politically affiliated - generally considered
right-wing.

The other key word is "systematic." The Foreign Ministry
has for months been taping all the news programs seen
here, and then - if it hears of something particularly galling
- having someone watch it and complain.

The problems with this method were manifold, starting
with the fact that it was not done in "real time," and
including logistical problems such as who, exactly, is
going to sit around and watch hundreds of hours of
tapes? And when someone in the ministry''s under-staffed
hasbara (information/propaganda) department was
assigned the task, it was both difficult and
time-consuming to rummage through hours of tape
looking for that one particular clip.

The IDF also has a unit that monitors the key networks,
as well as various Arab television networks. But their
intelligence officers are looking for intelligence
information, such as who is the guy in the background
whispering into Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser
Arafat''s ear. This unit in the intelligence branch is not
paying attention to whether a particular reporter is
interviewing Palestinians alongside official Israeli
spokesman, or whether he is interviewing Palestinians
alongside Israeli commentators who share what seems to
be the reporter''s left-wing bent.

The Foreign Ministry unit, outsourced with veterans of
this IDF intelligence unit as its core, is homing in precisely
on those elements.

It wants to know - and systematically chart - how long
each report on Israel lasted, where it was in the newsreel,
what terminology was used, who was interviewed, and
how long each side got to present its case.

But that''s not all. The unit monitors CNN, BBC and Sky
News around the clock, as well as 10 Arab networks. It
also has people in New York watching every televised
news item on Israel that appears on ABC, CBS, NBC,
CNN-USA, MSNBC, and two local New York
stations.

The monitoring of the Arabic stations is, obviously, not to
enable a Foreign Ministry spokesman to see an
anti-Israel report and lodge a complaint with Qatari
televisi
    • Gość: j23 Re: (J71) Mossad na forum IP: *.warszawa.cvx.ppp.tpnet.pl 24.07.01, 20:26
      Interesujące?!.
    • Gość: Piotr_M Re: (J71) Mossad na forum IP: *.gazeta.pl 24.07.01, 20:31
      Ja tez jestem z Mossadu. Walcze z antyizlaelskimi nastrojami jak lew. Szkoda
      tylko, ze tak slabo za to placa ... banda skapcow!
    • Gość: Yan Debilem jestes jacek71 IP: *.ramat-gan.gov.il 24.07.01, 23:21
      Jestes skonczonym debilem jacek71 !!!!!!
      Mossad nie ma co robic tylko czytac wypociny takich idiotow jak ty ?
      Jedz do hansa i leczcie sie razem u slawnego doktora Kevorkian.
      Chetnie zasponsoruje was obydwu
      • Gość: ABEL Re: Niech sobie pisze! IP: *.warszawa.cvx.ppp.tpnet.pl 25.07.01, 00:11
        Po co te chamskie odzywkie Boruch. Ty bądź kulturalna osoba. Niech on sobie
        pisze bo on ma mieć takie prawo.
    • Gość: TEREK Jaka jest prawda? IP: *.chello.pl 25.07.01, 00:27
      A prawda jest taka, że pewnych Mossad chce, a inni wyżalają się na Forum. J71 -
      jak chcesz pracować w służbach, to musisz wiedzieć, że nie jeden Mossad
      istnieje, choć, co trzeba przyznać, jest bardzo, może i za bardzo, skuteczny!

      To że nie zareagowali na twoją odpowiedź na ich ogłoszenie prasowe, to nie
      tragedia. To tylko kolejne doświadczenie życiowe. Tym razem negatywne.

      Głowa do góry!
      • Gość: scan Re: do TEREKA IP: *.home.net.pl 25.07.01, 00:35
        Witam Cię, Terek. Tu tafiłeś?. Ten facet pisze to samo w Informacjach. Widać
        niespełniony.
        Pozdrawiam serdecznie.
        Scan
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