Professor Steinberg's article about HRW, to which Judge Goldstone replied
Ken Roth's blood libel
By Gerald Steinberg
Jerusalem Post Op-Ed
August 26, 2006
A Malaysian newspaper recently published an article headlined
"Israel deliberately targeting civilians, says Human Rights Watch."
Turkish newspapers ran similar items, repeating HRW's statements
that "Israel intentionally bombs civilians." During the Lebanon War HRW's press releases, opeds and interviews with officials
were cited in hundreds of newspapers around the world, providing seeming legitimacy from a "neutral source" to the violent
anti-Israel protests and calls for revenge.
For HRW and executive director Kenneth Roth, Israel is a highly
emotional focus, and their reports are often biased and unreliable.
Roth's ideological objectives and slipshod methods are illustrated
in an August 18 column published in The Jerusalem Post ("Indiscriminate Bombardment"). Rejecting claims that "the IDF was
doing the best it could" or that Lebanese civilian deaths "were the result of Hizbullah hiding its rockets and fighters among
civilians," Roth declared that this "assertion doesn't stand up to the facts." This modern blood libel accuses Israelis of
"indifference to the taking of civilian lives."
But the factual basis for this article itself was glaringly absent.
Instead, Roth relied on the "halo effect," (the NGO version of
"trust me"), claiming that HRW "investigated some two dozen bombing incidents in Lebanon… In none of those cases was
Hizbullah anywhere around at the time of the attack."
Lacking any verifiable evidence, Roth reassures his readers that
HRW research techniques "cut through people's incentive to lie." These researchers "probed and cross-checked multiple eyewitnesses,"
who "were adamant that Hizbullah was not at the scene of the attack. We examined bombing sites for evidence of military activity
such as trenches, destroyed rocket launchers and military equipment, or dead or wounded fighters...."
ROTH DOES not provide names, but it is likely that Lucy Mair,
HRW's researcher for Israeli/Palestinian issues, was involved. A number of HRW's statements on the Lebanon war provided Mair's
name and a Beirut phone number. Before coming to HRW, she published anti-Israel propaganda in pro-Palestinian platforms such
as the "Electronic Intifada." This is hardly a credible biography for an "independent" researcher.
Furthermore, none of Roth's other claims can be checked, and they
are totally inconsistent with the hard evidence, such as the 4,000 missiles launched by Hizbullah at Israeli civilians during
this period.
Reporters from The New York Times, The New Yorker and elsewhere
had no difficulty finding reliable detailed evidence of Hizbullah's activities in these areas, but HRW's "probes" and "searches"
came up empty. Perhaps they were not looking very hard.
And in dismissing the justification for the IDF attack on Kana,
Roth relies on confused interpretations of an article by an Israeli journalist, and denigrates video footage "trotted out"
by the IDF "of Hizbullah firing rockets from a village." Instead, Roth makes the patently absurd demand for a video that would
show "that Hizbullah was in a civilian building or vehicle at the time of an Israeli attack…"
Finally, Roth admits that "Hizbullah certainly should not be let
off the hook" - as if the kidnappings and massive missile bombardments by terrorists are minor footnotes in terms of human
rights. His claim that HRW has conducted "detailed investigations of the militia's obvious war crimes" is also inconsistent
with the evidence. Of the 24 HRW statements and opeds during this war, as listed on NGO Monitor, most targeted Israel, and
the only lengthy study, of over 50 pages, also focused on allegations against Israel. HRW's very limited criticisms of Hizbullah,
like its statements on Palestinian terror, appear to be little more than fig leaves.