Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Haniyeh: Kidnappers didn't get money for Johnston
2007-07-06
Deposed Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh denied reports on Thursday night that the Army of Islam, the group that kidnapped BBC correspondent Alan Johnston, had received money in exchange for his release, Israel Radio reported.
"Technically, they didn't. It was a wire transfer, all very antiseptic. And it wasn't to Don Mumtaz. It was to Sonny. So, really, we didn't pay him off."
According to Haniyeh, Johnston was released without preconditions, and no deal was struck with the kidnappers. The kidnappers, however, claimed they had received $5 million, as well as large quantities of weaponry. The organization added that Hamas had promised not to harm any members of the group.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Dogmushes: 'Hamas said we could keep arms in Alan Johnston deal'
2007-07-06
Members of the powerful Dughmush crime syndicate family in Gaza and Hamas officials clashed Thursday over what the clan claimed was a deal struck to gain the release of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston. Johnston was released from captivity on Wednesday, and members of the powerful clan said on Thursday that in line with the agreement, the clan's Army of Islam gang would be recognized as a legitimate Palestinian faction in the Gaza Strip.
"Legitimate Paleostinian faction." My head just spun around 360 degrees. I'm going to step outside to projectile vomit some pea soup now.
They also said the accord allowed the clan's private militia to keep its weapons, and denied reports that Hamas had paid a huge ransom for Johnston's release.

Johnston pays 'thank-you' visit to Abbas
"Yeah. Thanks a heap."
However, a senior Hamas official in the Gaza Strip said his movement was determined to disarm the Dughmushes. "There is a decision by Hamas to confiscate the weapons of all clans and gangs in the Gaza Strip," the official said. "It's only a matter of time before the Dughmush clan is also disarmed." The Hamas official said the Army of Islam, which is headed by Don Mumtaz Dughmush, was "nothing but a group of gangsters operating under the cover of Islam."

The group has nothing to do with Islam, he stressed. "When its members kidnapped the British reporter, they demanded $2 million and a plot of land from the Palestinian Authority," he said. "But when Hamas came to power, the gang knew that they would never get anything out of us."

A clan member told The Jerusalem Post that the five-point agreement with Hamas recognized the Army of Islam as "the weapon of mujahideen [holy warriors] against Jews, Crusaders and apostates." He said the deal also banned the Barzini clan Hamas and the Army of Islam from attacking each other and called for solving future disputes peacefully. "The Army of Islam belongs to all Muslims, and not a particular clan or faction," the clan member said. "We decided to release the journalist so as not to give an excuse to the Crusaders to dispatch international troops to the Gaza Strip."

Another member of the clan said Mumtaz Dughmush decided to release Johnston after he received assurances from Hamas that he and his relatives would not be killed. "We wanted to avoid a bloodbath in the Gaza Strip," he said. "It's forbidden for a Muslim to shed the blood of his Muslim brother."

Mumtaz, his brother Mu'taz and one of his top aides, Ahmed Mathloum, are all wanted by Hamas for involvement in the killing of Hamas operatives over the past two years. Mathloum, who is known by his nickname, Sonny Knuckles Khattab al-Makdissi, was detained by Hamas militiamen earlier this week as part of the movement's pressure on the Dughmushes to release Johnston. In response, members of the clan kidnapped 10 Hamas-affiliated college students in various parts of the Gaza Strip.

Ahmed Bahr, a top Hamas official in the Strip, said Mumtaz Dughmush decided to release Johnston when he realized that Hamas was about to use force. "On Tuesday night, Mumtaz realized that the game was over when our forces surrounded his house in the Sabra neighborhood [of Gaza City]," he said. "He asked for a fatwa from a sheikh stating that foreigners must be protected when visiting Muslims." Two of the Gaza Strip's top religious leaders, Abdel Hamid Aklouk and Sliman al-Dayeh, each volunteered to issue a fatwa that would provide cover pave the way for Johnston's release.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Dogmushes say they handed Shalit over to Hamas
2007-07-05
The kidnappers of Cpl. Gilad Schalit have transferred him to the custody of Hamas, Abu Mutfana - a leader in the Dogmush family Army of Islam - said Wednesday in an interview broadcast on Channel 10. Abu Mutfana, who spoke on television with his face obscured by a kaffiyeh, called on Schalit's family to "pressure your government to release the Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim prisoners held in Israeli prisons." Otherwise, Abu Mutfana warned, the Dogmush family Army of Islam "would take action."

Abu Mutfana stressed that the cross-border raid near Kerem Shalom in which Schalit was abducted over a year ago had been carefully planned by his family group in cooperation with the Aksa Martyrs Brigades and the Popular Resistance Committees. The Dogmush family Army of Islam, Abu Mutfana said, had been holding Schalit but had handed him over to Hamas because they had been "busy with other things."

However, a Channel 10 commentator said that Hamas had offered Abu Mutfana's family group money and weapons in exchange for Schalit. Overnight Tuesday, the Dogmush family Army of Islam released BBC correspondent Alan Johnston, who was kidnapped in Gaza nearly four months ago.

In response to Johnston's release, Abu Mutfada told Hamas that their victory celebrations wouldn't last long. "You're banging your drums as if Alan Johnston were a capo soldier in the Dogmush family Army of Islam that you freed from the American tyrants' jails," he said. Abu Mutfada said that the Dogmush family Army of Islam had freed Johnston of its own free will, and not because the Barzini clan went to the mattresses of pressure to do so by Hamas.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
BBC's Johnston released in Gaza
2007-07-04
BBC correspondent Alan Johnston has been freed from kidnappers in Gaza after almost four months in captivity. Television pictures showed Mr Johnston, 45, leaving a building and entering a white car, accompanied by armed men. He said he was tired but in good health. During his time as a hostage, three videos were released featuring images of Mr Johnston or of his belongings. Calls were made for his release in rallies worldwide and in an online petition signed by some 200,000 people. Mr Johnston was handed over to officials of the Hamas administration, reports say.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Johnston captors warm Hamas
2007-07-02
The captors of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston said on Sunday they have prepared 30 100, I mean 500, and Morgan Fairchild booby-trapped cars that will be used against Hamas militiamen if they try to release the journalist by force. Johnston is being held by members of the notorious Dughmush clan in the Sabra neighborhood of Gaza City. The captors, headed by Mumtaz Dughmush, call themselves the Army of Islam.
Oh, the brave, brave lions!
And an original name. They're prob'ly using an Arabic version of Fred's name generator.
Mumtaz, Killer of the Kuffarim9111
I'm not sure I could live with myself after being kidnapped by someone named Mumtaz Dogmush. Then again, Johnston may not have to.
Members of the clan accused Hamas of kidnapping and killing one of their sons on Saturday night. They identified the victim as Ahmed Dughmush, 28. The clan said his bullet-riddled body was discovered in Gaza City shortly after he was kidnapped from the street by members of Hamas's paramilitary Executive Force.
Hamas was sending a message, were they?
"Ahmed was a Fatah member who was working for the Palestinian Authority before the Hamas coup in the Gaza Strip," said a member of the clan. "He was executed by the Hamas murderers less than an hour after he was kidnapped."
And? Seems sensible to me. In fact, the most sensible thing you could do is to initiate attacks against Hamas leaders before they get you.
He said that Hamas was trying to drag the Dughmush clan into a confrontation in order to release Johnston. "Hamas thinks that by executing and terrorizing us they will achieve their goals," he added. "But they are mistaken."
'I will fight to the last of my cousins but not my sons!"
Another clan member threatened to kill Johnston if Hamas tried to release him by force. "We have prepared 30 bobby-trapped cars for them," he said.

Hamas militiamen have been surrounding the compound where the clan lives for the past two weeks. Hamas officials said it was only a matter of time before their men raided the compound to release the journalist. They described Mumtaz Dughmush as a "big thug" who is using Islam as a cover for his criminal activities.
How can you tell? Experience?
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Kidnapped BBC man's fate hangs on clan feud
2007-07-01
The arrest of two militants from the radical group holding BBC correspondent Alan Johnston hostage has put the journalist's life in great danger, according to sources in Gaza and within the group itself. Johnston, who was kidnapped on 12 March, today endures his 111th day in captivity.

Late last night, members of Jaish al-Islam were due to meet to discuss his fate after two of their members were arrested earlier by Hamas security forces hoping to pressure the group - led by Mumtaz Dogmosh - into releasing the journalist.

The revelation came even as members of the Dogmosh family - a notorious clan supplying most of the members of 'The Army of Islam' - continued desperate efforts to convince the group not to kill the 45-year-old Scot. However, moderate insiders said the radicals were in charge and out of patience with Hamas, the British government, and the BBC. 'We have tried to keep them talking and delaying, but now I fear they will not listen. We will know tonight,' said one Dogmosh member with close ties to Jaish al-Islam and who has been working to end the crisis for months.

Hamas security forces snatched two members of Jaish al-Islam on their way from dawn prayers on Tuesday and held them at the former Fatah military intelligence HQ. According to a Jaish member, one of the arrested men was given a mobile phone to call his comrades as a start of negotiations to swap them for Johnston, but instead the man told them not to bargain for their freedom. The militant who said he took that call said: 'The brother told me to refuse all talks with Hamas and to kill Alan if Hamas kills him. This has ended any chance of negotiations.'

Hamas police commander Abu Khalid said: 'There was an operation...to arrest two members of Jaish al-Islam to put pressure on the Dogmosh family. The response to this was that Mumtaz threatened all foreigners and journalists in Gaza. We have been patrolling the hotels and will protect any journalist who requests it. We need to keep Alan alive, so we wait, wait, wait. There is the need for patience, but the changes in the past two weeks show us patience could be finished. It could be days.'

Jaish al-Islam is one of a number of small but effective splinter groups that has worked with Hamas in the past, most notably as a partner in last year's kidnapping of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. But over the past year, it has moved away from Hamas in a series of political, religious and family disputes.
much more at link
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Ex-Abbas adviser calls for new Hamas-Fatah gov't
2007-06-29
former foreign policy adviser to Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas said this week that the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip marks the "end of one party rule" in the PA, and that any future peace deal must involve the Islamist movement.

Speaking at a briefing organized by the Arab American Institute and Americans for Peace Now, Ghaith al-Omari, a senior research fellow at the New America Foundation in Washington, said a new situation had emerged in which Hamas was in charge in Gaza and was "there to stay."

"A new reality has come on the ground," said Omari. "[And] one thing that is very clear is that Hamas will not be dislodged from Gaza."

A new Hamas-Fatah unity government would need to be established if there were to be any chance of peace, he said. "If Hamas feels that they have no stake in this peace process, they will and they can be major spoilers. All it takes is a few terror attacks in Israel to derail the peace process," Omari said. It was necessary to involve Hamas in the government because if it did not have the power it felt it deserved, it would resort to "military" means to acquire it, he said. "Any new arrangement that is going to be stable has to bring in Hamas in both the security sector and the political sector, but with the right conditions," he said.

In the meantime, Omari said the international community must strengthen Abbas's new emergency government under Prime Minister Salaam Fayad to contain Hamas to Gaza. In addition, he said Hamas must be "squeezed a little" in order to send the message that "taking over by violence doesn't pay."

Omari said that when negotiating over Gaza in the immediate future, when no PA unity government exists, the United States and Israel must speak to Abbas - not Hamas. "As for who you talk to right now, absolutely, completely, without any reservation, it has to be Abu Mazen [Abbas]," said Omari. "If you talk to Hamas right now it will be rewarding them in an unprecedented way for what happened in Gaza."

Hamas's victory in Gaza has dispelled two common misconceptions, Omari said. The first was the belief that Hamas's role in Palestinian affairs could be minimized through military force. The second misconception Hamas's victory dispelled, according to Omari, was that Hamas could rule Gaza by itself. "We are already seeing some signs of their confusion," said Omari, who cited Hamas's promise to release BBC correspondent Alan Johnston, and their subsequent inability, or unwillingness, to do so as proof of such. "We are seeing that Hamas's 'good intentions' are going to hit reality and soon they will realize that they will have to change their approach," he said.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
BBC's Johnston fitted with explosive vest to prevent 'rescue'
2007-06-25
Posted with the BBC's own objective reporting.
The kidnappers of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston have released a new video of him in which he is wearing what he says is an explosives vest. In the tape, Mr Johnston says his captors have said they will detonate the vest if force is used to try to free him.

The BBC said it was aware of the video and appealed for Mr Johnston's release.
BBC statement:
In a statement, the corporation said: "It is very distressing for Alan's family and colleagues to see him being threatened in this way. We ask those holding Alan to avoid him being harmed by releasing him immediately. We are keeping his family fully informed and offering them our continued support."
Johnston's family's statement:
Mr Johnston's father, Graham, said: "My family and I are obviously most concerned and distressed at this latest development. "Our thoughts, of course, are with Alan in his present predicament. We earnestly request his abductors to release Alan, unharmed in any way."
Jonston's own [coerced] statement:
In the tape, posted on a website used by militants, Mr Johnston is seen wearing a device around his torso and attached to shoulder straps. "The situation now is very serious. As you can see I have been dressed in what is an explosive belt, which the kidnappers say will be detonated if there was any attempt to storm this area," he says. Mr Johnston appeals for a peaceful resolution to his situation, saying talks had reached an advanced stage. Captors tell me that very promising negotiations were ruined when the Hamas movement and the British government decided to press for a military solution to this kidnapping."
Hamas' statement:
Earlier, Hamas leader Ismail Haniya said Mr Johnston's captivity could not carry on. "We will not allow the continuation of the abduction of the British journalist. The issue of Alan Johnston must end," he said in a speech to his supporters.
The FO statement:
The British Foreign Office said it deplored such footage of Alan Johnston. "We condemn the continued release of videos like this which can only add to the distress of Alan Johnston's family and friends," a spokeswoman said. "They have not seen Alan for over 14 weeks. Those holding Alan should release him."
Oh and by the way, here are the kidnappers' demands buried at the ass end of the article...

The Army of Islam has demanded the release of Abu Qatada, a Palestinian-born Islamic cleric who is suspected of having close links with al-Qaeda and is held by the UK government as a threat to national security.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
IAF airstrike kills Islamic Jihad operative in Gaza City
2007-06-25
An Islamic Jihad gunman was killed and two others were wounded when an IAF aircraft targeted a car traveling in eastern Gaza City on Sunday night, the first such attack since Hamas took over the Gaza Strip earlier this month. The IDF said that the man killed, Hussan Khalil al-Hur, had fired Kassam rockets at Sderot earlier in the day, wounding three people. Military source said he was also suspected of being the engineer who manufactured the rockets. The two other operatives in the car had also been involved in terror activity, including rocket attacks on Israel.

Islamic Jihad said the vehicle was carrying its members on a "holy mission" - code for an attack on Israel. Hamas television footage showed the burned car with at least one rocket inside.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri warned that his organization would retaliate against Israel. "Israeli attacks are continuing on Gaza, and there are responses from the resistance to these attacks," he said.

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said on Sunday that the kidnappers of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston had made a new video of the abducted journalist wearing what appeared to be explosives around his waist, Reuters reported. "In the past they showed him in an orange uniform. Today they showed him with an explosives belt round his waist," it quoted Haniyeh as saying. Johnston was abducted in Gaza on March 12 and is believed to be held by a small group of gunmen called Army of Islam.

On Sunday morning, three people were lightly wounded when they were hit by shrapnel from two Kassam rockets fired from the Gaza Strip. Both rockets landed in Sderot, one in the city's center. In addition to the wounded, several people suffered from shock. The victims were evacuated to Barzilai Hospital in Ashkelon. A residential home that was hit approximately a month ago sustained damage in the attack.

Palestinian terrorists fired 11 mortars at Israel on Sunday afternoon, hitting an area near the Karni crossing. Nobody was hurt in the attack, but firefighters were working to put out a brush fire that erupted as a result of the explosions.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas issues Johnston ultimatum
2007-06-18
Oh-oh, Al. Don't look like this thing's gonna go down like you thought it would...
Islamist group Hamas has told the Palestinian militants holding BBC correspondent Alan Johnston it will free him by force if they do not release him by the end of today.
There's only one hitch with that book deal, Al. Ya gotta be alive to write it...
Johnston was abducted by armed men in Gaza City on March 12 and Wednesday will mark his 100th day in captivity.
Does he win a swell prize?
Reuters quoted a senior Hamas official as saying: "If he is not released we would use all means to secure his life and to free him. Today is the last day for the captors to release Alan Johnston."
Oh, I wouldn't worry, Al. I'm sure they won't come in blowing shit up and firing at anything that moves...including you.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Egypt proposes hudna truce monitoring body for Gaza
2007-06-05
CAIRO - Egypt is pushing for the formation of a hudna truce monitoring body with the participation of the rival Palestinian factions to shore up a nearly three-week-old truce in Gaza, a top official said on Monday.

‘Egypt has drafted a memorandum listing the principles and the mechanisms to consolidate the ceasefire,’ the official told the state MENA news agency. ‘A monitoring commission will be set up, under the auspices of Egypt, to ensure the application of the accord.’
Anything, anything to keep people from throwing up their hands and giving the whole mess back to Egypt.
"Surely, effendi, we will work to make sure they are happy. Secure, and happy. Please to have some cash now?"
Egypt has been holding a series of separate meetings with the rival factions in a bid to consolidate the ceasefire which went into effect on May 16 after more than 50 people were killed in internal fighting in Gaza. The official said that Egypt hopes to bring the factions together for direct talks in the second half of June.

A Palestinian source close to the talks said Egypt was also seeking agreement on restictions on the bearing of arms in Gaza, where mounting lawlessness has seen a spate of abductions of Westerners, most recently BBC correspondent Alan Johnston.

‘The memorandum proposes a ban on the carrying of arms in residential areas, school buildings and hospitals, and on military-style demonstrations,’ the source said.
But not mosques. Never mosques.
Link


Britain
British journalists are getting out their anti-American message
2007-05-17
One Objective Union?

ON THE WEEKEND of April 14-15, 2007, delegates from the National Union of Journalists of Great Britain voted to boycott Israeli goods in a viciously-worded motion at their annual delegates' conference in Birmingham. The eminent journalist and MP Michael Gove has resigned from the union as a result. Adding insult to injury, the British media reported in recent days that the union had passed the motion in order to "show solidarity with Palestinian journalists in relation to the kidnap of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston." Did we hear that right?

The NUJ motion against Israel was excerpted in this clip from the Jerusalem Post:

. . . By a vote of 66 to 54, the annual delegates' meeting . . . called for "a boycott of Israeli goods similar to those boycotts in the struggles against apartheid South Africa led by trade unions, and [for] the [Trades Union Congress] to demand sanctions be imposed on Israel by the British government." The boycott motion was the third clause of a larger anti-Israel resolution proposed by the union's South Yorkshire branch that condemned Israel's "savage, pre-planned attack on Lebanon" last summer and the "slaughter of civilians in Gaza" in recent years.

The motion condemning Israel's "savage" treatment of Palestinian civilians after "the defeat of its army" by Hezbollah passed by an even larger margin than the boycott.

According to the Israeli media, the Daily Telegraph's Washington correspondent, Toby Harnden, characterized the vote as "inane, ineffectual, counterproductive and insulting to the intelligence."

The Jerusalem Post also reported that Yahoo Europe news director Lloyd Shepherd had joked that he now looked "forward to similar boycotts of Saudi oil (for abuse of women and human rights), Turkish desserts (limits to freedom of speech) and, of course, the immediate replacement of all stationery in the NUJ's offices which has been made or assembled in China."

I am a member of the NUJ and have avoided their meetings like the plague for the past four years for two reasons: 1) the tone of the meetings is always aggressively anti-Zionist and anti-American, and when I have been unwell I've found this exacerbated my illness; 2) journalists' work issues are often barely discussed because of the inordinate amount of time devoted to denouncing Israel's apartheid and condemning America's imperialist genocides.

Last week I decided to attend my branch meeting despite feeling under the weather. I was stunned by the motion about Israel and voiced my displeasure. I also raised with the chairman the issue of the anti-American rhetoric that permeates NUJ proceedings and publications but received only a furious rebuke from him about "America bombing the shit out of Afghanistan and Iraq."

At least one member at my NUJ branch observed that the vote had coincided with Israel's Holocaust Memorial Day. And I was touched that the members insisted on taking me out after the meeting and apologizing for the chairman's behavior, but this did not lessen the blow from my union--which is supposed to represent impartiality in the media--passing this reprehensible and ill-informed motion against Israel. The credibility of the NUJ has been irreparably damaged, and the ignorance of the facts on the ground by the union's Chair, Jeremy Dear, is inexcusable. It is a dark day for British journalism.

At this point, it is vital to note coverage by the NUJ magazine, and by the British media in general, of the issue of American friendly fire incidents in Iraq and Afghanistan, the nature of which led True Crime Blog UK to accuse the lot of jumping on the "'let's hate America' bandwagon."

In the True Crime essay, decorated with a Union Jack, the writer provides a comprehensive report on the recent decision by the Oxfordshire coroner ruling the death of Lance Corporal of Horse Matty Hull an unlawful killing, the culprits being the 190th Squadron of the United States Air Force Air National Guard. The event was a tragedy, and, in a video of the strike that was widely shown on American television, one could hear the anguish, tears, and remorse of the pilots, whose commander in the air was Gus Kohntopp, an A-10 Thunderbolt fighter pilot with the Idaho Air National Guard.

What bothers me, and what irks True Crime UK, is the excessive zeal with which the British media have been reporting this story and that of ITN reporter Terry Lloyd, also killed by American forces in the middle of a fierce firefight during the opening days of the invasion.

Take, for example, the March 29 edition of the BBC's Thursday night news review hosted by Andrew Neil. He allowed Charles Glass, a former hostage of Hezbollah, to get in a dig at the Americans who, he claimed, had never been brought to justice by their own authorities for friendly fire killings of British servicemen. In fact, there had, as the British papers acknowledged, been a Pentagon inquiry long ago into the Hull killing.

What has struck observers of the coverage of the friendly fire death of both reporter Lloyd and soldier Hull has been the aggressive way the story has been reported to the British public, as if both men had been killed by the Taliban or some other terrorist group. In both the Lloyd and Hull cases, the families and solicitors have sought the nearest microphones and cameras to condemn the 'trigger-happy' and 'cowboy' American troops and airmen. The Oxfordshire coroner had complained about the lack of transparency from both the British Ministry of Defense and the Pentagon--but what was that video I kept seeing on television over and over again? Where would it have come from?

Friendly fire has been a sad by-product of war since the ancient days of the Battle of Barnet. In the heat of conflict, mistakes are made. But the amount of coverage of these two incidents, and the hatred that the various players have shown towards the Americans at fault, have been disturbing. Whenever the lawyers have emerged from the courthouse, they talk about the American service personnel as if they had summarily executed these two men.

Kohntopp flew 27 combat missions in support of Coalition forces involved in Operation Iraqi Freedom. He called the deployment, "the epitome of my career," was awarded the Bronze Star for his performance during the operation, and was later promoted to colonel.

On March 28, 2003, two 190th Squadron A10 Thunderbolt aircraft flew a mission to destroy artillery and rocket launchers from Iraq's 6th Armored Division 25 miles north of Basra. During the mission, the two A-10 aircraft mistakenly attacked a patrol of four FV 107 Scimitar armored vehicles from D Squadron of the Blues and Royals of the Household Cavalry that were supporting the 16th Air Assault Brigade in Operation Telic. The air attack killed Matty Hull and five of his squadron were injured.

The True Crime site says "there is an America-bashing slant to some of the press attention . . . " and adds, "I once worked with someone who was passionate about fighting racism . . . but she thought nothing of claiming that all Americans were complete and utter idiots . . . she totally failed to see how prejudiced, how racist, her own anti-American views were."

Carrying on, the True Crime blog discusses the most grotesque exploitation yet of the Matty Hull case by the British media: a visit by ITN to the hometown of pilot Gus Kohntopp. The British film team camped out in the village and accosted a few locals who seemed completely bewildered by the intrusion. One woman just burst into tears when the British reporter began pressing her about the alleged wrongdoing of Col. Kohntopp.

Meanwhile, Kohntopp is reported to have gone into hiding. The widow of Matty Hull has offered, in a huge tabloid headline, "My Mercy for Matty's Killers." Mrs. Hull says she does not want to punish the "U.S. Criminals" (another blazing headline), but that this should be a lesson for other pilots about the enormity of what they are doing in the sky.

What is so disturbing about the coverage of this case is the fact that, had it been in reverse, it is likely the American press would have shown every possible caution and restraint in dealing with its close ally. It is simply impossible to imagine any major television network, or for that matter the family of a loved one, hammering away about 'cowboy' and 'trigger happy' Britons.

As this article goes to print, the British National Union of Journalists' magazine has circulated to its membership a proposal that the killing of journalists be made a crime under international law. Throughout the coverage of the Terry Lloyd incident, the British media have been brutal. The latest news story is the 'outing' of the soldiers who killed Lloyd. The Shadow Foreign Secretary, William Hague, wants to see the soldiers brought to justice. (The Tories used to be pro-American, but those days now seem a pleasant memory.) Yes, he was in a makeshift ambulance, but, in the heat of what was a fierce confrontation, did Lloyd and his camera team, who had decided not to be embedded with the military, seriously think the platoons were going to stop and say, 'Oh, do pass so we might resume the battle?'

Members of the National Union of Journalists UK have this week received a magazine in which an article entitled "New Moves to Nail Killers of Terry Lloyd" tells us that the British television broadcaster ITN revealed the names of sixteen soldiers in the Red Platoon of Delta Company of the U.S. Marine Corps, but the American authorities refuse to confirm the names. The feature further details the efforts being made by the Metropolitan Police's war crimes unit to visit the United States to interview the soldiers.

The NUJ's broadcasting organizer, Paul McLaughlin, was quoted as saying "we seek to bring Terry Lloyd's killers to justice. The U.S. has shown contempt for the British justice system." The article goes on to say that various international media freedom groups and unions, along with the International Federation of Journalists, support the NUJ, whose ultimate goal is to have all sixteen soldiers extradited to Britain for trial.

I simply cannot imagine the National Press Club lobbying to have British soldiers extradited to the United States due to a tragic error in the heat of battle in which, say, an American broadcaster had been killed.

There has been considerable derision in the press about the lack of experience of those reservist pilots deployed to Iraq from places like Idaho and Wyoming. In the past fortnight, unfortunate images of Prince Harry exiting night clubs in the wee hours have made their way into the newspapers. He is about to deploy to Iraq. Should he be with his regiment preparing for his mission? Will he be any more battle-ready than Gus Kohntopp?

Now, in the United States, the controversy about the friendly fire death of former football star Pat Tillman is in the news once more. There is talk of senior military officials being implicated in a cover-up of the incident. He was awarded the Silver Star, but this is now being interpreted as a ploy by the Pentagon to cover up the true nature of his death.

One difference, though, between this and the British cases: the American media are covering the story with dignity and with respect for all concerned--no one is talking of putting Tillman's comrades on trial for his death.

If America had gone in to liberate the 15 Royal Marines and sailors held in Iran, and in the unlikely event tragedy had resulted, given the present anti-American climate in the British media the next chapter would have been charges of war crimes against brave American men in uniform performing the most dreaded job on earth.

Anti-American and anti-Israeli feeling runs high in Britain every day. The disproportionate hostility to the Americans responsible for the deaths of Matty Hull and Terry Lloyd bring a new dimension to America-hatred in the British Isles. That the journalists' union wants to boycott Israel and see prosecutions for American soldiers in the thick of battle puts journalistic objectivity at a new low.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More