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Media Paints Israel as Aggressor in Coverage of Killing Hezbollah Commander

Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr

Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr (Photo: Instagram)

Some international media headlines omitted the fact Hezbollah commander was targeted, painting Israel’s strike as an all-out attack on the pastoral suburbs of Beirut.

By Rinat Harash, HonestReporting

On Tuesday, July 30, an Israeli airstrike in Beirut eliminated Hezbollah’s most senior military commander, who was responsible for the rocket attack that had killed 12 Israeli children and teenagers in the Golan Heights last weekend.

Fuad Shukr was also the adviser to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, and the United States says he played a central role in the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, which killed 241 U.S. military personnel.

Yet some international media headlines omitted the fact he was targeted and painted Israel’s strike as an all-out attack on the pastoral suburbs of the Lebanese capital.

Here’s a collection of some of the worst headlines we could find, followed by accurate ones.

Israeli “Attack” on Suburbia

The intelligence-based targeting of Shukr took place in the Dahiya suburb of Beirut, which is a Hezbollah stronghold.

Yet Reuters headline made it look like Israel had deliberately attacked desperate housewives on their way to the spa:

NBC News did the same, while at least mentioning it was a retaliatory strike:

For the Independent, it was a completely unsolicited air strike on Beirut:

And AP, like the three examples above, omitted the essence of the story — the targeting of a top Hezbollah commander:

Context and Target
So what would be a better headline? One that mentions the following elements:
-The target of the strike– a top Hezbollah commander.
-The reason for the strike — in retaliation for a lethal terror attack.
-The location of the strike — Beirut or its suburb– as a geographical locator, not as the essence of the story.

CNN did exactly that:

ABC NEWS did not mention the soccer field massacre in their headline, but at least led with IDF announcement on Shukr:

And Axios properly reported on the target of the strike:

The conclusion, however, isn’t positive.

As the bad examples above show, media outlets twisted what should have been a straightforward story.

And the question is why is it so hard to accurately report what happened, where and why?

If it’s because accurate reporting paints Israel as fighting against evil, then media doing the opposite end up serving evil.

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