Jonathan Cook: the Blog from Nazareth - www.jonathan-cook.net

Liberal Jewish commentary clouds our view

Jonathan Freedland writing at his hasbara best. This is becoming a discernible trend in liberal commentary about the renewed Israeli-Palestinian talks. The fact is that there is not an ice-cube’s hope in hell of these talks leading to anything but a serious deterioration in the Palestinians’ position. But Freedland would tell you otherwise. According to [...]

Fear is the panacea for US security state

This out-Bushes the Bush Administration. The White House is warning all Americans that al-Qaeda is planning a major unspecified terror operation in some unknown place in the world at some unknown time in August. Well, we can say with certainty that no American on the planet is going to be helped by that kind of [...]

Keeping Palestinian refugees out of sight

Following the 1948 war and the massive numbers of Palestinians who were ethnically cleansed from the former state of Palestine, Israel was keen to conceal not only the recent war crimes it had committed but, even more importantly, the continuing one it commits to this day in not allowing the refugees to return to their [...]

Fox’s hounding of Muslim Bible scholar

This interview on Fox News of a leading Biblical scholar (who happens to be Muslim) isn’t simply embarrassing, it’s downright sinister. One has to watch it to believe it. I fear this tells us something about the state of the US more than it does about Fox News. We learn very little about Dr Reza [...]

FBI and the anti-war movement

The extent to which the US has become a security and surveillance state was illustrated to me that last time I travelled there, a few years back on a book tour. I had 10 internal flights to make over the course of 2 weeks. When I was pulled out of line and taken for “extra [...]

Another partisan reporter at the NYT

I have in the past written a number of articles (for example, here) discussing the preponderance of what I call “partisan reporters” covering the Israel-Palestine beat for the corporate media. These are journalists who have a strong emotional attachment and personal investment in Israel. Often it takes the form of the reporters serving in the [...]

10 years’ jail for selling cakes

Strange what things suddenly reveal to Israelis the ugliness of their political and legal systems, but this story seems to have pricked some consciences. Zaki Sabah, a Palestinian street vendor in the Old City of Jerusalem sells one of the local staples, kaki simsim or sesame cakes (not bagels, as Israelis keep referring to them). [...]

BBC’s latest craven posture on Israel

Remember when in 2009 the BBC reneged on its commitment to the Disasters Emergency Committee by refusing to run ads to raise money for the homeless and destitute in Gaza, arguing that such broadcasts were not charitable but political (presumably because that was the way Israel saw them). The BBC’s intransigence infuriated the British public [...]

Media courtiers and the royal baby

The birth of the “Royal Baby” seems a good moment to consider the function of the supposedly “liberal-left” media. How well does a paper like the Guardian do in expressing the worldview of much of its readership when confronted with this kind of news event? The answer: it offers almost wall-to-wall sycophancy. Headlines include: All [...]

The Guardian and Edward Snowden

A little while back, I advised that we should beware feting the Guardian for its role in the Edward Snowden revelations. This is what I wrote: But please be careful about investing too much faith in the Guardian’s position. Whatever the view of the individual journalists at the paper (especially Greenwald), the Guardian as a [...]

Forget Obama. It’s about power structures

One of the problems for “leftists” – as we are called – is that, when one criticises structures of power, people recoil because they can think only of the individuals who operate inside these structures. Exxon is a psychopathic corporation pillaging the planet, but we know someone who works in accounts or human resources and [...]

Time to decolonise our minds of Hollywood

There’s a real danger in writing posts on a subject like this one of feeling like a killjoy. But here goes anyway. I’m still a sucker for a big Hollywood movie but increasingly I try to remind myself that my enjoyment is really part of an addiction that has been encouraged in me by big [...]

Corporations: our real rulers

I can’t speak for the situation in all European countries, but it’s clear that the UK’s political system (like the US one) is now entirely captured by the corporations. Democratic institutions are the facade behind which true power – that of the corporate elites – lurks. Thinking otherwise is on a par with believing in [...]

Al-Jazeera in US wants to be CNN copy

I have expressed fears before that the only way Al-Jazeera America will get itself on US cable is once it has neutered itself to the point that it is little different from CNN. Now an email has been leaked from one of Al-Jazeeera’s senior presenters, Marwan Bishara, who castigates AJAM executives for caving into pressure [...]

Why Israel’s apartheid doesn’t make news

Electronic Intifada has a story about the latest incident of a Palestinian citizen of Israel being refused entry to a public facility, this time a swimming pool, because he was not Jewish. I find it interesting how much people are outraged by these stories. Yes, such racism is disgusting. And these reports do reveal something [...]

The demands of a top journalist

One of America’s most garlanded journalists, Walter Pincus, writes an article full of falsehoods and innuendo to smear Glenn Greenwald and Edward Snowden. The article is published in one of the world’s most prestigious newspapers, the Washington Post. Greenwald points out three major factual errors in the piece. Pincus grudgingly concedes one of them, while [...]

Decades of war crimes barely make news

In a far-off land with a strange name, French Polynesia, some people with dark skins – barely worthy of being considered humans – were an obstacle to France’s need to develop its nuclear weapons programme. So France tested its nuclear bombs anyway – 193 times over a 30-year period – showering them in radioactive dust. [...]