Thursday, September 03, 2009

Ya'alon claims he was defamed


Minister tells Peace Now activist media slurred speech in which he called leftists a 'virus'

Attila Somfalvi
YNET News

Minister for Strategic Affairs Moshe Ya'alon on Wednesday commented on a speech in which he referred to the Peace Now movement as a virus. In a letter sent to an activist belonging to the leftist movement, Yuval Ben Bassat, Ya'alon blamed the media for twisting his words and slandering him. "I understand your anger towards me in light of the incitement against me, and the de-legitimization I'm being put through these days by the media," Ya'alon wrote in the letter obtained by Ynet.



"I didn’t say Peace Now or peace activists are a virus. I presented my analysis, the failure of the political process between us and the Palestinians as I have done in my book, and in hundreds of lectures I have given in recent years. I referred to Peace Now's paradigm/point to view, and not the movement and its members," Ya'alon wrote.



The vice premier claimed in the letter that the segment quoted on television was distorted and is what created the political frenzy. "My lecture was detailed, and sadly the removal of segments from their context in a purposeful way created the wave of incitement and de-legitimization against me," he wrote.



Ya'alon further added, "This is not the first time this type of thing has been instigated by those who preach pluralism and tolerance. The other quotes which were purposefully taken out of context are also perceived negatively. I stand by what I wrote in my book, which I restated in my lecture."


Ya'alon's statements stirred up the political system and even led Prime Minister Benjamin Natanyahu to cut his vacation short in order to meet with his deputy. In the meeting, Netanyahu reprimanded Ya'alon and told him his statements were "unacceptable in style or content and do not represent the government's stance."


Responses
Figures in the political system voiced opposite opinions regarding Ya'alon's statements. Knesset Member Ophir Pines-Paz (Labor) said that Ya'alon's true face had been revealed and urged a condemnation by the prime minister. "He who doesn't believe in peace should not be part of the government of Israel," he said. Sources close to Defense Minister Ehud Barak also expressed discontent with Ya'alon.



On the opposite side, National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau backed Ya'alon's remarks and linked the case to the Swedish newspaper's article accusing Israel Defense Forces soldiers of harvesting organs of Palestinians.



"Ya'alon said correct things about the heavy damages caused to the State of Israel by Peace Now, the elites, and the media. The link is that the Swedish affair and the harm caused to Ya'alon were part of a public smear campaign."


Landau added, "Each person has his own style, but Peace Now members – who chanted during their rallies 'Begin is a murderer', 'Sharon is a murderer' and 'the settlers are cancer' – are not exactly the people who can complain about others calling them names."

Comment: Politics a dirty game played by all members. Tb keep one self above the fray is impossible today. Why? The media does not care about the truth, it cares about image making and breaking-it sells and ignites talk. The media is basically leaning left of center, has an agenda contrary to its established former role in a democracy and realizes it does have some power. One must understand this and realize new rules of the game must be employed. Any communication will be represented in the manner that is consistent with the media's agenda-thus, even this letter General Ya'alon wrote was "leaked" to a media bent upon destroying him-he need not apologize rather he should reaffirm his foundational beliefs, time andagain.

No comments: