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If the media can probe Shireen Abu Akleh's death, why not the murder of other Palestinians?

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Jonathan Cook
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The special focus subtly reinforces too the impression that Palestinian accounts of Israeli abuses, even when the supporting evidence is overwhelming, cannot be trusted.

The veteran Israeli journalist Gideon Levy has run a weekly column, the Twilight Zone, in the Haaretz newspaper for years in which he investigates the killing or serious wounding of Palestinians - often people whose names have never appeared in the western media.

Invariably he finds that Israel's military lies - sometimes flagrantly - about the circumstances in which Palestinians have been killed, or it initiates an inconclusive, stone-walling investigation.

The lies are needed because the truth would show something consistently ugly about Israel's decades of military occupation: that Israeli soldiers often kill unarmed Palestinians in cold blood; or that they recklessly shoot Palestinian bystanders; or that they execute armed Palestinian fighters when no one's life is in danger.

The common thread in Levy's reports is the complete impunity of Israeli soldiers, whatever their actions.

Pilloried in public

But there is a further conclusion to be drawn. Blinken and the Biden administration keep insisting on a thorough, independent, credible and transparent investigation, and say it is important to "follow the facts, wherever they lead".

But who do they expect to carry out such an investigation?

The White House, of course, reflexively discounts the findings of the Palestinian Authority's investigation that Abu Akleh was deliberately shot by Israeli soldiers. It acts as if the investigations conducted by these four large media organisations do not qualify. Meanwhile, the administration itself shows precisely zero interest in conducting an investigation, despite pressure from Congress to involve the FBI.

Would Blinken prefer that the United Nations take on the task? Presumably not, given how the US and Israel responded to the last major independent investigation by the UN, one into Israel's month-long attack on Gaza at the end of 2008. Israel refused to cooperate.

Richard Goldstone, a distinguished South African jurist, led a panel of experts who concluded that Israel had committed a series of war crimes during its attack, known as Cast Lead, as had Palestinian militias.

The UN panel's report found that Israel had adopted a policy that intentionally targeted Palestinian civilians, the vast majority of the 1,400 Palestinians killed in Cast Lead.

Both the US and Israel worked strenuously to bury the report. Goldstone, who is Jewish, found himself publicly shamed and isolated by Jewish communities in the US and South Africa. He was even barred from attending his grandson's bar mitzvah. Eventually, he appeared to succumb to the pressure campaign, expressing regret over the report.

No one in Washington came to Goldstone's defence over the UN's thorough, independent, credible and transparent investigation. Quite the reverse: he was publicly pilloried. The US administration thereby sent a message to other experts that investigating "independently" and "credibly" is certain only to bring ignominy on their heads if it exposes Israel's war crimes.

Israel's hands 'tied'

Or maybe Blinken would prefer that the International Criminal Court at the Hague investigate.

And yet the US demonstrated the degree to which it appreciates full, independent, credible and transparent investigations by that body two years ago, when the ICC tried to turn the spotlight on to US war crimes in Afghanistan and Israel's in the occupied Palestinian territories.

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Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. He is the 2011 winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His latest books are "Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East" (Pluto Press) and "Disappearing Palestine: (more...)
 

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