Chris Hedges: The Israeli Execution of Shireen Abu Akleh

Israel, which shoots hundreds of Palestinians a year, routinely includes reporters and photographers on its target lists.

Original Illustration by Mr. Fish — “Hard Pressed.”

By Chris Hedges
ScheerPost.com

Shireen Abu Akleh, the Al Jazeera reporter with more than two decades of experience covering armed conflicts, knew the protocol. She and other reporters remained last Wednesday in the open, clearly visible to Israeli snipers about 650 feet away in a building. Her flak jacket and helmet were emblazoned with the word “PRESS.”

There were three shots fired in her direction. The second bullet hit the Al Jazeera producer Ali al-Samoudi in the back. The third shot, al-Samoudi remembered, hit Abu Akleh in the face below the rim of her helmet.

There were a few seconds when the Israeli sniper saw profiled in his scope Abu Akleh, one of the most recognizable faces in the Middle East. The 5.56 mm bullet from the M-16, designed to spin end over end upon impact, would have obliterated most of Abu Akleh’s head.

The accuracy of the M-16, especially the M16A4s equipped with the Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight (ACOG), a prismatic telescopic sight, is very high. In the fighting in Fallujah so many dead insurgents were found with head wounds that observers at first thought they had been executed. The bullet that killed Abu Akleh was deftly placed between the very slim opening separating her helmet and the collar of her flak jacket.

I have been in combat, including in clashes between Israeli and Palestinian forces. Snipers are dreaded on a battlefield because each kill is calculated.

Shireen Abu Aqleh. (CC BY 3.0, Wikimedia Commons)

The execution of Abu Akleh was not an accident. She was singled out for elimination. Whether this killing was ordered by commanding officers, or whether it was the whim of an Israeli sniper, I cannot answer. Israelis shoot so many Palestinians with impunity my guess is the sniper knew he or she could kill Abu Akleh and never face any consequences. 

The shooting, Al Jazeera said in a statement, was “a blatant murder, violating international laws and norms.” Abu Akleh, the network added, was “assassinated in cold blood.”

Abu Akleh, who was 51 and a Palestinian-American, was a familiar and trusted presence on television screens throughout the region, revered for her courage and integrity and beloved for her careful and sensitive reporting on the intricacies of daily life under the occupation.

Her reporting from the occupied territories routinely punctured Israeli narratives and exposed Israeli abuses and crimes, making her the bête noire of the Israeli government. She was a heroine for young Palestinian women, as Dalia Hatuqa, a Palestinian-American journalist and friend of Abu Akleh’s, related to The New York Times.

“I know of a lot of girls who grew up basically standing in front of a mirror and holding their hair brushes and pretending to be Shireen,” Hatuqa told the paper. “That’s how lasting and important her presence was.”

“I chose journalism to be close to the people,” Abu Akleh said in a clip shared by Al Jazeera after she was killed. “It might not be easy to change the reality, but at least I was able to bring their voice to the world.” 

In a 2017 interview with the Palestinian television channel An-Najah NBC, she was asked if she was worried about being shot.

“Of course, I get scared,” she said.

“In a specific moment you forget that fear. We don’t throw ourselves to death. We go and we try to find where we can stand and how to protect the team with me before I think about how I am going to go up on the screen and what I am going to say.”

Her funeral attracted thousands of mourners, the largest in Jerusalem since the death in 2002 of the Palestinian leader Faisal Husseini. Israeli police in full riot gear disrupted the procession, confiscating and ripping down Palestinian flags. The police fired stun grenades and pushed, clubbed and beat mourners and pallbearers, causing them to lose their grip on the coffin. Thousands chanted: “We sacrifice our soul and blood for you, Shireen.”

Daily Humiliation

It was another example of the daily humiliation meted out to Palestinians by their Israeli occupiers. It was also a moving tribute to a reporter who understood that the role of journalism is to give a voice to those the powerful seek to silence.

I covered the Israeli occupation for seven years, two years with The Dallas Morning News and five with The New York Times, where I was the paper’s Middle East Bureau Chief.

One of the chief objectives of the Israeli army was to prevent our reporting from the occupied territories. If we were able get past Israeli checkpoints, not always possible, to document murderous assaults by Israeli soldiers on unarmed Palestinians then Israel’s well-oiled propaganda machine was rolled out to obscure our reporting. Israeli officials swiftly issued counter narratives.

The Israeli prime minister, foreign minister, defense minister and Israeli Defense Force (IDF) spokesperson, for example, immediately blamed the killing of Abu Akleh on Palestinian gunmen until video footage examined by B’Tselem Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories exposed the falsehood. 

When Israel is caught lying, as it was with the murder of Abu Akleh, it immediately promises an investigation. The narrative shifts from one of blaming the Palestinians to the outcome of an inquiry.

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Impartial investigations into the hundreds of killings by soldiers and Jewish settlers of Palestinians are rarely carried out. Perpetrators are almost never brought to trial or held accountable.

The pattern of Israeli obfuscation is pathetically predictable. So is the collusion of much of the corporate media along with Republican and Democratic politicians. U.S. politicians decried the murder of Abu Akleh and dutifully repeated the old mantra, calling for a “thorough investigation” by the army that carried out the crime.

The dramatic footage captured in September 2000 at the Netzarim junction in the Gaza Strip by France 2 TV of a father trying to shield his 12-year-old son Muhammad al-Durrah from the Israeli gunfire that killed him resulted in a typical propaganda campaign by Israel.

Israeli officials spent years lying about the killing of the boy, first blaming the Palestinians for the shooting, and later suggesting that the scene was faked and Muhammad was still alive.

Wall painting by unknown artist of Muhammad al-Durrah who was killed by Israeli Occupation forces in Gaza in September 2000. (Imad J. CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons)

One thing is certain, the Israeli military knows which one of its snipers killed Abu Akleh, although the name of the soldier will probably never be made public. Nor will, I expect, the sniper be reprimanded.

“With all due respect to us, let’s say that Israel’s credibility is not very high in such cases,” Israel’s Minister of Diaspora Affairs Nachman Shai said of an Israeli investigation into the killing. “We know this. It is based on the past.”

Israel has a long history of blocking investigations into the plethora of war crimes it commits in Gaza, the world’s largest open-air prison, and the West Bank.

It refuses to cooperate with the International Criminal Court (ICC) into possible war crimes in the occupied territories. It does not cooperate with the U.N. Human Rights Council and prohibits the United Nations Special Rapporteur (UNSR) for Human Rights from entering the country.

Israel revoked the work permit for Omar Shakir, the director of Human Rights Watch (Israel and Palestine), in 2018 and expelled him. In May 2018,  Israeli Ministry of Strategic Affairs and Public Diplomacy published a report calling on the European Union (EU) and European states to halt their direct and indirect financial support and funding to Palestinian and international human rights organizations that “have ties to terror and promote boycotts against Israel.”

Campaigns of Terror

Israel relies on campaigns of terror, with random and indiscriminate killings, to beat back Palestinian resistance. Israeli strategists describe the tactic as “mowing the grass,” part of an endless war of attrition. Israeli terror keeps Palestinians perpetually off-balance, fearful, and living at a subsistence level. This state terrorism also contributes to Israel’s main goal, a slow-motion ethnic cleansing of Palestinian land.

The 2014 bombing and shelling of Gaza, which lasted 51 days, killed more than 2,250 Palestinians, including 551 children.

Israel’s use of its military against an occupied population that does not have mechanized units, an air force, navy, missiles, heavy artillery and command and control, not to mention a U.S. commitment to provide $38 billion dollars in defense-aid to Israel over the next decade, is not justifiable under international law.

Israel is not exercising the right to defend itself. It is carrying out mass murder. It is a war crime. The attacks are designed to degrade civilian infrastructure, destroying power plants, water and sewage treatment facilities, residential high-rises, government buildings, roads, bridges, public facilities, agricultural lands, schools and mosques.

Israel used state terror to crush the International Solidarity Movement that saw activists come to the occupied territories from around the world, often using their bodies to block Israel from demolishing Palestinian homes, as well as filming and recording human rights abuses.

As the author and journalist Jonathan Cook writes:

“But Abu Akleh’s U.S. passport was no more able to save her from Israeli retribution than that of Rachel Corrie, murdered in 2003 by an Israeli bulldozer driver as she tried to protect Palestinian homes in Gaza. Similarly, Tom Hurndall’s British passport did not stop him from being shot in the head as he tried to protect Palestinian children in Gaza from Israeli gunfire. Nor did filmmaker James Miller’s British passport prevent an Israeli soldier from executing him in 2003 in Gaza, as he documented Israel’s assault on the tiny, overcrowded enclave.

All were seen as having taken a side by acting as witnesses and by refusing to remain quiet as Palestinians suffered — and for that reason, they and those who thought like them had to be taught a lesson.

It worked. Soon, the contingent of foreign volunteers — those who had come to Palestine to record Israel’s atrocities and serve, when necessary, as human shields to protect Palestinians from a trigger-happy Israeli army — were gone. Israel denounced the International Solidarity Movement for supporting terrorism, and given the clear threat to their lives, the pool of volunteers gradually dried up.” 

Israel has a deep hostility to the press, especially Al Jazeera which has large viewership throughout the Arab world. Al Jazeera reporters are routinely denied press credentials, harassed and blocked from reporting.

Israeli warplanes in May 2021 destroyed the al-Jalaa building in Gaza that housed dozens of international news agencies, including the Gaza offices of Al Jazeera and the Associated Press.

The Israeli Air Force bombing of the al-Jalaa Building which housed press offices in Gaza, May 15, 2021. (Osama Eid, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Commons)

At least 144 Palestinian journalists have been wounded by Israeli forces in the occupied territories since 2018 and three, including Abu Akleh, have been killed in the same period, according to Reporters Without Borders.

Palestinian reporters Ahmed Abu Hussein and Yasser Mortaja, also clearly identified as press, were shot dead by Israeli snipers in Gaza in 2018. At least 45 Palestinian journalists have been killed by Israeli soldiers since 2000, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Information.

“Abu Akleh was most likely shot precisely because she was a high-profile Al Jazeera reporter, known for her fearless reporting of Israeli crimes,” Cook writes. “Both the army and its soldiers bear grudges, and they have lethal weapons with which to settle scores.”

Israel does little to hide its callous disregard for the lives of Palestinians, international activists and journalists.

“Suppose that Shireen Abu Akleh was killed by Israeli army fire,” Avi Benyahu, a former IDF spokesperson stated. “There’s no need to apologize for that.”  

Reporters and photographers, in Israel’s eyes, are responsible for their own deaths.

“When ‘terrorists’ fire at our soldiers in Jenin, the soldiers must retaliate in full force even in the presence of journalists in from Al Jazeera in the area — who usually stand in the army’s way and impede their work,” said Knesset member Itamar Ben Gvir.

Israeli forces have killed at least 380 Palestinians, including 90 children, during the past year, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA). This includes at least 260 Palestinians killed in Gaza during Israel’s latest assault in May 2021.

The pace of Israeli killings of Palestinians has been steadily increasing in the wake of armed Palestinians murdering 18 people in cities across Israel since the end of March.

In March, Israeli forces killed 12 Palestinians, including three children. In April, Israeli forces killed at least 22 Palestinians, including three children. Abu Akleh was covering an Israeli raid on the Jenin refugee camp where army units said they were hunting for Palestinian attackers.

The killing of Abu Akleh would have been treated very differently if she was killed by Russian soldiers in Ukraine. There would have been no equivocations about who carried out the murder. Her death would have been denounced as a war crime. No one would have acquiesced to let the Russian military carry out the investigation. 

The world is divided into worthy and unworthy victims, those who deserve our compassion and support and those who do not. Ukrainians are white and largely Christian. We see the struggle against the Russian occupier as a battle for freedom and democracy. We provide [an additional] $40 billion in weapons and humanitarian aid. We impose punishing sanctions on Moscow. We make the Ukrainian cause our own.

The 55-year-long fight for Palestinian freedom is no less just, no less worthy of our support. But Palestinians are occupied by our Israeli ally. They are not white. Most are not Christian, although Abu Akleh was Christian. They are not deemed worthy. They suffer and die alone. The war crimes carried out by Israel go unheeded and unpunished. The Palestinians doggedly refuse to give up. This makes them as heroic, maybe more heroic, than Ukrainian fighters. The U.S. is on the wrong side of history in Israel. Abu Akleh’s blood is on our hands.   

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for 15 years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief for the paper. He previously worked overseas for The Dallas Morning NewsThe Christian Science Monitor and NPR.  He is the host of show “The Chris Hedges Report.”

Author’s Note to Readers: There is now no way left for me to continue to write a weekly column for ScheerPost and produce my weekly television show without your help. The walls are closing in, with startling rapidity, on independent journalism, with the elites, including the Democratic Party elites, clamoring for more and more censorship. Bob Scheer, who runs ScheerPost on a shoestring budget, and I will not waiver in our commitment to independent and honest journalism, and we will never put ScheerPost behind a paywall, charge a subscription for it, sell your data or accept advertising. Please, if you can, sign up at chrishedges.substack.com so I can continue to post my Monday column on ScheerPost and produce my weekly television show, “The Chris Hedges Report.”

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21 comments for “Chris Hedges: The Israeli Execution of Shireen Abu Akleh

  1. May 19, 2022 at 19:15

    I worked with Ali Samoudi when living in Jenin in 2003 just after the Israeli military had torn that city apart. Many of us lived in an International Solidarity Movement apartment there and provided international witnesses to the daily atrocities we saw. Ali was an amazing and brave journalist, often coming to pick one of us up at the apartment to accompany him while he delivered his video pieces or supplies to an entrapped population that was constantly being forced to stay indoors under curfew.

    He had been severely wounded in 2002 when Israeli thugs had planted a bomb in his car hoping to kill him. The bomb went off prematurely or he would never have survived. He was in hospital for months with wounds. And yet, he is still working as the brave, outspoken journalist he’s always been. It was my honor to work with him then

    • Yolanda Johnson
      May 23, 2022 at 07:20

      Great story. The media is not very diverse when it comes to covering the lives and achievements of brave Palestinian journalists.

  2. Ray Peterson
    May 18, 2022 at 17:13

    Chris, what is “heroic” about the neo-Nazi’s in Ukraine now
    engaged in Kiev’s puppet government, unwilling to negotiate
    with Putin’s straightforward requests for reasonable security?
    And if you are going to appoint yourself world history judge;
    the United States is on the wrong side of history not only about
    Israel, but in Ukraine, China, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Venezuela and all the
    CIA asset regime change operations.
    Your anti-Russian bias poisons your otherwise moral reporting.

  3. Drew Hunkins
    May 18, 2022 at 15:06

    “The Palestinians doggedly refuse to give up. This makes them as heroic, maybe more heroic, than Ukrainian fighters.”

    Asinine and distorted analogy. Where to begin…

  4. John OCallaghan
    May 18, 2022 at 12:13

    I cant remember his name,but he was Commandant of one of the Nazi concentration camps, and he used to shoot Jewish prisoners from his balcony just for the sheer fun of it. One of his victims could easily have been the snipers relatives,who knows…… But of course the point being that this killer sniper and the rest of his murdering cronies are doing the same thing that the Nazis did……. and they should be equally condemmed for it by the world! …………

  5. Todd Phillips
    May 18, 2022 at 08:04

    The cowardly sniper who executed Abu Akleh will be celebrated among his or her peers in the military and probably in their community as well. Israel is a monstrous state

  6. alley cat
    May 18, 2022 at 05:01

    “The 55-year-long fight for Palestinian freedom is no less just [than the fight for Ukrainian freedom], no less worthy of our support.”

    Chris equates Russia’s intervention in Ukraine with the evil empire’s invasion of Iraq and the Zionist occupation of Palestine.

    Widespread acceptance of this kind of false equivalence has put us on the fast track to nuclear Armageddon.

    Had Russia not intervened in Ukraine, Ukrofascists would be busily cleansing ethnic Russians and turning Ukraine into a vast U.S. military base on Russia’s borders.

    A fascist, racist, Ukraine is an existential threat to all of us, not just to Russia.

    • mgr
      May 18, 2022 at 09:24

      Alley Cat: “Had Russia not intervened in Ukraine, Ukrofascists would be busily cleansing ethnic Russians and turning Ukraine into a vast U.S. military base on Russia’s borders.” And we would be even closer to a nuclear conflict than we are now.

      It is often overlooked of late that just a few months ago Ukraine was considered the most corrupt nation in Europe with deeply embedded and rising neo-Nazi elements in its government and military. Now, thanks to the subterfuge of corporate media, they are “freedom fighters” and all good. I guess someone waved a magic wand. But back in the real world, what the fuck..? A fascist, racist Ukraine is not just a threat to everyone else but also to itself. If Ukraine survives this, if we all do, Ukraine just might have a chance at a future. Under the leadership of Zelenski, Azov and the neo-Nazi political elements, it most certainly did not.

      Thank you for pointing this out. Good insight.

      Funny how degenerate nations flock together. How tragic that it is consistently American dollars that keep them afloat and fuel their degeneracy. What a more peaceful and wonderful world it would be for everyone if America simply stopped funding conflicts out of its own self interest.

      • alley cat
        May 18, 2022 at 20:30

        mgr: “A fascist, racist Ukraine is not just a threat to everyone else but also to itself.”

        Yes, thanks for taking the analysis a crucial step further.

  7. Antiwar7
    May 18, 2022 at 01:45

    What a cowardly, brutal act. Similar to the murderous rage of the Kiev regime. What a coincidence: they’re both major US allies.

  8. Jane Christenson
    May 18, 2022 at 01:23

    It is 100% outrageous how Israel and the US/NATO commit war crimes regularly without consequence.
    I’m way beyond disgusted with our (US) government for the blatant hypocrisy. I think the entire world can see it. The topic is so deep. Americans consume. Half the people I speak with have no clue. The rest are under corporate (work) gag orders. When will we Rise Up? When will the global working class unite?

    • iwasathought
      May 18, 2022 at 13:44

      These tragedies will end only after the US Jewish community stops funding the US Jewish Lobby, which controls the indecent and unconditional US government support for Israel.

  9. Charles
    May 17, 2022 at 21:36

    How terribly sad that the world has to put up with this constant barbaric behavior. The funny thing is that the Israelis wonder why there is so much anti-semitism in the world. Give it a guess. This has been going on for 74 years. There is always an end to oppression and bullying and usually its not very nice.

  10. Skip Edwards
    May 17, 2022 at 21:05

    The USA, my country and a country I served by reaching the rank of Captain in the USAF, is an accomplice to murder, the many murders committed by the government of Israel in our names. Damn Israel, and I say it again……Damn Israel.

  11. Michael Cosenza
    May 17, 2022 at 18:44

    The only way to get Israel under control is to use the same tactics used to break apartheid in S. Africa, Refuse to buy anything made in Israel. Unfortunately, the US Government doesn’t have the backbone to apply economic pressure on Israel, but individuals can by boycotting anything made in Israel. The US also needs to stop providing military grant money money to Israel. Enough is enough!!! Money is the only thing they understand

    • LarcoMarco
      May 18, 2022 at 15:14

      It’s hard to resist buying Israeli products when your prescriptions are fulfilled by Israeli Pharma. And I’m recalling when Obomber banned importation of meds from Canada, ostensibly because their American-owned Pharma factories are substandard.

    • Julio Santos
      May 20, 2022 at 09:46

      Agreed. With the corrupted series of white house tenants that we have suffered lately and a the whole legislative branch of our government almost completely sold out to specials interests, BDS is the only solution.

  12. Drew Hunkins
    May 17, 2022 at 16:19

    Every American taxpayer should be forced to read Israel Shahak’s seminal “Jewish History, Jewish Religion.” The book is extraordinary, and it’s relatively short. It gets into Jewish supremacism, Tel Aviv’s need to project irrationality (mad dog) to the world, double-standards on how many religious Jews view gentiles.

    A must-read.

  13. Vera Gottlieb
    May 17, 2022 at 15:16

    Not so much ‘shame on israel’ as SHAME on the rest of the Western world for lacking the courage to stand up to Apartheid israel and just looking the other way. When israel says ‘jump’…we just ask ‘how high’.

    • Sam
      May 18, 2022 at 15:21

      Vera, what have you determined to be the reason why we ask, “how high”? How and why does Israel have so much control over us? Hint: follow the money.

      • Charles
        May 19, 2022 at 23:58

        Or follow the blackmail.

Comments are closed.