Hasbara: An Overview & Quick Primer

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
An article from over at 972 Magazine by Noam Sheizaf on hasbara, with commentary:

Hasbara: Why does the world fail to understand us?

A short discussion of the Israeli term used to describe the ongoing, ever-growing, national propaganda effort

I have used the word “Hasbara” pretty freely recently, and so do more and more people, without stopping to explain what it actually means. The use of this term has been widespread in Israeli Hebrew for many years now, usually with a positive meaning, though not always in a positive context – there is a never-ending debate on “the failure of Hasabra” – yet I often wonder how many people outside Israel actually know it, let alone understand what it stands for. So here are a few words on Hasbara.

Hasbara is a form of propaganda aimed at an international audience, primarily, but not exclusively, in western countries. It is meant to influence the conversation in a way that positively portrays Israeli political moves and policies, including actions undertaken by Israel in the past. Often, Hasbara efforts includes a negative portrayal of the Arabs and especially of Palestinians.


The Hebrew meaning of the word Hasbara (הסברה) is “explanation” (the term “propaganda” has a different word in Hebrew – תעמולה). I believe that the popular use of this term also reflects a widespread public notion that a better effort of explaining Israel’s actions to the world will generate better understandings of Israel’s policies, and more international support. A less common use of the verb “to explain” (להסביר), which has to do with welcoming someone, was used in the past by the Tourism Ministry in campaigns urging Israelis to show a hospitable approach to tourists.


Hasbara represents only one side of propaganda, as it is mostly aimed at foreign audience. The use of the Hebrew term Hasbara in a critical context, rather than “propaganda” or “public diplomacy” (the title of the Wikipedia entry on the issue), is necessary, because Hasbara efforts are wider and their goals much more ambitious than any similar activities taken by all democracies and most non-democracies. Hasbara targets political elites, opinion makers and the public simultaneously; it includes traditional advocacy efforts as well as more general appeals made through mass media, and it is carried out by government agencies, non-governmental organizations, lobbying groups, private citizens, students, journalists and bloggers.


The Israeli government encourages all citizens to actively engage in Hasbara. Recently, it even distributed brochures with talking points to all Israelis traveling abroad (a Hebrew web version of the campaign can be viewed here). Israelis are asked to engage in politically-oriented conversations with their hosts and contacts abroad. Rather than discuss the Palestinian conflict, they are advised to cite Israeli technological achievements, mention environmental policies and take pride in notable cultural works. The West Bank is to be discussed – under its ancient Hebrew name, Judea and Samaria – as a potential tourist marvel.


Until a few years ago, the main government agency carrying out Hasbara work was the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, through its Media and Hasbara department. Under Ehud Olmert’s government, and more so under Netanyahu’s, there was a considerable increase in Hasbara efforts. Prime Minister Netanyahu has launched for the first time a Hasbara Ministry, headed by a government minister (the current hasbara minister is Yuli Edelstein). The Hasbara Ministry includes a situation room, which operates in five languages; it has a new-media team that can reach, according to the office’s web page, 100,000 volunteers on social media networks, as well as many bloggers.


UPDATE: The Ministry of Hasbara is hiring! “Advantage to minorities and representatives of the gay community.” More details here.


On top of the Hasbara Ministry, there is a Hasbara branch in the Prime Minister’s Office (in charge of both local and international PR). The IDF Spokesperson has an international arm with a new media branch, which makes Hasbara efforts and does not limit itself to providing information on army activities. Other government agencies, such as the Ministry of Tourism or the Ministry of Culture, also take part in ad-hoc Hasbara activities. There are other agencies that have gradually moved into greater involvement in Hasbara – perhaps the most notable is The Jewish Agency, which used to serve as a liaison to Jewish communities abroad, and now trains its envoys to American campuses to engage in propaganda.


Under Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the Foreign Ministry was instructed to take a bigger role in the Hasbara effort (a popular rant against the foreign ministry for many years was that it deals with peacemaking instead of advocacy, and Lieberman has promised to solve that). I was contacted awhile ago by a private agency that won a contract with the foreign ministry; they were looking for professionals to play hostile journalists in simulations with Israeli diplomats.


Much of the Hasbara work carried out outside official channels – but with heavy official influence – is carried out through non-governmental organizations such asStand With Us, The Israel Project and more. These organizations produce resources – booklets, slideshows, flyers, maps, polls and more – and spin news events in ways which are favorable to the Israeli government. A lot of thought is put into influencing opinion-makers: journalists and bloggers are flown on a regular basis to tours in Israel, accompanied by government officials, while Israeli representatives – former diplomats, journalists, soldiers and officers – are brought to give lectures at campuses, think-tanks, conferences and other public events around the world. Organizations also try to influence the grassroots level by granting Hasbara fellowships to international students in Israel.

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There is an interesting tension in Israel between the tremendous efforts put into Hasbara – Israeli advocacy is probably the most widespread and ambitious state-run propaganda effort in the world today – and a sense of “Hasbara failure” in the Israeli public. Rants about the fact that Israel is misunderstood and complaints about the incompetence of those dealing with Hasbara are often heard in the popular media. In my opinion, “the failure of Hasbara” is actually a failure of policy – especially, but not limited to, that relating to the occupation and the control over the Palestinians.


Understanding this point could shed light on a self-defeating element in the Hasbara battle: as Israel loses interest in finding a solution to the Palestinian question that would meet the minimal moral standards of the Western World – either “one man one vote” or complete Palestinian sovereignty over a contiguous territorial unit – Hasbara efforts are just likely to draw more attention to the ongoing Israeli failure to live up to the promise of its talking points, and will shed more light on the ever-growing gap between the model, picture-perfect democracy reflected in brochures and the grim reality on the ground.


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Hasbara: Why does the world fail to understand us? | +972 Magazine
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
It looks like rightwing Israeli politician Danny Ayalon is making an attempt to push back against Lara Sawalha and Dana Dajani’s first video, where he gotten taken out back to the woodshed and thoroughly spanked for being the bad little boy that he is. Sawalha and Dajani's original video:


The interesting thing about Israeli hasbara (propaganda) is that it often depends on the ignorance of the recipient to be effective. The better informed and in possession of actual facts the recipient is, the less they can be mislead by misrepresentations, willful omissions of relevant facts, and outright perversions of the truth.

With that in mind, here's Danny's latest attempt at sucking in the uninformed and easily misled ... along with some relevant facts that he glosses over and fails to mention:

Danny Ayalon fabricates Christian fears in Islamophobic hasbara video | Mondoweiss
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Seems almost like American politics.
In some respects it is, but as Ragman notes at times it's played at a whole different level ... the stakes are a lot higher there than they are here ... at least at present.
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
The stakes there are much higher. No dispute about that. But the tactics of propaganda are closer than we think. Remember what you see here and watch what happens in 16.
We have such a ignorant electorate I see no reason that you won't see the same thing. Just different subjects.
 

hossman2011

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Give me a break.. what is wrong with a little propaganda to help bolster the international image... heaven knows the Palestinians go out of their way to doctor videos and news stories to skew the international image of Israel... and the only difference between them and our debaucherous political campaigns... more than a few reputations die. That is what happens in the name of religion when two religions try to pee on each other... been happening for thousands of years... But as long as the Palestinians continue to harbor Terrorists and supply them with followers... have no use for their troubles...
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Give me a break ...
Nah - you give the Pals a break ... after all, they are the indigenous people who are being illegally dispossessed and ethnically cleansed from their own land ...

what is wrong with a little propaganda to help bolster the international image ...
LOL ...

In Israel's case, quite a lot ... usually because it backfires and blows up in their faces ...

This is becoming ever more so the case with widespread availability of internet access and the proliferation of relatively cheap, high quality video recording devices ... as well as a growing understanding of the actual historical contexts and facts, aided to some extent by formerly classified Israeli documents which plainly spell out some of the actual history ...

Why do you think Israel has ended up becoming the international pariah that they currently are ?

It sure ain't because the Israeli's propaganda is effective ...

heaven knows the Palestinians go out of their way to doctor videos and news stories to skew the international image of Israel ...
PM me that direct dial number you have for heaven whenever you get a sec ...

BTW - how do you account for non-Palestinian 3rd party individuals (humanitarian NGO's and the like) - which include Jewish Israelis - witnessing, documenting, and affirming these events ?

It used to be that the Palestinians were relatively alone in their struggle - that ain't the case anymore ...

FWIW, 972 mag (cited in the OP) is not a Palestinian mag - it an Israeli publication (which may occasionally features some Palestinian writers) ... check out the names on their "About" page ... you won't find very many "Mustafa's" or "Ali's" ... it's more like Ben-Ami, Goldman, Kaufman, Ruttenberg, Scheindlin ...

About | +972 Magazine

That is what happens in the name of religion when two religions try to pee on each other ... been happening for thousands of years...
It really isn't so much a matter of two religions as much as it is a matter of two peoples - and the illegal dispossession and ethnic-cleansing of the indigenous inhabitants of the land vs. the foreign interlopers who are attempting to accomplish said dispossession and ethnic-cleansing ...

Religion certainly does enter into it to a certain extent - mostly as a smokescreen to cover up the reality of the premise above ...

This is why you'll see advocates of Zionism - which is a modern secular political ideology (which was founded by a nominally Jewish man who actually considered himself to be an atheist, Theodor_Herzl) - attempt to shift the conversation away from the historical and present reality (encompassed in the first sentence above) and make it about something (religion) which is more easily demonized ... most particularly now, after 9/11 ...

It's disingenuous at best - but it does explain the substantial Zionist/Israel Firster backing that is behind "Islamophobia Inc" here in the US ...

But as long as the Palestinians continue to harbor Terrorists and supply them with followers... have no use for their troubles...
You are ignoring the Palestinians legal and internationally recognized right to resist - including armed resistance - being illegally occupied by a foreign power.

That's a fairly typical reaction of many Americans - many of whom are generally largely ignorant of international law, and have been fed loads of misinformation (aka propaganda) with a particular narrative that is designed to render a certain outcome (leave them brainwashed in favor of one side against the other)

But even beyond that, if you want to squeal "terrorists" about the Palestinians, you must necessarily ignore the very large elephant in the room to avoid the cognitive dissonance - which is the fact that the "nation" of Israel itself was founded on terrorism ... all of which is rather thoroughly documented and admitted to ... even by the Israelis themselves ...

And that Israel continues to practice terrorism today - in direct violation of international law - and as a military power which is vastly superior to those whose rights it criminally violates on a daily basis ...

If you want to educate yourself in the relevant international law, you could start with the following article which is written by a Jewish Israeli woman, Mya Guarnieri about the legal assessment of Lynda Burstein Brayer, another Jewish Israeli who was born in South African under apartheid, and who made aliyah (returned to Israel and became a citizen) and who became an Israeli-trained and educated lawyer (graduate of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Law):

Palestinian right to fight occupation not only moral, but legal as well | +972 Magazine

Then you could wade into UNGA Resolution 2649, which references UNGA Res 1514 which contains within it containing the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples:

.... Affirms the legitimacy of the struggle of peoples under colonial and alien domination recognized as being entitled to the right of self-determination to restore to themselves that right by any means at their disposal; ...
Read the above sentence again ... and again ... and as many times as it takes to understand what "by any means at their disposal" actually means ...

Do you think if the Palestinians had tanks, artillery, and jet fighters with smart bombs they'd really be using suicide bombers ?

IMEU: UNGA Resolution 2649 on the right of populations to resist occupation

And after that - if you are feeling especially frisky - you can dive into the Fourth Geneva Convention, including the subsequent protocols:

The Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols - ICRC

... which provides the basis for a veritable laundry list of violations of International Law by Israel ... that are probably entirely too numerous to count individually ...

Additionally, the following article by Noam Sheizaf (another Jewish Israeli, and CEO of 972 Mag) referenced in the link above, illustrates the basic simplicity of why the Palestinians have a fundamental (moral) right to resist - even if they chose to assert that resistance by using force of arms:

The undeniable Palestinian right to resist occupation | +972 Magazine
 
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