‘Abducted’ Is Not the Word for Israeli Soldiers

“The double standard should be glaring” —  Jonathan Cook on why the AP and other media outlets are making no effort to find out how many of the Israelis held in Gaza are, in fact, soldiers.

By Jonathan Cook
Jonathan-Cook.net

Over on social media, @zei_squirrel has another excellent thread on the Western media’s use of deceptive language to manipulate how readers think about what has been unfolding in Gaza over the past year.

This time the focus is on the way the Associated Press agency, or AP, stresses in its reporting a supposed failure to distinguish between Palestinian “militants” and “civilians” in Gaza’s official death toll — by any reckoning, a massive undercount — to insinuate the Israeli talking-point that most of the dead in Gaza are likely to be “evil Hamas.”

@zei_squirrel rightly refers to this as genocide-laundering.

But I want to address a parallel point about the language used by Western media @zei_squirrel doesn’t raise here, but that is equally misleading and compounds the very problem he’s examining.

The double standard should be glaring. While AP and other outlets are keen to highlight a distinction between civilians and militants among Palestinian casualties to suggest that a significant proportion of the dead are actually militants, they do the exact reverse when reporting on the Israelis taken into Gaza by Hamas during its Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel.

That point is illustrated by this paragraph, taken from @zei_squirrel’s post:

“Hamas, once again, is cited as having ‘abducted’ 250 Israelis on October 7. Those Israelis are always described as ‘hostages.’ But we know a significant proportion of them were actually soldiers — soldiers seized that day from military bases that have been enforcing a brutal occupation and 17-year medieval-style siege on Gaza. None of those soldiers were ‘abucted.’ They were ‘captured’.”

No one in the media has made the slightest effort to distinguish in the coverage between Israeli civilians seized that day, and Israeli soldiers. All the Israelis taken into Gaza on Oct. 7 have been automatically accorded civilian status through the use of the word “abducted,” even though we know that is not true – not by a long stretch.

Similarly, no effort has been made to explain that the Israelis released by Hamas were civilians, in contrast to many of those who are still held in Gaza — presumably because Hamas has preferred to use soldiers as its main bargaining chips in negotiations rather than civilians.

What is Hamas negotiating for, beyond a ceasefire? For the return of many thousands of Palestinians who truly have been abducted — dragged off into Israeli torture camps like Sde Teiman.

Remember, Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories has been declared illegal by the International Court of Justice, the world’s highest court. In international law, Israel is the undoubted aggressor.

Hamas didn’t “start it” on Oct. 7. Israel has been “starting it” for decades with its illegal occupation. The judges recognised that the Palestinians have a legal right to resist their occupation through violence to liberate themselves.

Yes, when Hamas targets Israeli civilians, it is committing a war crime. But Israel, as the indisputable aggressor, is in no position to act as any kind of law enforcer in the occupied territories.

Lower Manhattan building where the AP has its headquarters. (Ken Lund, Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 )

So why is the media failing to note the difference between “abducted” Israeli civilians and “captured” Israeli soldiers in its reporting? Because language strongly shapes how we feel emotionally about news events.

If most of the remaining Israelis in Gaza are actually soldiers, not civilians, Western publics might feel even less receptive to the argument that the mass slaughter of Palestinians, the erasure of their homes and infrastructure, and their starvation is necessary to secure the Israelis’ return.

They might insist instead that their governments stop arming Israel’s genocide and impose a ceasefire.

Which is precisely what Israel doesn’t want. It is precisely what Western governments don’t want. And so it is precisely what the Western media don’t want.

That is why the media make no effort to find out how many of the Israelis in Gaza are, in fact, soldiers. Even the suggestion that they have a duty to find out would outrage them. They would regard it as justifying “terrorism.”

So while the media insist on making a distinction between Palestinian civilians and militants —  between women and children, on one side, and men on the other (as though every man in Gaza is a combatant and therefore a legitimate target) —  they keep referring to all Israelis held in Gaza as “abducted,” as civilians.

The media aren’t failing us. This is what they are there to do. They are not journalists. They are propagandists for their governments. And their governments are enabling a genocide.

Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British journalist. He was based in Nazareth, Israel, for 20 years. He returned to the U.K. in 2021. He is the author of three books on the Israel-Palestine conflict: Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State (2006), Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (2008) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (2008). If you appreciate his articles, please consider offering your financial support

This article is from the author’s blog, Jonathan Cook.net.

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

9 comments for “‘Abducted’ Is Not the Word for Israeli Soldiers

  1. Red Star
    October 25, 2024 at 07:51

    My local media in the UK is ultimately US owned and gets all its national and international “news” from AP. Its been noticeable for a long time that comments that are contrary to the Official Narrative, especially with regards to Ukraine or Israel, are often removed.

  2. robert e williamson jr
    October 24, 2024 at 22:25

    In my humble opinion Mr. Cook we could be here for hours discussing Israel’s history of dependence on applying what is normally considered a “double standard” to get it’s demands met. In this time period the days for this type of conduct are long over.

    IMHO a historical leaning t0 be the exception to every rule generally accepted by the rest of the civilized world as normal civil conduct. Enough is enough.

    One who indefinitely practices ZERO TOLERANCE in every aspect of its social / political behavior and expects no resistance often will become the recipient of the same abusive conduct by the other.

    I have seen enough of it for my liking. IMHO If one expects to be treated as a normal human being one must exhibit conduct in a manner conducive to being accepted as a normal human being. FULL STOP! PERIOD!

    IMHO the U.S.A. would be held in much better stead in the future had it not been pivotal in encouraging and materially supportive of Israel in obtaining nuclear weapons, a strong air force lead military and supporting the Israeli economy with billions of dollars in aid.

    The result has been leadership behavior tantamount to that of a seriously spoiled and maladjusted ten or twelve year old child.

    All to waste thousands of lives and billions of dollars in an effort soothe the ravings of a mad man.

    When someone tells you who they are believe them the first time!

    What a mess, you cannot make this crap up!

    Thanks CN

  3. DC-rez
    October 24, 2024 at 16:05

    Israeli media outlets as well as the Grayzone, Electronic Intifada and others have reported that over 400 of the dead on Oct. 7 were soldiers. We may never know how many of the remaining were killed by Israeli attack helicopters and tanks. A majority I would bet.

  4. Rob Roy
    October 24, 2024 at 15:21

    We would know nothing if not for alternate news sources which is the source of truth. If Harris is elected, censorship will rule. They say the First Amendment is “dangerous.” Freedom of speech is the basis of democracy. Without it, we are doomed to fascism. At least the Republicans are for freedom of speech. So, who are the criminals this time around?

    • Tim N
      October 25, 2024 at 09:04

      The Republicans are for freedom of speech? You haven’t been paying attention. Both Parties are criminal enterprises, both Parties support the extermination of the Palestinians, both Parties support the destruction of free-speech rights for protesters demanding an end to the Genocide in Gaza. There is no excuse for ignorance on anbody’s part on these matters at this point.

    • Bradley Zurweller
      October 25, 2024 at 15:34

      “At least the Republicans are for freedom of speech.”

      Over here in reality, Trump has promised oligarch Musk a position in his government. Musk, who will let you say whatever you want on twatter if you’re a fascist sympathizer or outright nazi, but who won’t let you criticize Israel.

  5. Kawu A.
    October 24, 2024 at 13:35

    Whether their media houses use the right language or not humanity is changing and cannot be taken for a ride any longer!

    DECOLONISATION is coming sooner than expected!

    • Rob Roy
      October 24, 2024 at 15:22

      Hope so!

  6. Steve
    October 24, 2024 at 12:58

    Worth noting, from Wiki:
    “Since the Israeli Declaration of Independence in 1948, fixed-term military service has been compulsory in Israel. (from age 18)
    the minimum required length of military service is two years and eight months (with some roles requiring an additional four months of service)
    all discharged citizens remain eligible to be called up for reserve duty until the age of 40.”

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