24. Media Misquotes Threat From Irans President
Sources:
Global Research, January 20, 2007
Title: Wiped Off The MapThe Rumor of the Century
Author: Arash Norouzi
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=NOR20070120&articleId=4527
Information Clearing House, May 9, 2006
Title: Full Text: The President of Irans Letter To President
Bush
Translated by Le Monde
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12984.htm
Student Researchers: Becky Bazell
Faculty Evaluator: Peter Phillips, Ph.D.
Across the world a media story has spread that Irans President
Ahmadinejad has threatened to destroy Israel, by saying that, Israel
must be wiped off the map. Contrary to general belief, this statement
was actually a misinterpretation. However, it was the Islamic Republic
News Service in Iran that first mistranslated the quote. Irans
Foreign Minister attempted to clarify the statement, but the quote ended
up having a life of its own in the corporate media.
Amid heated wrangling over Irans nuclear program and the threat
of preemptive strikes by the US, the quote has been continually used
to reinforce the idea that Iran is being run by extremists seeking the
total destruction of Israel.
So what did Ahmadinejad actually say? To quote his exact words in Farsi:
Imam ghoft een rezhim-e ishghalgar-e qods bayad az safheh-ye
ruzgar mahv shavad.
Rezhim-e is the word regime, pronounced just like the English
word with an extra eh sound at the end. Ahmadinejad did
not refer to Israel the country or Israel the landmass, but the Israeli
regime. This is a vastly significant distinction, as one cannot wipe
a regime off the map. Ahmadinejad did not even refer to Israel by name,
he instead used the specific phrase rezhim-e ishghalgar-e qods
(regime occupying Jerusalem).
A similar statement by Ahmadinejad in December 2006, As the Soviet
Union disappeared, the Zionist regime will also vanish and humanity
will be liberated, has also been misinterpreted.
In May of 2006 President Ahmadinejad published an open letter to President
Bush clearly asking for peace and the mutual respect of human rights.
He warns that Western media, through contrived and deceptive information,
has intensified the climate of fear that leads to attacks on innocent
peoples. The letter was not reported in the US news media. Ahmadinejad
began the letter writing, Mr. George Bush, For some time now I
have been thinking, how one can justify the undeniable contradictions
that exist in the international arena. Can one be a follower of Jesus
Christ (PBUH), the great Messenger of God, Feel obliged to respect human
rights, Present liberalism as a civilization model, Announce ones
opposition to the proliferation of nuclear weapons and WMDs, Make War
on Terror his slogan, And finally, Work towards the establishment
of a unified international communitya community which Christ and
the virtuous of the Earth will one day govern, But at the same time,
have countries attacked; The lives, reputations and possessions of people
destroyed and on the slight chance of the
of a
criminals
in a village city, or convoy for example the entire village, city or
convey set ablaze.
Evaluator Comment
Ahmadinejad declared that Zionism is the Wests apparatus of political
oppression against Muslims. He says the Zionist regime was
imposed on the Islamic world as a strategic bridgehead to ensure domination
of the region and its assets. This position is viewed as threatening
to many in the West. While threats and counter-threats escalates tensions
in the Persian Gulf, I believe it is important for the media to publish
both sides of issues and be as accurate as possible by seeking to build
understanding rather than fear and anger.
Peter Phillips
UPDATE BY Arash Norouzi
In May 2007, the US House of Representatives unanimously passed a resolution
calling on the U.N. Security Council to charge Ahmadinejad with the
crime of inciting genocide because of his calls for the destruction
of the State of Israela violation of the U.N.s 1948
Genocide Conventionspecifically citing the false wiped off
the map quote from October 2005. It also called for the U.N. to
prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, with the potential
means to the end of carrying out President Mahmoud Ahmadinejads
threats against Israel.
This misquote has become a key component of the push for war with Iran,
a war that would make Iraq look like the cakewalk it was predicted to
be. Attacking Iran would result in massive death and destruction, affect
world oil supplies, provoke terrorism, could initiate the next World
War, and might even include the use of nuclear weapons for the first
time since WWII. In this heated atmosphere, an accurate narrative is
essential in averting the next cataclysmic Mideast intervention. When
President Bush emphasizes the importance of taking the words of Americas
enemies seriously, that process begins with first determining just what
exactly those words are.
Yet my article is about more than just clarifying a mistranslated statement.
Its about the media, propaganda, plagiarism, language, false assumptions
...Functioning much like a puzzle, it engages readers by allowing them
to deconstruct the quote and its meaning themselves. This self-verification
process adds a compelling aspect in which credibility becomes largely
obsolete. The articles punchline demonstrates undeniably
that members of the mainstream media knowingly spread this rumor, and
readers are challenged to check for themselves by comparing linked sources
proving this claim.
The idea is not merely to contest a single misquote, but to also promote
skepticism about all pre-war intelligence. If this quote is false, then
its logical to assume that other accusations against Iran could
be wrong toojust as they were with Iraq.
The overwhelming ubiquity of this misquote has deterred others from
correcting what they probably view as a lost cause. Yet my article alone
has been viewed by millions, translated into at least half a dozen languages,
garnered radio interviews, inspired videos on YouTube, and become the
subject of an entire article in The Bangkok Post. It got the attention
of people at the BBC, Washington Post, IAEA, State Department, United
Nations, and the Islamic Republic itself. Its been quoted by numerous
journalists, authors and academics, in published letters to the editor,
and on call-in TV shows such as on C-SPAN. The Associated Press has
now begun citing the vanish from the page of time phrase,
adding that independent analysts have refuted the map
quote; and Dennis Kucinich was prepared to correct the rumor when asked
about the subject on TV recently.
These are hopeful signals that underscore the importance of alternative
voices in the media, and their potential effectiveness in influencing
the discourse. If the first casualty of war is the truth, then its
up to the truth tellerswhomever they may beto enlighten
us.