Recently declassified files show how the UK government covertly monitored Australian journalist John Pilger, and sought to discredit him by encouraging media contacts to attack him in the press.
In Declassified UK
In subsequent days, journalists at the scene in Israel continued to investigate the validity of the beheaded babies story. A French journalist in Kfar Aza reported that nobody had mentioned beheaded children to him.
Meanwhile, Oren Ziv, a prominent Israeli journalist, highlighted he had not seen any evidence to support the claims before adding that Israeli soldiers and the armyâs spokesperson remained unable to confirm the allegations.
The White House quickly walked back on Bidenâs earlier claim. It reiterated he had not in fact seen evidence of the beheaded babies he was convinced of less than 36 hours ago, making clear that the presidentâs comments were merely repeating Israeli news reports and officials.
However, there was little detectable appetite from the British media to change tack and report on this clarification in the ongoing story.
In fact, the newspapers had moved on completely. The zealous willingness to examine in scrupulous detail atrocities taking place on the ground and describing in vivid terms the violent acts, spectacularly disappeared.
Nor was there a lack of information to report on. By the time one week had passed since 7 October, more than 2,000 Palestinians had been murdered by Israelâs relentless military bombardment. At least 720 of them were children and around 450 were women.
The privileging of Israeli sources and perspectives is hardly new. An internal report by the BBC into its news coverage of Israel and Palestine that was commissioned by the corporationâs governors in 2006 remarked on âhow little history or context is routinely offeredâ.
It also noted âthe failure to convey adequately the disparity in the Israeli and Palestinian experience, reflecting the fact that one side is in control and other lives under occupationâ.
For evidence of this today, just consider the difference between the BBCâs âexplainerâ of what it calls the âIsrael-Gaza warâ whose chronology starts on 7 October 2023 and Al-Jazeeraâs own version which argues that the current conflict âhas its roots in a colonial act carried out more than a century agoâ.
The list of recipients includes party leader Keir Starmer, his deputy Angela Rayner, shadow foreign secretary David Lammy, and even the former vice-chair of Labour Friends of Palestine, Lisa Nandy, who is now shadow international development minister.
These donations were provided by Labour Friends of Israel (LFI), a pro-Israel lobby group which takes MPs on âfact-findingâ missions to the region, and Sir Trevor Chinn, a multi-millionaire business tycoon and long-time pro-Israel lobbyist.
More than half of Starmerâs shadow cabinet are listed as parliamentary supporters or officers of LFI.
Rishi Sunak has given Britainâs full approval to the flattening of Gaza.
Late on 7 October, the prime minister tweeted âwe stand unequivocally with Israelâ. Sunak had expressed âfull solidarityâ to Benjamin Netanyahu, the tweet added.
As Netanyahu had promised âmighty vengeanceâ following the Hamas-led offensive that morning, there was no room for doubt about the signal which Sunak was sending.
In a few words, Sunak took Britainâs foreign policy to a new extreme.
Israelâs âmighty vengeanceâ is shaping up to be its most destructive bombardment ever of Gaza and its 2.3 million inhabitants.
A âmighty vengeanceâ endorsed by 10 Downing Street.