By

Robin Shepherd

Analysis

Even the best of the BBC meets terror with error in interviews

February 15, 2013 11:00
Not such a Hard time: Mashaal faces Sackur
1 min read

There is a moment in Stephen Sackur’s recent BBC Hardtalk interview with Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal when one throws up one’s hands in despair.

Having tried repeatedly to get Mashaal to disavow his organisation’s opposition to the existence of the state of Israel, Sackur is rebuffed: “The whole world knows Hamas has never stated it believes in a two-state solution,” Mashaal says, “…the issue is not the two-state solution…” At which point, Sackur seeks to correct the Hamas leader with reference to opinion polls suggesting the Palestinian people support a two-state solution, the implication being that Hamas should, too. “Isn’t it time for some new thinking, from you?” he later asks.

Stephen Sackur is probably the BBC’s best political interviewer. I have never had the impression he bears the kind of visceral hostility to Israel of so many of his colleagues. That makes his forlorn line of questioning all the more illustrative of where the Western media get things so badly wrong.

The first error is to misunderstand the nature of Hamas. It is an extreme, Judeophobic Islamist terror outfit that derives its support from those Palestinians committed to violent opposition to Israel’s very existence. If it were to abandon that position, its supporters would shift allegiance to another violent rejectionist group.

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