Become a Member
Douglas Murray

ByDouglas Murray, Douglas Murray

Opinion

Pro-Israel? Time for a British media Fox hunt

October 19, 2011 10:26
3 min read

A lot has been said in recent weeks about Liam Fox, and very little of it is true. It may well be, as Fox himself has said, that he "blurred the lines". It may be that he made a serious error in not formalising Adam Werritty's role. But he was also the subject of a range of totally unsubstantiated witch-hunts which ended up scalping the best Defence Secretary in a generation. Among those witch-hunts, one stood out.

Fox could have survived the innuendo about his friendship with Werritty. He could have survived further speculation about his friend and adviser's business dealings. He certainly could have survived the revelation that both men had meetings with people from Sri Lanka. But the moment when it was clear it was all over was when the press started repeating, for no apparent reason, the fact that Fox is "pro-Israel". "That's it", I thought: "time to send for the removal men."

Over recent days, the wildest imaginable headlines have been run by broadsheet and tabloids. Last Sunday, the Observer led its front-page with: "Revealed: Hidden Tory links to US radical right". If you were under the impression that "radical right" might, like "radical left", mean something really nasty, then you'd have been disappointed to discover that the relevant links were -prepare yourself - to pro-business organisations. But there is a notch even beneath this in the lexicon of dastardliness. For the British press, the circle of hell beneath that inhabited by Americans arguing for lower taxes is anyone at all with a link to Israel.

The British press no longer use the term "pro-Israel" descriptively - only ominously. To state that someone is pro-Israel is not to state a fact but to make a slur. It is to suggest dark and sinister dealings. It is as fine an example as exists of the moral inversion that now grips this country.