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December 22, 2004,
8:12 a.m. Late last week, the State Department added al-Manar, the official television station of Hezbollah, to the Terrorism Exclusion List (TEL), effectively prohibiting it from broadcasting in the United States. While this action is welcome, it must be the beginning, not the end, of the effort to combat propaganda of a new and much more ominous sort.
The State Department officially categorized Hezbollah as a terrorist organization in 1997. One wonders why it took so long. In Beirut in 1983, Hezbollah suicide bombers killed more than 250 American Marines and diplomats. Until 9/11, no terrorist organization had murdered so many U.S. citizens. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage has called Hezbollah "the A Team" of terrorism. Hezbollah launched al-Manar in 1991. Much of its programming is intended to spread hatred of America and Israel, and to induce viewers to express that hatred in meaningful ways. Appearing on al-Manar, Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah frequently calls for "Death to America." Among al-Manar's specialties are videos, inspired by MTV but with a difference. For example, one shows the Statue of Liberty as a ghoul, her gown dripping blood, a knife instead of a torch in her raised hand. In Arabic the video enumerates America's involvements around the world e.g. Vietnam, Chile, Iraq and concludes with the words: "America owes blood to all of humanity." Another video, set to martial music, calls for suicide bombers to kill U.S. soldiers in Iraq. It ends with the image of an exploding suicide belt. In other al-Manar videos, Koranic verses are sung, the words scrolled across the screen while footage in the background shows American and Israeli flags being burned, demonstrators waving a "Down with U.S.A." sign, a suicide bomber recording his valediction. Many of the videos unabashedly aim to recruit terrorists. Viewers are told that "the path to becoming a priest in Islam is through jihad" and implored to focus on the rewards of martyrdom in the afterlife and on judgment day. Mothers are encouraged to give up their sons, to prepare them "for battle knowing that their blood will mix with the soil." Also of concern is the possibility that al-Manar broadcasts may contain coded communications a way for Hezbollah's terrorist "generals" to command their "troops" in the field, for example sleeper cells in the United States and elsewhere. Until last weekend, al-Manar was broadcast to America through Intelsat, a Barbados-owned company with offices in Washington, D.C., and GlobeCast, a French-owned satellite provider. Both reportedly removed al-Manar immediately following the State Department's designation. * * * YOU’RE NOT A SUBSCRIBER TO NATIONAL REVIEW? Sign up right now! It’s easy: Subscribe to National Review here, or to the digital version of the magazine here. You can even order a subscription as a gift: print or digital! |
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