Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Guilty by Affiliation
Mohammed El-Kurd
13 Aug 2025
🖨️ Print Article
Various Israeli reporters carrying guns
Various Israeli reporters carrying guns on national television

The Israeli murder of heroic Palestinian journalist Anas Al-Sharif was bookended by accusations that he was part of Hamas. For many of our allies, the instinct is to prove his innocence by proving him “unaffiliated.” The following text, an excerpt from a previously published work, is a commentary on that impulse.

Originally published in Mohammed El-Kurd.

The invention of the civilian as a “nonpartisan,” “neutral” figure has exacerbated the depoliticization of the Palestinian cause. To be deemed a civilian necessitates that we exist in a mythological dimension where we are without perspective. Our cause, as imagined in this mythology, is no longer understood as a liberation struggle but as a “humanitarian crisis,” where revolutionaries are not part and parcel of our nation, motivated by political aspirations and dreams of emancipation. Instead, they are interpreted as rogue actors senselessly wreaking havoc to the dismay of helpless bystanders—the disinterested women and children, the impartial paramedics and journalists.

In such ahistorical readings, which obfuscate the power imbalance between the occupier and the occupied, the militant is evacuated outside of the context that gave rise to him or her in the first place; the newscaster is expected to present the killing of her siblings as if she were an unbiased observer; and the nurse whose patient is a beloved coworker maimed by an airstrike is expected to maintain “professionalism,” to not seek revenge on the drone operator.

Of course, in Palestine, like everywhere else, there are individuals who are or define themselves as “apolitical.” There are, one could argue, medics who think all parties are to blame, journalists who believe in the myth of objectivity instead of satirizing it. But “neutrality” is not an indicator of innocence, nor does it guarantee safety. In fact, what unites the nonpartisan and the partisan, or the partisan by association, is their susceptibility to settler violence. The difference is, we seem to only run to the rescue of those perceived to be apolitical. When the affiliated (or the allegedly affiliated) are a target, we first try to negate their alleged affiliation before we respond to their calls.

Some months into the ongoing genocide in Gaza, which is “the deadliest conflict for journalists in recent history,” the Israeli occupation forces openly considered journalists employed by media organizations associated with or run by Hamas “to be legitimate military targets.” A senior spokesperson for the IOF went as far as telling reporters that “there was ‘no difference’ between working for [Al-Aqsa TV] and belonging to Hamas’s armed wing.” This statement brings to mind another comment by a different military spokesman, who said the late Shireen Abu Akleh was “armed with [her] camera.” It also brings to mind a Jewish Insider headline that reads, “One-Third of Journalists Killed in Gaza Were Affiliated with Terrorist Groups.” A headline where journalists justify killing journalists.

The instinct of many defenders of Palestinians is to dispel the connection between the slain Palestinian media workers and their supposed political leanings, as if anywhere in the world these exist in isolation. While it is demanded of us to distance ourselves from the guerrilla fighters struggling against colonialism and occupation, Zionist soldiers—the colonizers and occupiers—can work, without much irony or scrutiny, in newsrooms and in media watchdog organizations. Take, for example, Axios’s political reporter covering Israeli affairs, Barak Ravid, who was, until March 2023, a reservist in the Israeli occupation forces while working for an international media outlet. Or the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, who dropped out of his American university to volunteer in the IOF during the First Intifada, then, during the course of his job as a so-called prison counsellor at the notorious Ketziot camp, lied to cover up for a friend whom he witnessed beating a prisoner. Correspondents entangled with the Israeli army are not challenged on the basis of proximity to “the conflict,” let alone condemned to die because of their participation in or fondness of the Israeli military apparatus. They do not need to be humanized.

Indeed, they are often more than merely human; the New Yorker had no reservations in quoting what it called a “lefty” journalist who lauded the IOF soldiers waging the genocide in Gaza with the words “they are our children. . . . They are us.” If you are a New York Times correspondent in occupied Jerusalem, as Isabel Kershner was, with two sons in the IOF, how does that influence your reporting on “the conflict”? If your spouse’s professional duty was “shaping a positive image of Israel in the media,” as program director at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), the settler state’s “leading security think tank,” as was Kershner’s husband’s,* how can you maintain impartiality as a reporter? “An examination of articles that Kershner has written or contributed to since 2009 reveals that she overwhelmingly relies on the INSS for think tank analysis about events in the region.” Examples of reporters having direct ties to the entity waging the genocide against the Palestinian People are numerous. As for Palestinians—we are held to a completely different and impossible standard.

It is not enough for a Palestinian to be a journalist to be deemed human; they must be “unaffiliated.” Otherwise, in accordance with Zionist logic, they cannot be grievable or included in the official death toll; slaughtering them is cause for celebration. Such an unfeasible demand of “no affiliation” fragments Palestinians further: we are not only divided based on colonial borders and invented geographies, but even within a single profession we are split into legitimate and illegitimate targets. This has created a reality in which the Palestinian People are pitted against each other; some of us work for reputable, foreign agencies, others work for local ones, “Hamas-run.” As a result of this indictment, we look for the exceptional, and we cite it.

And when I say “we,” I implicate myself in this critique. When I wrote about Palestinian martyr Omar As‘ad, I wasted some time searching for reliable sources that proved the soldiers had beaten him. Something, perhaps a deeply seated, learned behavior or a pervasive, subconscious impulse, told me it was not enough that he had been left to die in the cold—bound, gagged, and blindfolded. He needed to have been beaten too. Despite the entire argument I am agonizing over, I sifted through articles in an attempt to editorialize his killing with another layer of brutality. But when we do what we do to Shireen Abu Akleh, to Omar As‘ad, to Hind Rajab, to Mohammed Abu Khdeir, when we do it out of love, out of a desperate desire to legitimize mourning them, we are inadvertently reifying the colonial rationale that killed them and rendered them killable in the first place.

 

Gaza
Palestine
Journalism
Israel

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist , Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
The White Supremacist Imperative on Violence: A Black Radical Perspective on the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination
15 July 2026
The U.S.-EU-NATO axis remains intact, and its commitment to militarism represents an existential threat to the world.
Hanna Eid
Sovereignty and Strategic Depth
08 July 2026
The U.S.
Jeremy Scahill , Jawa Ahmad
Exclusive: Internal Documents Show Trump’s “Board of Peace“ Moving to Crush Palestinian Self-Determination
24 June 2026
Gaza proposals obtained by Drop Site show Trump’s board attempting to force a Palestinian surrender that Israel could not achieve in war.
Ramzy Baroud
Why Didn’t Iran Put Gaza on the Table? A Difficult Answer
03 June 2026
From Gaza to Tehran, from the politics of resistance to the limits of regional diplomacy, a pressing question has resurfaced amid the 2026 war:
Hanna Eid
Imperialism and the Arab World: An Interview with Tara Alami
27 May 2026
Compliant Arab regimes spent decades spreading anti-Iran propaganda, but the current assault on Iran is shattering those lies.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
ESSAY: The Palestine Question: Background and Solution, Edward Atiyah, 1946
20 May 2026
“It is impossible to make a national home for one people in a country inhabited by another, except by dislodging the latter.”
Black Alliance For Peace
Move the Games: No World Cup for Genocide, Ecocide, or State Thuggery
29 April 2026
A celebration of the most popular sport in the world can't be held in a country that commits genocide, ecocide, and daily state violence.
Joshua Reaves Charmelus
Exporting Apartheid: Israel’s Role in Haiti’s Water Crisis
29 April 2026
Behind the Dominican Republic’s assault on Haitian water sovereignty stands an Israeli Occupation apparatus – arming border forces, training po
Zeinab Al Saffar
Negotiations or Annihilation: Can the Resistance Be Talked Away?
29 April 2026
Israel's diplomacy with Lebanon is a fiction.
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist , ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
White Power, White Decedance, White Denial: A Dialog with Ajamu Baraka
22 April 2026
Ajamu Baraka and Margaret Kimberley discuss how the assault on Iran exposed the pathological nature of white power, the cynical games of the du

More Stories


  • UNAC Conference flyer
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
    Opening Remarks from Ajamu Baraka at the 2024 UNAC Conference
    17 Apr 2024
    Ajamu Baraka delivered this speech at the opening of the 2024 United National Antiwar Coalition Conference.
  • Rwandan refugees
    Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    The US Did Not Fail to Intervene in Rwanda
    17 Apr 2024
    The U.S. kept the U.N. Security Council from sending in troops to stop the 1994 Rwandan Genocide.
  • Man holding Haitian flag in front of fire
    MOLEGHAF
    MOLEGHAF Denounces the US-Imposed “Accord for Peaceful Orderly Transition” in Haiti
    17 Apr 2024
    The "transitional council" in Haiti is another part of the plan to maintain the dominance of imperialist forces over the island. This process is driving the nation further into a socioeconomic crisis.
  • OJ Simpson at his trial
    Gus Griffin
    O.J. Simpson and Understanding the Black Support He Never Deserved
    17 Apr 2024
    O.J. Simpson's acquittal in one of the most infamous murder trials of the 20th century was celebrated as a symbolic win for the Black community against an oppressive system. However, O.J. was…
  • Axis of resistance
    Essam Elkorghli
    The Axis of Resistance Exposing the Functionaries of Imperialism
    17 Apr 2024
    The Axis of Resistance is shining a light on the reactionary regimes in the region who remain active and willing agents of imperialism.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us