Doctors Call Out Medical Journal’s Anti-Israel Bias

The Lancet, a distinguished medical journal, recently published an anti-Israel diatribe in the form of an open letter signed by 24 physicians, accusing the Jewish state of committing ‘crimes against humanity.’

A formal rebuttal, which disputes the letter’s points and calls into question the signatories’ impartiality, was written by three Israeli doctors and submitted to The Lancet, but they refused to publish it.

A petition is now circulating and gathering signature from medical professionals around the world in an attempt to persuade the journal to give equal time to the opposing view and publish the rebuttal.

The original article at The Lancet can be read here.

The following rebuttal was written by Israeli physicians Tamir Wolf, Danny Hava Brown and Shachar Moshe Aharony. A PDF version of the rebuttal (complete with footnotes and sources) can be downloaded by clicking here.

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Our First Submission to The Lancet. From a Bomb-Shelter

A few weeks ago, while 3 Israeli teenagers were kidnapped and murdered, the wife of Palestinian Authority (PA) chairman, Mahmoud Abbas, was discharged from an Israeli private hospital after orthopedic surgery. More often than not, reality is far from black and white. Yet, in the depiction of the current situation- “An open letter for the people of Gaza” – reality is seemingly black.

Twenty-four signatories claim to “report the facts as we see them” and under an “ethical and practice” pretense, use the pages of The Lancet, to chant skewed and shamelessly unfounded propaganda that would fail any peer review. Under false claims of “no conflict of interest”, the authors who are deeply involved in pro-Palestinian organizations slander Israel.

Their evidence-less attempt to hide behind their medical degree in order to spread the propaganda of the terrorist organization Hamas, is a betrayal of our profession. A lot has been said about the bias of theinternational media in the portrayal of this conflict. This rebuttal in The Lancet is our attempt to show the other side of the coin.

We are baffled by the decision of The Lancet’s editorial board to publish this one-sided op-ed, full of hatred, ill-conceived notions and factual chicanery. This publication definitely defies, in our eyes, the very calling of The Lancet to “…consider any original contribution that advances orilluminates medical science or practice, or that educates or entertains the journal’s readers.”

Like the authors, we too went through medical school. Like them – we too are horrified by the deaths of innocent women and children. Unlike them,the word “massacre”, used whimsically, is not foreign. Our families went up in smoke in Europe. Israel is our home now. Unlike all of them, we served in the (Israeli Defense Forces) IDF, and treated multiple Palestinians. Our humanity has been truly put to the test on more than one occasion, and we are proud to say that we prevailed.

A few days ago we saw a photo in one of the social networks in which a muslim protestor somewhere in Europe holds two signs. One saying “Stop Hamas terrorism on Israel”, the other “Free Gaza from Hamas”. This says it all. But how did we even get here, to a third round of fighting with Hamas?

In August 2005, Israel disengaged unilaterally from Gaza. Israel dismantled settlements and uprooted over 10,000 Israelis. It withdrew its military and civilian presence from every inch of Gaza, effectively ending the occupation. Israel continued to uphold its obligations under the 4th Geneva Convention in matters where it continues to have effective control such as providing water and electricity. Likewise, and in direct contrast to the libels told in the Open Letter, Israel has always allowed the passage of food, medicine and fuel into Gaza.

Rather than using the end of the Israeli occupation to create the “Singapore of the Middle East”, Hamas overthrew the PA in a military coup d’états in June 2007 in killing 550 and leaving hundreds injured. Since then, the people of Gaza have been living under the tyranny of a violent extremist regime. Hamas hatred is not only towards Israel but also against their Palestinian brethren.

As for the alleged “aggression of Gaza by Israel”. The current cycle of violence began when Hamas operatives abducted and murdered three settler teens in the West Bank. Without prejudice to the question of the legality of settlements, the cold-blooded murder of innocent teens is inexcusable. Amidst arrests of Hamas operatives that followed, Hamas began indiscriminately barraging of Israeli towns. Israel initially limited its response to air strikes aimed at the missile launchers and Hamas terrorists. On June 15th Israel agreed to the Egyptian ceasefire and halted its attacks. Hamas rejected the ceasefire and shot over 80 rockets at Israeli civilian populations, and violated a UN sanctioned humanitarian ceasefire. The U.S, EU, and most of the international community recognized Israel’s right to defend itself against the aggression of Hamas and commended it for accepting the ceasefire. And then came the terror tunnels.

The first assault by 13 terrorists emerging out of a terror attack tunnel near an Israeli town armed with assault weapons and syringes occurred on July 17th. Their goal was to murder and kidnap Israelis. The IDF has since uncovered 31 such tunnels, and counting. Interrogations of Hamas forces paint a disquieting picture. A maze of tunnels accommodating two hundred hamas terrorists led to six Israeli towns. On Rosh Hashana, (the Jewish New Years Eve) when families would be sitting for dinner, Hamas was planning to emerge from the tunnels, kill entire communities and kidnap the youngsters. This calamitous plan would have been an Israeli 9/11.

It seems unreasonable that an impoverished community such as that of Gaza, would have such a sophisticated and extravagant offensive infrastructure. The question is, where did the money come from?

Over the past decade, Hamas has received an excess of $10B in foreign aid. The signatories were quick to contend that Israel’s policies led to “hunger, thirst, pollution, shortage of medicines, electricity…sewage outflow…”. They claim, “building materials have been blockaded so that schools, homes, and institutions cannot be properly rebuilt.” Nothing could be further from the truth.

In one week of groundwork, Israel discovered over 30 terror tunnels with estimated 500 tons of cement in each. The cement and materials used to build these tunnels, alongside the reported 900 tunnels Egypt has destroyed over the past year, could have been used to turn Gaza into an oasis. Out of the reported hundreds of millions of dollars in aid just about zero schools, hospitals, and institutions were built. The money, we now know, is all underground cementing terror passages and stockpiling ammunition bunkers.

A significant share of these funds went to cushion the pockets of Hamas “leaders” such as Musa Abu Marzuk ($2-3B), Khaled Mashaal ($2-5B), Ismail Haniyeh ($4M), while the people of Gaza were left in ruins.

In addition to blaming Israel for the below-par economic situation, the authors questioned the moral asymmetry in the conflict. There definitely is asymmetry. Israel’s strategy is aimed at protecting life. Hamas’ strategy isto exploit children. Hundreds of Palestinian children have been killed while building the terror tunnel network and more recently, as shields.

Hamas’ use of civilian objects and populations to launch it attacks is atrocious. The recent EU Council conclusions published on July 22 stated that “…The EU strongly condemns calls on the civilian population of Gaza to provide themselves as human shields.There is asymmetry. WhileHamas’ “golden hour” terrorists ride in ambulances, Israel build a field hospital. While Israel spends billions on civil defense, Hamas use donkeys as IEDs and dress up as elderly women to launch perfidious attacks. UN facilities have become a haven for terrorist activity, as acknowledged by the UN itself. Hospitals such as Shifa Hospital, mentioned in the Open Letter, “[have] become a de fact headquarters for Hamas leaders who can be seen in the hallways and offices.”

The authors claim that the IDF is “clearly directing fire to target whole families killing them within their homes”. This outrageous accusation is baseless. Al Jazeera published an updated list of casualties in Gaza. The data (82% of fatalities men, 66% of them between the ages of 18 and 38) attests to the fact that the IDF is indeed targeting combatants.

While Gaza is one of the most densely populated areas in the world, Israel has been working tirelessly to develop high precision weapons and warning mechanisms to minimize civilian causalities. Such measures (text messages, leaflets, repetitive announcements) surpass NATO operations in precision and its proportionality calculus. Civilians are never a target. Unfortunately, Hamas’ military tactics attempt to ensure maximum civilian casualties.

Given these conditions, even the most humanitarian army cannot avoid civilian casualties, however hard it tries, however tragic. International Humanitarian Law is on Israel’s side. When a civilian target is used for military purpose, it loses its protective status and becomes a legitimate target. While every life is sacred, urban warfare has its gloomy realities, and international law recognizes and accommodates such brass tacks.

Israel should not apologize for its low death rates. It has spent billions ofdollars to create technologies and infrastructure for the world’s most advance civil defense system. While at the same time, Hamas did nothing for its citizens.

The authors claim to have a moral high ground. More than 170,000 Syrians have been murdered since the conflict began in March 2011 and 2.8 million people have been displaced. I wonder how many of the signatories visited Syria over the past 4 years. Israeli physicians have been treating Syrian casualties in our hospitals as well as in a dedicated military field hospital erected just to this end. 700 was the latest count of Syrian victims treated by Israel.

Last week, Israel set up a field hospital near the Gaza crossing to provide care for those caught in the crosshairs. Hamas on its end, shot mortars at the field hospital on July 23rd, clearly considering their own wounded as negligible compared with the potential triumph of killing an Israeli doctor. Israeli physicians treat Palestinians routinely and in special programs such as “Save a Child’s Heart” where kids from the Palestinian territories,

Iraq, and Iran (over 200 kids to date) receive free open-heart surgeries in Israel. In 2013, Israel treated 1-year old Amal, granddaughter of Hamasleader Ismail Hanieyh for gastroenteritis, while scores of Gazans are treated in Israeli hospitals at any given time.

We applaud The Lancet for addressing the current situation in our region.We would welcome an unbiased approach though, not as much unsubstantiated political rhetoric. We are appalled by the choice of its authors’ terminology, and with the lack of “scientific rigor” in presenting the facts. Such incitement only widens the gap of mistrust and solidifies the notion that no matter what Israel does, no matter how hard it tries, it will never be good enough for a hypocritical community that denounces aggression “on the basis of our ethics and practice” – but only if Israel is involved.

There is suffering, grief and pain on both sides. We sincerely hope this will end soon, and that peace will be upon us all. Until then, as a service to those living in the region and to our colleagues from around the world, we call on The Lancet to promote informative dialogue and discussion.

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The above letter was refused for publication by The Lancet. Its authors have initiated a petition, signed by medical professionals all over the world, calling on The Lancet to publish both sides of the story.

The petition is accompanied by the following letter from the rebuttal’s authors:

Dear friends and colleagues,

On July 23rd, The Lancet published an Open Letter describing the situation in Gaza (http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(14)61044-8/fulltext).

We believe that The Lancet, a top tier scientific journal by all accounts, did a great disservice to their target audience, our community.

The publication of an extremely biased one-sided analysis of such a complex situation is outrageous and full of lies.

The authors (who deceitfully disclosed no conflict of interest) are members of biased pro-Palestinian groups who are hostile to Israel. And while individuals are definitely entitled to their opinions, hiding behind an MD degree does not entitle one to defame under the pretense of a publication in a professional medical journal.

The authors do not provide any evidence or facts for their preposterous allegations, providing mainly political rhetoric, nothing of value, nothing more.

Frankly, we were quite astounded that the journal accepted it for publication. In our eyes, it should not have passed a basic editorial / peer review process.

The response attached herein is one that we put together in-between sirens in Tel-Aviv and reserve duty in the south. We are submitting it to The Lancet for publication and are simultaneously hoping to gather signatures from supporters around the world.

Please indicate yours by filling out your details in this survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/6NH6VV2

We encourage you to share the link with colleagues you believe would be interested in showing support, though please refrain from using social networks and stick to more secure methods (like email).

From email exchange with the editor of The Lancet, the Open Letter already gained support from over 16,000 professionals – extremely disturbing.

Please help us spread the word.

Yours Sincerely,

Tamir Wolf, MD, PhD

Shachar Aharony, MD

7 Comments

  • Milhouse

    The Lancet used to be a distinguished medical journal, but it lost that status at least 15-20 years ago, and has become a worthless publication.

  • emet

    #1, that has made itself obvious by the mere fact that so many doctors would not be paying attention to the lies of the media. Someone must have been paid off to do this. Thats very low, and it further lowers the publication’s worth.

  • Ezra

    Indeed. Let’s not forget that it’s the Lancet that published the original (bogus) paper about vaccines and autism, and also the equally bogus paper about the second Gulf War having caused the deaths of 600K or so Iraqis.

  • Go to Twitter now!

    You can Tweet the link to the rebuttal to The Lancet:

    @TheLancet

    The Lancet tweeted the ‘Open Gaza Letter’ on their Twitter. They claim that “over 14,000 people” have added their signatures.
    Despite their claim, only 318 people retweeted it, and 93 ‘liked’ it.

    Yidden, copy and paste this link, and tweet this link to Lancet now!

    http://crownheights.info/assets/2014/07/Lancet-Gaza-Op-ed-Rebuttal.pdf

    Tweet it to @The Lancet

    We can easily send over 14,000 tweets to Lancet, and give then a taste of real medicine.

  • Dr. Miriam Adahan

    B”H
    Over 10,000 missiles have rained down on Israel since 2000. Does anyone consider how soul-destroying it is for Israelis to have to run to their bomb shelters 10-20 times a day? Children are terribly traumatized. They cannot go out to play. They are cooped up in stiflying hot bomb shelters. Pregnant women often give birth prematurely. 80% of the population is suffering from PTSD! WAKE UP TO THE FACTS!

    • Millionaire

      You are preaching to the choir. Go I on twitter and tell it to Lancet.

  • Yossel

    I think this is G-d’s continued attempt to show us that we are a “nation that shall dwell alone.” We continue to seek the approval and friendship of non-Jews instead of focusing on love of our fellow Yidden. Such dribble is shameful for a publication is supposed to represent the most intelligent people; instead it shows off Neanderthal ignorance and hatred. Makes logical sense? Of course not! Anti-Semitism has no logic. I think it’s G-d’s way of saying “don’t even bother to lick their tuchises, it won’t work.”