Israeli spokesperson calls The Intercept an “anti-Israel propaganda outlet”

The Israeli government is used to news outlets, especially in the United States, uncritically repeating their dishonest spin and outright lies.




As a reporter, I believe I have a moral responsibility to tell the truth about Israel’s atrocities in Gaza — and about how the Biden administration is fueling them.

But that’s not what the Israeli government is used to. They expect news outlets, especially in the United States, to uncritically repeat their dishonest spin and outright lies.

Presumably, that’s why Israel’s spokesperson in New York just publicly attacked me and labeled The Intercept an “anti-Israel propaganda pamphlet.”

At a time when journalists at other outlets risk being fired for scrutinizing Israel, The Intercept’s continued independence from corporate and political pressure depends on reader donations.

There are just two days left until December 31, and we’re still almost $300,000 away from our year-end fundraising goal. Can you donate to The Intercept today?

The Intercept stands nearly alone among U.S. news outlets in holding our government accountable for its actions in this war: arming, funding, supporting, and lying on behalf of Israel’s annihilation of the people of Gaza.

From the moment President Joe Biden spoke to his “great, great friend” Benjamin Netanyahu on October 7, the U.S. has not just supplied Israel with additional weapons and intelligence support, it has also offered crucial political cover for Israel’s scorched-earth campaign, which has now killed more than 20,000 Palestinians.

This is the essential context that readers desperately need, but reporters at corporate news outlets know that if they challenge the pro-Israel consensus, they risk losing their jobs and maybe their entire careers.

The Intercept’s adversarial journalism is needed now more than at any other time since our founding — and this year-end drive is a key part of how we plan to keep our nonprofit newsroom fully funded in the year ahead.

If you value this reporting and share our belief that great journalism can make a difference in times of war, please make a year-end donation to The Intercept.

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Thank you,

Jeremy Scahill
Co-founder

The Intercept’s fiscal sponsor is First Look Institute, a 501(c)(3) charitable organization (tax ID number 80-0951255).

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The Intercept is an award-winning nonprofit news organization dedicated to holding the powerful accountable through fearless, adversarial journalism. Our in-depth investigations and unflinching analysis focus on surveillance, war, corruption, the environment, technology, criminal justice, the media and more. Email is an important way for us to communicate with The Intercept’s readers, but if you’d like to stop hearing from us, click here to unsubscribe from all communications. Protecting freedom of the press has never been more important. Contribute now to support our independent journalism.

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