Thread: I’m as guilty as anyone of admiring Pity the Nation when it was the first book I’d read on #Lebanon and I knew nothing else about the place, and little else about its author Robert #Fisk, who has died at 74 (1)
The first thing to say is Lebanese readers themselves were never so easily impressed by the book, as @emile_hokayem reminds us, and as @aelghossain, @faysalitani, and many others will also remind you if you prompt them (2)
Fisk died with his once-envied reputation largely in ruins, having spent the better part of the last decade peddling inexpiable untruths for this century’s leading mass murderer, Bashar al-Assad. See, e.g., @im_PULSE’s extensive documentation of this (3) pulsemedia.org/2016/12/03/rob…
Yet the idea Fisk was a model journalist before mysteriously and abruptly losing his way post-2011 is unserious. Looking back, the political fatuity, moral frivolity, and sheer dishonesty were strains running through his writing from the start (4)
That he committed outright fabrications, for example, is well-documented; see below for just one of many examples. It should go without saying this calls into question the veracity of everything else he asked readers to believe on his authority (5)
Then there were, of course, the famous embarrassments, such as his fawning Bin Laden profile from 1993, on which he was nonetheless to dine out for so long afterwards (6) independent.co.uk/news/world/ant…
As @HBaumannLiv says, Fisk did undoubtedly inspire a generation of younger writers to make their own forays into the Middle East; reporters and researchers who, fortunately, have tended to care more about truth and ethics than Fisk himself (7)
Speaking of falsehoods, and to end on a light note, the @guardian’s obituary tells readers Fisk was a ‘fluent Arabic speaker’, which will have sent coffee flying over a thousand laptop screens from Fes to Fujairah this morning (8) theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/n…
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The stupendous scale of the damage in #Beirut has to be seen to be believed, & can’t really be believed even when seen. Just took these in Mar Mikhael & Gemmayze: (1)
These aren’t one or two isolated spots; this extends for kilometres, from the eastern fringe of the city to its centre, and well beyond (2)
Mar Mikhael is an epicentre of #Beirut nightlife & culture; home to most of the city’s best cafes, restaurants, bars, art galleries, etc. Unfortunately, it’s also right by the port, and so was hit worse than just about anywhere else (3)
Quick thread with initial thoughts on why #Lebanon’s PM @saadhariri just chose to resign, in defiance of orders from Hizbullah’s Nasrallah: (1)
@saadhariri First, just look at #Tripoli, #Sidon & #Beirut, Hariri’s traditional pillars of support (Sidon is his hometown), which have been major sites of #LebanonProtests. Every day this cabinet remained he was hemorrhaging what little popularity he still preserved (2)
@saadhariri Second, today’s disgraceful violence by Hizb & Amal thugs in Beirut was a great embarrassment to him. It’s one thing to be in coalition with your political foes when there’s a measure of stability in the country; quite another to be covering for them as they assault citizens (3)
1. Thread: My take on Iran/Trump, which I may regret in just a few days, but anyway: Trump doesn’t want war with Iran, as today’s NYT & Reuters reports underscore. Trump sees Middle East wars against anyone other than ISIS/AQ as a waste of good American $ on brown people far away
2. Iran gets this. Iran is smart. It sees straight through Trump’s bullshit, as it did Obama’s. The Iranians are very astute readers of the region, and also understand Washington better, frankly, than many Washington pundits
3. So Iran knows it can safely raise the heat, blow up some tankers here, a Saudi airport & pipeline there, some rockets at compounds in Iraq, Israelis on the Golan. These are designed to make plain just how much trouble they can cause if anyone does ever come at them for real