Inside Israel’s social media campaign to woo the Middle East
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[January 12, 2021]
By Stephen Farrell, Maha El Dahan, Lisa Barrington and Zainah El-Haroun
(Reuters) - Working in close quarters,
surrounded by maps of the Middle East, a small team based in Israel’s
foreign ministry are focusing their sights on the Arab world.
Their mission: using social media to convince Arabs to embrace the
Jewish state.
The team is spearheading an Arabic-language campaign via platforms such
as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram as part of a multi-pronged diplomatic
effort to win over popular acceptance in the Middle East.
But overturning decades of hostility is no easy feat, despite Israel in
recent months having secured landmark Washington-brokered deals with the
governments of the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco.
The magnitude of the task was underscored by a recent online backlash
after photographs of Egyptian actor and rapper Mohamed Ramadan partying
with Israeli celebrities at a Dubai bar surfaced on social media in
November, along with a video showing guests partying as the Jewish song
"Hava Nagila" played.
The Israeli Arabic-language social media team re-posted the photos from
its main Facebook and Twitter accounts, including one of Ramadan hanging
an arm around the neck of Israeli pop star Omer Adam with the caption
"art always brings us together."
Israeli officials acknowledge the challenges of the task in a region
where there is widespread support for Palestinians living under Israeli
occupation or as refugees across the Middle East.
Yonatan Gonen, who heads the Arabic-language social media unit, said in
an interview that they posted the photos of Ramadan with the Israeli
celebrities to show “normalization” between Israelis and Arabs. He
acknowledged that the furore was disappointing but said there were also
positive responses and that “it takes time, people change their minds
over generations.”
Ofir Gendelman, a spokesman for Israel’s prime minister, said increasing
numbers of Arabs view Israel as an ally and many publicly show their
support on social media. “As regional peace expands further, talking to
our neighbours in their own language becomes even more important,” said
Gendelman, adding that Israel plans to expand its outreach in Arabic.
Ramadan didn’t respond to requests for comment. He said on social media
at the time that he did not ask people taking photographs where they
came from. “I salute the brotherly Palestinian people,” he added.
Dr Ala’a Shehabi, a London-based academic researcher with dual Bahraini
and British nationality, said public sentiment in Arab countries remains
pro-Palestinian. Of Israel’s social-media campaign, she added: “It is
not a success if it hasn’t changed popular opinion.”
DIGITAL DIPLOMACY
Israel wants to gain broader Arab support for the new deals than it has
with formal peace treaties it signed with Egypt and Jordan, in 1979 and
1994, respectively. Those treaties are upheld by the countries’ leaders
but are regarded with little enthusiasm by many Egyptians and
Jordanians.
An October report by Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs found that
during August and September more than 90% of Arabic social media
commentary regarding the “normalization” deals was negative.
“Israel must prepare to commence a protracted campaign online to win
hearts and minds in favor of creating stronger ties with Israel,”
according to a detailed summary of the report shared with Reuters by the
ministry. A ministry official said that by January the level of negative
commentary had fallen to 75%.
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A screen grab obtained on January 7, 2021, from an Israeli
foreign ministry twitter account in Arabic shows a September
15, 2020 post, of the word "peace" in Arabic with parts of
the Israeli, Emirati and Bahraini flags. Twitter page of @IsraelArabic/via
REUTERS
That foreign ministry’s ten-member Arabic-language team includes
both Jews and Arabs.
With messages such as “Salam, Shalom” - the Arabic and Hebrew words
for peace - the campaign heavily features what Gonen refers to as
“soft content,” such as music, food and sport. The team also posts
about Israel’s adversaries such as Iran, Hamas and Hezbollah.
Established in 2011, the Arabic-language unit has significantly
ramped up activity since late summer when news of the first accord
was made public. The team currently publishes up to 700 or so social
media posts a month, about 15% to 20% more than before the deals,
Gonen said.
During a recent visit to Dubai, team member Lorena Khateeb posted to
Twitter a photo of herself outdoors with the Israeli flag draped
over her back. "Never imagined that I would raise the Israeli flag
in an Arab country," she said in the Nov. 21 post in both Arabic and
English. Days later, one Israel’s official accounts - called @IsraelintheGulf
and which she operates - tweeted a similar flag-draped photo of her.
Khateeb told Reuters that responses to her posts are mostly positive
but some are negative.
GAUGING SUCCESS
Gonen says the aim is to create “engagement, interactions and
dialogue” with Arab audiences. He said his team reaches 100 million
people monthly via its social media accounts, which is double what
it was a year ago.
It’s main Twitter account, which uses the handle @IsraelArabic and
posted the Ramadan photos, has more than 425,000 followers.
Still, the Jewish state still faces widespread opposition to its
reconciliation efforts across the region, which is home to more than
400 million Arabic speakers.
Michael Robbins of the Arab Barometer, a non-partisan research
network that studies attitudes across the Arab world, said a post-normalisation
survey by his group in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Jordan and
Lebanon suggested that the efforts of Israel and its regional allies
“have had little if any effect on the views of ordinary citizens.”
He said they lacked data from Gulf countries, which did not permit
them to ask questions that name Israel, but that attitudes in the
countries they did conduct surveys had changed little from previous
years.
“Overall, these results suggest that Israel’s strategy to win hearts
and minds is failing. Few Arab citizens regardless of age or
geography have positive views toward Israel,” Robbins said.
(Reporting by Stephen Farrell from Jerusalem, Maha El Dahan and Lisa
Barrington from Dubai, and Zainah El-Haroun from Ramallah; Editing
by Cassell Bryan-Low)
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