As my colleague Thomas Erdbrink reports from Tehran, Iranâs state media scrambled Friday to correct comments wrongly attributed to the countryâs president-elect, Hassan Rouhani, after he was incorrectly quoted calling Israel âa sore which must be removed.â
Press TV, the English-language arm of Iranâs state broadcaster, subtitled Mr. Rouhaniâs actual remarks, made during the Islamic Republicâs annual march for Quds, the Arabic name for Jerusalem. The video shows that the cleric did not mention Israel by name or call for its elimination, but did compare âthe shadow of the occupation of the holy land of Palestine and the dear Quds,â to âa woundâ or âsoreâ that âhas been sitting on the body of the Islamic world for many years.â
A longer clip of the state television broadcast showed Mr. Rouhani marching in the parade as chants of âDeath to Israelâ echoed in the background.
That report also showed other senior figures marching, including the former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. According to Shiva Balaghi, an Iranian-American cultural historian, Mr. Rafsanjani explained as he marched that the point of the annual Quds Day rally was to encourage Palestinians. âWhen they see this support,â he said, âthey will become hopeful.â
Arash Karami, a journalist who blogs about the Iranian media, noted that two semi-official news agencies that initially misreported Mr. Rouhaniâs remarks, subsequently corrected their reports in articles headlined: âThe Occupation of Palestine Is a Wound on the Body of The Islamic World.â
Even after video showed that Iranâs incoming president had been misquoted, a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the Israeli leader stood by his initial response to the false statement, in which he said:
Rouhaniâs true face has been revealed earlier than expected. Even if they will now rush to deny his remarks, this is what the man thinks and this is the plan of the Iranian regime. These remarks by President Rouhani must rouse the world from the illusion that part of it has been caught up in since the Iranian elections. The President there has changed but the goal of the regime has not: To achieve nuclear weapons in order to threaten Israel, the Middle East and the peace and security of the entire world. A country that threatens the destruction of the State of Israel must not be allowed to possess weapons of mass destruction.
Hours later, the prime ministerâs official spokesman to the Arab media, Ofir Gendelman, posted an Arabic translation of Mr. Netanyahuâs rejoinder on Facebook without mentioning that the comment that prompted the response was never made.
The rapid spread of these false reports that Iranâs new president had explicitly called for Israelâs destruction echoed an incident in 2005, when the countryâs current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was incorrectly quoted as saying that Israel âmust be wiped off the map.â As The Lede explained last year, Mr. Ahmadinejad had, in fact, used a metaphorical turn of phrase in Persian that has no exact English equivalent, made no mention of a map, and might have intended his comment to be more of a prediction than a threat.
That said, Mr. Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the far more powerful cleric who rules Iran, have repeatedly predicted that Israel will cease to exist and openly support militant groups that are pledged to the destruction of the Jewish state. In some cases, they have even used language very like that falsely attributed to Mr. Rouhani on Friday. âThe Zionist regime is a true cancer tumor on this region that should be cut off,â Iranâs supreme leader said in a speech last year. âAnd it definitely will be cut off.â