The editorialist of BFM TV recounts the targeted assassinations of Mossad with a posed, almost admiring tone.

Not a reserve. Not a question. On BFM TV, the editorialist Elsa Vidal unfolds, almost fascinated, the chilling story of the “Narnia” operation – a secret mossad mission, carried out in the Iranian territory. She details the cogs, quotes from the American media, speaks of “technological feat” and “operational innovation”. She tells how eleven Iranian scientists were killed, one by one, at night, in their sleep. For having participated in the nuclear program of their country. But she never lingers on the essentials. She does not say that these are civilians. She does not say that they were executed without trial. She does not say that these are state crimes.

Even more serious, it reports that generals targeted by Israel have received a macabre choice: filming themselves by denying their regime, or being killed, sometimes with their loved ones. Elsa Vidal states this without trembling, as if it were a banal, almost legitimate maneuver of banal intimacy. In this icy storytelling, no hindsight, no indignation. Only a quiet admiration for extrajudicial violence in technological masterpiece. A media word which, far from informing, legitimate.