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The New York Times' Misguided Crusade

By Robert Scheer, AlterNet. Posted October 18, 2005.


The New York Times used its resources to back reporter Judith Miller, tarnishing itself in a case that wasn't about the 1st Amendment.
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Media corporations are arguably the most important yet least examined centers of power in our society. The owners of the Fourth Estate have a unique ability to direct the searchlight of inquiry upon others while remaining powerfully positioned to deflect it from themselves.

That is the blunt message of the belated but devastating report in Sunday's New York Times on how the paper turned reporter Judith Miller's "case into a cause." In its zeal to present its own discredited reporter as a 1st Amendment hero, the "paper of record" badly neutered its news department's coverage of the Miller saga and deployed its editorial page as a battering ram in her defense, publishing 15 editorials supporting Miller's protection of her White House source.

"The Times ... limited its own ability to cover aspects of one of the biggest scandals of the day," concluded the front-page article. "Even as the paper asked for the public's support, it was unable to answer its questions."

The paper, led by publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr., waged a nonstop public crusade not just to protect Miller in the courts but to make her an outright heroine -- obscuring the fact that she was not protecting the public's right to know but was abetting the Bush administration in its shameless and possibly criminal attempt to discredit a whistle-blower. That whistle-blower, former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, had enraged the administration by exposing its use of faked WMD evidence as justification for invading Iraq.

For reasons that are still murky (and which are not made clearer by her own lengthy statement printed in the same edition), Miller argues that a waiver signed last year by Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Scooter Libby, was not good enough to allow her to testify and that simply asking Libby point-blank whether he had signed the waiver willingly would have been somehow unethical.

"She has the keys to release herself," the judge said when holding Miller in contempt of court for refusing to testify. "She has a waiver she chooses not to recognize."

To understand how the New York Times got to this embarrassing point, it must be acknowledged that even at highly regarded newspapers, editors serve at the whim of their publishers. What is clear from the Times' Sunday exposé is that publisher Sulzberger granted Miller uncritical backing despite the severe reservations felt by some of the paper's top editors.

Douglas Frantz, then the investigative editor at the New York Times and now managing editor of the L.A. Times, is quoted as saying Miller once called herself "Miss Run Amok," and when he asked her what that meant, she said, "I can do whatever I want."

Others at the New York Times, including top editors, had become highly suspicious of her sourcing on Iraq WMD stories. They even went so far as to publish an "Editor's Note" questioning the paper's own coverage of the run-up to the war -- with particular emphasis on five of Miller's pieces. But those well-honed editorial sensibilities didn't matter much once the publisher weighed in.

Despite being abysmally ignorant of some of the case's details, the publisher granted Miller total license to define her stonewalling of the grand jury as a freedom-of-the-press battle.

"This car had her hand on the wheel because she was the one at risk," Sulzberger said, ignoring the risks to the paper's integrity. There were also other lives, careers and reputations in the balance, particular that of outed CIA agent Valerie Plame, her covert contacts who had helped her track down WMD, and her ex-diplomat husband.

Yet Sulzberger's insistence that Miller was the true victim carried the day at the paper his family owns. As Miller put it in honest, if gloating, terms: "He galvanized the editors, the senior editorial staff. He metaphorically and literally put his arm around me."

Evidently galvanizing the editors led to their suspending the profound doubts that they felt concerning Miller's tactics and standards as a reporter. Perhaps most damaging in Sunday's article is the admission that an article on Libby and Plamegate was apparently squashed by top management to protect Miller.

"It was taken pretty clearly among us as a signal that we were cutting too close to the bone, that we were getting into an area that could complicate Judy's situation," said Richard Stevenson, one of the censored reporters.

As for Miller, she seems to still have no clue as to what it means to be an ethical journalist. "We have everything to be proud of and nothing to apologize for," she stated, apparently referring to herself and to the great newspaper she was allowed to corrupt.

Digg!

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq.

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gallery of rogues
Posted by: cold2touch on Oct 19, 2005 5:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I used to place Novak, Coulter and Limbaugh atop the pyramid of journalistic maggotism but have since revised the rankings: Miller gets gold, Friedman the silver. And what of Sulzberger? He is more to blame for relegating the once great paper to Bush League than anyone else. Did he too partake of the neocon weed, enveloped in smoke of New American Century?

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Say it, Bob!
Posted by: richards1052 on Oct 20, 2005 1:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Typically great stuff from Bob Scheer.

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As we await the upshot of all this lying, let's get in the Holiday spirit
Posted by: BobbyG on Oct 20, 2005 11:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everybody sing...

MERRY LITTLE FITZMAS

Have ourselves a merry little Fitzmas,
Make our nation right,
From now on
The WHIGs will all be in plain sight.

Have ourselves a merry little Fitzmas,
Make those bastards pay.
From now on
Indictments will have made our day.

Here we are, charges coming soon,
The Grand Jury's tune will roar.
Rule of law once so dear to us
Gathers near to us once more.

Through the years
They all will be together,
If Club Fed allows.
We could hang them all from just the highest boughs.
But have ourselves A merry little Fitzmas now.

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How the Times have (has) changed!
Posted by: Sojourner on Oct 21, 2005 7:37 AM   
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Earlier on the topic of the NYTimes, a comment reminded us of the Pentagon Papers scandal, where the Times took the risk at that time to publish the revelation of lies behind the Vietnam War. The Times stood tall against the CIA.

One prominent American fault is our inability to learn from our history. Vietnam was only 40 years ago, yet Iraq is a repeat. We are repeating the same mistakes that Alcohol Prohibition made in the Roaring 20s. We have elected backward-looking leadership, but they somehow cannot learn from our past mistakes.

This is more than a temporary lapse. The definition of addiction is of someone who keeps doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. This is a character defect.

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why judy is at the center
Posted by: the republic on Oct 23, 2005 1:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps this will shed some insight into why Judy seems to be in the middle of everything.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Mockingbird

Could she be a modern, neo-con Mockingbird? If not in the service of the CIA, then WHIG?

Or, could it be as simple as Joe Wilson questioned the premise of war, thus indirectly questioning Judy, and, given her personality, she shivved him?

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US PERSON
Posted by: US Person on Oct 25, 2005 11:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the Times whats to really redeem itself it should examine the relationship between its publisher and the Administration instead of issuing lame mea culpas about its slanted war coverage and psuedo heroine.

The bottom line is that the "newspaper of record" became a conduit for war propaganda via its embedded reporter, Judith Miller. One story she did write, the aluminum tubes, was another prominent piece of war cabal fiction. Judy, Judy, Judy: SHAME!

Its happened before in American history where the press fanned the flames of war. The Spanish American War very popular with the Fourth Estate. But the Times reporter's participation in the campaign to sell the illegal Occupation of Iraq is unprecedented.

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