Lapdogs
Cowardly and clueless, the U.S. media abandoned its post as Bush
led the country into a disastrous war. A look inside one of the
great journalistic collapses of our time.
By Eric Boehlert
05/05/07 "Salon" -- -- Thirteen days before he announced United
States-led coalition forces had begun the war to "disarm Iraq,
to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger,"
President Bush on the evening of March 6, 2003, strolled into
the East Room of the White House at 8:02 p.m. for a rare press
conference -- just his eighth since taking office. With war
looming, the evening was clouded in a strange dynamic. Perhaps
trying to shake off allegations of being a cowboy charging
towards war, Bush appeared oddly sedate throughout the
prime-time appearance, talking slowly and in a pronounced hush.
His low-key approach was mirrored by the ninety-four equally
somnambulant reporters assembled that night in the East Room who
meekly walked through the motions with Bush.
If anxious viewers at home were hoping for some last-minute
insight from Bush to help ease their doubts about the imminent
war, why it had to be fought now, and why so many of the United
States' longtime allies around the world refused to support it,
those viewers were likely disappointed as the president stuck to
his well-worn talking points ("Saddam Hussein has had twelve
years to disarm. He is deceiving people"). And for any viewers
who held out hope that members of the assembled mainstream media
(hereafter, "MSM") would firmly, yet respectfully, press Bush
for answers to tough questions about the pending invasion, they
could have turned their TVs off at 8:05 p.m.
The press corps's barely-there performance that night, as
reporters quietly melted into the scenery, coming at such a
crucial moment in time remains an industry-wide embarrassment.
Laying out the reasons for war, Bush that night mentioned al-Qaida
and the terrorist attacks of September 11 thirteen times in less
than an hour, yet not a single journalist challenged the
presumed connection Bush was making between al-Qaida and Iraq,
despite the fact that intelligence sources had publicly
questioned any such association. And during the Q&A session,
nobody bothered to ask Bush about the elusive Osama bin Laden,
the terrorist mastermind whom Bush had vowed to capture.
Follow-up questions were nonexistent, which only encouraged Bush
to give answers to questions he was not asked.
At one point while making his way through the press questioners,
Bush awkwardly referred to a list of reporters whom he was
instructed to call on. "This is scripted," he joked. The press
laughed. But Bush meant it was scripted, literally. White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer later admitted he compiled Bush's cheat
sheet, which made sure he did not call on reporters from some
prominent outlets like Time, Newsweek, USA Today, or the
Washington Post. Yet even after Bush announced the event was
"scripted," reporters, either embarrassed for Bush or
embarrassed for themselves, continued to play the part of eager
participants at a spontaneous news conference, shooting their
hands up in the air in hopes of getting Bush's attention. For TV
viewers it certainly looked like an actual press event.
That was not the night's only oddly scripted moment. Before the
cameras went live, White House handlers, in a highly unusual
move, marched veteran reporters to their seats in the East Room,
two-by-two, like school children being led onto the stage for
the annual holiday pageant. The White House was taking no
chances with the choreography. Looking back on the night, New
York Times White House correspondent Elisabeth Bumiller defended
the press corps' timid behavior: "I think we were very
deferential because ... it's live, it's very intense, it's
frightening to stand up there. Think about it, you' re standing
up on prime-time live TV asking the president of the United
States a question when the country's about to go to war," she
told students at Towson University in Maryland. "There was a
very serious, somber tone that evening, and no one wanted to get
into an argument with the president at this very serious time."
It's unlikely viewers expected "an argument" that night in the
East Room. But what about simply asking pointed questions and
firmly requesting a direct response? On March 6, even that was
beyond the media's grasp. The entire press conference
performance was a farce -- the staging, the seating, the
questions, the order, and the answers. Nothing about it was real
or truly informative. It was, nonetheless, unintentionally
revealing. Not revealing about the war, Bush's rationale, or
about the bloody, sustained conflict that was about to be
unleashed inside Iraq. Reporters helped shed virtually no light
on those key issues. Instead, the calculated kabuki press
conference, stage-managed by the White House employing the
nation's most elite reporters as high-profile extras, did reveal
what viewers needed to know about the mind-set of the MSM on the
eve of war.
And for viewers that night who didn't get a strong enough sense
of just how obediently in-step the press corps was with the
White House, there was the televised post-press conference
analysis. On MSNBC, for instance, "Hardball's" Chris Matthews
hosted a full hour of discussion. In order to get a wide array
of opinion, he invited a pro-war Republican senator (Saxby
Chambliss, from Georgia), a pro-war former Secretary of State
(Lawrence Eagleburger), a pro-war retired Army general
(Montgomery Meigs), pro-war retired Air Force general (Buster
Glosson), a pro-war Republican pollster (Frank Luntz), as well
as, for the sake of balance, somebody who, twenty-five years
earlier, once worked in Jimmy Carter's White House (Pat Caddell).
Battered by accusations of a liberal bias and determined to
prove their conservative critics wrong, the press during the
run-up to the war -- timid, deferential, unsure, cautious, and
often intentionally unthinking -- came as close as possible to
abdicating its reason for existing in the first place, which is
to accurately inform citizens, particularly during times of
great national interest. Indeed, the MSM's failings were all the
more important because of the unusually influential role they
played in advance of the war-of-choice with Iraq. "When America
has been attacked -- at Pearl Harbor, or as on September 11 --
the government needed merely to tell the people that it was our
duty to respond, and the people rightly conferred their
authority," noted Harold Meyerson in the American Prospect
magazine. "But a war of choice is a different matter entirely.
In that circumstance, the people will ask why. The people will
need to be convinced that their sons and daughters and husbands
and wives should go halfway around the world to fight a nemesis
that they didn't really know was a nemesis."
It's not fair to suggest the MSM alone convinced Americans to
send some sons and daughter to fight. But the press went out of
its way to tell a pleasing, administration-friendly tale about
the pending war. In truth, Bush never could have ordered the
invasion of Iraq -- never could have sold the idea at home -- if
it weren't for the help he received from the MSM, and
particularly the stamp of approval he received from so-called
liberal media institutions such as the Washington Post, which in
February of 2003 alone, editorialized in favor of war nine
times. (Between September 2002 and February 2003, the paper
editorialized twenty-six times in favor of the war.) The Post
had plenty of company from the liberal East Coast media cabal,
with high-profile columnists and editors -- the newfound liberal
hawks -- at the New Yorker, Newsweek, Time, the New York Times,
the New Republic and elsewhere all signing on for a war of
preemption. By the time the invasion began, the de facto
position among the Beltway chattering class was clearly one that
backed Bush and favored war. Years later the New York Times
Magazine wrote that most "journalists in Washington found it
almost inconceivable, even during the period before a fiercely
contested midterm election [in 2002], that the intelligence used
to justify the war might simply be invented." Hollywood peace
activists could conceive it, but serious Beltway journalists
could not? That's hard to believe. More likely journalists could
conceive it but, understanding the MSM unspoken guidelines --
both social and political -- were too timid to express it at the
time of war.
To oppose the invasion vocally was to be outside the media
mainstream and to invite scorn. Like some nervous Democratic
members of Congress right before the war, MSM journalists and
pundits seemed to scramble for political cover so as to not
subject themselves to conservative catcalls. One year later, a
pro-war writer for Slate conceded he was "embarrassed" by his
support for the ill-fated invasion but he insisted, "you've got
to take risks." But supporting the war posed no professional
risk. The only MSM risks taken at the time of the invasion were
by pundits who staked out an unambiguous position in opposing
the war. Bush's rationale for war -- Saddam Hussein, sitting on
a swelling stockpile of weapons of mass destruction, posing a
grave and imminent threat to America -- turned out to be untrue.
And for that, the press must shoulder some blame. Because the
MSM not only failed to ask pressing questions, or raise serious
doubts about the White House's controversial WMD assertion, but
in some high-profile instances, such as with Judith Miller's
reporting for the New York Times, the MSM were responsible for
spreading the White House deceptions about Saddam's alleged
stockpile; they were guilty of "incestuous amplification," as
former Florida senator Senator Bob Graham called it. Being meek
and timid and dictating administration spin amidst a wartime
culture is one thing. But to be actively engaged in the spin, to
give it a louder and more hysterical voice, is something else
all together. In fact, the compliant press repeated almost every
administration claim about the threat posed to America by
Saddam. The fact that virtually every one of those claims turned
out to be false only added to the media's malpractice.
And when not playing up the threat of WMDs in 2002 and 2003, the
press was busy playing down the significance of peace activists
and war doubters, as the MSM instead handed over the press
platform at times exclusively to pro-war drum beaters and
government talking heads. The White House could not have asked
for more. Of course, by March 2003, the White House had already
become accustomed to having a compliant press diligently detail
each and every one of the administration's War on Terror
warnings, warnings that played to Bush's political strength by
casting him as a wartime leader and warnings that almost always
fell into the less-than-meets-the-eye category. The often
overblown MSM reporting on terror threats, fed directly from the
White House, segued right into the overblown reporting on
Saddam's deadly arsenal, also fed directly from the White House.
The latter would not have been possible without the former. The
press's timid War on Terror coverage foreshadowed its timid WMD
coverage.
As Washington Post ombudsman Michael Getler later wrote, the
MSM's performance in 2002 and 2003 -- its inability and refusal
to demand sharp answers to difficult questions about prewar
intelligence -- likely represented their most crucial newsroom
failing in nearly half a century. "How did a country on the
leading edge of the information age get this so wrong and
express so little skepticism and challenge?" asked Getler. "How
did an entire system of government and a free press set out on a
search for something and fail to notice, or even warn us in a
timely or prominent way, that it wasn't or might not be there?"
The single-word answer is, timidity.
Looking back, bigfoot journalists conceded they failed to do
their jobs during the run-up to war. ABC's Ted Koppel admitted,
"If anything, what we've been criticized for, and probably more
justifiably, is that we were too timid before the war." Dan
Rather agreed: "We did not do our job of pressing and asking
enough questions often enough." They weren't the only ones
disappointed. A majority of Americans thought the news media
could have done a better job informing the public about Iraq and
the stakes involved in going to war, according to an August 2005
survey conducted by the McCormick Tribune Foundation in Chicago.
While some journalists admitted their mistakes, most refused to
admit it was political pressure from the right and a fear of
being labeled unpatriotic that fueled the timidity. Instead,
journalists offered up head-scratching explanations for their
timorous prewar performance. PBS's Jim Lehrer suggested
journalists just weren't smart enough to have foreseen all the
troubles that would plague Iraq following the invasion.
Appearing on MSNBC's "Hardball," Lehrer was asked by host
Matthews about the press's wartime performance. Matthews noted,
"During [the] course of the war, there was a lot of snap-to-it
coverage. We' re at war. We have to root for the country to some
extent. You' re not supposed to be too aggressively critical of
a country at combat, especially when it's your own." Matthews
asked Lehrer if he thought the press had failed to provide
"critical analysis" in the months before the war.
Lehrer: I do. The word "occupation," keep in mind, Chris, was
never mentioned in the run-up to the war. It was "liberation."
So as a consequence, those of us in journalism never even looked
at the issue of occupation.
Matthews: Because?
Lehrer: Because it just didn't occur to us. We weren't smart
enough to do it. I agree. I think it was a dereliction of our --
in retrospective.
It never occurred to journalists that the United States might
have to effectively occupy Iraq in the wake of the invasion?
That's just not believable. It's far more likely journalists
were too anxious to express their doubts during the drum-beating
of early 2003. Lehrer later returned to the topic, suggesting
even if journalists had been smart enough to figure out the
occupation angle, it still would have been hard to report it
out:
Lehrer: It would have been difficult to have had debates about
that going in, when the president and the government of the --
it's not talking about "occupation." They're talking about -- it
would have been -- it would have taken some -- you'd have had to
have gone against the grain.
"Could 'courage' be the word Lehrer sought?" asked the Daily
Howler. "Did he want to say: 'It would have taken some courage'
" for the nation's press to have gone against the grain.
Equally odd, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, looking
back on the press's failings with regards to Iraq, suggested,
"The media were victims of their own professionalism. Because
there was little criticism of the war from prominent Democrats
and foreign policy analysts, journalistic rules meant we
shouldn't create a debate on our own."
Little criticism of the war from prominent Democrats? In a
sense, Ignatius was right and for Post readers that statement
may have had a ring of truth to it simply because the Post
seemed to do such a masterful job of ignoring prewar criticism
from prominent Democrats, like party stalwart Senator Ted
Kennedy. In September 2002 he made a passionate, provocative,
and newsworthy speech raising all sorts of doubts about the war.
It garnered exactly one sentence -- thirty-six words total -- of
coverage from the Post, which in 2002 printed more than a
thousand articles and columns, totaling perhaps 1 million words
about Iraq, but only set aside thirty-six words for Kennedy's
antiwar cry. As for Ignatius's suggestions that journalists were
supposed to wait to be signaled by the political parties before
leaping into action -- that reporters and pundits couldn't raise
doubts about the war because Democrats, supposedly, were not --
that represented an entirely new standard for news gathering. Or
did Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein wait for Democrats to raise
doubts about Watergate before the duo started making calls?
When the Post was not downplaying criticism from Democrats, it
was downplaying the warnings from respected foreign policy
analysts, and even decorated generals. On October 10, 2002,
retired Marine General Anthony Zinni, the former head of Central
Command for U.S. forces in the Middle East, delivered a keynote
address at a Washington think tank where he outlined his grave
concerns about the Bush administration's war with Iraq. Among
the key points made by Zinni, who endorsed Bush during the 2000
campaign and whom Bush then handpicked to serve as the United
States' envoy to the Middle East, was that war with Iraq should
not be the United States's top priority. "I'm not convinced we
need to do this now," said Zinni. "I believe that [Saddam] can
be deterred and is containable at this moment." How did the Post
play the antiwar speech by one of the administration's own
senior officials? It set aside 336 words, which were tucked away
on page 16. (One year later Zinni spoke before the U.S. Naval
Institute and the Marine Corps Association, undressed the
administration for its bungled handling of the war, and famously
described its misguided preemptive war effort as "a brain fart
of an idea." The Washington Post declined to cover those
remarks.)
Zinni was hardly alone in getting snubbed. A survey conducted by
the liberal media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting focused on the first two weeks of February, 2003, when
the debate about the war should have been raging on the public
airwaves. The survey found that of 393 people interviewed
on-camera for network news reports about the war, just 6 percent
were people who expressed skepticism about the looming invasion.
Keep in mind, at that time a majority of Americans -- 61 percent
according to one national poll -- expressed some skepticism over
the war; specifically favoring diplomacy over invasion. But on
television, the narrative was quite different. Additionally,
according to Media Matters for America, 23 percent of U.S.
senators voted to oppose the war in the fall of 2002, but only
11 percent of the senators invited to appear on the Sunday
morning talk shows prior to the invasion were antiwar.
Then again it should not have been surprising that most guests
invited by MSM producers to discuss the war on television were
in favor of it, since so many of the experts were on the
government payroll themselves. According to figures from media
analyst Andrew Tyndall, of the 414 Iraq stories broadcast on
NBC, ABC, and CBS from September 2002 until February 2003,
almost all the stories could be traced back to sources from the
White House, the Pentagon, or the State Department. Only 34
stories, or just 8 percent, were of independent origin.
Independence did not seem to be a trait held in particularly
high regard by the MSM at the time. Prior to the invasion of
Iraq, CNN's then-news chief Eason Jordan took the extraordinary
step of making sure he received a personal okay from Pentagon
officials regarding the retired military officers CNN planned to
use as on-air commentators for its war coverage. As Jordan
explained it, "I went to the Pentagon myself several times
before the war started and met with important people there and
said, for instance, at CNN, 'Here are the generals we're
thinking of retaining to advise us on the air and off about the
war.' And we got a big thumbs-up on all of them. That was
important."
MSNBC was so nervous about employing an on-air liberal host
opposing Bush's ordered invasion that it fired Phil Donahue
preemptively in 2003, after an internal memo pointed out the
legendary talk show host presented "a difficult public face for
NBC in a time of war." MSNBC executives would not confirm -- nor
deny -- the existence of the report, which stressed the
corporate discomfort Donahue's show might present if it opposed
the war while "at the same time our competitors are waving the
flag at every opportunity." By canning Donahue, MSNBC made sure
that cable viewers had no place to turn for a nightly opinion
program whose host forcefully questioned the invasion. The irony
was that at the time of Donahue's firing one month before bombs
started falling on Baghdad, MSNBC officials cited the host's
weak ratings as the reason for the change. In truth, Donahue was
beating out Chris Matthews as MSNBC's highest-rated host.
Newspapers played it safe, too. In 2003 the Columbia Journalism
Review called around to letters-page editors to gauge reader
response to the looming war in Iraq and was told that at The
Tennessean in Nashville letters were running 70 percent against
the war, but that the newspaper was trying to run as many
pro-war letters as possible in order to avoid accusations of
bias.
Indeed, between the time Bush first included Iraq as part of the
"axis of evil" in January 2002, and the time the invasion
commenced in March 2003, the MSM didn't seem to know how to
cover those who opposed the war. The press just wanted the
protesters to go away. Maybe because, as influential broadcast
news consulting firm Frank N. Magid Associates informed its
clients, covering antiwar protesters turned off news consumers,
according to its survey. On October 26, 2004, antiwar protesters
staged a massive rally in Washington, D.C., drawing more than
100,000 people from across the country. The next day in a small
piece on page 8 that was accompanied by a photo larger than the
article itself, the New York Times reported falsely that "fewer
people attended than organizers had said they hoped for." Two
days later, scrambling to fix the article's obvious error, yet
at the same time refusing to run an actual correction, the Times
published a second, sort of do-over article about the rally. As
historian Todd Gitlin noted, "the Times ran a rare nonapology
apology story under the peculiarly passive headline, "Rally in
Washington Is Said to Invigorate the Antiwar Movement," stating
that the demonstration had drawn "100,000 by police estimates
and 200,000 by organizers" this time declaring that the numbers
"startled even organizers."
Meanwhile, editors at the Washington Post seemed similarly
unsure how to handle the October 2004 outpouring of antiwar
sentiment in its backyard, as the newspaper dramatically
downplayed the story. The Post's ombudsman Michael Getler was
not impressed. "Last Saturday, some 100,000 people, and possibly
more, gathered in downtown Washington to protest against
possible U.S. military action against Iraq," he wrote. "The Post
did not put the story on the front page Sunday. It put it
halfway down the front page of the Metro section, with a couple
of ho-hum photographs that captured the protest's fringe
elements." Months later Getler detailed the Post's laundry list
of misses when it came to covering the antiwar movement or even
noteworthy displays of war doubt. The list is worth reading in
full, while keeping in mind the extraordinary resources the Post
devoted to covering the war story, albeit only certain parts of
the war story:
"The [missed opportunities] started last August with the failure
to record promptly the doubts of then-House Majority Leader
Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.) and of Brent Scowcroft, the first
President Bush's national security adviser. The first public
hearings on the implications of war, held by the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, got just a few paragraphs at the end of
stories. In September, there was no spot coverage of the
testimony of three retired four-star generals before the Senate
Armed Services Committee warning against an attack without
exhausting diplomatic options and gaining United Nations
backing. Soon after, a widely reported speech by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy (D-Mass.) got one line in The Post, and large antiwar
rallies in London and Rome went unreported the next day. In
October, when more than 100,000 people gathered in Washington to
protest war, the paper put the story in the Metro section. Then
came complaints that a major speech by Sen. Robert C. Byrd
(D-W.Va.), one of the few senators who has taken a strong
antiwar position, was missed and that the story about the most
recent bin Laden audiotape failed to point out bin Laden's
description of Iraqi leaders as "infidels." An overflow town
meeting on war policy in Alexandria was missed. A rare story
last month estimating the cost of the war, which was front-page
news elsewhere, ran on Page A19. The congressional testimony the
following day of Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz, who
discounted those cost estimates and who described as "wildly off
the mark" previous testimony by the Army chief of staff that
hundreds of thousands of troops might be needed for occupation
duty, was not reported."
The MSM's awkward look-the-other-way approach to peace activists
extended for years. In August 2005 Cindy Sheehan, a mother from
Vacaville, California, whose son Casey was killed while serving
in Iraq, set up a bring-the-troops-home vigil in Crawford,
Texas, as Bush relaxed during his five-week vacation. On August
8, and one week into her campaign, the New York Times profiled
Sheehan, reporting that much to the White House's chagrin, she
and her antiwar protest had been "transformed into a news media
phenomenon."
But had she really? The story certainly seemed compelling; an
angry mom camped out on the side of the road in the 100 degree
Texas heat waiting out a reluctant president who refused to meet
with her but whose caravan of Secret Service SUVs actually sped
past her in a cloud of dust on the way to a GOP fundraiser. Yes,
reporters took an early interest. But as had become customary
since 2003 when dealing with any antiwar protest story, the
press proceeded with extreme caution.
Between August 5 and August 8, the time frame during which the
Times called Sheehan a "phenomenon," here's how many times
"Cindy Sheehan" was mentioned on CNN: eight. Between August 5
and August 8, here's how many times "Britney Spears" was
mentioned on CNN: eighteen.
During the second and third weeks of August the MSM did increase
its coverage of Sheehan's protest, as her antiwar camp quickly
swelled in size to include hundreds of fellow demonstrators.
(USA Today correctly described it as a "headline-grabbing
national movement.") But there were still some notable MSM
holdouts. For three weeks, as the protest story continued to
mushroom, ABC's "Nightline" refused to touch it. ("Nightline"
finally addressed the Sheehan story on August 19, giving it just
seven minutes of air time.) The omission was telling because,
despite the uptick in print coverage, the Sheehan story still
had not crossed over into phenomenon territory for most
television producers, and certainly not at network news outlets.
For instance, between August 8 and August 18, ABC News aired
more than fifty hours of morning and evening national news
programming, but mentioned "Cindy Sheehan" just twenty-six
times.
Compare that to the 2005 springtime news craze when Terri
Schiavo's parents, who like Sheehan, staged a very public, and
political, vigil for their child. The Schiavo story, cherished
by conservatives, dominated the networks night after night.
During the peak ten-day period of that saga, from March 20 to
March 30, here's how many times ABC News mentioned "Terri
Schiavo": 189. During that same stretch "Nightline" devoted four
entire programs to the story. The message was clear: Schiavo, a
right-to-life martyr (for some) was very big news, but Sheehan,
an antiwar martyr (for some), was not.
As Sheehan's star rose through August, so did the right-wing
attacks. As nervous Bush supporters watched the president's
approval rating slide, they unleashed their wrath on Sheehan,
labeling the mourning mom a "crazy," "anti-Semite," "left-wing
moonbat," "crackpot" whose behavior bordered on "treasonous" and
who was nothing more than a "hysterical noncombatant." They also
charged that Sheehan was a creation of the radical left, that
she was being exploited, and she did not represent mainstream
Americans. That kind of organized attack was to be expected from
the conservative operatives. What was not expected was how
easily some in the MSM absorbed those talking points for
themselves. On MSNBC, Norah O'Donnell referred to the "left-wing
supporters" behind Sheehan. Later she asked a guest if Sheehan
had become "a tool of the left," while pressing another on
whether it was wise for Sheehan to be associated with "antiwar
extremists" camped out in Crawford. (At no point during the 2005
Schiavo story did an MSNBC anchor ever suggest the pro-life
parents had become "tools of the right.")
The Washington Post's Dana Milbank wondered out loud if Sheehan
would be remembered as a modern-day Lyndon LaRouche, the fringe
political figure who's been accused of being a cult leader and
fascist, and who served a prison sentence for mail fraud and tax
code violations. Later that month, Milbank gave prominent
display in the Post to a right-wing activist who accused Sheehan
of being a communist. Meanwhile, Milbank's Post colleague Mike
Allen, appearing on CBS's Face the Nation on August 21,
belittled the Crawford protesters by highlighting what he
considered to be the camp's fringe elements: "Right now it's
PETA, hippies, Naderites." Allen conveniently left out the fact
that also in attendance at the Sheehan camp were military
parents whose children had also been killed while serving in
Iraq.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution printed an opinion column in
which a critic of Sheehan asserted "Cindy Sheehan evidently
thinks little of her deceased son." Asked if that was
appropriate, even in an opinion column, to suggest a mother
"thinks little" of her dead son, the Journal- Constitution's
op-ed page editor David Beasley insisted the attack on Sheehan
was fair game. Yet it's hard to imagine that if a prominent
Georgia politician's son was killed in the line of duty the
Journal-Constitution op-ed page would allow a columnist to
assert that the politician thought little of his or her dead
son.
At the same time several corporate-owned television stations
refused to broadcast antiwar ads that Sheehan appeared in. In
one ad Sheehan pleaded with Bush for a meeting and accused him
of lying to the American people about Iraq's development of
weapons of mass destruction and its connection to al-Qaida. An
ABC affiliate in Utah owned by Clear Channel Communications
informed backers their ad was an "inappropriate commercial
advertisement for Salt Lake City." A CBS affiliate in Boise,
Idaho, also refused to air the ad, insisting its claim that Bush
lied about Iraq's WMDs was not provable. The station's action
was highly unusual. As the Associated Press noted in a 2004
article about political advertising, "Stations rarely reject
commercials" over a concern about accuracy.
The following month, on September 24, Sheehan helped lead a
massive antiwar rally in Washington, D.C., which drew between
100,000 and 200,000 participants, making it the largest United
States demonstration since the war began. Nonetheless, the event
was effectively boycotted by television news outlets. Instead,
CNN, Fox, and MSNBC were obsessed with providing wildly
overexcited coverage of Hurricane Rita, which delivered
less-than-expected damage as it came ashore in the marshlands
along the Texas and Louisiana borders. Unlike Hurricane Katrina,
the monster storm that decapitated New Orleans just weeks
before, television news outlets struggled to find compelling
images of real Rita-related devastation to justify their
breathless, around-the-clock coverage, while at the same time
they all but refused to even acknowledge the historic antiwar
rally.
Question: If between 100,000 and 200,000 pro-war demonstrators
had assembled in the nation's capital on that same September
2005 weekend and cheered Bush outside the White House, would the
MSM have given them just cursory coverage, Rita or no Rita?
The night of the antiwar protest, NBC Nightly News at least
managed to mention the rally on the air. Anchor Brian Williams,
though, was careful to give one sentence to the antiwar
protesters and one sentence to a small group of pro-war
demonstrators who also gathered in Washington, D.C., that day.
Antiwar forces absolutely dwarfed their pro-war counterparts but
NBC news executives thought both groups deserved the same amount
of coverage, with the subtext being dueling war demonstrators
facing off against each other. That was a common MSM theme. CNN
reported it "was a weekend of protests and counter-protests in
Washington."
The MSM's ingrained timidity regarding war protesters, even in
2005, was telling because on the eve of the Sheehan-led rally, a
CNN/USA Today poll revealed 67 percent of Americans disapproved
of Bush's handling of the war in Iraq and 59 percent said
sending troops to invade Iraq was a mistake. Both numbers
represented public opinion high-water marks since the war began.
Yet the press, still spooked about charges it was not being
sufficiently pro-administration during a time of war, treated
antiwar demonstrators with an overabundance of caution.
On Monday, September 26, when Sheehan along with 370 war
protesters were arrested outside the White House, NBC's Nightly
News ignored the arrests. Both the CBS and ABC nightly newscasts
gave the arrests one sentence, downplaying the numbers involved.
CBS reported Sheehan was arrested along with "dozens" of others.
(As in, thirty dozen?) The next morning CNN, ignoring the fact
that nearly four hundred people chose to be arrested in order to
protest the war, reported "Sheehan and several others were
arrested." [Emphasis added.]
The MSM's signature 2002-2003 timidity during the run-up to war,
though, was most clearly visible in their reporting on weapons
of mass destruction and the overblown prewar estimates about
Iraq's firepower. The topic was absolutely essential. If the
White House could prove, or at least convince most Americans,
that Saddam posed an imminent danger, then the war of choice
with Iraq would be easier to sell. Easier for Bush to announce,
one month before the invasion, "My job is to protect the
American people from further harm. I believe that Saddam Hussein
is a threat to the American people." Any lingering,
why-a-war-now doubts would hinder that sales pitch. In the fall
of 2002 the White House needed to paint a picture of Saddam's
Iraq as a country flooded with illegal chemical and biological
warfare agents. The MSM was more than willing to help with the
task.
A telling and comprehensive media study of the WMD coverage
conducted by Center for International and Security Studies at
Maryland (CISSM) and the University of Maryland and released in
March 2004 concluded too many press stories simply repeated the
"official line" on WMD regarding the Iraq war, and that most
journalist accepted the Bush administration's linking of the War
on Terror with WMDs, while at the same time failing to note that
there was no precedent of terror organizations demonstrating the
capacity to use WMDs. Simply put, "The American media did not
play the role of checking and balancing the exercise of power
that the standard theory of democracy requires," according to
CISSM, which monitored WMD coverage between October 2002 and May
2003 from seven U.S. news outlets: Christian Science Monitor,
Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Washington Post, Newsweek, US
News & World Report, as well as NPR's "Morning Edition" and "All
Things Considered."
In retrospect, NBC's Brian Williams argued the MSM had no choice
but to simply repeat what administration officials were saying
about Saddam's alleged WMD arsenal. "We had no independent
testing authority," Williams told CNN. "We had to go with [what]
the government experts and witnesses [were saying], including
our own secretary of state before the United Nations."
Williams's predecessor Tom Brokaw agreed, insisting, "A lot of
what happened during the lead-up to [war] was unknowable." In
truth, there was a long list of distinguished military and
political experts who were ready and willing -- before the war
began -- to illuminate NBC's viewers about the gaping holes in
Bush's justification for war and what the colossal hurdles would
be post-invasion. NBC anchors, though, were not overly
interested in hearing from them and yet years later insisted
there was no way to have known the war had been poorly thought
out.
As the MSM watched Fox News post big rating numbers with its
openly conservative broadcasts while at the same time
journalists were being dogged by accusations of being too
liberal, out of touch, and unpatriotic in a time of national
crisis, pressure mounted to prove they could play nice with a
Republican administration and forcefully back a war. That seemed
to be particularly true at the New York Times, which knee-jerk
conservatives had singled out as being too pro-peace in its
reporting. Executive editor Howell Raines wanted to show his
right-wing critics wrong. "According to half a dozen sources
within the Times, Raines wanted to prove once and for all that
he wasn't editing the paper in a way that betrayed his liberal
beliefs," wrote Seth Mnookin in his 2004 Times expose, "Hard
News." Mnookin quoted Doug Frantz, the former investigative
editor of the Times, who recalled how "Howell Raines was eager
to have articles that supported the war-mongering out of
Washington. He discouraged pieces that were at odds with the
administration's position on Iraq's supposed weapons of mass
destruction and alleged links of al-Qaida." The New York
Observer later reported, "One senior Washington bureau staffer
said that as the Bush administration edged closer to invasion,
the editorial climate inside The Times shifted from questioning
the rationale for military action to putting the paper on a
proper war footing. 'Everyone could see the war coming. The
Times wanted to be out front on the biggest story,' the staffer
said. 'It became the plan of attack.'"
For the administration, one cornerstone of its plan of attack
was built around Iraqi defectors who told reporters wild tales
about Saddam's WMDs. Shepherded to the press by Ahmad Chalabi,
the unreliable, glad-handing Iraqi defector who, much to the
White House's delight, conned reporters with tales of Saddam's
fearsome arsenal, the defectors were greeted as truth tellers.
And perhaps nowhere were their tales told more excitedly than on
the front pages of the New York Times, and most often told by
the sympathetic Judith Miller who stood out as the paper's go-to
person for anonymous heavy security scoops and who had risen to
the top of the Times's newsroom star system. Miller may have won
the admiration of the Times leadership, but years prior to the
war in Iraq at least one reporter with the paper voiced his
distaste for Miller's unique style of pro-government reporting.
According to the Washington Post, Craig Pyes, a former contract
writer for the Times who teamed up with Miller for a series on
al-Qaida, complained about her in a December 2000 memo to Times
editors and asked that his byline not appear on one piece:
"I'm not willing to work further on this project with Judy
Miller. I do not trust her work, her judgment, or her conduct.
She is an advocate, and her actions threaten the integrity of
the enterprise, and of everyone who works with her. ... She has
turned in a draft of a story of a collective enterprise that is
little more than dictation from government sources over several
days, filled with unproven assertions and factual inaccuracies."
One of the Times's first high-profile, post-9/11 defector
stories came on December 20, 2001, when neoconservatives inside
the White House were first pressing their case for an invasion
of Iraq. The article was headlined, "An Iraqi Defector Tells of
Work on at Least 20 Hidden Weapon Sites." Written by Miller, the
story wove the startling tale of Adnan Ihsan Saeed al-Haideri, a
forty-three-year-old Iraqi who had fled his homeland in
Kurdistan and who, according to Miller, "said he personally
worked on renovations of secret facilities for biological,
chemical, and nuclear weapons in underground wells, private
villas, and under the Saddam Hussein Hospital in Baghdad as
recently as a year ago." If verified, she noted, "his
allegations would provide ammunition to officials within the
Bush administration who have been arguing that Mr. Hussein
should be driven from power partly because of his unwillingness
to stop making weapons of mass destruction, despite his pledges
to do so."
As James Bamford later detailed in Rolling Stone, al-Haideri was
lying about his claims about Saddam. CIA officials, who had
strapped al-Haideri up to polygraph tests for hours at a time,
knew he was lying long before Miller ever wrote her
ominous-sounding article. (The CIA did not peddle the fake
al-Haideri story to Miller, Chalabi did.) Regardless of its
authenticity, al-Haideri's fanciful tale, trumpeted by the
Times, proved to be invaluable to the White House. Wrote
Bamford:
"For months, hawks inside and outside the administration had
been pressing for a preemptive attack on Iraq. Now, thanks to
Miller's story, they could point to 'proof' of Saddam's 'nuclear
threat.' The story was soon being trumpeted by the White House
and repeated by newspapers and television networks around the
world. It was the first in a long line of hyped and fraudulent
stories that would eventually propel the U.S. into a war with
Iraq -- the first war based almost entirely on a covert
propaganda campaign targeting the media."
The administration's war architects had set up a simple, yet
foolproof way to disseminate pro-war propaganda through the
Times; foolproof as long as Times reporters and editors played
along. Here's how one former CIA analyst described the scheme to
James Moore, writing in Salon:
"The White House had a perfect deal with Miller. Chalabi is
providing the Bush people with the [Saddam] information they
need to support their political objectives with Iraq, and he is
supplying the same material to Judy Miller. Chalabi tips her on
something and then she goes to the White House, which has
already heard the same thing from Chalabi, and she gets it
corroborated by some insider she always describes as a 'senior
administration official.'"
Round and round it went. Of course there were scores of senior
intelligence officials within the administration, and
specifically within the CIA, who refuted Chalabi's intelligence,
but they never received the same type of airing in Miller's
articles. In retrospect, Miller's Iraq reporting was in
desperate need of balance, not to mention professional
skepticism. Two Page One stories in particular stand out not
only for being extraordinarily helpful to the White House's war
efforts -- in fact, the articles appear to have been spoon-fed
by government officials -- but also for being untrue.
The first arrived September 8, 2002, and was co-written with
Michael Gordon. The duo were investigating the state of Iraq's
arsenal and discovered that Saddam had made a bold initiative in
hopes of reconstituting his nuclear weapons program. Two weeks
earlier Vice President Dick Cheney announced in an August 26
speech, that "Many of us are convinced that Saddam Hussein will
acquire nuclear weapons fairly soon ... and subject the United
States and any other nation to nuclear blackmail." Few
independent arms experts signed off on Cheney's Armageddon
warning. But that's where the Times September 8 expose came in.
Keep in mind that the Times article surfaced after Bush's chief
of staff and former General Motors executive Andy Card had
famously explained that the administration held off from trying
to publicly make the case for war during the summer months of
2002 because, "From a marketing point of view, you don't
introduce new products in August."
So think of the Times September 8 article as the launch
commercial in the war marketing effort. And what more could the
White House have asked for than the so-called liberal New York
Times trumpeting on its front page a Holy Shit-type exclusive
that forcefully reported, "More than a decade after Saddam
Hussein agreed to give up weapons of mass destruction, Iraq has
stepped up its quest for nuclear weapons and has embarked on a
worldwide hunt for materials to make an atomic bomb, Bush
administration officials said today." Specifically, the article
relayed administration claims that Saddam had been trying to
import thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes used for rotors
in centrifuges to enrich uranium, a key step in producing an
atomic bomb. None of the tubes ever reached Iraq. The article
came complete with colorful quotes from administration officials
who feared a "mushroom cloud" if Saddam's mad arms march was not
stopped.
At times it was difficult for readers to discern where White
House spin ended and the Times reporting began. Adopting the
administration rhetoric with astonishing ease, Miller and Gordon
wrote, "Mr. Hussein's dogged insistence on pursuing his nuclear
ambitions, along with what defectors described in interviews as
Iraq's push to improve and expand Baghdad's chemical and
biological arsenals, have brought Iraq and the United States to
the brink of war." [Emphasis added.] Of course, arms inspectors
later determined that allegations about Saddam's "nuclear
ambitions" were erroneous.
The tubes article, which was later discredited, appeared on a
Sunday. That morning administration officials, the same ones who
likely leaked the story in the first place, hyped the Times
exclusive on the morning talk shows. On CNN's "Late Edition,"
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice insisted the tubes
"are only really suited for nuclear weapons programs, centrifuge
programs." She added: "We don't want the smoking gun to be a
mushroom cloud," using the exact same language as one of the
off-the-record administration sources featured in the Times
exclusive. The synergy between the White House and the Times was
stunning, even to other members of the MSM. "You leak a story to
the New York Times and the New York Times prints it, and then
you go on the Sunday shows quoting the New York Times and
corroborating your own information," noted CBS reporter Bob
Simon. "You've got to hand it to them. That takes, as we say
here in New York, chutzpah."
As Michael Massing wrote in the New York Review of Books, "The
September 8 story on the aluminum tubes was especially
significant. Not only did it put the Times' imprimatur on one of
the administration's chief claims, but it also established a
position at the paper that apparently discouraged further
investigation into this and related topics." In other words,
Miller, a star reporter, had publicly and forcefully staked out
her, and the paper's, position regarding Saddam's WMD.
Unfortunately for both, it was the wrong position.
The Times tubes article immediately raised doubts among
scientists and other independent experts who did not believe the
tubes in question would have been used for making nuclear
weapons. At least one, David Albright, director of the Institute
for Science and International Security, contacted Miller after
the article ran and spoke with her at length, relaying the
skepticism he and others had. A follow-up to the tubes story was
imminent and the Times had two choices. It could step back and
emphasize the doubts being raised regarding the story being told
by the White House, thereby deflating some of the original
article's hyperbole, or the paper could stick close to the
president and forge ahead with the Saddam-might-have-nukes
narrative. Miller opted for the latter. Said Albright after
reading the Times follow-up tubes article, "I thought for sure
she' d quote me or some people in the government who didn't
agree. It just wasn't there."
Fast forward to Iraq, April 2003, and Miller was embedded with
U.S. forces, hunting for WMDs, sporting a military uniform, and
boasting top-secret security clearance no other reporter -- let
alone Times editor -- could match. (Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld reportedly signed off on Miller's unique arrangement.)
It seemed clear Miller, rewarded for her bellicose prewar WMD
reporting, had landed a unique role in the search for WMDs,
although one that would be hard to describe as a journalist.
Instead, she seemed to be more of a quasi government agent who
happened to file dispatches on deadline. As the Washington
Post's Howard Kurtz reported, "More than a half-dozen military
officers said that Miller acted as a middleman between the Army
unit with which she was embedded and Iraqi National Congress
leader Ahmed Chalabi, on one occasion accompanying Army officers
to Chalabi's headquarters, where they took custody of Saddam
Hussein's son-in-law. She also sat in on the initial debriefing
of the son-in-law, these sources say. Since interrogating Iraqis
was not the mission of the unit, these officials said, it became
a "Judith Miller team," in the words of one officer close to the
situation. Kurtz also quoted an anonymous senior staff officer
complaining, "It's impossible to exaggerate the impact she had
on the mission of this unit, and not for the better."
Miller was embedded with the high-profile WMD military search
team, Mobile Exploitation Team (MET) Alpha, which was combing
Iraq looking for the same weapons Miller had spent so much of
2002 hyping. Being embedded with MET Alpha -- the best seat in
the house -- and being the first reporter to break the worldwide
news when MET Alpha found the WMDs was going to be Miller's
victory lap, and likely lock up her second Pulitzer Prize in
three years. And on April 21, it all seemed to come together
when Miller filed her biggest post-invasion scoop: "Illicit Arms
Kept Till Eve of War, an Iraqi Scientist Is Said to Assert." In
it, she reported MET Alpha had hit the trifecta in the sands of
Iraq when it located a scientist who said he worked in Iraq's
chemical weapons program for more than a decade and that: (a)
He'd "led Americans to a supply of material that proved to be
the building blocks of illegal weapons." (b) He insisted Saddam
had destroyed chemical weapons and biological warfare equipment
just days before the war began. (c) And Saddam had also ferried
lots of WMDs into Syria for safekeeping, which explained why
U.S. forces couldn't find them. In case readers missed the
implications, Miller reported that the scientist's allegation
"supports the Bush administration's charges that Iraq continued
to develop those weapons and lied to the United Nations about
it." Indeed, the scientist represented the answer to anxious
White House prayers.
But when readers delved deeper into the story, Miller's account
became more peculiar as she revealed that she had no independent
confirmation on any of the information; it was all relayed to
her by MET Alpha commanders. That's because Miller was never
told the scientist's name, she could not confirm he was a
scientist, she was not allowed to interview him, and she was not
allowed to visit his home. She was, however, allowed to look at
him, from a distance, and watch as he "pointed to several spots
in the sand where he said chemical precursors and other weapons
material were buried." Additionally, Miller agreed not to write
about the scientist and his claims for three days while military
officials read over her story and okayed it for publication. In
other words, military officials provided Miller with a string of
exclusive and extraordinary WMD revelations via the scientist.
Miller then typed the information up and military officials
double-checked it to make sure she got everything right. The
next day, appearing on PBS, Miller hyped the scientist's story
even harder, suggesting he was better than a "smoking gun" of
Saddam's WMD arsenal. To Miller, the alleged scientist was "a
silver bullet in the form of a person." (Reporter James Moore
noted that during the same PBS appearance Miller referred to
scientists, plural, whom the MET Alpha team had found; her
article referred only to a single mysterious scientist.)
Like Bush's infamous March 6 press conference, Miller's MET
Alpha article should be studied and dissected in journalism
schools for years to come. The fact that it was printed as is,
with no independent verification of any kind, on the front page
of the New York Times was stunning. But in retrospect, the
"wacky-assed piece," as one anonymous Timesman famously dubbed
it, served a very useful purpose -- it illustrated just how
dramatically the wartime mind-set among top Times editors had
shifted, to the point where they thought that kind of trust-me
brand of journalism was acceptable. (It's ironic: During the
Clinton years, high-profile reporters at the Times cut
journalism corners writing dubious Whitewater stories that
embarrassed the White House. But during the Bush years, Times
reporters cut journalism corners writing dubious WMD stories
that aided the White House.)
Needless to say, the scientist's claims championed by Miller
were never verified, and the United States' handpicked weapons
inspector -- and war supporter -- David Kay, concluded the WMDs
were nowhere to be found. Or as Kay put it, "There were no
stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction at the time of the
war." In 2005 Miller did concede her WMD articles failed to hold
up, but Miller insisted everyone else got it wrong, too: "W.M.D.
-- I got it totally wrong. The analysts, the experts and the
journalists who covered them -- we were all wrong. If your
sources are wrong, you are wrong."
But other reporters found the right sources prior to the war.
Knight Ridder's Warren Strobel and Jonathan Landay wrote in
October 2002 about a "bitter feud over secret intelligence" that
was unfolding between the CIA and Bush administration appointees
at the Pentagon who were pushing for the war rationale. "The
dispute," they wrote, "pits hardliners long distrustful of the
U.S. intelligence community, against professional military and
intelligence officers who fear the hawks are shaping
intelligence analyses to support their case for invading Iraq."
Another Knight Ridder piece quoted an anonymous official who
said "analysts at the working level in the intelligence
community are feeling very strong pressure from the Pentagon to
cook the intelligence books." Miller never wrote those kinds of
stories during the run-up to war. Instead of sparking debate
over intelligence, she, along with the White House, seemed
intent on snubbing it out.
Walter Pincus, the veteran national security reporter for the
Washington Post, was another notable example. Prior to the war
Pincus wrote a string of insightful articles about the type of
intelligence the administration was leaning on to justify a
preemptive war. Those stories included "Bush Clings To Dubious
Allegations About Iraq," "U.S. Lacks Specifics on Banned Arms,"
"Alleged al-Qaida Ties Questioned; Experts Scrutinize Details of
Accusations Against Iraqi Government," and "Making the Case
Against Baghdad; Officials: Evidence Strong, Not Conclusive."
The only problem was, prior to the war Pincus's prophetic
dispatches were routinely buried by his editors inside the
Post's A section, on page 13, 16, 18, or 21. It wasn't until
three months after the invasion when the elusive weapons of mass
destruction could not be found that Post editors began to
regularly feature Pincus's Iraq exposes on the front page.
"[They] went through a whole phase in which they didn't put
things on the front page that would make a difference," Pincus
complained.
The same mind-set was on display at the New York Times;
breathless scoops about Saddam's mighty arsenal were paraded on
Page One, while insightful examinations about doubts surrounding
prewar intelligence got buried. For instance, the Times's James
Risen completed "C.I.A. Aides Feel Pressure in Preparing Iraqi
Reports" days before the invasion began. Yet editors held the
article for a week before finally publishing it on Page B10.
Given that reticence, it was not surprising that MSM outlets
were so slow in admitting their prewar shortcomings. As early as
July 2003, Slate media critic Jack Shafer, looking back on
Miller's overexcited reporting, labeled it "wretched." The Times
leadership, though, did nothing. Nine months later, in March
2004, the paper's public editor, badgered by readers asking that
the paper hold itself accountable for its fraudulent reporting,
asked executive editor Keller about the issue. In a dismissive
response, he insisted there was no need to recant Miller's
reporting, that she was a "fearless" journalist, that her
critics basically didn't know what they were talking about, and
that an internal review would simply "consume more of my
attention than I was willing to invest." (During the run-up to
war in 2002 and 2003 Keller worked as a Times columnist and
wrote for the Sunday Times Magazine, where he supported the war
and wrote glowingly of Paul Wolfowitz, then-deputy defense
secretary and chief architect of the Iraq invasion.)
On May 26, 2004, the Times, without mentioning Miller by name,
finally addressed the paper's faulty WMD reporting. In its "From
the Editors" note, Times leaders conceded the reporting was "not
as rigorous as it should have been." Keller, though, remained in
a defensive crouch. "I don't see this as an apology," he told
the Boston Globe the day the editors' note was published. "I see
this as an explanation. It's not a note that's going to satisfy
our most bloodthirsty critics." He stressed that while there may
be a "small lynch mob of people who want to see someone strung
up," it was time for the Times, "to move on" from the debate; to
get past the annoying "distraction" of the paper's faulty WMD
reporting. It was telling that the Times's "mini-culpa," as
Shafer dubbed it, only appeared after the Times public editor
tipped off the paper's leadership that he was going to
investigate, and write about, the Times's prewar reporting. (He
later called it "very bad journalism.")
Another year later, and now nearly thirty months after the
invasion, the Times was still wrestling with the ghost of
Miller's war reporting after she got dragged into court as part
of the ongoing criminal investigation into which Bush White
House insider leaked the identity of CIA operative Valerie
Plame, the wife of a prominent Bush administration war critic.
Miller stood her ground and served eighty-five days in jail
rather than cooperate with prosecutors, a move the Times cheered
from its editorial page. But when Miller emerged from prison
only to announce she couldn't remember who leaked her the
sensitive information (it was not Cheney's top aide, Scooter
Libby, she insisted), nor could she recall why she had scribbled
the name "Valerie Flame" in a notebook she brought back from a
July 2003 meeting with Libby at the time Plame's name was being
leaked by the White House, the notion that Miller had swapped
her allegiance from the Times to the White House became
impossible to ignore. Amid the unfolding scandal, which did deep
damage to the newspaper's reputation, Keller addressed the staff
in an October 21 memo and was forced, yet again, to circle back
to the paper's faulty prewar reporting. "I wish we had dealt
with the controversy over our coverage of WMD as soon as I
became executive editor [in July 2003]. At the time, we thought
we had compelling reasons for kicking the issue down the road,"
Keller explained. "The paper had just been through a major
trauma, the Jayson Blair episode, and needed to regain its
equilibrium. It felt somehow unsavory to begin a tenure by
attacking our predecessors." (Blair was a young reporter who had
duped Times editors into publishing scores of his fictitious
news reports.) "I was trying to get my arms around a huge new
job, appoint my team, get the paper fully back to normal, and I
feared the WMD issue could become a crippling distraction."
That's a plausible explanation. But there was likely another,
unspoken, element in play -- Keller in 2003 simply didn't feel
like he had to deal with the WMD controversy because the
criticism mostly came from the left (i.e., the "small lynch
mob"), and from the MSM perspective in 2003, antiwar critics did
not have to be engaged, which was part of the larger media
mind-set during the Bush years of ignoring their liberal
critics.
But try to imagine a parallel universe where the WMD facts had
been reversed. Imagine that Miller, playing up tips from
Democrats and progressives, had been aggressively skeptical in
her prewar reporting about administration claims about Saddam's
WMDs, and that time and again her editors gave Miller's
pro-peace-flavored dispatches pageone placement. But then months
after the invasion, U.S. troops uncovered WMD stockpiles bigger
and deadlier than even the administration officials had claimed.
At that point right-wing press critics like Rush Limbaugh,
Michelle Malkin, and the team at the Weekly Standard would have
declared war on the Times, accusing the paper of undermining the
president, putting the nation at risk, and being driven by a
blind liberal bias. The notion that, beset with those kinds of
outside political attacks, editor Keller would have kicked the
Miller controversy down the road for a year or more because it
would have been too messy to deal with is just not believable.
Instead, following an immediate internal review, Miller likely
would have been quietly relieved from the paper within six
months of the invasion. In reality though, Times leadership, for
nearly two years, did not treat criticism of Miller's reporting
seriously. In fact, if it hadn't been for the subpoena power of
Fitzgerald, whose investigation cast the spotlight on the
Times's regrettable prewar performance, it's doubtful the paper,
based on its halfhearted effort at self-examination in 2004,
would have ever come clean.
The Times WMD embarrassment was not an isolated incident. In
fact, it fit into a larger pattern that the paper's leaders
refused to address, let alone fix. Just as with its dishonest
Whitewater coverage in the 1990s and its misleading coverage of
Wen Ho Lee, the scientist inside the Los Alamos National
Laboratory who was wrongly charged with espionage, a charge the
Times hyped relentlessly, the paper continued to let itself be
used by partisan Republicans who were planting and pushing phony
stories for political advantage. During the Clinton years the
fantastic tales -- Whitewater and Wen Ho Lee -- were designed to
embarrass a Democratic president. During the Bush years the
fantastic tale about WMDs was designed to help start a war. In
each case the Times, anxious to shed its "liberal media" tag,
fell for the ploy, promoted the false stories, and did severe
damage to the newspaper's reputation in the process.
Both the press and the White House were guilty of hyping the
WMDs' existence, and both often avoided taking a serious look
back. Unless, of course, it was to look back and have a good
laugh together about the administration's fruitless hunt. The
backslapping occurred on March 24, 2004, at the annual black-tie
dinner of the Radio and Television Correspondents Association,
held at the Washington Hilton. The eagerly anticipated social
event attracted a media-saturated crowd of approximately 1,500
people who were treated to a tongue-in-cheek address from Bush.
Tradition held that sitting presidents took the opportunity at
the Correspondents dinner to poke fun at the press as well as
themselves. Bush did just that during his ten-minute,
professionally written monologue, delivering some topical
zingers: "'Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.' My Cabinet could
take some pointers from watching that show. In fact, I'm going
to have the Fab Five do a makeover on [Attorney General John]
Ashcroft."
Then Bush turned to the "White House Election-Year Album," as
photos flashed on the screen behind his podium. One showed Bush
gazing out an oval office window as he provided the narration:
"Those weapons of mass destruction must be somewhere!" The
audience laughed. Then came a picture of Bush on his hands and
knees peering under White House furniture. "Nope, no weapons
over there!" The MSM audience laughed harder. And then came a
snapshot of Bush searching behind the drapes. "Maybe under
here?" The audience roared in approval -- Bush couldn't find the
WMDs!
The next morning, newspaper reporters who laughed out loud
themselves at the Correspondents dinner dutifully typed up the
jokes. It wasn't until some Democratic members of Congress,
along with parents whose children had been killed in Iraq,
expressed their disgust that it dawned on some members of the
MSM that Bush's jokes might be considered offensive. Even after
objections were raised the MSM rallied around Bush arguing the
jokes were no big deal. In fact, it was telling how the MSM were
reading off the exact same talking points as the Bush supporters
in the right-wing press. Their mutual message was simple --
lighten up! On National Review Online, conservative talk show
host Michael Graham, who attended the Correspondents dinner,
mocked the critics: "Somehow, over the past 30 years, liberalism
has mutated into something akin to an anti-comedy vaccine. The
more you're Left, the less you laugh."
The supposedly liberal Los Angeles Times completely agreed. In
an unsigned editorial, the paper belittled Democrats and anyone
else who had the nerve to question Bush's sense of wartime
humor, or daring to question Beltway tradition: "The truly
serious thing about what's known as Washington's 'Silly Season'
is whether presidents rise to the challenge." On Fox News, there
was heated agreement between Sunday News anchor Chris Wallace
and the network's Washington bureau managing editor, Brit Hume,
that Bush's WMD jokes were perfectly acceptable.
Wallace: "I still think it's funny."
Hume: "I thought it was a good-natured performance."
But what about Fox liberal Juan Williams? He also had no
patience for the Bush critics upset about the jokes: "I think
people are petty in the situation."
Washington Post news reporter and Fox panelist Ceci Connelly
concurred: "The pictures were funny. I laughed at the photos."
To his credit, MSNBC's Chris Matthews was among the few Beltway
celebrity pundits who separated from the pack and expressed real
resentment over the poor taste displayed by Bush and his press
apologists: "I wonder if they're spending a day at Walter Reed
Hospital with all the guys who had limbs amputated and brain
injuries and things like that, how funny they think it is that
the reason they were given for fighting this war is now the butt
of humor by their commander in chief."
The MSM's meek performance prior to the war did not spring out
of a vacuum -- the WMD charade, the mad rush to quote government
sources, and the knee-jerk attempt to undermine and ignore
administration critics. It was all telegraphed in the wake of
9/11 and through the early stages of the press's deferential War
on Terror coverage, which worked full-time to portray Bush as a
savvy wartime president. Those efforts didn't come any more
devoted than Washington Post's 2002 eight-piece series, "10 Days
in September: Inside the War Cabinet," in which reporters Bob
Woodward and Dan Balz were given extraordinary access to the
White House and in exchange explained away lingering questions
about Bush's response to 9/11, like why he spent that day flying
around the country instead of returning to the capitol, and why
it was his flak Karen Hughes who first addressed the nation and
took questions that traumatic day, not Bush or Cheney. The duo
also covered up for the White House regarding its phony cover
story that a coded message had come in on 9/11 indicating Air
Force One was a terrorist target.
Conservative pundits cheered the series, suggesting it was a
Pulitzer Prize must-win. Raves from the right were
understandable. To say the series presented the administration,
and Bush in particular, in a favorable light would be an
understatement. Readers saw Bush utterly sure of himself,
operating on gut instincts, leading roundtable discussions,
formulating complex strategies, asking pointed questions,
building international coalitions, demanding results, poring
over speeches, and seeking last-minute phrase changes.
The portrait was so contrary to the public's previous perception
of the president that it was reminiscent of the classic
"Saturday Night Live" sketch that ran at the height of the
Iran-Contra scandal and featured an outwardly jolly and
oblivious Ronald Reagan, who in private Oval Office meetings
revealed himself as a mastermind of the complicated
arms-for-hostage operation, barking out orders to befuddled
cabinet members. In the same way, but without satire, the Post
series suggested that a president often depicted prior to 9/11
as a genial delegator of duties, who ducked the Vietnam War with
a stateside post in the Texas Air National Guard, was in fact a
natural, hands-on commander in chief of the War on Terror.
From the ubiquitous flag pin lapels for anchor men and women and
the stirring news team theme music to the permanent terror alert
logos sketched into the corner of television screens, the MSM
broadcast their allegiance. It was CBS anchor Dan Rather, on
September 17, 2002, declaring, "George Bush is the president, he
makes the decisions. Wherever he wants me to line up, just tell
me where. And he' ll make the call."
Twenty months after announcing he'd take orders from Bush,
Rather, as the war in Iraq unfolded, made another public
proclamation: "Look, I' m an American. And when my country is at
war, I want my country to win, whatever the definition of 'win'
may be. Now, I can't and don't argue that that is coverage
without a prejudice. About that I am prejudiced." NBC's Brian
Williams called it "the 9/11 syndrome," or "guilty of settling
in to too comfortable a journalistic pattern." Some outside the
MSM likely preferred the phrase "dictation." It was the kind of
pronounced and prolonged presidential press reverence likely not
seen in this country in half a century.
ABC News's White House correspondent Terry Moran claimed he was
offended when he overheard two print reporters talking inside
the briefing room in January 2002, as they awaited spokesman Ari
Fleischer's arrival to face mounting questions about the
administration's role in the burgeoning Enron business scandal.
"I heard people saying, 'All right, we're back, to hell with the
war [in Afghanistan],' as if chasing the shadows and ghosts of
potential appearances or possible conflicts of interest
[regarding Enron] was more important than the war the country
had been thrust into," Moran told American Journalism Review. "I
was shocked ... I'm not sure that lower Manhattan had actually
stopped smoldering." Four months after the attacks of 9/11,
Moran thought it was still inappropriate for reporters to pose
tough questions to the White House.
That was the prevailing MSM attitude as 2002 unfolded. Then
halfway through the year the administration doubled down and
secured another round of free passes when it signaled its
interest in invading Iraq. Between the War on Terror and the war
with Iraq, the Bush White House all but guaranteed itself a
timid press corps that emphasized its megaphone function. The
MSM coverage of the War on Terror and their reporting during the
run-up to the invasion of Iraq were inexorably linked. By the
time the invasion was launched in March of 2003, the press was
so comfortable having spent the previous year lying down for the
White House and its foreboding War on Terror, that it could not
muster enough energy to get up off the floor.
What was telling, and often ignored by the MSM, was how the
White House's choreographed terror alerts so often coincided
with crass political maneuvering; jockeying the MSM refused to
acknowledge. For instance, the first noticeable wave of terror
scares came in early 2002, in the weeks surrounding Bush's
hawkish "Axis of Evil" State of the Union Address, in which the
first seeds for an invasion of Iraq were publicly planted. In
his speech Bush warned about "thousands of dangerous killers"
who had spread throughout the world "like ticking time bombs set
to go off without warning." Later, White House communications
director Karen Hughes told reporters 100,000 men had been
trained in al-Qaida camps and were now scattered in sixty
countries.
The same week, FBI Director Robert Mueller warned Americans that
undetected al-Qaida sleeper cells might still be operating on
American soil. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld warned
Americans to prepare for other attacks that "could grow vastly
more deadly than those we suffered" September 11. And CIA
Director George Tenet sent a report to Congress indicating
agents found crude diagrams of nuclear weapons in a suspected
al-Qaida safe house in Afghanistan. Maybe the scariest scenario
of all was an alleged terrorist plot to fly a commercial
airliner into an American nuclear power plant.
The bad news came so fast and furious that it was hard to get a
handle on what was more upsetting; that the Bush administration,
which had previously maintained absolute secrecy about its
domestic anti-terror operations, was suddenly so talkative, or
that the media reported the thinly documented terror threats so
breathlessly and uncritically. This was the same administration,
after all, that refused to identify hundreds of mostly Middle
Eastern immigrants jailed in the United States in the wake of
September 11, that ordered many routine immigration hearings
closed to the public and mandated records of the proceedings not
be released to anyone. It also refused to release the identities
of al-Qaida fighters held at Guantᮡmo Bay, Cuba, and proposed
that accused terrorists be tried in secret military tribunals.
Yet when it came to suggestive and potentially deadly terrorist
scenarios, the White House opened the spigots for the press.
Of course, for careful news consumers who read deep into news
stories and searched out lots of different perspectives, they
soon realized the dire warnings coming from the White House were
not all that they appeared to be. Those 100,000 al-Qaida
-trained terrorists roaming the world? One week after the
allegation was made by the White House, Newsweek reported that
intelligence officials thought the number was inflated ... by
90,000.
The White House alone controlled virtually all the information
about the war on terrorism and it alone decided how that
information was disseminated. The press, anxious for access,
eagerly played along. That snug relationship was on stark
display on January 17, 2002, just weeks before Bush's State of
the Union Address. That's when Attorney General John Ashcroft
and FBI Director Mueller held a hurried press conference,
carried live on CNN, to unveil five videotapes found in the
rubble of a home near Kabul, Afghanistan, owned by Muhammad
Atef, a top aide of bin Laden's. Five men seen on the tapes were
identified as deadly terrorists, who, in the words of Ashcroft,
"may be trained and prepared to commit future suicide terrorist
attacks."
What made the discovery so unsettling, Ashcroft said, was the
fact that "the videotapes depict young men delivering what
appear to be martyrdom messages from suicide terrorists." The
nation's top crime fighter added that the seriousness of the
threat demanded the information be released immediately. The
names and pictures of the five al-Qaida members were distributed
to the press as a sort of worldwide version of the TV show
"America's Most Wanted," as Ashcroft asked for tips from
concerned world citizens in helping track the men down.
The press eagerly complied. The New York Times played the story
on page 1, where it also ran color head shots of the men. The
Washington Post also printed the story on its front page,
reporting excitedly that "five al-Qaida members ... may be on
the loose and planning suicide attacks against Western targets."
(Then again, they "may" not.) Meanwhile, CNN reported
extensively about the "extraordinary videotape." In fact, there
wasn't a television news operation in the country that didn't
display the government's most-wanted poster of the five al-Qaida
members. It was the best War on Terror prop producers had had in
weeks.
Naturally it's newsworthy when government officials lay out
those sorts of terror warnings, and nobody's suggesting they
should be ignored. But it's also the press's job to seek context
and perspective, and pry additional information from officials
to determine just how dire the threats might be. Because there
was something odd about Ashcroft's breathless news bulletin. For
instance, pressed further at the press conference, Ashcroft
seemed to back away from his original, already tentative
description of the taped utterances, suggesting, "We believe
that these could be, and likely appear to be, sort of, martyrdom
messages from suicide terrorists." Sort of? Either the
statements were martyrdom messages or they were not. Even the
overworked Arabic translators inside the government should have
been able to make that simple distinction.
Meanwhile, what exactly did the men say on the tapes?
Journalists were never told, because before being shown snippets
of the tapes, the government stripped all the sound off and
refused to provide a printed transcript. Reporters instead were
reduced to describing the men's silent gesticulations in an
effort to wring out any meaning. There was even less to the
story than that. Ashcroft and Mueller did not know, or would not
say, if the men planned any imminent attacks, when the tapes
were made, when the tapes were found, who found the tapes, what
the nationalities of the five men were, if they were in America,
or even if they were dead or alive.
No matter. The tapes were universally treated as very big news.
Two weeks later, though, in a brief, 235-word aside, the
Washington Post revealed intelligence officials had determined
the martyrdom tapes had actually been made more than two years
earlier, raising doubts about the fear of "imminent" suicide
attacks. Would the Post or the New York Times have originally
played that story on Page One if Ashcroft had forthrightly
announced the so-called suicide tapes had been made in 1999?
Probably not. But that's how the War on Terror press game was
played; Ashcroft garnered huge headlines with frightening
allegations about terrorist threats, and then when the stories
petered out the MSM obediently looked away.
On February 20, 2003, when Ashcroft personally announced the
terrorist indictment of Sami Al-Arian, a former University of
South Florida professor, the news conference was carried live on
CNN (Ashcroft tagged Al-Arian the North American leader of the
Palestinian Islamic Jihad) and the story generated a wave of
excited media attention. Al-Arian's case never had anything to
do with bin Laden or Saddam, but Bush's Justice Department,
which indicted Al-Arian just one month before the invasion of
Iraq, made sure to leave the impression that the crucial terror
case would keep America safe. That night, ABC's World News
Tonight led its newscast with the Al-Arian indictment. Both NBC
and CBS also gave the story prominent play that evening. But
fast forward to December 2005 when, in an embarrassing blow to
prosecutors, Al-Arian was acquitted by a conservative Tampa,
Florida, jury. Big news, right? Nope. That night, neither ABC,
CBS, nor NBC led with the terror case on their evening
newscasts. None of them slotted it second or third either. In
fact, none of the networks reported the acquittal at all. The
odds that the networks would have ignored the conclusion of the
Al-Arian trial if the jury had returned a guilty verdict in a
case that the government had called a centerpiece to its War on
Terror? Zero.
By early 2003, with the war in Iraq only weeks away, the MSM,
and particularly the cable news outlets, had taken their unique
brand of "Fear Factor" programming to new extremes (remember the
duct tape scare?), never pausing to ask whether the red-hot
terror rhetoric streaming out of the administration was intended
to accomplish anything besides whip up hysteria about Arab
terrorists and placing the country on a firm war setting for the
Iraq invasion.
"With terrorists out there somewhere, how scared should you be?"
asked CNN one month before the invasion. Terror experts
displayed the hottest models of gas masks on television, the way
toy gurus usually run down the must-have gifts during the
Christmas buying season; endless what-if chatter about possible
terrorist attacks replaced the kind of hype that usually comes
with the arrival of a category-four hurricane. ABC News,
trotting out its "Good Morning America" home improvement editor,
showed viewers how to turn a laundry room into a fallout shelter
with duct tape and drop cloths.
Solid reporting could have helped relieve some of the anxiety
surrounding terror threats, instead of heightening it. For
instance, the Pentagon's decision to deploy Avenger
surface-to-air missile launchers around Washington, D.C., at the
time clearly ratcheted up the panic level. The New York Daily
News simply reported they were there to "protect prime targets
-- the White House, Congress and the Pentagon -- from an aerial
attack."
But an aerial attack from whom? The newspaper never asked.
Neither Saddam nor bin Laden had planes or missiles that could
reach America. Of course, al-Qaida successfully turned
commercial jets into missiles. But if seventeen months after
9/11 the government was placing surface-to-air missile launchers
to shoot down hijacked planes as a last defense before crashing
into U.S. targets, what did that say about the country's
national defense? The press was entirely uninterested in that
debate.
There's no question that the White House, teaming up with the
MSM in early 2003, succeeded in scaring the hell out of
Americans, with an amazing 82 percent of those interviewed by
CBS/New York Times pollsters saying they expected America to be
hit by a terrorist attack in the next few months. For the White
House, the scare offense made for great politics. First, the
anxiety level helped boost support for the war in Iraq since
Bush -- falsely -- assured Americans an invasion would help
eliminate Islamic terrorists. And second, Americans routinely
gave the Bush presidency its highest marks for his handling of
terrorist threats. (By early 2006, polls indicated that battling
terror was virtually the only issue Bush scored well in.)
The media's obedient brand of terror scare reporting extended
all the way into 2005, as the MSM dutifully played up the White
House's selected theme for Bush's second inauguration: terror.
The MSM's signature timidity was on full display as it detailed
the massive, unprecedented, and largely unexplained security
blanket that turned the nation's capital into something akin to
an armed fortress. Snipers were positioned on rooftops, bombers
flew overhead, Humvee-mounted antiaircraft missiles dotted the
city, manholes were cemented shut, and news racks swept off the
streets. Specialists in chemical, biological, and radiological
terrorism prevention mingled with the spooked inauguration
crowds. Armed Coast Guard boats patrolled the Potomac River. And
there was even an emergency engineering unit on standby to deal
with any collapsed buildings.
The MSM, though, were too afraid to ask the simple question,
why? Why were tens of millions of taxpayer dollars being spent
-- nearly 9,000 police officers and military personnel were
deployed -- to transform a public celebration of democracy into
a show of foreboding military force? And was it all simply a
political ploy for a White House that thrived on the issue of
national security? Keep in mind, the military clampdown came
despite the fact an assessment compiled at the time by the
departments of Defense, Homeland Security, and Justice declared,
"There is no credible information indicating that domestic or
international terrorist groups are targeting the inauguration."
Indeed, Homeland secretary Tom Ridge refused to raise the terror
alert level, announcing on the eve of Bush's second swearing-in,
"There is nothing that we've seen that gives us any reason to
even consider [it]."
Another way cable news outlets boosted Bush's War on Terror was
by simply handing over huge chunks of airtime to the president
for him to use however he wanted. By the spring of 2002, Bush's
afternoon stump speeches from cereal factories, elementary
schools, and chambers of commerce had become a staple on the
cable news networks. CNN officials insisted the coverage
reflected the unique war on terrorism being waged. "CNN, like
all news organizations, makes decisions about its coverage based
on the stories of the day. In covering a war at home and
military action overseas, it is necessary to cover the
administration making the decisions, regardless of political
party," said a network spokesperson.
The high-minded protestations of the news channels
notwithstanding, the fact was that the majority of the Bush
events the cable outlets rushed to cover had nothing whatsoever
to do with the war on terrorism. Viewers who regularly watched
CNN in 2002 saw it break away from programming to show Bush
delivering prepared, extended remarks in front of friendly,
partisan crowds about faith-based charities, defense
modernization, education reform and tax cuts, education,
simplifying tax codes for small business, strengthening Social
Security, protecting the rights of investors, welfare reform,
and on and on and on.
The irony was that in May of 1999, CNN's high-profile anchor Lou
Dobbs got into an on-air tiff with then CNN chief Rick Kaplan. A
noted friend of the Clintons, Kaplan demanded that producers cut
away from Dobbs' program in order to show Clinton addressing a
ceremony honoring the victims of the shooting at Columbine High
School. Dobbs, a firm Republican, was incensed. As the New York
Post reported, "Dobbs, who didn't consider the staged event
breaking news, was absolutely livid." But no one at CNN seemed
mildly concerned -- let alone absolutely livid -- about the
countless staged events CNN aired for Bush. Once again, the MSM
came up with new, more convenient rules for the wartime
president.
Excerpted with permission from "
Lapdogs:
How the Press Rolled Over for Bush
," By Eric Boehlert (The Free Press, 2006).
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