May 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept" - If you read the sketchy New York Times article on
the Delta Force raid into Syria a few days ago — how an ISIS leader was
killed when he “tried to engage” American commandos while his fighters used
women and children as shields, and an 18-year-old slave was freed with no
civilian casualties thanks to “very precise fire” — you can be forgiven for
thinking, “Haven’t I seen this movie before?”
You probably have, and it was called
Zero Dark Thirty, the film directed by Kathryn Bigelow, written by Mark
Boal and backed with gusto by the Central Intelligence Agency.
The CIA provided Bigelow and Boal with privileged access to officials and
operators behind the hunt for Osama bin Laden — and not coincidently, their
movie portrayed the CIA’s torture program as essential to the effort to find
and kill the leader of al Qaeda. It grossed more than $132
million worldwide.
Zero Dark Thirty was criticized by
a number of writers (including me)
when it came out in 2012, and now it is being treated as a
political farce in a new Frontline documentary scheduled to
be broadcast by PBS on Tuesday, May 19. Titled “Secrets,
Politics and Torture,” the show explores the CIA’s effort to persuade
Congress, the White House and the American public that its “enhanced
interrogation methods” were responsible for extracting from unwilling
prisoners the clues that led to bin Laden and other enemy targets.
Jane Mayer, the New Yorker writer
whose work on CIA torture has been exemplary, explains that the team behind
Zero Dark Thirty was conned by the CIA.
“The CIA’s business is seduction, basically,” she
says in the documentary. “And to seduce Hollywood producers, I mean they are
easy marks compared to some of the people that the CIA has to go after.”
Another journalist, Michael Isikoff, connects the
final dots by pointing out the harm caused by political lies that find their
way into blockbuster films.
“Movies like Zero Dark Thirty have a huge
impact,” he says. “More people see them, and more people get their
impressions about what happened from a movie like that than they do from
countless news stories or TV spots.”
The Frontline documentary could not come at
a better moment. Just last week, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh
published a 10,000-word
story in the London Review of Books that challenged much
of the official narrative about the hunt for bin Laden. You don’t have to
believe everything Hersh wrote — and I don’t, including the reference to
SEAL team members throwing some of bin Laden’s corpse over the Hindu Kush —
to appreciate the debate he has re-opened over the considerable holes in the
government’s story.
There is a saying in the military that first reports
are always wrong. We need to remember this lesson when we get first reports
of the latest military or intelligence successes — and the second reports
and the movies, too. Much that the Pentagon said about the rescue of Private
Jessica Lynch during the invasion of Iraq turned out to be fictitious. The media’s
portrayal of the toppling of a statue
of Saddam Hussein in Firdos Square was pretty much the opposite of what
really happened as Marines stormed into Baghdad on April 9, 2003. Similar
problems of fact probably exist in this week’s accounts of a flawless
killing of an ISIS leader (or at least a man whom the military tells us is
an ISIS leader).
The Frontline documentary includes a clip
from Zero Dark Thirty in which a CIA torturer yells at an al Qaeda
prisoner, “When you lie to me, I hurt you!” A repurposing of that line would
hold true for the government and the American public — when it lies to us,
it hurts us.
Photo: Jessica Chastain in “Zero Dark
Thirty” via Sony Pictures