The Sunday Times’ Snowden Story is Journalism
at its Worst — and Filled with Falsehoods
By Glenn Greenwald
June 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept" -
Western journalists claim that the big lesson they learned from
their key role in selling the Iraq War to the public is that
it’s hideous, corrupt and often dangerous journalism to give
anonymity to government officials to let them propagandize the
public, then uncritically accept those anonymously voiced claims
as Truth. But they’ve learned no such lesson. That tactic
continues to be the staple of how major US and British media
outlets “report,” especially in the national security area. And
journalists who read such reports continue to treat self-serving
decrees by unnamed, unseen officials – laundered through their
media – as gospel, no matter how dubious are the claims or
factually false is the reporting.We now
have one of the purest examples of this dynamic. Last night, the
Murdoch-owned Sunday Times published their
lead
front-page Sunday article,
headlined “British Spies Betrayed to Russians and Chinese.”
Just as the conventional media narrative was shifting to
pro-Snowden sentiment in the wake of
a key court ruling and a new surveillance law, the
article (behind a
paywall: full text
here)
claims in the first paragraph that these two adversaries “have
cracked the top-secret cache of files stolen by the fugitive US
whistleblower Edward Snowden, forcing MI6 to pull agents out of
live operations in hostile countries, according to
senior officials in Downing Street, the Home Office and
the security services.” It continues:
Western intelligence agencies say
they have been forced into the rescue operations after
Moscow gained access to more than 1m classified files held
by the former American security contractor, who fled to seek
protection from Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, after
mounting one of the largest leaks in US history.
Senior government sources
confirmed that China had also
cracked the encrypted documents, which contain details of
secret intelligence techniques and information that could
allow British and American spies to be identified.
One senior Home Office official
accused Snowden of having
“blood on his hands”, although Downing Street said there was
“no evidence of anyone being harmed”.
Aside from the serious retraction-worthy
fabrications on which this article depends – more on those in a
minute – the entire report is a self-negating joke. It reads
like a parody I might quickly whip up in order to illustrate the
core sickness of western journalism.
Unless he cooked an extra-juicy steak, how
does Snowden “have blood on his hands” if there is “no evidence
of anyone being harmed?” As
one observer put it last night in describing the government
instructions these Sunday Times journalists appear to
have obeyed: “There’s no evidence anyone’s been harmed but we’d
like the phrase ‘blood on his hands’ somewhere in the piece.”
The whole article does literally
nothing other than quote anonymous British officials.
It gives voice to banal but inflammatory accusations that are
made about every whistleblower from Daniel Ellsberg to Chelsea
Manning. It offers zero evidence or confirmation for any of its
claims. The “journalists” who wrote it neither questioned any of
the official assertions nor even quoted anyone who denies them.
It’s pure stenography of the worst kind: some government
officials whispered these inflammatory claims in our ears and
told us to print them, but not reveal who they are, and we’re
obeying. Breaking!
Stephen Colbert captured this exact
pathology with untoppable precision in his
2006 White House Correspondents speech, when he
mocked American journalism to the faces of those who practice
it:
But, listen, let’s review the rules.
Here’s how it works.The President makes decisions. He’s the
decider. The press secretary announces those decisions, and
you people of the press type those decisions down. Make,
announce, type. Just put ’em through a spell check and go
home. Get to know your family again. Make love to your wife.
Write that novel you got kicking around in your head. You
know, the one about the intrepid Washington reporter with
the courage to stand up to the administration? You know,
fiction!
The Sunday Times article is even
worse because it protects the officials they’re serving with
anonymity. The beauty of this tactic is that the accusations
can’t be challenged. The official accusers are being hidden by
the journalists so nobody can confront them or hold them
accountable when it turns out to be false. The evidence can’t be
analyzed or dissected because there literally is none: they just
make the accusation and, because they’re state officials, their
media-servants will publish it with no evidence needed. And as
is always true, there is no way to prove the negative. It’s like
being smeared by a ghost with a substance that you can’t touch.
This is the very opposite of journalism.
Ponder how dumb someone has to be at this point to read an
anonymous government accusation, made with zero evidence, and
accept it as true.
But it works. Other news agencies
mindlessly repeated the Sunday Times claims
far and wide. I
watched last night as American and British journalists of all
kinds reacted to the report on Twitter: by questioning none of
it. They did the opposite: they immediately assumed it to be
true, then spent hours engaged in somber, self-serious
discussions with one another over what the geopolitical
implications are, how the breach happened, what it means for
Snowden, etc. This is the formula that shapes their brains:
anonymous self-serving government
assertions = Truth.
By definition, authoritarians reflexively
believe official claims – no matter how dubious or obviously
self-serving, even when made while hiding behind
anonymity – because that’s how their submission
functions. Journalists who practice this sort of
primitive reporting – I uncritically print what government
officials tell me, and give them anonymity so they have no
accountability for any it – do so out of a similar
authoritarianism, or uber-nationalism, or laziness, or
careerism. Whatever the motives, the results are the same:
government officials know they can propagandize the public at
any time because subservient journalists will give them
anonymity to do so and will uncritically disseminate and accept
their claims.
At this point, it’s hard to avoid the
conclusion that journalists want it this way. It’s impossible
that they don’t know better. The exact kinds of accusations
laundered in the Sunday Times today are made – and then
disproven – in every case where
someone
leaks unflattering information about government officials.
In the early 1970s, Nixon officials such as John
Ehrlichman and Henry Kissinger
planted accusations in the U.S. media that Daniel Ellsberg
had secretly given the Pentagon Papers and other key documents
to the Soviet Union; everyone now knows this was a lie, but at
the time, American journalists repeated it constantly, helping
to smear Ellsberg. That’s why Ellsberg has constantly defended
Snowden and Chelsea Manning from the start: because the same
tactics were used to smear him.
The same thing happened with Chelsea Manning. When WikiLeaks
first began publishing the Afghan War logs,
U.S.
officials screamed that they – all together now – had “blood
on their hands.” But when some journalists decided to scrutinize
rather than mindlessly repeat the official accusation (i.e.,
some decided to do journalism), they found it was a fabrication.
Writing under the headline “US officials
privately say WikiLeaks damage limited,” Reuters’ Mark Hosenball
reported that “internal U.S. government reviews have
determined that a mass leak of diplomatic cables caused only
limited damage to U.S. interests abroad, despite the Obama
administration’s public statements to the contrary.”
An
AP report was headlined “AP review finds no WikiLeaks
sources threatened,” and explained that “an Associated Press
review of those sources raises doubts about the scope of
the danger posed by WikiLeaks’ disclosures and the Obama
administration’s angry claims, going back more than a
year, that the revelations are life-threatening.” Months
earlier, McClatchy’s Nancy Youssef wrote
an article headlined “Officials may be overstating the
dangers from WikiLeaks,” and she noted that “despite similar
warnings ahead of the previous two massive releases of
classified U.S. intelligence reports by the website, U.S.
officials concede that they have no evidence to date that the
documents led to anyone’s death.”Now we
have exactly the same thing here. There’s an
anonymously made claim that Russia and China “cracked the
top-secret cache of files” from Snowden’s, but there is
literally zero evidence for that claim. These hidden
officials also claim that American and British agents were
unmasked and had to be rescued, but not a single one is
identified. There is speculation that
Russia and China learned things from obtaining the Snowden
files, but how could these officials possibly know that,
particularly since other government officials are
constantly accusing both countries of
successfully hacking sensitive government databases?
What kind of person would read evidence-free
accusations of this sort from anonymous government officials –
designed to smear a whistleblower they hate – and believe them?
That’s a particularly compelling question given that Vice’s
Jason Leopold just last week obtained and published previously
secret documents revealing
a coordinated smear campaign in Washington to malign
Snowden. Describing those documents, he reported: “A bipartisan
group of Washington lawmakers solicited details from Pentagon
officials that they could use to ‘damage’ former NSA contractor
Edward Snowden’s ‘credibility in the press and the court of
public opinion.'”
Manifestly then, the “journalism” in this Sunday
Times articles is as shoddy and unreliable as it gets.
Worse, its key accusations depend on retraction-level lies.
The government accusers behind this story have
a big obstacle to overcome: namely, Snowden
has said unequivocally that when he left Hong Kong, he took
no files with him, having given them to the journalists with
whom he worked, and then destroying his copy precisely so that
it wouldn’t be vulnerable as he traveled. How, then, could
Russia have obtained Snowden’s files as the story claims – “his
documents were encrypted but they weren’t completely secure ” –
if he did not even have physical possession of them?
The only way this smear works is if they claim
Snowden lied, and that he did in fact have files with him after
he left Hong Kong. The Sunday Times journalists thus
include a paragraph that is designed to prove Snowden lied about
this, that he did possess these files while living in Moscow:
It is not clear whether Russia and China
stole Snowden’s data, or whether he voluntarily handed over
his secret documents in order to remain at liberty in Hong
Kong and Moscow.
David Miranda, the boyfriend of the
Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald,
was seized at Heathrow in 2013 in possession of 58,000
“highly classified” intelligence documents after visiting
Snowden in Moscow.
What’s the problem with that Sunday Times passage?
It’s an utter lie. David did not visit Snowden in Moscow before
being detained. As of the time he was detained in Heathrow,
David had never been to Moscow and had never met Snowden. The
only city David visited on that trip before being detained was
Berlin, where he stayed in the apartment of Laura Poitras.
The Sunday Times “journalists”
printed an outright fabrication in order to support their key
point: that Snowden had files with him in Moscow. This is the
only “fact” included in their story that suggests Snowden had
files with him when he left Hong Kong, and it’s completely,
demonstrably false (and just by the way: it’s 2015, not 1971, so
referring to gay men in a 10-year spousal relationship with the
belittling term “boyfriends” is just gross).
Then there’s the Sunday Times claim
that “Snowden, a former contractor at the CIA and National
Security Agency (NSA), downloaded 1.7m secret documents from
western intelligence agencies in 2013.” Even the NSA
admits this claim is a lie. The NSA has repeatedly said that it
has no idea how many documents Snowden downloaded and has no way
to find out. As the NSA itself admits, the 1.7 million number is
not the number the NSA claims Snowden downloaded – they
admit they don’t and can’t know that number – but merely the
amount of documents he interacted with in his years of working
at NSA. Here’s then-NSA chief Keith Alexander explaining exactly
that in
a 2014 interview with the Australian Financial Review:
AFR: Can
you now quantify the number of documents [Snowden] stole?
Gen. Alexander: Well, I don’t
think anybody really knows what he actually took with him,
because the way he did it, we don’t have an accurate
way of counting. What we do have an accurate way of
counting is what he touched, what he may have downloaded,
and that was more than a million documents.
Let’s repeat that: “I don’t think
anybody really knows what he actually took with him,
because the way he did it, we don’t have an accurate way
of counting.” Yet someone whispered to the Sunday
Times reporters that Snowden downloaded 1.7 million
documents, so like the liars and propagandists that they are,
they mindlessly printed it as fact. That’s what this whole
article is.
Then there’s the claim that the Russian and
Chinese governments learned the names of covert agents by
cracking the Snowden file, “forcing MI6 to pull agents out of
live operations in hostile countries.” This appears quite
clearly to be a fabrication by the Sunday Times for
purposes of sensationalism, because if you read the actual
anonymous quotes they include, not even the anonymous
officials claim that Russia and China hacked the entire archive,
instead offering only vague assertions that Russian and China
“have information.”
Beyond that, how could these hidden British
officials possibly know that China and Russia learned things
from the Snowden files as opposed to all the other hacking and
spying those countries do? Moreover, as
pointed out last night by my colleague Ryan Gallagher – who
has worked for well over a year with the full Snowden archive –
“I’ve reviewed the Snowden documents and I’ve never seen
anything in there naming active MI6 agents.” He also said: “I’ve
seen nothing in the region of 1m documents in the Snowden
archive, so I don’t know where that number has come from.”
Finally, none of what’s in the Sunday
Times is remotely new. US and UK government officials and
their favorite journalists have tried for two years to
smear Snowden with these same claims. In June, 2013, the New
York Times
gave anonymity to “two Western intelligence experts, who
worked for major government spy agencies” who “said they
believed that the Chinese government had managed to drain the
contents of the four laptops that Mr. Snowden said he brought to
Hong Kong.” The NYT‘s Public Editor
chided the paper for printing that garbage, and as I
reported in my book, then-editor-in-chief Jill Abramson told the
Guardian‘s Janine Gibson that they should not have printed
that, calling it “irresponsible.” (And that’s to say nothing of
the woefully ignorant notion that Snowden – or anyone else these
days – stores massive amounts of data on “four laptops” as
opposed to tiny thumb drives).
The GOP’s right-wing extremist Congressman
Mike Rogers constantly did the same thing. He
once announced with no evidence that “Snowden is working
with Russia” – a claim even former CIA Deputy Director Michael
Morell
denies – and
also argued that Snowden should “be charged with murder” for
causing unknown deaths. My personal favorite example of this
genre of reckless, desperate smears is
the Op-Ed which the Wall Street Journal published
in May, 2014, by neocon Edward Jay Epstein, which had
this still-hilarious paragraph:
A former member of President Obama’s
cabinet went even further, suggesting to me off the record
in March this year that there are only three possible
explanations for the Snowden heist: 1) It was a Russian
espionage operation; 2) It was a Chinese espionage
operation, or 3) It was a joint Sino-Russian operation.
It must be one of those, an anonymous official
told me! It must be! Either Russia did it. Or China did it. Or
they did it together! That is American journalism.
The Sunday Times today
merely recycled the same evidence-free smears that have been
used by government officials for years – not only against
Snowden, but all whistleblowers – and added a dose of
sensationalism and then baked it with demonstrable lies. That’s
just how western journalism works, and it’s the opposite of
surprising. But what is surprising, and grotesque, is how many
people (including other journalists) continue to be so plagued
by some combination of stupidity and gullibility, so that no
matter how many times this trick is revealed, they keep falling
for it. If some anonymous government officials said it, and
journalists repeat it while hiding who they are, I guess it must
be true.
UPDATE:
The Sunday Times has now quietly deleted one of the
central, glaring lies in its story: that David Miranda had just
met with Snowden in Moscow when he was detained at Heathrow
carrying classified documents. By “quietly deleted,” I mean just
that: they just removed it from their story without any
indication or note to their readers that they’ve done so (though
it remains in the print edition and thus requires a retraction).
That’s indicative of the standard of “journalism” for the
article itself. Multiple other falsehoods, and all sorts of
shoddy journalistic practices, remain thus far unchanged.