The Spirit of Judy Miller is Alive and
Well at the NYT, and It Does Great Damage
By Glenn Greenwald
July 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept" - One of the very few
Iraq War advocates to pay any price at all was former
New York Times reporter Judy Miller, the
classic scapegoat. But what was her defining sin? She
granted anonymity to government officials and then
uncritically laundered their dubious claims in the New
York Times. As the paper’s own editors put it in
their 2004 mea culpa about the role they played
in selling the war: “We have found a number of instances of
coverage that was not as rigorous as it should have been. In
some cases, information that was controversial then, and
seems questionable now, was insufficiently qualified or
allowed to stand unchallenged.” As a result, its
own handbook adopted in the wake of that historic
journalistic debacle states that “anonymity is a last
resort.”But 12 years after
Miller left, you can pick up that same paper on any given
day and the chances are high that you will find reporters
doing exactly the same thing. In fact, its public editor,
Margaret Sullivan,
regularly lambasts the paper
for doing so. Granting anonymity to government officials
and then uncritically printing what these
anonymous officials claim, treating it all as Truth, is
not an aberration for the New York Times. With some
exceptions among good NYT reporters, it’s an
institutional staple for how the paper functions, even a
decade after its editors scapegoated Judy Miller for its
Iraq War propaganda and excoriated itself for these precise
methods.
That the New York Times
mindlessly disseminates claims from anonymous officials with
great regularity is, at this point, too well-documented to
require much discussion. But it is worth observing how
damaging it continues to be, because, shockingly, all sorts
of self-identified “journalists” — both within the paper and
outside of it — continue to equate un-verified assertions
from government officials as Proven Truth, even when these
officials are too cowardly to attach their names to these
claims, as long as papers such as the NYT launder
them.
Let’s look at an illustrative example from
yesterday to see how this toxic process works. The New
York Times published
an article about ISIS by Eric Schmitt and Ben Hubbard
based entirely and exclusively on unproven claims from
officials of the U.S. government and its allies, to whom
they (needless to say) granted anonymity. The entire article
reads exactly like an official press release:
Paragraph after paragraph does nothing other than summarize
the claims of anonymous officials, without an iota of
questioning, skepticism, scrutiny or doubt.
Among the assertions mindlessly repeated
by the Paper of Record from its beloved anonymous officials
is this one:
Leave to the side the banal journalistic
malpractice of uncritically parroting the
self-serving claims of anonymous officials, supposedly what
the paper is so horrified at Judy Miller for having done.
Also leave to the side the fact that the U.S. government has
been anonymously making these Helping-The-Enemy claims not
just about Snowden but about all whistleblowers for decades,
back to Daniel Ellsberg, if not earlier. Let’s instead
focus on this: the claim itself, on the merits,
is monumentally stupid on multiple levels: self-evidently
so.
To begin with, The Terrorists™ had been
using couriers and encryption for many, many years before
anyone knew the name “Edward Snowden.” Last August, after
NPR uncritically laundered claims that Snowden
revelations had helped The Terrorists™, we
reported on a 45-page document that the U.K. government
calls “the Jihadist Handbook,” written by and distributed
among extremist groups, which describes
in sophisticated detail the encryption technologies, SIM
card-switching tactics and other methods they use to
circumvent U.S. surveillance. Even these 2002/2003 methods
were so sophisticated that they
actually mirror GCHQ’s own operational security methods
for protecting its communications.
This “Jihadist Handbook” was written in
2002 or 2003: more than a full decade before any Snowden
revelations. Indisputably, terrorists have known for a very
long time that the U.S. government and its allies are trying
to intercept their communications, and have long used
encryption and other means to prevent that.
The New York Times’ claim
that ISIS learned to use couriers as a result of the Snowden
revelations is almost a form of self-mockery. Few facts from
Terrorism lore are more well-known than Osama bin Laden’s
use of couriers to avoid U.S. surveillance. A
2011 article from the Washington Post — more
than two years before the first Snowden story — was
headlined: “Al-Qaeda couriers provided the trail that led to
bin Laden.” It described how “Bin Laden strictly avoided
phone or e-mail communications for fear that they would be
intercepted.”
Terrorists have been using such
surveillance-avoidance methods for almost two full decades.
In May,
we published a 2011 NSA document that quoted Jon Darby,
NSA’s then-associate deputy director for counterterrorism,
as saying that “[o]ur loss of SIGINT access to bin Laden
actually occurred prior to 9/11 — it happened in 1998.”
If one were engaged in journalism, one
would include some of these facts in order to scrutinize,
question and express skepticism about the claims of
anonymous officials that ISIS now uses encryption and
couriers because of Snowden reporting. But if one is engaged
in mindless, subservient pro-government stenography, one
simply grants anonymity to officials and then uncritically
parrots their facially dubious claims with no doubt or
questioning of any kind. Does anyone have any doubts about
what these New York Times reporters are doing in
this article?
There’s one more point worth noting about
the New York Times’ conduct here. As has been
documented many times, Edward Snowden never publicly
disclosed a single document: Instead, he gave the documents
to journalists and left it up to them to decide which
documents should be public and which ones should not be. As
I’ve noted, he has sometimes disagreed with the choices
journalists made, usually on the ground that documents media
outlets decided to publish should have, in his view, not
been published.
One of the newspapers that
published documents from the Snowden archive is called “The
New York Times.” In fact, it is responsible for publication
of some of the most controversial articles
often cited by critics as ones that
should not have been published, including
ones most relevant to ISIS. When it comes to claiming
credit for Snowden stories, the New York Times is
very good at pointing out that it published some of these
documents. But when it comes to uncritically publishing
claims from anonymous officials that Snowden stories helped
ISIS, the New York Times suddenly “forgets” to
mention that it actually made many of these documents known
to the world and, thus, to ISIS. What the New York Times
is actually doing in this article is accusing itself
of helping ISIS, but just lacks the honesty to tell
its readers that it did this, opting instead to blame
its source for it. In the NYT’s blame-its-source
formulation: “The Islamic State has studied revelations from
Edward J. Snowden.”
When I was first told about the Sunday
Times’ now disgraced story claiming that Russia and
China obtained the full Snowden archive, my initial reaction
was that the story was so blatantly inane and so
journalistically corrupted — based exclusively on unproven,
self-serving accusations from anonymous U.K. officials —
that it wasn’t even worth addressing. I changed my mind and
decided to write about it only when I saw huge numbers
of journalists sitting around on Twitter that night
uncritically assuming that these claims must be True
because, after all, government officials said them and a
newspaper printed them.
I went through exactly the same process
when I saw this Snowden-helps-ISIS claim laundered
yesterday in the New York Times. I assumed that the
“journalism” here was so glaringly shoddy that nobody needed
me to write about it, and that a few mocking tweets would
suffice. Everyone knows by now to treat anonymous government
claims like this critically and not accept them as true
without evidence — or so I reasoned.
But then I began seeing one self-described
journalist after the next treat the accusation from these
anonymous officials as tantamount to Proven Truth. They just
started asserting that Snowden’s revelations helped ISIS
without a molecule of doubt, skepticism or critical thought.
That’s what makes this process so destructive: once the New
York Times uncritically publishes a
claim from a government official, even (maybe especially)
if anonymous, huge numbers of “journalists” immediately
treat it as Truth. It’s shocking to watch, no matter how
common it is.
Here are just a few examples: first, from New
York Times reporter Alex Burns, stating the
Snowden-helped-ISIS claim as fact:
Now here’s long-time journalist Kurt
Andersen, demanding that Snowden be confronted and made
to say whether he regrets this:
Here’s a tweet claiming the NYT
“reported” this, re-tweeted by long-time NYT and
CNBC journalist John Harwood:
After I noted that the NYT
“reported” no such thing but merely uncritically wrote down
what anonymous officials said, here’s Harwood explicitly
defending classic stenography as “reporting”:
Here’s a CNN and Miami Herald
columnist, Frida Ghitis, nakedly treating the anonymous
claim as true by blaming Snowden for helping ISIS:
Here’s a tweet Business Insider
sent to its 1.1 million followers this morning:
Here’s self-proclaimed “terrorism expert”
Will McCants mindlessly repeating it as fact:
And now the bottom-feeding British tabloid
Daily Mail has
a just-published screaming, hysterical story based
exclusively on the anonymous assertion laundered by the
New York Times:
Look at what the New York Times,
yet again, has done. Isn’t it amazing? All anyone in
government has to do is whisper something in its
journalists’ ears, demand anonymity for it, and instruct
them to print it. Then they obey. Then other journalists
treat it as Truth. Then it becomes fact, all over the world.
This is the same process that enabled the New York Times,
more than any other media outlet, to sell the Iraq War to
the American public, and they’re using exactly the same
methods to this day. But it’s not just their shoddy
journalism that drives this but the mentality of other
“journalists” who instantly equate anonymous official claims
as fact.
The peak of the Sunday Times’ humiliation
was when its lead reporter, Tom Harper, went on CNN and
expressly admitted that the paper did nothing other than
mindlessly print anonymous government claims as fact without
having any idea if they were true. What made Harper a
laughingstock was this sentence,
captured in a Vine by The Guardian’s HannahJane
Parkinson (to listen, click the “unmute” button in the lower
right-hand corner):
How is this not exactly what the New
York Times, yet again, has done? In fact, if one
replaces “British” with “American,” is that not the actual
motto describing how this paper so often behaves, one might
even say their core function?