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New York Times bows to White House pressure over CIA
tapes story
By Bill Van Auken
21 December 2007
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The decision by the New York Times to bow to White House
pressure and publish a correction of the sub-head on its December
19 story linking senior Bush advisors to the destruction of CIA
torture tapes has been hailed by the Republican rightechoed
by large sections of the mediaas a major political victory.
Rupert Murdochs Fox News, for example, headlined its
story on the correction, White House Slams New York Times
Piece on Destroyed CIA Tapes, while Murdochs main
American print outlet, the New York Post, published a story
with the headline Times suffers a head wound
over CIA story.
In interviewing Mark Mazzetti, one of the reporters who
wrote the story for the Times, CNNs John Roberts
declared, The White House tried to beat the stuffing out
of you.
At least for the moment, the cowardly climbdown by the Times
has tended to overshadow the substance of the story itself, which
points to the administrations role in a criminal coverup
of acts of torture that amount to war crimes.
The Times story established that at least four senior
lawyers and White House advisorsAlberto Gonzales, Bushs
White House counsel and then attorney general; Harriet Miers,
his successor in the counsel position; David Addington, counsel
and then chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney; and John
Bellinger III, the National Security Councils top lawyerhad
participated in discussions on the tapes and their destruction.
The story also cited one former senior intelligence official,
who stated that there had been vigorous sentiment
among some top White House officials to destroy the tapes.
Given their political record, there is every reason to believe
that Gonzales and Addington were directly involved in the decision
to destroy the tapes, in what amounted to criminal obstruction
of justice, under conditions in which a federal court had ordered
that all such evidence be preserved. They are both identified
with the Bush administrations contempt for the law and assertion
of the most extreme interpretation of unilateral executive power.
Moreover, given that all four worked as the closest advisors
to the president and vice president, it strains credulity to claim
that Bush and Cheney were kept in the dark about the criminal
action that they were discussing with the CIA.
This is the basis of the extreme sensitivity of the White House
to the Times story. There is a potentialgiven a sharp
shift in the political situationthat these revelations could
lead to an unraveling of the administration and criminal prosecution
of its leading figures, including Bush himself.
So a campaign was mounted to change the story by focusing on
the offending second deck of the Times headline, which
read, White House Role Was Wider Than It Said.
White House press secretary Dana Perino issued a written statement
Wednesday morning claiming that the eight-word subhead implied
that the White House has been misleading in publicly acknowledging
or discussing details related to the CIAs decision to destroy
interrogation tapes.
The statement insisted that the White House press secretary,
acting on the advice of the White House general counsel, had refused
to comment publicly on the issue because of an ongoing investigation
by the Department of Justice and the CIA Inspector General. In
other words, the role of the White House could not be wider than
it said, because Perino had refused to say anything.
The New York Times inference that there is an effort
to mislead in this matter is pernicious and troubling, and we
are formally requesting that NYT correct the sub-headline of this
story, the statement declared.
It went on to criticize the paper for its reliance on
un-named sources and individuals lacking a full availability of
the facts, comparing this method unfavorably to what it
portrayed as the more sensible method favored by the White House,
the CIA and the Justice Department, where facts can be gathered
without bias or influence and later disseminated in an appropriate
way.
Later on Wednesday, the better part of the White House press
briefing by Perino was given over to an exchange on the matter
that frequently descended to the level of the absurd. Much of
it consisted of Perino taking umbrage over what she claimed was
the newspapers suggestion that she personally had misled
the American public.
Her argument consisted of the assertion that only she could
speak formally for the White House, and therefore to publish the
subhead White House Role Was Wider Than It Said constituted
a direct charge that she had either lied or changed her story.
Instead, she insisted, she had refused to comment on the destruction
of the tapes, as she continued to do during the press conference.
I speak for the President and the White House,
Perino said at one point. This says that I was misleading,
and I was not.
It doesnt say you, a reporter responded.
It doesnt say you at all...They didnt specifically
say its you. Its talking about the White House, the administration
in general.
I speak for the White House, Perino reiterated.
I represent the White House.
Asked why she was taking it personally, Perino
responded: Its not a personal thing. The White House
asked for a correction. And I would remind you, the New York
Times is going to do one. Thus ended the discussion.
As anyone with even a passing acquaintance with American politics
knows, the phrase White House is routinely usedparticularly
in the enforced shorthand of newspaper headlinesto refer
to the executive branch of the US government.
Whatever the intellectually challenged Ms. Perino did or did
not say from her podium in the White House briefing room, administration
officials had assured reporters that the White House had no significant
involvement in the discussions that led to tapes destruction.
That had now been exposed as a lie.
Therefore, there was nothing to retract in relationship to
the headline, and instead of printing a correction, any newspaper
genuinely committed to upholding its independence and defending
first amendment rights in general would have told the administration
to get lost and denounced the demand from Perino as a blatant
attempt at political intimidation and censorship.
Instead, the Times quickly caved in to the White Houses
attack, publicly announcing that it would print the retraction.
In its Thursday edition, it stated that the headline referred
imprecisely to the White Houses position thus far
on the matter. The newspaper accepted the specious argument
that the White House itself has not officially said anything
on the subject, so its role was not wider than it said.
This revealing episode is only the latest in a long series
of actions that have exposed the so-called paper of record
as a willing and servile accomplice of the Bush administration.
It is worth recalling that in August 2002, precisely when Abu
Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri were being waterboarded and
subjected to other forms of torture at Guantanamoacts filmed
on the videotapes that we now know were destroyedthe Times
published a feature article by its national security correspondent
Eric Schmitt under the sarcastic headline, There are ways
to make you talk. The article, based entirely on the assurance
of US officials, told the Times readers that the
interrogation methods being employed by the American military,
CIA and FBI were all in strict compliance with the Geneva Conventions
and that torture is not an option.
Needless to say, the Times editors felt no compunction
to retract or correct this article, which has since been revealed
as false and a whitewash of war crimes.
The incestuous relationship between the Times, known
as the voice of Americas erstwhile liberal establishment,
and the right-wing Republican administration was revealed most
clearly in the newspapers handling of a story exposing the
illegal warrantless wiretapping carried out by the National Security
Agency against American citizens under Bushs orders.
The Times reported the massive NSA spying operation
in December 2005, acknowledging that it hadat the urging
of the Bush administrationsuppressed the story for
a year. Only later did the newspapers public editor
reveal that the discussions on squelching the exposé had
actually unfolded in the weeks leading up to the November 2004
election.
The effect of the Times editors decision
to stop the storys publication was to deny American voters
as they went to the polls the knowledge that the incumbent president
was carrying out a massive abuse of power by spying on US citizens
in violation of the law and the Constitution. It could well be
argued that this act of self-censorship played a decisive role
in Bushs re-election.
It should be noted that the publication in the Times
earlier this month of the original article on the destruction
of the CIA videotapes came only after discussions with the government,
the contents of which are unknown. The newspapers forewarning
allowed CIA director Michael Hayden to have the first word on
the destruction of the tapes, in which he sought to frame the
decision as an entirely legal and necessary act.
There is no telling how long the Times sat on this story,
but leading Democrats were aware of the tapes destruction
at least as early as November 2006. They knew of the existence
of the tapes themselves in 2003. There is every reason to suspect
that the Times, which its myriad ties to the political
establishment, had at least some knowledge of the story as well.
Then there is the papers long record of promoting the
illegal war against Iraq, both in the disseminating false information
about non-existent weapons of mass destruction by
its former senior correspondent, the ideologically driven Judith
Miller, and in the noxious opinion columns of its foreign affairs
columnist Thomas Friedman.
The Times, as with the American media as a whole, has
done everything it can to cover up the real brutality of the American
occupation of Iraq. It helped to bury the story of the estimated
number of Iraqi civilians killed as a result of the US invasion655,000
through June 2006produced by the medical journal Lancet.
It did not even report on a subsequent estimate by the British
polling agency ORB, which put the number at 1.2 million.
This latest capitulation over the headline of the CIA tapes
story is only one more verification of a fundamental trend: the
disappearance of anything that could legitimately be described
as a fourth estate, a genuinely independent media
committed to the exposure of abuses of state power and the defense
of the democratic rights of the population.
Instead the mass media, itself run by massive capitalist corporations,
serves largely as a propaganda arm of the government and the ruling
elite, suppressing and distorting information as needed and seeking
to shape public opinion to conform to their interests.
See Also:
Report indicates White House encouraged
torture tape destruction
Administration demands retraction, calling news story "pernicious"
[20 December 2007]
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