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nerve gas story
CNN withdraws report on US use of nerve gas in Vietnam War
By the Editorial Board
3 July 1998
The decision by CNN to retract its investigative report on
the use of nerve gas by American special forces during the Vietnam
War raises more questions than it answers. The program, "Valley
of Death," broadcast June 7, charged that the Studies and
Operations Group (SOG), an army commando unit, used deadly sarin
gas during a mission in September 1970 aimed at killing defectors
from the US military who had fled into Laos.
Heads have already rolled at the network, with a vice-president
resigning and two producers fired for their role in the broadcast.
CNN correspondent Peter Arnett, arguably the only well-known television
journalist with a deserved reputation as a serious and courageous
reporter, has been reprimanded. Yet there is no question that
Arnett and April Oliver, the senior producer for the program,
assembled a mass of testimony to back up their report.
The CNN broadcast provoked a furious response from the Pentagon,
which denounced it and denied, without providing substantiation,
that Operation Tailwind involved the use of nerve gas or an attempt
to eliminate American soldiers who had defected. This public attack
was accompanied by a well-organized campaign by right-wing groups
and publications to discredit the CNN program. Considering the
fact that many prominent political and military figures responsible
for US policy in Southeast Asia at the time are still alive, it
is likely that pressure was brought to bear from these quarters
as well.
In response to these attacks, CNN issed a statement that it
had begun an investigation into its June 7 broadcast. On Thursday
it made public a lengthy analysis of how it researched the story,
prepared by attorney Floyd Abrams. This report found no evidence
that any of the material presented in the CNN exposé was
falsified or doctored. Rather it concluded the opposite, stating
that the reporters had assembled considerable evidence.
Abrams writes: "The broadcast was prepared after exhaustive
research, was rooted in considerable supportive data, and reflected
the deeply held beliefs of the CNN journalists who prepared it
... we do not believe it can reasonably be suggested that any
of the information on which the broadcast was based was fabricated
or nonexistent." Why then the abject apologies to the Pentagon
and the participants in Operation Tailwind?
Abrams admits that most witnesses interviewed for the program
agreed that they had been quoted accurately: "Contemporaneous
notes made by the principal producer, April Oliver, are not only
consistent with typed notes that she prepared immediately after
her interviews, but in almost all cases with the later recollections
of the individuals interviewed."
The source material for the program was brought together in
a briefing book for senior CNN executives which ran to 150 pages.
The witnesses included Admiral Thomas Moorer, who was Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time of Operation Tailwind,
three high-level intelligence sources who confirmed the basic
story but would not allow their names to be used, and nearly a
dozen participants, including the second-in-command, Robert Van
Buskirk.
Nevertheless, Abrams argues in his report that the producers
were negligent in not including the accounts of other Tailwind
participants who disputed the claim that nerve gas was used, and
in not reporting information that might discredit Van Buskirk
as a witness, such as a history of nervous disorders and his claim
to having suffered repressed memory syndrome. On this basis, he
concludes that the program should not have been broadcast.
It could be pointed out that a history of emotional distress
is not uncommon among Vietnam veterans, particularly those who
were engaged in highly stressful--and murderous--activities such
as those carried out by the SOG. But there is a more fundamental
issue: Arnett and Oliver were journalists, not prosecutors. It
was not their job to develop evidence "beyond a reasonable
doubt," but to bring hitherto suppressed issues to light,
for public discussion and further investigation.
Given the seriousness of the facts uncovered by Arnett and
Oliver, the burden of proof rests on the government and the military.
Rather than a retraction, the logical step would be for CNN to
demand the opening of all files on Operation Tailwind and the
convening of a public inquiry.
There is a curious double standard at work in the network's
humiliating climbdown. When it serves their interests, as in the
campaign over Clinton's alleged relations with Monica Lewinsky,
the American media have no compunction indulging for months on
end in speculation, presented as news, about an episode of no
intrinsic importance, and with virtually no factual substantiation.
Similarly, government dispatches alleging Iraqi schemes to conceal
"weapons of mass destruction" are routinely reported
by the media as fact, with little or no independent verification.
But when it comes to allegations of real crimes by the Pentagon
and CIA, it seems no amount of evidence is sufficient.
Allegations of US use of nerve gas in Vietnam, backed by considerable
eyewitness and participant testimony, cannot be lightly dismissed,
given the circumstances of that time. This was the period of Operation
Phoenix, when the CIA organized the assassination of 20,000 National
Liberation Front cadres and supporters in South Vietnam; of the
systematic spraying of Agent Orange, a powerful chemical weapon,
to defoliate much of the Vietnamese countryside; of napalm and
saturation bombing; of the My Lai massacre--an atrocity which
may never have been brought to light if similar standards of proof
had been required before the first news articles were written.
As a result of CNN's retraction, the focus of attention has
been shifted from an important issue with considerable contemporary
relevance--whether the United States military has used nerve gas
and sought to kill military defectors--to a dispute over the network's
handling of the evidence.
CNN's surrender to a barrage of attacks from military and intelligence
circles conforms to a disturbing pattern. The San Jose Mercury-News
withdrew its exposure of CIA ties to the crack cocaine traffic
in south central Los Angeles. And only days ago, the Cincinnati
Enquirer retracted a report on human rights violations by
Chiquita Foods at its banana plantations in Central America and
agreed to pay the agribusiness giant $10 million.
In the relative handful of instances in recent years where
media exposés have made serious probes into misconduct
by major American corporations or government agencies, the reports
have, with increasing regularity, been retracted or suppressed
after political and economic pressure was brought to bear.
See Also:
Missile attack on Iraq - Danger
of new US-made crisis in Persian Gulf
[2 July 1998]
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