Media malfeasance on Saddam report
posted at 9:52 am on March 15, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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Stephen Hayes at the Weekly Standard reviews the media reporting of the Pentagon analysis released this week on documents seized by the US in the invasion of Iraq — and gives a ringing condemnation, and not just to the media but also to the Pentagon and the White House. The report’s authors demanded a release of the full report when they saw the media spinning their work into a message that belied everything they had written. However, the blame falls mainly on their own organization, as Hayes reports:
How can a study offering an unprecedented look into the closed regime of a brutal dictator, with over 1,600 pages of “strong evidence that links the regime of Saddam Hussein to regional and global terrorism,” in the words of its authors, receive a wave-of-the-hand dismissal from America’s most prestigious news outlets? All it took was a leak to a gullible reporter, one misleading line in the study’s executive summary, a boneheaded Pentagon press office, an incompetent White House, and widespread journalistic negligence.
Oh, is that all? In other words, business as usual since 2003. Hayes explains this specific set of circumstances:
On Monday, March 10, 2008, Warren P. Strobel, a reporter from the McClatchy News Service first reported that the new Pentagon study was coming. “An exhaustive review of more than 600,000 Iraqi documents that were captured after the 2003 U.S. invasion has found no evidence that Saddam Hussein’s regime had any operational links with Osama bin Laden’s al Qaida terrorist network.” McClatchy is a newspaper chain that serves many of America’s largest cities. The national security reporters in its Washington bureau have earned a reputation as reliable outlets for anti-Bush administration spin on intelligence. Strobel quoted a “U.S. official familiar with the report” who told him that the search of Iraqi documents yielded no evidence of a “direct operational link” between Iraq and al Qaeda. Strobel used the rest of the article to attempt to demonstrate that this undermined the Bush administration’s prewar claims with regard to Iraq and terrorism.
With the study not scheduled for release for two more days, this article shaped subsequent coverage, which was no doubt the leaker’s purpose. Stories from other media outlets tracked McClatchy very closely but began to incorporate a highly misleading phrase taken from the executive summary: “This study found no ’smoking gun’ (i.e. direct connection) between Saddam’s Iraq and al Qaeda.”
It’s hard to believe that the Pentagon and the White House have still not figured out the dynamics of war reporting in this age. Any report with this kind of impact will be the target of leaks, and probably by those least inclined to support the war. The leaks will go to others who don’t support the war, and they will get the first opportunity to define reality in the media. This is exactly what happened to this report on the Harmony documents; it’s a textbook case of media spin.
In fact, as I noted yesterday, the captured Iraqi documents show that Saddam Hussein funded at least two al-Qaeda groups, including Ayman al-Zawahiri’s group Egyptian Islamic Jihad. He also created and funded terrorist groups in Somalia in 1993 to attack the US troops there at the time. Another group which received funding, the Bahrain-based Army of Mohammad, received funding specifically because they intended to target America and Americans, with full knowledge that the AoM received its direction from Osama bin Laden.
Because the media relied on a politically-motivated leak and didn’t actually read the report before telling people what it said, they essentially reported a lie to the American public. Instead of getting ahead of this, or at least right behind it, the Pentagon and the White House dithered for most of the week about how to respond. It took three days before they finally released the entire report to the public, and the delay became a story in itself. What was the Bush administration hiding? Only their own incompetence at public relations, as it turned out.
The full report shows clearly that Saddam Hussein had made himself one of the most significant sponsors of terrorism in the world. While much of it intended to keep his own people from killing him, a significant portion was directed towards the US, and some of that funded and supported Osama bin Laden. That story, however, won’t get told, thanks to the malfeasance of media that prefers leaks over source material and an administration that hasn’t learned a thing about messaging in five years.
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Anyone with a brain could see that those first reports were complete rubbish — Saddam openly supported terrorist efforts in Palestine, and did openly harbor Abu Nidal.
What a disgraceful MSM.
Richard Romano on March 15, 2008 at 10:03 AM
incompetence bt the nedia?
no.
deliberate distortion.
incompetence by the WH and pentagon?
yes.
they should have been all over these distortions.
reliapundit on March 15, 2008 at 10:10 AM
O’Reilly is correct . . . the U.S. media is totally corrupt.
Furthermore, in my opinion, the MSM is also actively working to undermine and destroy all conservative though and policies in government.
We are in serious trouble.
rplat on March 15, 2008 at 10:11 AM
“… the Pentagon and the White House have still not figured out the dynamics of war reporting in this age.”
That’s what drives me nuts! You’re the freakin’ PRESIDENT! Hold a presser and say what HotAir has been telling US!
I just watched a few minutes ago on CNN the infobabe lying to their veiwers, I was waiti for her to mention the connections Ed told us about yesterday, but no, it was all about ‘no links’. Lyin’ bastids!
Tony737 on March 15, 2008 at 10:16 AM
I don’t believe anything the msm reports. They have proved over and over that they are only propaganda machines. Even Fox news has become a propaganda outlet for the liars. Fair and Balanced junk, how about Fair and True!
WildBillK on March 15, 2008 at 10:18 AM
Dammit! Forgot to close tags … AGAIN! Sorry.
Tony737 on March 15, 2008 at 10:19 AM
I’m still trying to figure how McCain plans to play nice with these scumbag traitorous wretches,
bbz123 on March 15, 2008 at 10:53 AM
bbz, it’s the scumbag traitorous wretches in the media who gave him the nomination. They played him up and made him the name recognition guy, they decide who our nominee is for us.
Tony737 on March 15, 2008 at 11:03 AM
or
White House wrongdoing on communication.
Entelechy on March 15, 2008 at 11:08 AM
While they are scumbags, we do vote Tony. The electorate, on both sides, is idiotically uninformed, naive, and psychotic, and makes the choices it does.
Entelechy on March 15, 2008 at 11:10 AM
Keeping score?
MSM liberal media (CNN, NYT, MSNBC) 1000, Bush Administration 0.
Only seconds left in the game.
Travis1 on March 15, 2008 at 11:14 AM
In the new issue of the Weekly Standard, Steve Hayes expands on his post regarding the Pentagon report documenting Saddam Hussein’s support for terrorism. The report, Steve writes, ought to be big news:
Throughout the early and mid-1990s, Saddam Hussein actively supported an influential terrorist group headed by the man who is now al Qaeda’s second-in-command, according to an exhaustive study issued last week by the Pentagon.
Is the MSM willing to utter one word about this connection, as reported by the Pentagon…. Of coarse not. The MSM and the DNC are working hand-n-hand towards one common goal; Liberalism… This is not what the media was given special privileges for. We “the people” should shut down the MSM as it exists today; refuse to support any advertiser that contributes to this behavior. Yes, their subscribers are shrinking in numbers; yes, their power is slowly diminishing. Not quickly enough!!!
Keemo on March 15, 2008 at 11:16 AM
“… we do vote Tony. The electorate, on both sides, is idiotically uninformed …” – Entel
I agree, my point was that the media influences our vote by their coverage of certain candidates or the lack thereof with regards to others.
Tony737 on March 15, 2008 at 11:26 AM
Bulletin!
Bush is sending another tornado to CNN headquarters in Atlanta. Get under your desks, libbies.
Travis1 on March 15, 2008 at 11:30 AM
I did my own take on the false reporting that the media did. When I read the actual report, I just couldn’t believe how completely polar opposite the report was to the claims made in the “article” based on a single anonymous source. It’s truly disgusting imo.
However, let’s take a different tack on this.
How does this effect a President Hillary Clinton given that her supporters recognize she’s not going to end the war?
How does this effect a President Obama given that his supporters (more than Hillary’s) still believe he’ll immediately end the war in Iraq and make Code Pink happy?
Will Obama bite at the bait and point to the article as proof of no-ties despite the fact that all an intrepid reporter needs to do to catch him in a fubar is to actually look at the report? OR will he ignore the article and admit he was wrong about groups from the AQ terrorist network being inside Iraq before 2004? My guess is they’ll dodge it as much as possible and never get asked about it, but imagine the danger if they were? They’d have to take a position-a position that either justifies the invasion and recognizes the truth, or a position that is completely, grossly, and obviously not supported by the report itself?
McCain would be smart to play up what the report actually says. It’s literally tear at the 2 Democratic Party candidates as well as the party.
scottm on March 15, 2008 at 11:36 AM
I knew what you meant Tony – still, if the populace wouldn’t be so naive, it would show the media a certain
fingerbroom.Entelechy on March 15, 2008 at 11:37 AM
Misrepresentation by MSM is to be expected nowadays, but what I cannot learn to accommodate is the gross incompetence in PR management from the WH and Pentagon. It makes me wonder what the hell’s the use of continuing to support this administration.
petefrt on March 15, 2008 at 11:44 AM
There are many who have invested themselves in a storyline that is based on ideology and no amount of facts or documentation will ever change their views.
I think the White House bears a large chunk of the responsibility b/c they have totally abdicated the telling of the story to the opposition. They never fought for the truth in a spirited way and rather than be disagreeable simply left the field. This is really unconscionable.
I think Kenneth Timmerman’s book would have been better served with a less shrill title. Having said that, he does a remarkable job of naming names within the govt and media that specifically used their positions to undermine the president and often misled or outright lied to achieve their desired ends.
In his book he produces Valerie Plame’s actual email in which she suggests her husband for the Niger trip.
Goes over all of the New York Times leaks of our covert efforts to track/locate terrorists.
Here is a pretty good summary of Timmerman’s book.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=64cd41af-03b3-45af-bb77-dfdbbee2af2a
http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Warriors-Traitors-Saboteurs-Surrender/dp/0307352099
http://www.amazon.com/Disinformation-Media-Myths-Undermine-Terror/dp/0895260069
moxie_neanderthal on March 15, 2008 at 11:58 AM
“… if the populace wouldn’t be so naive, it would show the media a certain broom.” – Entel
Wouldn’t that be great? I thought with talk radio, Fox News and the internet, we’d have gotten past this by now. But the fight goes on. Thank God (and Michelle) for HotAir!
Tony737 on March 15, 2008 at 12:29 PM
The other side has the refs, the timekeeper, the scoreboard. We have to keep playing.
mymanpotsandpans on March 15, 2008 at 12:44 PM
Why would the MSM want their fairytale to change? Disney wouldn’t change the ending of Cinderella, the slipper doesn’t fit.
Tazz 55 on March 15, 2008 at 1:01 PM
moxie_neanderthal on March 15, 2008 at 1:25 PM
The left’s refutation of Stephen Hayes’ take on the report.
http://mediamatters.org/items/200609210001
moxie_neanderthal on March 15, 2008 at 1:30 PM
I stand on my box and defend this administration every day here on campus. I am tired and worn out. If the President can’t stand up and defend himself, then I’m quiting.
knat on March 15, 2008 at 1:34 PM
Obama’s foreign policy likely to be pragmatic, inclusive
This is comforting……
By Warren P. Strobel | McClatchy Newspapers
Posted on Friday, March 7, 2008 email | print tool nameclose
tool goes here
WASHINGTON — If he’s elected president, Barack Obama promises to bring a new tone and more inclusive approach to American foreign policy, reaching out to adversaries and giving greater weight to the views of U.S. allies.
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/staff/warren_strobel/story/29766.html
moxie_neanderthal on March 15, 2008 at 1:45 PM
The major Norwegian wire service reported it exactly as McClatchy did, with most local and national newspapers reporting it without a second look. Before the actual report was even released. Now that the report has been released, silence.
Exactly the same thing happened with the Volcker report on the UN’s Oil for Food scandal. They reported that a few Scandinavian companies were involved, and largely ignored all the important facts, the bread and butter, of the report.
Why? Because they couldn’t be bothered with reporting the forest for the trees. The trees were incompatible with their previous reporting, and thus had to be ignored.
Seixon on March 15, 2008 at 1:45 PM
“Why? Because they couldn’t be bothered with reporting the forest for the trees. The trees were incompatible with their previous reporting, and thus had to be ignored.”
Seixon on March 15, 2008 at 1:45 PM
That is a perfect summation of the corrupt news media worldwide but particularly right here in the United States. The dishonest news media has done nothing but bring aid and comfort to the evil doers of the world.
Travis1 on March 15, 2008 at 2:01 PM
What is, or should be, astounding in all of this is that the information has been in front of the public for a decade: Saddam Hussein promised $25,000 checks to the families of suicide bombers. This alone was support of terrorism. If someone can commit suicide to get insurance money for his family, surely someone can blow up a bunch of strangers that he is supposed to hate to get his family more money than he could learn in his lifetime.
The information has been there all along. But it doesn’t fit the narrative of the Press and the Analysts, and most other people have been taught not to think seriously and critically about things.
On the one hand, it saddens me to see Fox News running garbage about celebrity murders for over half their hours and preempting programs for vapid ‘live’ coverage of hurricanes. On the other hand, if that is the only way to get them to watch a ‘conservative’ news station, there may be a repugnant strategic value in it.
njcommuter on March 15, 2008 at 3:00 PM
Really? Your link leads to a story from 2006.
Del Dolemonte on March 15, 2008 at 4:42 PM
Del,
Good to hear from you once again. Different format than what we had at CQ, but still gives us a forum for communication and sharing of ideas. I have always enjoyed watching as you destroy mindless trolls.
Cheers…
Keemo on March 15, 2008 at 5:35 PM
“malfeasance of the media”????? Cap’n Ed, I respect you – you have been good to us online. But why now do you pull punches at the Liberal/Socialist, adjenda-driven, Communist-loving, MSM? You should have said, “TREASON OF THE MEDIA” because it has gone that far.
jimbo2008 on March 15, 2008 at 6:38 PM
Thanks for the kind words. Don’t know whether moxie is a mindless troll, though. If you click on his name, it takes you to a car maintenance site. Actually I think moxie is saying that the left is trying to use a nearly 2 year old article to refute something from this week.
Del Dolemonte on March 15, 2008 at 8:12 PM
Actually Del, I was referring to the likes of Bogey, jharp, monkei,Teresa et al; the good ol’ days of CQ…
Keemo on March 15, 2008 at 8:35 PM
Seixon,
Long time no talk. Good to see you around.
I actually called the White House press office tonight for a comment for a piece I am working on and when I asked them about this report I got “Ughh…..Ummmm…..Ughhh…..”
“………..” (Pause)(15 seconds of silence)
“Call the Pentagon”
I said “does that mean you have no comment?”
“Call the Pentagon”
and that was it. These people can’t be this incapable of defending themselves can they?
ikez78 on March 15, 2008 at 10:15 PM
This is what we get with a press for whom making a mistake or even outright telling lies has no material downside. Perhaps a smart White House press staff would deny seating to press conferences to media outlets that report news based on leaks and rumors without fact checking.
Allow them to “buy” their way back into good grace by publishing corrections with headlines as large as the original article and with the same prominence as the original article.
That’s just one idea. The key point is that something must be done about the media outlets we have who are taking advantage of there being no downside for false or biased reporting. Who watches the watchers – and can “prosecute”
misdeeds?
herself on March 16, 2008 at 3:23 AM
It’s nice to see how the right has internalized the left’s message on the “communications war.”
The MSM/left consistently argues that the left can’t be held to the same standards as the right because, well, they don’t HAVE any standards.
Now, it’s become so accepted, that when someone on the left lies about you, if you don’t adequately defend yourself (using the leftist MSM to do so, miraculously), the lie becomes YOUR fault.
Might as well go home boys and girls, if you’re accepted that premise than it doesn’t matter who wins the election, the left has won the field.
How about the LIARS being held responsible for their LIES, for once, or is that “just not the way the system works?”
Forgive me if I’m sick of watching the free pass the left/MSM gets when they spew lies like projectile vomit.
Merovign on March 16, 2008 at 3:28 AM
Precisely. It is clear to my way of thinking that the whole story has been already written, facts be damned.
Once large segments of our society have invested themselves in a storyline and it is unimaginable for them to rethink what they’ve already said.
It takes person of strong intellecual honesty (Eric Blair/George Orwell) to come around and refute previously held positions or positions which are not popular.
Orwell talked about the “pansy left.” And part of what is rolled up in that characterization is the intellectual dishonesty of some for their failure to speak the truth once it was known. (Soviet Union/the communist pograms in Spain against the anarchists…etc..)
In fact, Christopher Hitchens has spoken at some length about this issue.
moxie_neanderthal on March 16, 2008 at 9:35 AM
It is worth noting, (I previously provided links) that Strobel seems to have a more favorable view of Obama than McCain in his reporting.
Mr Obama’s entire campaign rests on his pre-war and pre-access to senate intel assesment that this war was not worth fighting. He cannot change his tune. He is fully invested in this storyline.
moxie_neanderthal on March 16, 2008 at 9:53 AM
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