ZNET
November 12, 2005
How
The New York Times Discovered All Those
Wmds In Iraq And Cuba
By
Jane Franklin
"U.S. Says Hussein Intensifies Quest for A-Bomb Parts" blared the
lead article of the New York Times on Sunday, September 8, 2002. That
fateful
article is now a notorious example of the disastrous symbiosis between
the
White House and corporate media.
Using White House sources, co-authors Judith Miller and Michael
Gordon
stated as fact that "Iraq has sought to buy thousands of specially
designed
aluminum tubes, which American officials believe were intended as
components of
centrifuges to enrich uranium" for use in making nuclear bombs. The
article warned that American officials are "alarmed" by Iraq's
"quest for nuclear weapons": "The first sign of a `smoking gun,'
they argue, may be a mushroom cloud."
Here was the perfect gift to President Bush's quest for war: an
article
parroting the Administration's own words on the front page of the
liberal New
York Times, "the newspaper of record." Timed for the Sunday talk
shows and their White House guests, the article was deployed within
hours of
its publication by Vice-President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin
Powell,
and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, each seizing the
opportunity to
spread their scary disinformation to TV audiences throughout the
country and
the world.
On "Meet the Press" with Tim Russert, Cheney cited the article as
evidence for the administration's case: "There's a story in the New
York
Times this morning...I want to attribute the Times. I don't want to
talk about,
obviously, specific intelligence sources, but it's now public that, in
fact,
[Saddam Hussein] has been seeking to acquire...the kinds of tubes that
are
necessary to build a centrifuge" as a step toward building a nuclear
bomb.
General Colin Powell, the media's image of a moderate (despite such
achievements as his cover-up of the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, support
for the
contras in Nicaragua, and oversight of the invasion of Panama), was
part of the
show. In his interview on "Fox News Sunday" by Tony Snow and Brit
Hume, Powell delivered a bellicose argument for quick "regime change"
because "time is not on our side." "As we saw in reporting just
this morning," he gravely warned, Hussein has ordered "the
specialized aluminum tubing one needs to develop centrifuges that would
give
you an enrichment capability" for making nuclear bombs.
Condi Rice, interviewed by Wolf Blitzer on CNN's "Late Edition,"
stated that the White House knows of "shipments going into Iraq" of
aluminum tubes "that are only really suited for nuclear weapons
programs." She failed to mention that her own staff had been informed a
year earlier of serious doubts about that claim. Borrowing a key phrase
from
the Times article, she warned, "We don't want the smoking gun to be a
mushroom cloud."
This phrase became a rallying cry used by President Bush on October
7 in
Cincinnati in his speech that took the nation to war. "Iraq," he
said, "has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes and other
equipment needed for gas centrifuges, which are used to enrich uranium
for
nuclear weapons." "Facing clear evidence of peril," he
continued, "we cannot wait for the final proof--the smoking gun--that
could come in the form of a mushroom cloud."
Four days later, a cowering Congress surrendered to Bush the
authority to
make war.
So the collusion between the Bush Administration and the New York
Times
contributed to a catastrophic war. Journalists reported what White
House
sources reported and then the White House reported what the journalists
reported. Even though the so-called facts--later revealed as bald
concoctions--were already in dispute, White House fiction subtly
morphed into
truth because it bore the respected imprimatur of the Times.
After the damage had been done, Times editors published on May 26,
2004, a
pathetically anemic apology, given the role they had played in
facilitating a
so-called War on Terror that threatens to be the Forever War.
Embarrassed by
blatantly false reports, the editors particularly mentioned six
articles,
including, of course, the September 8, 2002 history-making piece.
Judith Miller was responsible for more of the articles than any
other
reporter (author or co-author of four out of the six) but there were
four other
reporters who were authors or co-authors: Chris Hedges, John Tagliabue,
Patrick
E. Tyler, and Michael Gordon. Those five of course are not the only
eager
mouthpieces.
Now publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. is blaming Times editors as well
as
Judith Miller for the phony pre-war reports about weapons of mass
destruction
in Iraq. He said editors "didn't own up to it quickly enough." Where
was he? And why did the Times publish those jingoist articles about
WMDs in
Iraq in the midst of a massive White House campaign aimed at building
support
for Bush's plan to take out Hussein and take Iraq? When it comes to
foreign
policy, the owners of the New York Times are embedded with the White
House team
that feeds "information" to the eager mouthpieces of corporate media.
They share, for examples, the same clear positions on such crucial
matters as
Israel and Cuba.
Misinformation and disinformation in the New York Times and other
corporate
media are of course nothing new. Those who want to explore the sordid
record,
especially of the Times, should start by consulting Lies of Our Times,
a
monthly magazine published from January 1990 through December 1994;
Edward
Herman's forthcoming article, "The New York Times Versus The Civil
Society," in the December, 2005, Z Magazine; and Howard Friel and
Richard
Falk's The Record of the Paper: How the New York Times Misreports US
Foreign
Policy.
Judith Miller was able to use her job at a prestigious newspaper to
embed
herself with key personalities like Cheney's favorite, Ahmad Chalabi,
an Iraqi
with Iranian ties able to produce lying defectors. At the White House
itself
Miller embedded herself with various acolytes of Dick Cheney, not just
I. Lewis
(Scooter) Libby. Her entanglement with John R. Bolton is equally
insidious. Just
as she collaborated with the White House to stampede us into invading
Iraq, she
attempted to do the same with Cuba.
In the spring of 2002 former President Jimmy Carter was scheduled to
visit
Havana, becoming the first president in or out of office to visit the
island
since the revolution of January 1, 1959. Because the visit was contrary
to the
White House policy of isolating Cuba with sanctions against travel and
trade,
the White House of course wanted to sabotage Carter's trip. On May 6,
six days
before Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter were to fly to Havana, Under Secretary
of State
for Arms Control John Bolton delivered a speech to the Heritage
Foundation in
Washington called "Beyond the Axis of Evil: Additional Threats from
Weapons of Mass Destruction."
He announced, "The United States believes that Cuba has at least a
limited offensive biological warfare research and development effort.
Cuba has
provided dual-use biotechnology to other rogue states. We are concerned
that
such technology could support BW [biological warfare] programs in those
states."
On cue, Judith Miller immediately published in the New York Times an
alarming article headlined "Washington Accuses Cuba of Germ-Warfare
Research." Framed in the "he says-she says" format of what
passes for "objective" journalism nowadays, Miller adroitly presented
the case on behalf of her White House connection. Who is the only
person she
could find to deny or even question Bolton's claims? Why, a Cuban
official, of
course. On the other side, cited in support of Bolton were a Soviet
defector, a
Cuban defector, and unnamed "administration officials."
Miller ended her article with a quote from right-wing Cuban-American
Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart (Republican of Florida), who has
publicly
called for the assassination of President Fidel Castro. Diaz-Balart
said that
Bolton's remarks "`begin to put into the proper perspective the debate
about Cuba, a terrorist state with biological weapons 90 miles from the
shores
of the United States.'" Thus, the article proceeded from Bolton's claim
of
a "research and development effort" to Diaz-Balart's affirmation of
"biological weapons" 90 miles from Florida.
Hurried newspaper readers would probably miss the article's internal
evidence indicating opposition to Bolton's claim among Washington's
intelligence agencies. Miller reported that Bolton "publicly alluded to
conclusions that American intelligence agencies have reached in recent
months
after protracted internal debate."
Internal debate? What's that about? An investigative reporter could
have
easily found out. Bolton's unsubstantiated charge was so outrageous
that it
became one of the main issues in his failure to be confirmed by the
Senate last
summer as ambassador to the United Nations because he had tried to
bully analysts
into saying that there was a definite attempt by Cuba to develop
biological
weapons. Reportedly due to Cheney's urging, Bush gave him the job
anyway with a
recess appointment.
The New York Times, which hardly pretends to cover news about Cuba
fairly,
seemed like a good site for promoting Bolton's onslaught. Miller's
report aimed
to convince Times readers that Cuba's vaunted health system is actually
a cover
for terrorist activities. Why would Jimmy Carter want to visit a rogue
nation
armed with germ weapons? But this time the Administration was going too
far.
Even much of the rest of the corporate media recognized how perverse it
was to
portray Cuba's health system, admired and helpful around the world, as
a
terrorist threat. There was a virtual chorus of "Where's the
evidence?" The Florida Sun-Sentinel brought up the question of timing,
following up with an editorial that asked, "Where's the beef?" New
York's Newsday called the charge of terrorism a "Preposterous
suggestion,"
noting that the upshot is that Cuba has "the most sophisticated
biomedical
resources in Latin America," and adding, "So what?" Skeptical
responses came from all over, including the Chicago Tribune, the
Baltimore Sun
and the Guardian of London. (Bolton's charge was part of a broader
campaign
alleging WMDs in Cuba, as explored in my article, "Looking for
Terrorists
in Cuba's Health System," Z Magazine, June 2003.)
Jimmy Carter did not call off his trip. Quite to the contrary. As he
and
Rosalyn took a tour with Fidel Castro of the Center for Genetic
Engineering and
Biotechnology, he revealed that during briefings before his visit, he
asked the
White House, State Department and CIA if there were any "possible
terrorist activities that were supported by Cuba," and the answer from
all
three was "No." Why didn't Judith Miller do that? Why didn't her
editors make sure she did?
It would have been interesting to be the fly on the wall when Bolton
visited
Judith Miller last summer while she was in jail. Was it friendship or
fear that
took him there? The New York Times has never apologized for the May 7,
2002,
report that promoted Bolton's false charge about Cuba even though the
editors
must have heard what Carter had to say just a week later.
In October, as her stories continued to unravel, Miller told Times
reporters, "`W.M.D.--I got it totally wrong.'" Blaming her sources,
she said, "`The analysts, the experts and the journalists who covered
them--we were all wrong. If your sources are wrong, you are wrong.'" It
shouldn't take much effort to find better sources than Ahmad Chalabi,
John
Bolton, Karl Rove, Scooter Libby, Dick Cheney, and the rest of the Bush
mob.