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Research
assistance by Petra Bartosiewicz. Read James Carey's June
16 Nation editorial for more on problems at the
New York Times. |

ho's the exact opposite of Jayson Blair, the
New York Times reporter accused of inventing sources and
quotes, plagiarizing and other sins? Well, how about Judith Miller?
Where Blair is young and black and inexperienced, a rookie
journalist whose job was largely to interview ordinary people,
Miller is middle-aged and white and a veteran
Times star whose
job it is to interact with the best and the brightest in science,
academia and government.
But Blair and Miller have more in common than you might think.
Both are in trouble for giving readers dubious information. While
Miller's alleged improprieties are of a more subtle nature, and she
comes into this rough patch with an estimable reputation built over
the course of a long and distinguished career, her case reveals a
great deal about the state of today's news media. What Miller did,
and the fact that her brand of journalism is encouraged and rewarded
by the powers that be, is precisely the kind of topic that the
Times's leadership ought to air during its current semipublic
glasnost phase. In Blair's case, the only serious damage has
been to the paper's image. Miller, on the other hand, risks playing
with the kind of fire that starts or justifies wars, gets people
killed and plays into the hands of government officials with
partisan axes to grind.
Every morning, almost every other source of news looks to see
what the Times does, then follows its lead. On the morning of
April 21, in a front-page story from Iraq, Miller suggested that the
main reason US forces had failed to find the much-ballyhooed Weapons
of Mass Destruction--the ostensible primary reason for the
invasion--was that they had been recently destroyed or existed only
as precursors with dual, civilian uses. Her source? A man standing
off in the distance wearing a baseball cap, who military sources
told her was an Iraqi scientist who had told them those things. In
the same piece, she floated unsupported claims alleging that Iraq
had provided WMD aid to Syria and Al Qaeda. In so doing, she put the
Times's imprimatur on a highly questionable formulation that
was also essential to White House political interests.
In response to questions to Miller, her editor, Andrew Rosenthal,
told The Nation via e-mail that the article "made clear that
Judy Miller was aware of his identity and in fact met him, but was
asked to withhold his name out of concern for his personal safety."
Yet the article does not bear that out. It says military officials
"declined to identify him," that she was only permitted to view him
from a distance and that she was not allowed to interview him but
merely permitted to view a letter ostensibly written by the man, in
Arabic. "What's surprising and I think disappointing is that the
New York Times, not just Judith Miller, chose to take at face
value the initial assessments of a US investigations team that
certainly has a vested interest in finding WMD in Iraq," says Daryl
Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. The
New York Observer spoke with sources at the Gray Lady who
indicated widespread grumbling about the piece; one source called it
"wacky-assed."
But it was more than that: Miller and the Times consented
to prepublication approval of her piece by the military. "Those
officials asked that details of what chemicals were uncovered be
deleted," Miller wrote. "They said they feared that such information
could jeopardize the scientist's safety by identifying the part of
the weapons program where he worked." (Why his safety would be in
question with Saddam vanquished was not explained.)
The April 21 story was one of a series of pieces on WMD in Iraq
filed by Miller that relied heavily on unnamed sources and Pentagon
officials. The question of how close Miller may have come to serving
as a vehicle for Administration views was raised by Washington
Post reporter Howard Kurtz in a May 26 story. He quoted an
internal e-mail by Miller in which she said that the main source for
her articles on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction was Ahmad
Chalabi, an exile leader who is close to top Pentagon officials. In
the e-mail, to Times Baghdad bureau chief John Burns, Miller
said of Chalabi: "He has provided most of the front page exclusives
on WMD to our paper." As Kurtz noted, "According to the New
Yorker's Seymour Hersh, Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress was a
key source of information about weapons for the Pentagon's own
intelligence unit--information sometimes disputed by the CIA.
Chalabi may have been feeding the Times, and other news
organizations, the same disputed information."
"Chalabi has NEVER been an unnamed source of mine," Miller told
The Nation in an e-mail. "He has ALWAYS been named. Every
time. This is one of several gross errors in Kurtz's story." Miller
did not identify those errors. It's notable that Miller's comments
about Chalabi don't jibe with what she told Burns in her e-mail to
him. Chalabi is named or quoted in sixteen Miller articles over the
past year, mostly on political topics, but in only one of those is
he mentioned, even remotely, in connection with WMDs--and then only
to note that he and US military investigators might be exchanging
intelligence information. If he were the New York Times's key
supplier of exclusives on that subject and, as Miller claims, was
not used as an unattributed source, his name should appear in those
articles. Rosenthal did not comment on the Chalabi memo beyond
saying Kurtz should not have published it.