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Case Open: Why is the press avoiding the Weekly Standard's intelligence scoop?
Slate ^ | 11/18/03 | Jack Shafer

Posted on 11/19/2003 6:17:47 AM PST by Gothmog

Who's afraid of the Weekly Standard?

Everybody knows how the press loves to herd itself into a snarling pack to chase the story of the day. But less noticed is the press's propensity to half-close its lids, lick its paws, and contemplate its hairballs when confronted with events or revelations that contradict its prejudices.

The press experienced such a tabby moment this week following the publication of Stephen F. Hayes' cover story in the most recent Weekly Standard about alleged links between Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden. The Hayes piece, which went up on the Web Friday, quotes extensively from a classified Oct. 27, 2003, 16-page memo written by Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas J. Feith at the request of the Senate Intelligence Committee. The committee, which is investigating the administration's prewar intelligence claims, asked Feith to annotate his July 10 testimony, and his now-leaked memo indexes in 50 numbered points what the various alphabet intelligence agencies (CIA, FBI, DIA, NSA) had collected about a Saddam-Osama connection.

A classified memo by a top Pentagon official written at Senate committee request and containing information about scores of intelligence reports might spell news to you or me—whether you believe Saddam and Osama were collaborating or not. But except for exposure at other Murdoch media outlets (Fox News Channel, the Australian, the New York Post) and the conservative Washington Times, the story got no positive bounce. Time and Newsweek could have easily commented on some aspect of the story, which the Drudge Report promoted with a link on Saturday. But except for a dismissive one-paragraph mention in the Sunday Washington Post by Walter Pincus and a dismissive follow-up by Pincus in today's (Tuesday's) Post pegged to the news that the Justice Department will investigate the leak, the mainstream press has largely ignored Hayes' piece.

What's keeping the pack from tearing Hayes' story to shreds, from building on it or at least exploiting the secret document from which Hayes quotes? One possible explanation is that the mainstream press is too invested in its consensus finding that Saddam and Osama never teamed up and its almost theological view that Saddam and Osama couldn't possibly have ever hooked up because of secular/sacred differences. Holders of such rigid views tend to reject any new information that may disturb their cognitive equilibrium. Another explanation is that the national security press corps gave it a bye because they found nothing sufficiently new in the memo—and nothing that hadn't been trotted out previously in other guises by the Bush administration. In other words, old news ain't today's news. Another possible explanation is that the press has come to discount any information from the administration camp as "rumint," a rumor-intelligence cocktail that should be avoided. (One willing victim of prewar rumint, the New York Times' Judith Miller, piped the allegations of Iraqi defectors into her paper for months and months before the war and suffered a nasty blow to her reputation as a conscientious reporter when her defectors turned out to be spewing crap.)

The Department of Defense evinced more critical interest in the leaked memo than most of the press with a Saturday, Nov. 15, press release, confirming the memo's authenticity but claiming—without naming Hayes or the Weekly Standard—that it had been misinterpreted: "The classified annex was not an analysis of the substantive issue of the relationship between Iraq and al Qaida, and it drew no conclusions."

The DoD objection is a bit of a red herring. Except for the Weekly Standard's grandiose title "Case Closed" (it should have been titled "Case Open"), the Hayes piece works assiduously (until its final paragraph, at least) not to oversell the memo. Hayes' ample quotations from the memo preserve much of the qualifying language that fudges any absolute case for the Saddam-Osama connection.

This doesn't prevent Pincus from letting his sources rip the memo. One anonymous "former senior intelligence officer" quoted by Pincus sniffs that the memo is not an intelligence product but "data points ... among the millions of holdings of the intelligence agencies, many of which are simply not thought likely to be true."

Help me! Many a reporter has hitched a ride onto Page One with the leak of intelligence much rawer than the stuff in Feith's memo. You can bet the farm that if a mainstream publication had gotten the Feith memo first, it would have used it immediately—perhaps as a hook to re-examine the ongoing war between the Pentagon and CIA about how to interpret intelligence. Likewise, you'd be wise to bet your wife's farm that had a similar memo arguing no Saddam-Osama connection been leaked to the press, it would have generated 100 times the news interest as the Hayes story.

I write this not as a believer in the Saddam-Osama love child or as a non-believer. My mind remains open to argument and to data both raw and refined. Hayes' piece piques my curiosity, and it should pique yours. If it's true that Saddam and Osama's people danced together—if just for an evening or two—that undermines the liberal critique that Bush rashly folded Iraq into his "war on terror." And if it's true, isn't that a story? Or, conversely, if Feith's shards of information direct us to the conclusion that his people stacked the intel to justify a bogus war, isn't that a story, too? Where is the snooping, prying, nosy press that I've heard so much about?

Finally, the memo isn't Feith's best sales pitch for the Saddam-Osama connection, nor does Hayes present it as such. As the DoD press release explains, the memo is Feith's response to the Senate Intelligence Committee's request for a catalog of intelligence reports that supports his July 10 testimony, a catalog that will help the committee locate the original reports from the various intelligence agencies. Given the leaky nature of the intelligence committee—with the Democrats and Republicans aggressively venting sensitive information to the press for political advantage—I'd be disappointed if we don't see some of the meaty original reports in the coming months. For open minds, the case does remain open.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: caseclosed; ciaintel; feith; leaks; mediabias; stephenfhayes
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Het, even Slate noticed. But, will anyone notice Slate noticed unless it's posted somewhere where people will notice it.
1 posted on 11/19/2003 6:17:47 AM PST by Gothmog
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To: Gothmog
IF it had been a memo that pointed a guilty finger at President Bush it would be all over all the main network TV channels, CNN, and all the front pages of all the newspapers.....
2 posted on 11/19/2003 6:20:28 AM PST by buffyt (Can you say President Hillary? Me Neither!!!!)
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To: Gothmog
Bookmarked.
3 posted on 11/19/2003 6:21:10 AM PST by unsycophant
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To: Gothmog
"Why?"

Is that a rhetorical question?

;)
4 posted on 11/19/2003 6:21:18 AM PST by bannie (The government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend upon the support of Paul.)
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To: Gothmog
Case Open: Why is the press avoiding the Weekly Standard's intelligence scoop?

The press is dominated by democrats and other sworn enemies of the United States.

5 posted on 11/19/2003 6:24:06 AM PST by friendly (Man is so made that whenever anything fires his soul, impossibilities vanish.)
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To: Gothmog
My God, Shafer wrote something that I actually agree with, and something that didn't proclaim George Bush as the anti-Christ. I'll be looking out my window all day for flying pigs.

}:-)4
6 posted on 11/19/2003 6:29:03 AM PST by Moose4 ("The road goes on forever, and the party never ends." --Robert Earl Keen)
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To: Gothmog
Seriously, we should all contact this guy and give him congradulations for pointing out the obvious.
7 posted on 11/19/2003 6:31:54 AM PST by sirchtruth
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To: Gothmog
"If a Slate fell in the Internet would anybody hear it?"
8 posted on 11/19/2003 6:32:21 AM PST by Semper Paratus
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To: Moose4
LOOK OUT! Incoming!!!


9 posted on 11/19/2003 6:40:40 AM PST by buffyt (Can you say President Hillary? Me Neither!!!!)
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To: Gothmog
media bias. why else.
10 posted on 11/19/2003 6:41:26 AM PST by petercooper (Proud VRWC Neanderthal)
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To: Dog; Dog Gone; Coop; swarthyguy; Green Knight; Peach; FairOpinion; JustPiper; apokatastasis; ...
Why indeed?
11 posted on 11/19/2003 6:44:32 AM PST by Angelus Errare
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To: Semper Paratus
Yes, and we're all having a good time laughing about it, ha ha ha.
12 posted on 11/19/2003 6:44:42 AM PST by Gothmog
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To: Gothmog
I beleived long before the war with Iraq that President Bush had confirmed this link between Bin Laden's terrorists and Iraq, but couldn't reveal it to protect US intelligence sources.

President Bush is a man of integrety who would not have commited US forces to a war in Iraq simply to show his macho as is insinuated by the liberals. On the contrary, Clinton bombed an aspirin factory in the Sudan to take pressure off his Monica affair and likely killed some innocent people in the process.

13 posted on 11/19/2003 6:45:29 AM PST by The Great RJ
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To: Gothmog
Oh yeah, here's a link to a Tony Blankely op-ed on the same subject for those who are interested:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1024604/posts

14 posted on 11/19/2003 6:45:51 AM PST by Gothmog
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To: Angelus Errare
But the press is all over Bush when it looks like he may have compromised a CIA agent. Sheesh.

How about an organized Freepmail to the networks?
15 posted on 11/19/2003 6:48:32 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Gothmog
Many a reporter has hitched a ride onto Page One with the leak of intelligence much rawer than the stuff in Feith's memo.

Some more reporters should have been mentioning the memo, if only to question its legitimacy.

They didn't even do that...which makes it clear that their bosses don't want the memo to get air time or media space.

I'm sure that, somewhere, some liberal media honcho is trying to find something connected with the memo that can blame Bush big-time.

If the honcho or an underling succeeds in pointing a finger at Bush, we will hear about the memo.

16 posted on 11/19/2003 6:49:58 AM PST by syriacus (In this world there's matter, antimatter, and ANTIFACT. Schumer is an expert on antifacts.)
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To: petercooper
....why else......

How about fear?
17 posted on 11/19/2003 6:56:02 AM PST by bert (Don't Panic!)
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To: bannie
GMTA. My exact thoughts. "Why" used with anything concerning the press is indeed rhetorical.
18 posted on 11/19/2003 6:58:02 AM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?")
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To: Gothmog
bookmark
19 posted on 11/19/2003 7:00:39 AM PST by CheezyD
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To: syriacus
Not only the lib media, but the CIA bureaucrats, Sen. Rockefeller and Sen. Roberts. Roberts is still wasting time being bipartisan, I guess. From the WPost 11/18/03

"The CIA will ask the Justice Department to investigate the leak of a 16-page classified Pentagon memo that listed and briefly described raw agency intelligence on any relationship between Saddam Hussein's Iraqi government and Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda terrorist network, according to congressional and administration sources.

"In addition, the leaders of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) and Vice Chairman John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), are considering making their own request for a Justice investigation. The top-secret memo was attached to an Oct. 27 letter to them from Undersecretary of Defense Douglas J. Feith."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A54452-2003Nov17.html

20 posted on 11/19/2003 7:09:22 AM PST by Gothmog
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