Posted on 02/16/2007 5:27:43 AM PST by Tolik
Casting the First Stone
Newsweek has some nerve to be questioning with unnamed sources, of course Bushs intentions.
A new round of Middle East hysteria has broken out in Washington. It goes like this: Iran is not really such a serious threat; but once again we are cooking intelligence, ignoring moderates, being needlessly provocative, acting unilaterally and preemptively, looking for a mere pretext to strike, and refusing to try diplomacy. Supposedly Mr. Bush, if just for political reasons alone, cant wait to face the bad choice of removing the Iranians centrifuges and the worst choice of letting them be.
That we have been engaged with Iran on and off for 27 years is forgotten. We are also apparently to put aside for a moment Irans breakneck efforts to get the bomb and forget its serial threats to wipe out the Israeli democracy.
This fear of American cowboyism is now widespread in and out of government. Consult, for example, the latest Newsweek cover-story exposé by Michael Hirsh and Maziar Bahari (Rumors of War), in which we are lectured about George W. Bushs blundering: The secret history of the Bush administrations dealings with Iran is one of arrogance, mistrust and failure.
For Newsweek, there is a weird (or rather, warped) sort of moral equivalence, in which Bush has become the doppelganger of Ahmadinejad, as evidenced by the cover photo of the issue showing a composite faceBush and Ahmadinejad each contributing half (Bush, of course, being the right side, while the right-wing fascistic Ahmadinejad is on the left). The suggestion is that without these two similar extremists, there would a sort of natural détente between our two not so dissimilar nations: In a warped parallel to Bush, who found his voice after 9/11 rallying Americans to the struggle against a vast and unforgiving enemy, the Iranian president rose in stature throughout the Middle East as he railed against America.Apparently after reading this Newsweek exclusive, one is supposed to snicker at the pedestrian Bush idea that Islamic terrorism is vast, unforgiving, or really an enemy at all.
This old Cold War media chestnut of two Manicheans on the path to Armageddon resurfaced also in the Sharon/Arafat days of the Intifada. Then we were lectured that, without those two fossilized extremists in charge, the natural aspirations of the common people on both sides of the border could have resulted in a breakthrough.
Few of such a therapeutic mindset wished to hear in those dark days that a democratically elected Sharonsubject to the audit of a free press and the censure of a nonviolent oppositionwas not comparable to a thug and a terrorist who had rigged one plebiscite and killed off or jailed most who spoke out against him.
Now one is gone, the other incapacitated. Yet the violence continues unabateddespite the liberal confidence that a reasonable Olmert and the good Abbas might have worked something out.
But neither can bring peaceany more than Sharon or Arafat could havesince the problem was never so much personalities per se as the fact that a constitutional democracy was surrounded by corrupt autocracies leveraged by Islamic terrorists.
So beware of Newsweeks latest secret history of our hidden war with Iran.
Anonymous Sources
The piece also has many of the hallmarks of what we have come to expect from this once-hallowed magazine.
First, of course, there are the Woodwardian unnamed sources, and lots of them. An occasional inside informant may be necessary. But in the case of a Newsweek, already on public probation for past lapses, resorting to such senior officials and participants should be seldom and sparse.
Yet, remembering little and learning even less, Newsweek, in a relatively short essay, offers us the following:
"It's plausible," says a senior Coalition adviser who is also not authorized to speak on the record.
Says a U.S. official involved in the talks, who asked not to be named speaking about topics that remain sensitive.
Riding high, Bush seemed to like the idea of a swap, says a participant who asked to remain anonymous because the meeting was classified. Some in the room argued that designating the militants as terrorists had been a mistake, others that they might prove useful against Iran someday.
Asking not to be named because the topic is politically sensitive, he says he got the rough draft from an intermediary with connections at the White House and the State Department.
According to a diplomat who was there but asked not to be identified revealing official discussions.
Says a White House official, who could not be named discussing Iran.
A senior British official who would only speak anonymously about deliberations with the Americans describes Tehran's mood around this time as "cock-a-hoop."
Says an Iranian intelligence official who asked not to be named because secrecy is his business.
Apparently, the more volatile the assertion, the more likely there is no proof for itother than a source who will not be identified, always apparently for prudent rather than self-serving reasons.
After the past furor over Bob Woodwards methodology and Michael Isikoffs work, its a matter of guesswork as to whether these Newsweek quotes are accurate, made up, or enhanced. And I doubt any editors could be certain either, unless they had tapes of these anonymous, self-serving sources to certify their own reporters authenticity.
When Newsweeks Koran story went south, and after it had resulted in several deaths, we got this strange explanation from Isikoff: Obviously we all feel horrible about what flowed from this, but its important to remember there was absolutely no lapse in journalistic standards here. Actually, Mr. Isikoff, it is important to remember that several died precisely because of a lapse of journalistic standards.
Good Sources
Second, in the Newsweek boilerplate formularemember the apotheoses of Richard Clark, John Murtha, Joe Wilson, etc.we always get the few good and thus named sources. Most often, they are presented as the more principled (and, as it happens, liberal) voices that were ignored, thwarted, or driven out. And now, in a fit of principle, they consult with Newsweek about the administrations arrogance, mistrust and failure.
No surprise, then, that once more, for the nth time, Richard Armitage and Colin Powell are wheeled out to offer the real deal. Powell, for one, thinks Bush simply wasn't prepared to deal with a regime he thought should not be in power. As Secretary of State he met fierce resistance to any diplomatic overtures to Iran and its ally Syria. "My position in the remaining year and a half was that we ought to find ways to restart talks with Iran," he says of the end of his term. "But there was a reluctance on the part of the president to do that." The former secretary of State angrily rejects the administration's characterization of efforts by him and his top aides to deal with Tehran and Damascus as failures. "I don't like the administration saying, 'Powell went, Armitage went ... and [they] got nothing.' We got plenty," he says. "You can't negotiate when you tell the other side, 'Give us what a negotiation would produce before the negotiations start'."Nowhere in the tattletale piece, in fact, are we given quotes or details about the Bush administrations supposed characterization of efforts by him and his top aides to deal with Teheran and Damascus as failures. The implication is that Newsweek calls up Powell and Armitage, relates to them something said by one of Newsweeks supposed unnamed administration sources critical of both, and then starts taking down quotes as they fire back.
Then we also get the de rigueur cry of the heart from the former NSC staffer who at ground zero confirms our worst Powellian fears about what the nefarious some in Team Bush secretly are conjuring:Some view the spiraling attacks as a strand in a worrisome pattern. At least one former White House official contends that some Bush advisers secretly want an excuse to attack Iran. "They intend to be as provocative as possible and make the Iranians do something [America] would be forced to retaliate for," says Hillary Mann, the administration's former National Security Council director for Iran and Persian Gulf Affairs.A student in Journalism 101 would not earn a C on a storyline that is framed as some view, then clarified by at least one, and concerns what some advisors secretly want.
After Secretary Powells U.N. speech on WMD, or Richard Armitages confession that he leaked the name of Valerie Plame and then kept silent while Mr. Libby was serially accused of the same, it is not clear that either is an altogether unbiased source.
Tacky Effects
Then there is Newsweeks psychodramatic and serial use of the upper case self-referentas in An Iranian diplomat admits to NEWSWEEK...as if capitalization implies gravitas. But usually it suggests the opposite, as anyone can attest who receives the weekly hate-mail typed in similar glaring block letters.
More importantly, if a source near the center of this scoop just happens now to work for NEWSWEEK, then what? He can hardly remain anonymous; at the same time, the article cannot make him culpable. Thus Michael Gerson ends up neither, in a sad sort of she did it or he did it exculpation.
One of the themes of the article is how Bush & Co. needlessly knocked back on their heels Iranian reformers by, among other things, caricaturing Iran as part of an Axis of Evil. But NEWSWEEKs Gerson actually helped to draft that controversial presidential speech. So how is this embarrassing NEWSWEEK moment handled?Barely a week after the Tokyo meeting, Iran was included with Iraq and North Korea in the "Axis of Evil." Michael Gerson, now a NEWSWEEK contributor, headed the White House speechwriting shop at the time. He says Iran and North Korea were inserted into Bush's controversial State of the Union address in order to avoid focusing solely on Iraq. At the time, Bush was already making plans to topple Saddam Hussein, but he wasn't ready to say so. Gerson says it was Condoleezza Rice, then national-security adviser, who told him which two countries to include along with Iraq. But the phrase also appealed to a president who felt himself thrust into a grand struggle. Senior aides say it reminded him of Ronald Reagan's ringing denunciations of the "evil empire."These are unhappy times of photoshopped Reuters pictures, concocted AP stories cobbled together from Middle Eastern stringers, presidential candidates who fudge and prevaricate about what they said and voted for in October 2002, and amnesiac columnists whose present vehemence against the war matches their past saber-rattling.
But what is missing is a little humility, some tiny notion that in a time of difficult war, the police themselves often need to be policed. We saw that irony again recently with poor Tim Russert in court, stumbling under oath, not unlike his own television guests, when the roles are reversed and a probing attorney plays himselfto himself.
Newsweeks new tale about how we missed a chance at peace with the Iranians and are hell-bent on war may or may not be accurate. But given both the magazines recent history, and its flawed methodology, we will never knowjust as we cant any more trust the pictures we see, the memos that are read on the air, or the media inquisitors who are themselves cross-examined.
All we are left to remember in these dark days of self-righteous indignation is the old advice of the scripture: Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.
Victor Davis Hanson is a military historian and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. His website is victorhanson.com.
Let me know if you want in or out.
Links: FR Index of his articles: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=victordavishanson
His website: http://victorhanson.com/
NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp
New Link! http://victordavishanson.pajamasmedia.com/
It's not only NEWSWEAK... the entire DBM is an active, socialist 5th column.
Bring back wartime press censorship.
VD Hanson?
Another reason to not alter the titles.
Bump, for later reading.
VDH seems to be writing this is a cold fury.
I wonder what Newsweek's circulation is now?
I did not know that Gerson is now a Newsweek contributor.
Wouldn't have to... if they just prosecuted a couple of the seditious bastards, the rest of the scum would catch on quick.
"Newsweek? Not in this house."
Hank Hill
I got that feeling too.
"Common experience tells us that claims that will only be made anonymously are often unreliable."
(Sen. Clinton Urges U.N. Sanctions Against Iran)
(Hillary Clinton calls Iran a threat to U.S., Israel)
(Harry Reid: More Troops to Iraq!)
(Advocates of troop surge about-face in Congress) (Reid to Challenge Bush on Iran)
(Harry Reid: No Good Military Options in Iran)
(Reid and Pelosi Deliver Address on the State of Our Union)
On and On it goes...the left gave Chavez and Ahmadinejad cart blanche to make fun of and criticize President Bush because of their unabated bashing of the President. The left once against the Iranian nuclear threat, are now apparently for willing to give Iran even more time to continue without a solution such as heavy sanctions which the President is for. Whatever the President proposes the left opposes its as simple as that.
FR limit for a title is 100 characters including spaces. So, with a long title one have to compromise. If I had to cut the title in any way, I repeat the whole title at the top of the post. (If title fits 100 characters, I don't repeat the title). Hope my bad behavior will be excused in this case. :^)
Great (and genuine) de-construction by Hanson, a national hero.
He is a patriot for our time - more than a little because he is so very well acquainted with the historical past.
Well said.
No wonder he is angry, we are under attack by demonic lunatics, who would happily exterminate all of us and the likes of Newsweek, are openly supporting them.
The left has gone insane.
He also exposes a bit of humor:
Then there is Newsweeks psychodramatic and serial use of the upper case self-referentas in An Iranian diplomat admits to NEWSWEEK...as if capitalization implies gravitas. But usually it suggests the opposite, as anyone can attest who receives the weekly hate-mail typed in similar glaring block letters.
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