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COMMENTARY: Some insiders think Judith Miller was her own 'source' (Arriana Huffington) Print E-mail
Written by Henry Adams   
Thursday, 28 July 2005

Judith Miller:  First Amendment martyr, or self-serving snitch? -- According to Arriana Huffington, insiders at the New York Times are divided into two camps over Judith Miller -- and one camp thinks that the reason that she has gone to jail rather than reveal her White House source is "because she was the source."  --  Here's the scenario:  "It's July 6, 2003, and Joe Wilson's now famous op-ed piece appears in the Times, raising the idea that the Bush administration has 'manipulate[d]' and 'twisted' intelligence 'to exaggerate the Iraqi threat.'  Miller, who has been pushing this manipulated, twisted, and exaggerated intel in the Times for months, goes ballistic.  Someone is using the pages of her own paper to call into question the justification for the war -- and, indirectly, much of her reporting.  The idea that intelligence was being fixed goes to the heart of Miller's credibility.  So she calls her friends in the intelligence community and asks, Who is this guy?  She finds out he's married to a CIA agent.  She then passes on the info about Mrs. Wilson to Scooter Libby (Newsday has identified a meeting Miller had on July 8 in Washington with an 'unnamed government official').  Maybe Miller tells Rove too -- or Libby does.  The White House hatchet men turn around and tell Novak and Cooper.  The story gets out."  --  When she's not protecting herself, Judith Miller has friends in high places who do it for her.  --  As Arriana Huffington points out, the role that Judith Miller played in hyping the non-existent WMD threat is well known, and was a source of great retrospective embarrassment (or what passed for embarrassment) on the part of the newspaper that employs her.  --  Yet she was not named in the paper's official apology in May 2004.  --  As Arriana Huffington says, the Times "steadfastly refused to even mention the less-than-rigorous reporter whose byline appeared on 4 of the 6 stories the editors singled out as being particularly egregious."  --  Judith Miller (born 1948) is, by virtue of her connections, anything but just a reporter; for eleven years she has been married to Jason Epstein, (born circa 1930) who is, as former editorial director for Random House and the initiator both of the "quality paperback" revolution (with Anchor Books) and, in 1963, of the New York Review of Books, a very avatar of New York intellectual life and a living legend in the world of U.S. publishing.  --  For some reason, though, newspapers never mention the Judith Miller-Jason Epstein marriage.  --  Never?  --  Well, that's an exaggeration.  --  In February 2004, Women's Wear Daily couldn't resist making some comments on the ironies of the inbred world of New York journalism as it relates to the drama of the U.S. national security state in a piece entitled "She Made Her (Em)Bed."[2] -- For a dated but still very readable account of the world of New York literary politics, see Philip Nobile, Intellectual Skywriting: Literary Politics and The New York Review of Books (New York: Charterhouse, 1974)....

1.

JUDY MILLER: DO WE WANT TO KNOW EVERYTHING OR DON'T WE?
By Arriana Huffington

The Huffington Post
July 27, 2005

Not everyone in the Times building is on the same page when it comes to Judy Miller. The official story the paper is sticking to is that Miller is a heroic martyr, sacrificing her freedom in the name of journalistic integrity.

But a very different scenario is being floated in the halls. Here it is: It's July 6, 2003, and Joe Wilson's now famous op-ed piece appears in the Times, raising the idea that the Bush administration has "manipulate[d]" and "twisted" intelligence "to exaggerate the Iraqi threat." Miller, who has been pushing this manipulated, twisted, and exaggerated intel in the Times for months, goes ballistic. Someone is using the pages of her own paper to call into question the justification for the war -- and, indirectly, much of her reporting. The idea that intelligence was being fixed goes to the heart of Miller's credibility. So she calls her friends in the intelligence community and asks, Who is this guy? She finds out he's married to a CIA agent. She then passes on the info about Mrs. Wilson to Scooter Libby (Newsday has identified a meeting Miller had on July 8 in Washington with an "unnamed government official"). Maybe Miller tells Rove too -- or Libby does. The White House hatchet men turn around and tell Novak and Cooper. The story gets out.

This is why Miller doesn't want to reveal her "source" at the White House -- because she was the source. Sure, she first got the info from someone else, and the odds are she wasn't the only one who clued in Libby and/or Rove (the State Dept. memo likely played a role too) . . . but, in this scenario, Miller certainly wasn't an innocent writer caught up in the whirl of history. She had a starring role in it. This also explains why Miller never wrote a story about Plame, because her goal wasn't to write a story, but to get out the story that cast doubts on Wilson's motives. Which Novak did.

This version of events has divided the Times into two camps: those who want to learn everything about this story, and those who want to learn everything as long as it doesn't downgrade the heroic status of their "colleague" Judy Miller. And then there are the schizophrenics. Frank Rich is spending his summer in the second camp, while at the same time writing some of the most powerful and brilliant stuff about the scandal: "This case is about Iraq, not Niger. The real victims are the American people, not the Wilsons. The real culprit . . . is not Mr. Rove but the gang that sent American sons and daughters to war on trumped up grounds . . . That's why the stakes are so high: this scandal is about the unmasking of an ill-conceived war."

But this unmasking -- if it is to be complete -- has to include Judy Miller and the part she played in the mess in Iraq. Of course, the division over Miller is nothing new . . . it predates her transformation into media martyr by many months. For an early look at this riff, check out Howard Kurtz' May 2003 reporting on the way Miller ferociously fought to keep Ahmad Chalabi, her top source on WMD, to herself and the anger it caused at the paper. And also the paper's extraordinary mea culpa from May 2004, in which its editors admitted that the Times' reporting on Iraq "was not as rigorous as it should have been" -- yet steadfastly refused to even mention the less-than-rigorous reporter whose byline appeared on 4 of the 6 stories the editors singled out as being particularly egregious. "It looks," the Times' public admission concluded, "as if we, along with the administration, were taken in." And yet just two month earlier, Times Executive Editor Bill Keller called Miller, who was one of the main reporters "taken in" a "smart, well-sourced, industrious and fearless reporter." Nothing about her less than "rigorous" reporting. Nothing about her reliance on Chalabi being less than "well-sourced."

Any discussion of Miller's actions in the Plame-Rove-Libby-Gonzalez-Card scandal must not leave out the key role she played in cheerleading for the invasion of Iraq and in hyping the WMD threat. Re-reading some of her pre-war reporting today, it's hard not to be disgusted by how inaccurate and pumped up it turned out to be. For chapter and verse, check out Slate's Jack Shafer. For the money quote on her mindset, look to her April 2003 appearance on "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer," where, following up on her blockbuster front page story about an Iraqi scientist and his claims that Iraq had destroyed all its WMD just before the war started, Miller said the scientist was more than a "smoking gun," he was the "silver bullet" in the hunt for WMD. The "silver bullet" later turned out to be another blank -- and the scientist turned out to be a military intelligence official.

Amazingly, however, even as her reporting has been debunked -- and her sources discredited -- Miller has steadfastly refused to apologize for her role in misleading the public in the lead up to the war. Indeed, in an interview with the author of Bush's Brain, James Moore, she, in the words of Moore, "remained righteously indignant, unwilling to accept that she had goofed in the grandest of fashions", telling him: "I was proved fucking right."

As recently as March 2005, in an appearance at Berkeley, she stubbornly refused to express regret. Indeed, she showed that she shares a key attitude with the Bush administration: an unwillingness to admit mistakes when faced with new realities. She even compared herself to the president, saying that she was getting the same information he was getting . . . and suggested that since he hadn't apologized, why should she? Maybe she's angling for the Tenet treatment: promote faulty intel, get a Medal of Freedom. Miller also echoed the words of Don Rumsfeld ("You go to war with the Army you have") when she justified her flawed reporting on WMD by saying "You go with what you've got." Really? Wouldn't it be better to wait until what you've got is right?

It's nice that Bill Keller is visiting Judy in jail giving updates about how hard this is for her, having to be away from her family and friends. But it would be even nicer if we'd had some acknowledgement from Miller of her complicity in sending 138,000 American soldiers away from their family and friends. And, unlike Miller, they won't be returning home in October. Indeed, as of today, 1,785 of them won't be returning home at all.

This story gets deeper with every twist and revelation, including the reminder (via Podhoretz) that Fitzgerald had a previous run in with Miller over her actions in a national security case, and the speculation (via Jeralyn at Talk Left) that Fitzgerald is considering seeking to put Miller under criminal contempt, rather than the civil contempt she's now under.

But one thing is inescapable: Miller -- intentionally or unintentionally -- worked hand in glove in helping the White House propaganda machine (for a prime example, check out this Newsweek story on how the aluminum tubes tall tale went from a government source to Miller to page one of the New York Times to Cheney and Rice going on the Sunday shows to confirm the story to Bush pushing that same story at the U.N.).

So, once again, the question arises (and you can't have it both ways, Frank): when it comes to this scandal, do you want the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth or do you want the truth -- except for what Judy Miller wants to keep to herself?

2.

SHE MADE HER (EM)BED
By J.B.

Women's Wear Daily
February 10, 2004

Original source: Cached

Judith Miller can't catch a break. Just one week after the New York Times reporter was the subject of a thinly veiled swipe by its public editor, Daniel Okrent, the New York Review of Books has chimed in. In an 8,420-word piece called "Now They Tell Us," written by Michael Massing, Miller, among others, is criticized for being one of the many "U.S. journalists who were far too reliant on sources sympathetic to the administration."

Going after Miller for her weapons of mass destruction reporting and her connections to Iraqi dissident Ahmed Chalabi is nothing new. As the piece points out, the Times reporter has been the "subject of harsh criticism in Slate, the Nation, Editor & Publisher, the American Journalism Review and the Columbia Journalism Review."

But there's one thing that differentiates the NYROB from the others: Miller is married to Jason Epstein, a founder of the NYROB who still writes for it occasionally. And the Review's co-editor happens to be Barbara Epstein, his ex-wife.

Of course, no one really expected that the biweekly would interfere with a critic's work on such an important topic.

"They're pretty honorable, how could they dare censor it?" pointed out one industry observer. But the daisy chain effect was amusing to some. "She's married to Epstein, whose ex-wife runs the publication [that's critiquing her]," said another.

Miller said the biggest problem was the piece itself. Speaking of her husband, she said he no longer has a managerial role at the title before adding, "If you'd like his view you should talk to him about it. We're independent agents. Obviously I disagree with Massing's description of the TimesTimes did an excellent job of presenting different perspectives under very difficult circumstances, [i.e , classified information]."

Miller also said she'd been "misquoted and misrepresented" in the piece and that a letter has been sent. It has not yet arrived at the Book Review, though, said Barbara Epstein.

As for Jason Epstein, he said, "I can't discuss that," and hung up the phone.


Last Updated ( Thursday, 28 July 2005 )
 
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