Catch 22 at the New York Times
From AlterNet, October 14, 2005
By Arianna Huffington
Now that Judge Hogan has lifted Judy Miller’s contempt citation,
there is no reason for the Times to hold back on its promised
full accounting of the Miller story.
Rarely has there been so much riding on a single article.
Especially internally. The frustration I’ve been reporting on
since July has now spilled into the MSM with “nearly a dozen
Times staffers” venting to Howard Kurtz. The Times newsroom is a
powder keg ready to blow.
But the Times finds itself facing a vexing Catch-22. In order to
quell the rising newsroom rebellion — not to mention fulfill its
obligation to the Times’ readers — the Miller reporting team of
Landman, Van Natta, Liptak, and Scott need to produce an article
that tells the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth
about what Bill Keller called Miller’s “entanglement with the
White House leak investigation.” But how can they do that
without going against the paper’s unwavering editorial line in
support of Miller?
As I’ve said before, coming clean on Miller will mean focusing
not just on “the drama” of Miller’s time behind bars but on her
discredited reporting on WMD in Iraq — the issue that brought
her to the Plame dance in the first place. It will require
Landman and company to interview the editors and reporters who
observed first-hand Miller’s actions during the period in
question (and who are speaking privately about her
journalistically dubious methods) — including her tirade against
Joe Wilson. It will entail the paper applying the same
journalistic standards to the Judy Miller story it would apply
to any other subject.
But how do you do that when your bosses are still sticking by
the Judy-as-hero routine?
So which way will it go? Will the Times save its journalistic
soul by coming clean or will it serve up a mushy bowl of
Judy-shielding pablum to avoid contradicting its editorial
stance so far?
If the language Keller has been using lately is any indication
of the paper’s mindset, it doesn’t bode well. His references to
“vultures still circling,” “preposterous speculation
congeal[ing] into conventional wisdom,” and “myths kicked up by
the rumor mill” don’t sound much like a man ready to come clean.
If the big Times story does not break with this siege mentality,
the paper will have made the kind of mistake it will be next to
impossible to recover from. Expect an exodus from West 43rd
Street. I hear that some of the Times’ brightest stars are
already being courted by competitors looking to take advantage
of the mounting anger at the paper’s handling of the Miller
affair. Maybe that’s what Keller meant by “vultures circling.”
And this time, the anguish won’t be brought to an end by the
kind of ritual bloodletting that followed the Jayson Blair
fiasco. Sulzberger sacrificing Keller won’t do the trick. No one
doubts for a moment that on all things Miller Keller has been
acting as a loyal lieutenant to the publisher.
As a source familiar with the inner working of the Times told me
in August: “Every big decision that comes out of the Times comes
directly from the top. Nobody does anything there without Arthur
Sulzberger’s approval. It’s the larger untold story in all of
this — that he now runs the newsroom.”
Or as longtime Times observer Michael Wolff told me: “The
distinction between the 3rd floor and the 14th floor used to be
real. The editor was always in charge. That’s no longer the
case. And it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that while Pinch has
been running the paper, it just lurches from crisis to crisis.
At some point you have to question the quality of his
leadership.”
And that questioning has already begun, leading to the
unspeakable being whispered among big media players. As one of
them boldly asserted to me: “Mark my words, this will end with
Sulzberger’s resignation.”
It’s a sign of how bad things have gotten that such a
far-fetched scenario has moved from the realm of the
preposterous (after all, nine of the Times board’s fourteen
directors were chosen by the Sulzberger family) to the realm of
the conceivable.
That’s a hell of a lot to have riding on a single story.
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Wilson, Plame, Cooper... Don't Forget the Back Story!
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.30 MB) 10/11/05
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-11-Charles-03.mp3
IS CHENEY GOING TO BE INDICTED?...BUSH HAD TO KNOW!!!!
Guest: Jane Hamsher
http://firedoglake.blogspot.com knows more than most about
why.
AUDIO: APROX 45 MINUTES.... OF WOW! WOW!!
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-13-Charles-03.mp3
POSTED AT: LEAKGATE:
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/LEAKGATE.HTM