There is one enormous journalism scandal hidden in Judith
Miller's Oct. 16th first person article about the (perhaps
lesser) CIA leak scandal. And that is Ms. Miller's revelation
that she was granted a DoD security clearance while embedded
with the WMD search team in Iraq in 2003.
This is as close as one can get to government licensing of
journalists and the New York Times (if it knew) should never
have allowed her to become so compromised. It is all the more
puzzling that a reporter who as a matter of principle would
sacrifice 85 days of her freedom to protect a source would so
willingly agree to be officially muzzled and thereby deny
potentially valuable information to the readers whose right to
be informed she claims to value so highly.
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001306732
'Hidden Scandal' in Miller Story, Charges Former CBS Newsman
By E&P Staff
Published: October 16, 2005 4:00 PM ET
NEW YORK Since the posting of The New York Times lengthy article
on Judith Miller's involvement in the Plame scandal Saturday
night, much Web buzzing has ensued concerning the revelation
that she had some sort of special classified status while
embedded with troops in Iraq at one point.
The issue came to the fore because Miller, in recounting her
grand jury testimony, wrote about how her former classified
status figured in her discussions with I. Lewis Libby. She was
pressed by the prosecutor on this matter.
E&P columnist William E. Jackson, Jr., had first raised this
issue last year. Today, former CBS national security
correspondent Bill Lynch posted his views in a long letter about
it at the Romenesko site at poynter.org. Here is the letter:
*
There is one enormous journalism scandal hidden in Judith
Miller's Oct. 16th first person article about the (perhaps
lesser) CIA leak scandal. And that is Ms. Miller's revelation
that she was granted a DoD security clearance while embedded
with the WMD search team in Iraq in 2003.
This is as close as one can get to government licensing of
journalists and the New York Times (if it knew) should never
have allowed her to become so compromised. It is all the more
puzzling that a reporter who as a matter of principle would
sacrifice 85 days of her freedom to protect a source would so
willingly agree to be officially muzzled and thereby deny
potentially valuable information to the readers whose right to
be informed she claims to value so highly.
One must assume that Ms. Miller was required to sign a standard
and legally binding agreement that she would never divulge
classified information to which she became privy, without risk
of criminal prosecution. And she apparently plans to adhere to
the letter of that self-censorship deal; witness her dilemma at
being unable to share classified information with her editors.
In an era where the Bush Administration seeks to conceal
mountains of government activity under various levels of
security classification, why would any self-respecting news
organization or individual journalist agree to become part of
such a system? Readers would be right to question whether a
reporter is operating under a security clearance and, by
definition, withholding critical information. Does a newspaper
not have the obligation to disclose to its readers when a
reporter is not only embedded with a military unit but also
officially proscribed in what she may report without running
afoul of espionage laws? Was that ever done in Ms. Miller's
articles from Iraq?
It is not hard to imagine a defense lawyer being granted a
security clearance to defend, say, an "enemy combatant." When
the lawyer gets access to classified information in the case, he
discovers it is full of false or exculpatory information. But,
because he's signed the secrecy oath, there's not a damn thing
he can do except whine on the courthouse steps that his client
is innocent but he can't say why. A journalist should never be
put in an equivalent position, but this is precisely what Ms.
Miller has opened herself to.
There are other questions. Does she still have a clearance? Did
she have it when talking to Scooter Libby? Is that why she never
wrote the Wilson/Plame story?
I am a former White House and national security correspondent
and have had plenty of access to classified information. When I
divulged it, it was always with a common sense appraisal of the
balance between any potential harm done and the public's right
to know. If I had doubts, I would run it by officers whose
judgement I trusted. In my experience, defense and intelligence
officials routinely share secrets with reporters in the full
expectation they will be reported. But if any official had ever
offered me a security clearance, my instincts would have sent me
running. I am gravely disappointed Ms. Miller did not do
likewise.
It strikes me that Ms. Miller's situation is the flip side of
the NYT's Jayson Blair coin. He and the Times were rightly
disgraced for fabricating. In my opinion, Miller also violated
her duty to report the truth by accepting a binding obligation
to withhold key facts the government deems secret, even when
that information might contradict the reportable "facts."
If Ms. Miller agreed to operate under a security clearance
without the knowledge or approval of Times managers, she should
be disciplined or even dismissed. If she had their approval, all
involved should be ashamed.
E&P Staff
(jdefoore@editorandpublisher.com )
===========
LEAKAGE:
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/LEAKGATE.HTM
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