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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/17/2004 1:15:58 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
"This doesn't sound like the liberal press to me"

Seymour Hersh - dyed in the wool liberal - The Pentagon
sharply denied the allegations, calling them "outlandish,
conspiratorial, and filled with error and anonymous
conjecture."

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) - "I do not yet have the
evidence...."

Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) - "On the surface, you could
portray...."

"Care to predict where this ends up?"

TWT - I'll let time & events allow facts & reality to
surface, not partisan hysterics &/or conjecture determine
where this should properly end up.........
<font size=4>
Pentagon Denies Report's Rumsfeld Claims

.....The Defense Department strongly denied the claims made in the report, which cited unnamed current and former intelligence officials and was published on the magazine's Web site. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita issued a statement calling the claims "outlandish, conspiratorial, and filled with error and anonymous conjecture.".....

.....Defense Department officials deny that, saying prisoners always are treated under guidelines of the Geneva Conventions.

"No responsible official of the Department of Defense approved any program that could conceivably have been intended to result in such abuses as witnessed in the recent photos and videos," Di Rita said in his statement. "This story seems to reflect the fevered insights of those with little, if any, connection to the activities in the Department of Defense."

Di Rita also said Cambone has never had any responsibility for any detainee or interrogation programs......

news.yahoo.com.



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/17/2004 1:48:54 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
....Nor are Nazi allusions limited to talk radio. Seymour Hersh, who broke the story of the Iraqi prisons in The New Yorker, appeared on CNN last week and said a picture of two guard dogs snarling at a prisoner was "a scene from we know what, you know, [the] Third Reich." When host Wolf Blitzer asked him to be more specific, Mr. Hersh changed the subject.....

Message 20137308



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/17/2004 4:04:23 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Sly Sy

A journalist’s latest tricks.
NRO
<font size=4>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The man behind many of the most provocative Abu Ghraib stories — Seymour M. Hersh of The New Yorker — is one of the best-known reporters in the business. But that doesn't mean he always gets his facts right. "If the standard for being fired was being wrong on a story, I would have been fired long ago," he once said. Hersh has admitted to lying to his sources and one former editor accused him of blackmailing them. Can he be trusted today?<font size=3> John J. Miller profiled Hersh in the December 3, 2001 issue of National Review.
<font size=4>
“At The New Yorker, each article undergoes an extensive fact-checking process:<font size=3> Quotes are confirmed, details authenticated, the spellings of names verified, and so forth," write that magazine's editors in their November 12 issue. "This is well known." With jaw-dropping piety, they go on to note that their "grueling procedure" applies even to cartoons.
<font size=4>
It is The New Yorker's reputation for rigorous fact-checking that made a story appearing in the same issue such a sensation.<font size=3> Seymour M. "Sy" Hersh, one of America's most celebrated investigative journalists, reported stunning new information about the military's nighttime raid, on October 20, of Taliban leader Mullah Omar's compound in Afghanistan. Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had said the mission "overall was successful." Hersh, however, labeled it "a near-disaster," and provided astonishing details: "Twelve Delta members were wounded, three of them seriously." It was the first time anybody in the public at large had heard this. Hersh's article was the talk of the Sunday news shows on November 4, before copies of The New Yorker had even hit the newsstands; he made a number of media appearances to explain his version of the events.
<font size=4>
If Hersh's account is correct, it is deeply troubling. It not only conjures up images of botched special operations of the recent past, such as the Desert One mission in Iran (1980) and the "Black Hawk Down" catastrophe in Somalia (1993), but also suggests that the Pentagon won't provide basic facts about the war, even when doing so poses no reasonable threat to national security.

But if the claims coming out of the Pentagon deserve close scrutiny-and they do-then the same must go for Hersh's reporting. It turns out that key assertions in his article are very probably wrong, even as Hersh uses them to opine on the airwaves about how the war should be fought.

Hersh, of course, is no ordinary reporter. Over the past 30 years, he has won just about every journalism award there is, including the Pulitzer, which he took home for uncovering the My Lai massacre in Vietnam. His articles and books are full of revelations. In the first New Yorker piece he wrote after September 11, for instance, he reported that an unmanned aircraft had a clear shot to kill Mullah Omar on the first night of the bombing-but that a military lawyer forbade the attack.

This was disputed, just as virtually everything Hersh
writes is disputed. It's become a ritual: Hersh publishes
an eye-popping story, and then the complaints pour in.
Sources say they weren't quoted properly. Others claim
Hersh takes material out of context and ignores facts that
don't comport with the point he wants to make. According
to a Vanity Fair profile of Hersh, A. M. Rosenthal, the
former executive editor of the New York Times (where Hersh
worked in the 1970s), once heard him "practically
blackmailing" a person he was supposed to be interviewing.

Hersh has admitted mistakes in the past. His 1991 book The
Samson Option, which said the Israelis owned nuclear
missiles, relied for much of its information on a man
Hersh now admits "lies like people breathe." In an
interview three years ago with The Progressive, Hersh
said, "If the standard for being fired was being wrong on
a story, I would have been fired long ago."

His methods came under severe criticism following the publication of his 1997 bestseller The Dark Side of Camelot and its negative portrayal of John F. Kennedy.<font size=3> While conducting his research, Hersh came across what looked like his biggest scoop since My Lai: a cache of unknown JFK documents offering apparent proof of an affair with Marilyn Monroe, among dozens of other tantalizing factoids. <font size=4>Hersh gained access to them through Lawrence X. Cusack, a man who claimed his father was a lawyer for Kennedy. The papers eventually were shown to be forgeries-Cusack is now in prison-but Hersh refused for months to disbelieve them, coming up with desperate rationalizations for skeptics who wondered why documents containing ZIP codes were dated before ZIP codes even existed. Hersh was so eager to get his hands on the papers, he wrote a letter to Cusack stating that he had "independently confirmed" the relationship between JFK and Cusack's father. This was a lie. "Here is where I absolutely misstated things," testified Hersh during Cusack's trial. Assistant U.S. attorney Paul A. Engelmayer accused Hersh of playing "a little fast and loose with the facts."<font size=3>

Ultimately Hersh stepped back from the brink. He tried to develop a television documentary about the JFK papers, and his partners were able to prove convincingly that they were fakes. The final version of his book did not cite them. But <font size=4>critics complained about the material he did use, because of its thin sourcing and its treatment of speculation as fact. "In his mad zeal to destroy Camelot, to raze it down, dance on the rubble, and sow salt on the ground where it stood, Hersh has with precision and method disassembled and obliterated his own career and reputation," wrote Garry Wills in The New York Review of Books.<font size=3> Conservatives enjoyed the controversy, because it involved liberals attacking each other and made JFK look bad. Yet Wills was essentially correct in his assessment.

Hersh defended his interest in Kennedy's sex life. "I put in all the sex stuff because it goes right to his character, his recklessness, his notion of being above the law," he told the New York Times. Hersh did not apply this same standard to what he called the "Clinton sex crap." One year later-and a month before Bill Clinton's impeachment-he lambasted the press for "climbing into the gutter with the president and the Republican radicals . . . the same Republicans who say you can't have Huckleberry Finn in libraries." When he did criticize Clinton, it was always from the left, for "what he's done to welfare, what he's done to the working class, what he's done to habeas corpus."
<font size=4>
Hersh saves his real ire for Republicans, accusing the GOP of having a racist foreign policy: "Ronald Reagan found it easy to go to Grenada, and Bush found it easy to go to Panama, to the Third World, or to people of a different hue. There seems to be some sort of general pattern here." The war in Afghanistan must only confirm these prejudices.

The latest New Yorker story quickly became the latest Hersh controversy. Top military officials have denied its primary claim of a disastrous mission that included serious casualties. "That's not true," said Gen. Myers on Meet the Press, when Tim Russert asked him about the article. "My belief is that every soldier that came back from that particular raid is back on duty today; none of them seriously injured, certainly none of them injured by the Taliban." Rear Adm. John Stufflebeem concurred: "The reports I have seen just don't support that article's supposition." Army Gen. Tommy Franks added, "We had a bunch of these young people who, you know, had scratches and bumps and knocks from rocks and all this sort of stuff. And so, it's-it's probably-it's probably accurate to say that maybe-maybe five or maybe 25 people were, quote, 'wounded.' We had no one wounded by enemy fire."

Clearly, somebody's not telling the truth. Perhaps the
matter might have cleared up if Hersh had confronted the
generals with his information before reporting it. This is
Journalism 101-let everybody involved have a chance to
comment-and yet Hersh chose to consider only one side of
the story.

It is difficult to double-check Hersh's work because of
its heavy reliance on anonymous sources. Perhaps in time
the full truth of October 20 will come out. For now,
though, there is a single assertion in Hersh's story whose
truth can be independently assessed. Hersh writes: "The
mission was initiated by sixteen AC-130 gunships, which
poured thousands of rounds into the surrounding area but
deliberately left the Mullah's house unscathed."

The Pentagon won't discuss operational details, but it's
extremely unlikely that the mission involved 16 AC-130
planes. The Air Force has only 21 of them, and a number of
these are set aside for training in Florida. More
important is the fact that these big planes, full of
firepower, don't fly in such large clusters. During the
invasion of Panama in 1989, the Air Force used only seven
of them at once. In the Gulf War, only a few were in the
air at a time. Would 16 of them lead a relatively small
special-forces operation in Afghanistan? "It makes zero
sense," one Air Force officer told me.

When I asked Hersh about this apparent discrepancy, he was
dismissive. "I wasn't there. Somebody could have misspoke.
I could have misheard. It's possible there weren't 16," he
said. "If I'm wrong, I'm wrong." He did admit that he had
made an error during his November 5 interview on CNN, when
he said the mission involved "sixteen helicopter gunships"
rather than 16 AC-130s. "That time I did misspeak," he
said.

Although The New Yorker says it assigned several fact-
checkers to Hersh's article, it would seem that Hersh is
once again playing fast and loose with the facts. And what
does that say about his central claim of twelve men
wounded, three of them seriously? "That's what my source
told me," he says.

This is more than a simple matter of getting facts
straight. Hersh has taken his contentions and used them as
a basis for blasting the conduct of the war. "The
operation was much too big. . . . It was noisy. It was
slow," he said on his round of TV interviews. "Delta Force
is so mad that they think-the language is that this time
we lost twelve. Next time, if they do it again the same
way, we're going to lose, you know, dozens. We can't
operate that way."

The next time he seems to break a big story in The New
Yorker, though, it's important to remember that General
Hersh wasn't there-and also to recall a line from Evelyn
Waugh's Scoop, in which an editor advises a war
correspondent: "If there is no news, send rumors instead."
<font size=3>
nationalreview.com



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/17/2004 4:18:21 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
MORE HASH FROM HERSH

nypost.com

May 17, 2004 -- Seymour Hersh is best known for gnawing on the ankles of patriots - not for his comedy writing.

But there's a real belly-laugh near the top of Sy's latest melodramatic melange, out this morning in "The New Yorker."
<font size=4>
The author holds Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld personally responsible for the Abu Ghraib scandal.

How does Hersh know this?

He says the CIA told him.<font size=3>

"A senior C.I.A. official," writes Hersh "said that the [Abu Ghraib] operation stemmed from Rumsfeld's long-standing desire to wrest control of America's clandestine and paramilitary operations from the C.I.A."
<font size=4>
His "senior CIA official" source then complains that Rumsfeld misled America about Abu Ghraib - but that, by God, the Agency wasn't fooled:

"Some people think you can bullsh*t anyone."

But not the CIA, no siree!

There's no BS-ing the very same CIA Which, um, totally missed 9/11!

And which also:

* Failed to convince Bill Clinton that al Qaeda presented a mortal danger;

* Guaranteed President Bush that it a had "slam-dunk" case on Saddam's weapons of mass destruction;

* Had no permanent presence in Afghanistan, al Qadea's home base, before 9/11 - despite al Qaeda's anti-U.S. world-wide depredations;

* Missed North Korea's nuclear fuel-rod reprocessing - until Pyonyong admitted in April, 2003, that it had broken an agreement not to produce weapons-grade plutonium;

* Failed to identify Indian preparations for an underground nuclear test in May 1998 - an event that triggered Pakistan's first nuclear tests and raised regional tensions to red-alert levels.

* Identified the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, as a weapons dump in May, 1999 - causing it to be bombed by U.S. forces and raising tensions with Beijing to near crisis levels.

But mostly it just missed 9/11.

And so Donald Rumsfeld seeks to bring the Agency under control.

Clearly, the CIA is fighting back; Hersh's latest screed is proof of that.

But God bless Rummy for his effort.

A patriot's work is never done. <font size=3>

nypost.com



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/17/2004 4:50:16 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CNN: Hersh report 'journalist malpractice'

Official denies existence of secret interrogation squad

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Officials in the Pentagon and the U.S. intelligence community Monday flatly denied a New Yorker magazine report that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld approved a clandestine unit to crack down on terrorists held at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, where inmates were abused.

The article, by Seymour Hersh, quotes a former intelligence official saying the unit's instructions were, "Grab whom you must. Do what you want." The report also says the CIA pulled its people from involvement in interrogations at the prison in October "because it was out of control."
<font size=4>
"This is the most hysterical piece of journalist malpractice I have ever observed," said Lawrence DiRita, spokesman for Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, in response to Hersh's report.

A senior intelligence official said the article contains "fantasy," adding, "I haven't found any truth in it."

The unit described simply does not exist, the intelligence official said.<font size=3>

Hersh, in an interview Monday on CNN's "American Morning," said there is no reason to believe Rumsfeld or President Bush knew about the abuses of Abu Ghraib inmates captured in photographs that have sparked outrage across the world.

"But the way it began was with" the clandestine program, he said.

Seven U.S. soldiers have been charged with abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad.

Hersh's article said that after the Afghanistan war began, Rumsfeld set up a special access program (SAP), "Copper Green," to travel and crack down on terrorists. According to a former intelligence official quoted in the magazine's May 24 issue, the rules governing the secret operation were, "Grab whom you must. Do what you want."

When attacks against coalition forces were on the rise last fall, Rumsfeld and Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence Stephen Cambone "cut an order sending this secret group into Baghdad," Hersh told CNN. "The instructions were, 'Let's get tougher.' "
<font size=4>
DiRita, responding Monday, called Hersh "one of history's great conspiracy theorists."

And the intelligence official told CNN there is no such thing as "Copper Green." The official said there is no joint interrogation program between the Defense Department and the CIA approved by the Secretary of Defense.

It is "incorrect" to suggest that the CIA withdrew from interrogations at Abu Ghraib, the intelligence official added.<font size=3>

But Hersh told CNN said he has faced similar attacks before when uncovering major stories.

When told the Pentagon spokesman's position, Hersh said, "I understand this is going to be the kind of response. ... I leaned over backwards to make sure in my own reporting. I met multiple sources. There was a lot of basis for this.

"It will come out eventually."

"I'm not saying that Rumsfeld or the president or anybody else had any idea of how this sort of transmogrified into what we saw in the photographs," he said, referring to the photos of naked Iraqi prisoners being forced to perform or simulate sexual acts by Americans at the prison.

"But the way it began was with a program, guys coming in -- very sophisticated guys, under aliases. We've all heard about the civilians running around those prisons. Some of them were people from this unit. I can tell you the intelligence community went batty about this."

Last fall, "when things began to go very bad in Iraq," the United States "brought in elements of this special unit into Baghdad" with certain instructions, Hersh said: "Get people -- go and grab some of the Sunni males, use coercion and also use sexual intimidation if you have to."

To accomplish that, Hersh wrote, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, head of U.S. forces in Iraq, had Abu Ghraib -- and its guards -- put under the command of a military intelligence brigade instead of the military police brigade that had been in charge, creating an atmosphere of conflict between the commanders of the two brigade.

Hersh, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his story on the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, said he had fewer than half a dozen sources for his report but more than two. And "more than a few in the CIA" know about the the agency's pullout from Abu Ghraib, he said.

Secretary of State Colin Powell said Sunday he had read a summary of the New Yorker article and stressed that all war prisoners should be treated humanely. "I haven't read the article and I don't know anything about the substance of the article," Powell said. "I have just seen a quick summary of it. So I will have to yield to the Defense Department to respond."

Find this article at:
cnn.com



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/18/2004 3:47:22 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
What Went Wrong

The flaw in Seymour Hersh's theory.

By Christopher Hitchens
Posted Tuesday, May 18, 2004, at 9:52 AM PT
<font size=4>
The most surprising thing about Seymour Hersh's latest New Yorker essay on the Abu Ghraib depravities is surely its title. It is headed "The Gray Zone." Can that be right? It seems to be generally assumed that the work of the sniggering video-morons is black and white: one of the very few moral absolutes of which we have a firm and decided grasp.

But Hersh's article wants to argue that the fish rots from the head, as indeed it very often does (even though, metaphorically speaking, one might think that the fish's guts would be the first to decay). And in order to argue this top-down process, he decides to propose that it began with Sept. 11. "In a sense," as he himself cautiously phrases it, this could arguably be true. As he reports:
<font size=3>
Almost from the start, the Administration's search for Al Qaeda members in the war zone, and its worldwide search for terrorists, came up against major command-and-control problems. For example, combat forces that had Al Qaeda forces in sight had to obtain legal clearance before firing on them. On October 7th,the night the bombing began, an unmanned Predator aircraft tracked an automobile convoy that, American intelligence believed, contained Mullah Muhammed Omar, the Taliban leader. A lawyer on duty at the United States Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Florida, refused to authorize a strike. By the time an attack was approved, the target was out of reach.
<font size=4>
Hersh has reported this tale before, along with the furious reaction that Donald Rumsfeld displayed when he heard the news. And, as he further reminds us, the Washington Post "reported that, as many as ten times since early October [2001], Air Force pilots believed they'd had senior Al Qaeda and Taliban members in their sights but had been unable to act in time because of legalistic hurdles."

These, and many other bureaucratic and butt-covering obstacles, according to Hersh and others, engendered such frustration at the top of the Pentagon that ruthless methods were discreetly ordered and discreetly applied. Thus, from the abysmal failure to erase Mullah Omar comes the howling success in trailer-porn tactics at Abu Ghraib.

More than one kind of non sequitur is involved in this "scenario." And very obviously, the conclusion can exist quite apart from the premises. (There would have been sadistic dolts in the American occupation forces in Iraq, even if there had not been wavering lawyerly fools in the Tampa center that was monitoring Afghanistan.) One needs to stipulate, once again, that the filthy images from Abu Ghraib are not bad because they look bad, but bad because they are bad. Yet is it as obvious as it seems that only the supporters of the war have any questions to answer here?

I ask this because, in the news cycle that preceded the Iraq atrocities, the administration was being arraigned from dawn until dusk for the offense of failing to take timely measures against the Taliban and al-Qaida. I hardly need to recapitulate the indictment here. We had our chance to see it coming, and to see where it was coming from, and the administration comprehensively blew all these chances, from the first warnings of suicide-hijacking to the cosseting of Saudi visa applicants. I might add that I completely agree with all these condemnations and wrote about many of them (including the spiriting of the Bin Laden relatives out of the country during a "no-fly" period imposed upon the rest of us) at the time.

But there is no serious way of having this cake and scarfing it. I remember a debate I had with Michael Moore—the newly crowned king of the Cannes Film Festival—at the more modest location of the Telluride Film Festival in 2002. Ridiculing the Bush administration's policy, he shouted that it had gone into Afghanistan to get Osama Bin Laden and Mullah Omar. "Mission NOT accomplished!" he added, to roars of easy applause. I asked myself then, and I repeat the question now: Would the antiwar camp have approved the measures necessary to ensure those goals? If they will the end, will they will the means? Would they taunt that lawyer in Tampa, as they taunt the supporters of regime change, with living a quiet life at home while others die in the field? Isn't the refusal to take out the leaders of al-Qaida a bit of a distraction from the struggle against al-Qaida?

As it happens, dear reader, I know the answers to those questions as well as you do. And that is partly why the Abu Ghraib nightmare is such a source of demoralization and despair. Thugs and torturers, who are always on tap in limitless supply, do their work in the dark and, when caught, plead exceptional circumstances. It's as if they are on an urgent self-appointed mission. But the battle against Islamic jihad will be going on for a very long time, against a foe that is both ruthless and irrational. This means that infinite patience and scruple and intelligence are required, as well as decisiveness and bravery. Given this necessary assumption, all short-cut artists, let alone rec-room sadists, are to be treated, not as bad apples alone, but as traitors and enemies. If Rumsfeld could bring himself to say that, he could perhaps undo some of the shame, and some of the harm as well.

******

So a Sarin-infected device is exploded in Iraq, and across the border in Jordan the authorities say that nerve and gas weapons have been discovered for use against them by the followers of Zarqawi, who was in Baghdad well before the invasion. Where, one idly inquires, did these toys come from? No, it couldn't be. …<font size=3>

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His most recent book is Blood, Class and Empire: The Enduring Anglo-American Relationship.
slate.msn.com



To: abstract who wrote (2483)5/18/2004 7:33:57 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Sly Sy at it Again

Joel Mowbray
May 18, 2004
townhall

Reading the “hot” new New Yorker “expose” —which has the rest of the media in a tizzy, and has many Democrats even hungrier for Rumsfeld’s resignation—can lead one to believe that the Defense Secretary had a hand in the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal.
<font size=4>
Reading it more closely, however, leads one to realize that Rumsfeld knew, well, nothing.

Reading it with the author’s credibility problems in mind, and the Pentagon’s seemingly obligatory denials seem more credible.<font size=3>

Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh has been a trailblazer on the Abu Ghraib scandal, breaking numerous stories. And his latest has tongues in Washington wagging.

In a piece titled “The Gray Zone,” Hersh lays the blame for the scandal at the feet of Rumsfeld, who, Hersh writes, expanded a secret operations unit into Iraq. In the second sentence of the lead paragraph, Hersh leaves little doubt as to his personal conclusions: “Rumsfeld’s decision embittered the American intelligence community, damaged the effectiveness of élite combat units, and hurt America’s prospects in the war on terror.”
<font size=4>
The article is quite damning, that is, until the reader gets to the obligatory disclaimer.

Buried 3,300 words inside a roughly 4,500-word article is the following exoneration: “Rumsfeld may not be personally culpable.” And further down near the end was another: “The former intelligence official made it clear that he was not alleging that Rumsfeld or General Myers knew that atrocities were committed.”

In Hersh’s line of work, opinion-based reporting, he is absolutely within bounds to attack Rumsfeld with as much tenacity as any rabidly partisan Democrat. But the problem is the treatment then given by the rest of the media.

When mainstream news outlets, such as the Associated Press, reported on Hersh’s latest piece, there was nary a mention of Hersh’s left-leaning bias.

Even more troubling is that there are more than 25 quotes attributed to “former intelligence officials” and only five to current officials anywhere in government. And all, save for one public official, are anonymous.
<font size=3>
Current officials deserve the cloak of anonymity, particularly when revealing information the public has a right to know and the act itself could cost the person’s job. But what is the rationale for keeping nameless all the “former” officials? There are no jobs on the line, and “former” officials are routinely quoted on the record in most outlets. Does Hersh think this adds a layer of intrigue if names aren’t there to clutter up a good story?

Most important, <font size=4>how can others judge the credibility of nameless individuals who could be doing nothing more than settling old scores?

Readers, and the media at large, would also be wise to consider Hersh’s credibility in past stories. While much of what he has written has been well-researched and true, he has not been without substantial error.

In November 2001, Hersh penned a New Yorker piece that portrayed a Pentagon mission to strike Mullah Omar in Afghanistan as a “near-disaster,” completely contrary to the official line. (An excellent Slate article by former Naval intelligence officer Scott Shuger found multiple flaws in Hersh’s reporting.)

One “fact” from the story that numerous conservative publications, from National Review to Washington Times, were quick to expose was one that even a junior New Yorker fact checker should have caught: “The mission was initiated by sixteen AC-130 gunships, which poured thousands of rounds into the surrounding area but deliberately left the Mullah’s house unscathed.”

There almost certainly could not have been 16 AC-130 gunships in one battle; the military has a worldwide total fleet of 21.

In that November 2001 piece, the muckraker painted a bleak picture, leading the casual reader to believe that the U.S. might lose the campaign. The Taliban was toppled the next month.

And in April 2003, Hersh attacked the military capabilities of ground forces in Iraq (blaming, guess who, Rumsfeld). A week and a half later, Saddam’s regime was no more.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the Pentagon has vehemently denied the allegations made in Hersh’s article. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita issued a statement calling the claims “outlandish, conspiratorial, and filled with error and anonymous conjecture.”

Maybe Hersh’s piece has quite a bit of truth in it. Even so, the worst that the article actually alleges (meaning with facts) is that Rumsfeld expanded a program that, unbeknownst to him, spiraled out of control.

But with the nameless sourcing—apparently needlessly in most of the cases—determining the accuracy of Hersh’s reporting becomes an essentially impossible task.

Let’s hope that’s not why he used almost solely anonymous sources.<font size=3>

©2004 Joel Mowbray

townhall.com