>From Editor and Publisher:

CNN Makes News with WMD Special, But Press Deserves Blame, Too 

By Greg Mitchell 

Published: August 19, 2005 11:05 PM ET 

NEW YORK A documentary to be aired on CNN this Sunday night on 
the "intelligence meltdown" on Iraq before the U.S. invasion is 
already making news. On Friday, CNN said that in the program, "Dead 
Wrong," a former top aide to Colin Powell calls his involvement in 
the former secretary of state's presentation to the United Nations on 
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction "the lowest point" in his life....

While the long-awaited program is sure to revive interest, and anger, 
over the administration's false selling of the war on the basis of 
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, it may well leave the press off 
the hook. Yet it was the media's swallowing of the false claims in 
Powell's crucial speech that enabled the march to war to continue....

It's a depressing case study of journalistic shirking of 
responsibility. The press essentially acted like a jury that is 
ready, willing and (in this case) able to deliver a verdict — after 
the prosecution has spoken and before anyone else is heard or the 
evidence studied. As media writer Mark Jurkowitz put it at the time 
in the Boston Globe, Powell's speech may not have convinced France of 
the need to topple Saddam but "it seemed to work wonders on opinion 
makers and editorial shakers in the media universe."

The San Francisco Chronicle called the speech "impressive in its 
breadth and eloquence." The Denver Post likened Powell to "Marshal 
Dillon facing down a gunslinger in Dodge City," adding that he had 
presented "not just one 'smoking gun' but a battery of them." The 
Tampa (Fla.) Tribune called Powell's case "overwhelming," while The 
Oregonian in Portland found it "devastating." To The Hartford (Ct.) 
Courant it was "masterful." The Plain Dealer in Cleveland deemed 
it "credible and persuasive." 

One can only laugh, darkly, at the San Jose (Ca.) Mercury News 
asserting that Powell made his case "without resorting to 
exaggeration, a rhetorical tool he didn't need." The San Antonio 
Express-News called the speech "irrefutable," adding, "only those 
ready to believe Iraq and assume that the United States would 
manufacture false evidence against Saddam would not be persuaded by 
Powell's case."

And what of the two giants of the East? The Washington Post echoed 
others who found Powell's evidence "irrefutable." That paper's 
liberal columnist, Mary McGrory, wrote that Powell "persuaded me, and 
I was as tough as France to convince." She even likened the Powell 
report to the day John Dean "unloaded" on Nixon in the Watergate 
hearings. George Will said Powell's speech would "change all minds 
open to evidence." 

Another Post liberal, Richard Cohen, opined: "The evidence he 
presented to the United Nations -- some of it circumstantial, some of 
it absolutely bone-chilling in its detail -- had to prove to anyone 
that Iraq not only hasn't accounted for its weapons of mass 
destruction but without a doubt still retains them. Only a fool, or 
possibly a Frenchman, could conclude otherwise."

Here's the Post's Jim Hoagland: "To continue to say that the Bush 
administration has not made its case, you must now believe that Colin 
Powell lied in the most serious statement he will ever make, or was 
taken in by manufactured evidence. I don't believe that. Today, 
neither should you."

The New York Times, meanwhile, hailed Powell's "powerful" and "sober, 
factual case." Like many other papers, the Times' coverage on its 
news pages — in separate stories by Steven Weisman, Michael Gordon 
and Adam Clymer — also bent over backward to give Powell the benefit 
of nearly every doubt. Apparently in thrall to Powell's moderate 
reputation, no one even mentioned that he was essentially acting as 
lead prosecutor with every reason to shape, or even create, facts to 
fit his brief.

Weisman called Powell's evidence "a nearly encyclopedic catalog that 
reached further than many had expected." He and Clymer both recalled 
Adlai Stevenson's speech to the U.N. in 1962 exposing Soviet missiles 
in Cuba. Gordon closed his piece by asserting that "it will be 
difficult for skeptics to argue that Washington's case against Iraq 
is based on groundless suspicions and not intelligence information." 
Try reading that with a straight face today. 

One recalls two quotes garnered by Howard Kurtz last year when he 
took a look back at the Washington Post's pre-war coverage.

"There was an attitude among editors: Look, we're going to war, why 
do we even worry about all the contrary stuff?" -- Pentagon 
correspondent Thomas Ricks.

"We are inevitably the mouthpiece for whatever administration is in 
power." -- Reporter Karen Young.

Why does any of this matter? It's fashionable to suggest that the 
White House was bent on war and nothing could have stopped them. But 
until the Powell speech, public opinion, editorial sentiment (as 
chronicled by E&P at the time) and street protests were all building 
against the war.

The Powell speech, and the media's swallowing of it, changed all that.


Greg Mitchell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is editor of E&P.

http://tinyurl.com/8zult





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