Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Judy, Judy, Judy...

As I mull over the Judith Miller stories burbling around the net, my mind keeps returning to Scooter Libby's love letter -- especially that arboreal metaphor involving interconnected root systems. Many people have wondered whether that strange commentary conveyed a secondary message via code.

See, for example, the Kos discussion here. One poster avers that Miller's 76-year old husband has a medical condition which probably prevents him from taking trips to Colorado to see the "aspens." (A veiled reference to the Aspen Institute?) I haven't verified the claim about her husband, but if it is true, then we may have further evidence that Libby wasn't talking about Mother Nature.

Even if we interpret Scooter's words purely as a misguided attempt to wax poetic, they still disturb. Administration officials and journalists should have an adversarial (though not necessarily acrimonious) relationship. Why the hell is Scooter implying that an interconnected root system links her to Bush & Co.?

Arianna Huffington, who knows the publishing industry well, implies that Miller will soon receive a semi-covert pay-off for services rendered. Huffington insists (despite Judith's denials) that Miller has bragged to friends of a book deal involving a $1.2 million advance:

That seems like an awful lot of money to pay a journalist with an iffy reputation whose cause never really became very celebre. A publishing insider crunched the numbers for me: "In order to recoup that kind of advance," the insider told me, "they'd have to sell 300,000 copies at $27 a book. Ain't gonna happen..."
This deal (presuming Huffington has reported accurately) appears to be nothing more than another political pay-off rendered "legit" by being routed through a publisher. That's an old device, of course. The public never catches on, since many people have an inflated idea of how much money authors make. If the Democrats ever regain Congress, they should investigate the large publishing houses.

Even before Plame-gate, there was something decidedly strange about Judith.

She first came to the attention of many when she wrote "hit piece" articles targeting Muammar Qaddafi, the Libyan dictator who functioned as a Reagan-era bete noir. Many believe that these pieces were compiled with the aid (and possibly under the direction) of John "The-Buck-Stops-Here-With-Me" Poindexter, who took the fall for Iran-Contra. Although Qaddafi's real life sins were and are plentiful, the administration couldn't resist making him the target of a disinformation campaign. (Older folks may recall the fictitious "Libyan hit squad" tasked to get Reagan, not to mention the inevitable tabloid images of Qaddafi in a dress.) The NYT no longer publishes defamatory pieces about the Libyan strongman now that he has made his peace with the current administration.

She later wrote a book with Laurie Mylroie, the neocons' favorite scribbler. Mylroie, for her part, identified herself with the theory (almost certainly false) that Saddam sponsored the first World Trade Center bombing and every major terror incident since.

One aspect of Miller's career that has received insufficient attention (Wikipedia doesn't mention it) concerns her interactions with British scientist David Kelly, whose life ended in a particularly curious "suicide." His haunting parting comment about "many dark actors playing games" appeared in an email to her. In her correspondence with him, she flattered him like a gushing teenager. Why would an allegedly objective American journalist go to such lengths to ingratiate herself with bio-war specialist in the U.K.? Much of her book Germs is based on Kelly's research.

I'm still unsure as to whether he sought her out, or whether she sought him. If the latter, we must ask why someone whose "roots" twine through the Veep's office would focus so intently on a man in Kelly's position. Some believe that Kelly's interactions with both Miller and U.S. Army linguist Mia Pederson carry the faint but distinctive aroma of manipulation and espionage.

The Kelly affair came to the forefront in July of 2003 -- at the same time, oddly enough, Scooter met with Judy to discuss ways to skewer Joseph Wilson. Miller wrote to Kelly, concerning the latter's appearance at a Parliamentary inquiry: "David, I heard from another member of your fan club that things went well for you today. Hope it's true, J."

Who was that other member of the "fan club"? I posit that she refered to Libby, Cheney or one of their neocon compatriots. Again we confront the question: Why would a British scientist attract such high-level attention?

Joseph Wilson and David Kelly, both experts in the respective fields, possessed information harmful to the administration's claims that Saddam possessed WMDs. They could have chosen to back Bush with fibs. Instead, they told the truth -- and both suffered retaliation. Wilson (and his wife) were smeared in an attack orchestrated, we now know, at the highest levels. As for Kelly -- well, how many people really think he committed suicide?

Judy Miller played a still-mysterious role in both affairs.

During the invasion of Iraq, Miller annoyed the military by delivering a son-in-law of Saddam Hussein to Chalabi and "friends" for interrogation. This 2003 Washington Post story deserves a re-read:

More than a half-dozen military officers said that Miller acted as a middleman between the Army unit with which she was embedded and Iraqi National Congress leader Ahmed Chalabi, on one occasion accompanying Army officers to Chalabi's headquarters, where they took custody of Saddam Hussein's son-in-law. She also sat in on the initial debriefing of the son-in-law, these sources say.

Since interrogating Iraqis was not the mission of the unit, these officials said, it became a "Judith Miller team," in the words of one officer close to the situation.
This ain't no ordinary reporter, folks.

At one time, it was not so very difficult to spot a spook in scribe's clothing. CIA-friendly writers using major newspapers for cover would "WREN-der" their reports from the Soviet bloc. The situation is much more complex these days. These operatives are tied together by ideological, not institutional, roots -- and the new "cold war" they're fighting is directed against the American people.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

When reading about Qaddafi I thought of the claims of former Mossad agent Victor Ostrovksy. He claimed that Israel set Libya up. We know who Miller is still loyal to. She lied for them then and she lies for and protects them now.

Anonymous said...

this story, this whole treasongate/millermartyr mess, is - in my humble opinion - the watershed for our democracy.

the more obvious reason is of course the exposure of this administration's complete disdain for all things lawful, constitutional, decent, and human. there is just no getting around the sickest irony that they would commit treason in the attempt to silence a dissenter.

well, they waged war to control oil and the world, and it has been pretty suspicious that they committed one murder of david kelly to quiet his dissent. i'll never forget reading about blair's reaction upon hearing about kelly's death while in japan. he went ashen, clearly shaken, was the report. i think it was the watershed moment for him; these maniacs mean business.

but i digress. the other, less obvious watershed moment for us democracy lies with the way in which the media's role - i.e., judy miller's jailtime - is debated. i just reviewed judy's interview with lou dobbs, the fawning creep, and my god, these two 'journalists' are galaxies away from recognizing the true role of the press and the meaning of a free press.

note how so many - and what strange bedfellows we find! novak and safire and bob dole (??) in bed with the traditional liberal notion of source protection!?! - are keeping the debate at that pedestrian level, source protection. as if THIS is what the first amendment is about. how deftly they twist it. no one ever asks the question, how can we debate a reporter's right to withhold information? how can a 'gentleman's agreement' take precedence over questions of abuse of power? how can they even pretend to place this debate on those levels when so much more is at stake?

we desperately need to elevate the debate to its rightful constitutional level. the first amendment guarantee of a free press does not exist to protect sources and their reporters; it exists to protect the press from powerful influence, mostly powerful governmental influence, and ultimately the public from abuses of this power.

judy and lou and novak and safire and dole have all taken on the role of shilling for governmental powers, and highly abusive powers at that. yet another irony is that these folks rank on fitzgerald and hogan as if they've violated the first amendment, but in fact they actually get it!! fitz and hogan have both publicly noted that miller was NOT going to jail for protecting a whistleblower, but for protecting those in power who had attacked a whistleblower.

in this we can take heart.

if we do not as a citizenry jump on this debate with all fours, we may well doom our democracy. this push for a federal shield law fully creeps me out, given that the noisemakers are all those doing the shilling. i fear that if such a thing passes, then rove and his ilk will forever be 'free' to misinform and propagandize with impunity.

we have to wonder just where has flown the sentiment and understanding - inspired by the us first amendment - that condemned julius streicher. he was the only non-government, non-military individual hanged at nuremberg. his crime: without the fuel from his publications of hatred and violence against the jews and minorities, the atrocities could have never obtained purchase.

before we can take our country back, we'll have to take back the press.

we can start by holding these creeps' feets to the fire. write lou dobbs at cnn and scream about how craven he has been. write above all the nytimes and laugh at the demise of their integrity and power.

and write your congressional reps. this issue - the fcc, the cpb, the nature of the shield law, the purpose of the free press, the integrity of journalism, the regulation of ownership - these should all be top billing when we take back congress next year.

this effort will be greatly aided by the publicity this case is bound to get in the next week or two. this should be more engrossing entertainment than the watergate hearings. wonder if the trials will be televised.

Anonymous said...

the World Wide Web is home to a great number of marketing opportunities that you could avail of,