John R. MacArthur On Iraq: "We're Seeing a Lot of Self-Censorship"

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First Posted: 03-14-08 11:35 AM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 05:12 AM

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As the war in Iraq completes its fifth year this week, The Huffington Post is featuring interviews with and essays by those journalists, elected officials, policymakers and former military officials who spoke out early and boldly against what they saw as an inevitable disaster. They join our Iraq Honor Roll.

John R. MacArthur: "We're Seeing a Lot of Self-Censorship"
Harper's Publisher Says Media as Timid as Democrats On Iraq

By Marc Cooper

John "Rick" MacArthur, publisher and president of Harper's magazine, was an early critic of the drive to invade Iraq, arguing on the eve of war that the White House was engaging in "Orwellian" manipulation of public opinion. Indeed, MacArthur, back in 1992, had penned a scathing critique of the media's lack of skepticism regarding the first war in Iraq, titled Second Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the 1991 Gulf War. He's also the author of The Selling of "Free Trade": NAFTA, Washington, and the Subversion of American Democracy (2000) and his forthcoming book on the decline of American democracy is titled You Can't Be President.

In an interview with The Huffington Post, MacArthur argued that the truth about the disaster-in-waiting in Iraq was always plain to see, so long as the will existed to search it out.

Are there media heroes and villains in recounting the run-up to the war in Iraq?

The journalistic heroes here are not the journalists. It's people like (former U.N. weapons inspector) Scott Ritter. And Ritter was the easiest source to quote at the time. What I kept saying to people at the time was if there's one Scott Ritter out there screaming his head off on talk radio and cable TV, then there are twenty other Scott Ritters types who are afraid to talk on the record but you can still talk to. If you were a Nervous Nelly sort of reporter and you wanted more official types to back up the sort of things he was saying, all you had to look was for them. I'm thinking of sources like [former U.S. weapons inspector] David Albright who had plenty to say.

The two great reporters for Knight-Ridder, Jonathan Landy and Warren Strobel, were getting it right but nobody was paying attention. I mean, all the editorials in the papers these guys were working for weren't paying any attention to what their own reporters were saying. Whoever wrote the editorials looked like they weren't reading their own newspapers. Everything those two reporters had been publishing up to then was contradicting everything Bush had been saying.

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How easy or difficult was it, in your view, for the average interested citizen in 2002 to find out what was going on in Iraq by reading the press?

It was easy to follow if you paid attention to what people like those at Knight-Ridder were saying. The stuff I was saying was a little harder to find. I was on some cable TV shows and wrote some opinion pieces early on. A piece I wrote for the Providence Journal was, I think, the first longish piece calling Bush a liar on this issue.

But you also had the Bush family track record of making stuff up about the first Gulf War, which I reported on in my book, The Second Front. You knew there was a history of making things up and the Bushes were not reliable on this and neither was the reporting on what they said. There was a whole history of propaganda with them.

You might then also have looked at what UNCSOM had done officially in Iraq. Or you could have dropped a dime and called (UN Chief Weapons Inspector) Mohamed ElBaradei in Geneva and he could have told you.

Let me tell you how bad this all was. When (former New York Times reporter) Judith Miller was really on her rampage with the (U.S. Army) Special Unit trying to find weapons of mass destruction in May 2003, right after the invasion, I go on a show with former CIA Director James Woolsey. They put me on a show on CNN International, by the way, because they won't let me on CNN domestic. So we're debating what they're going to find and what they're not going to find. And Woolsey says, "Don't worry. The New York Times isn't done reporting yet. There's a lot more stuff coming out." (Laughs). I do chapter and verse on everything they hadn't found, all from the public record and I say The New York Times is not a credible source on this and that Judith Miller is not an honest reporter.

A couple of weeks later I get a letter. This is dated May 26th 2003.

(Reading) "Dear Mr. MacArthur: I had the pleasure to watch CNN's Q&A program on Friday, 23 May, and I wish to thank you sincerely for setting the record straight. Your intervention was courageous and forthright. Yours Sincerely, Mohamed ElBaradei."
This guy's got to be pretty desperate! (Laughs) He happens to catch me on CNN International saying the obvious. And this is May 2003! The case was already falling apart.

The institutional tenor of the conversation was so crazy that maybe it was, in fact, impossible to get the truth. I mean look at Colin Powell. I have great respect for her and now she's dead. But go back and look at (long-time liberal Washington Post) columnist Mary McGrory and after Powell's testimony before the UN she was exclaiming, "I believe! I believe him!"

When you talk about the institutional tenor of the time, I take it you are referring to not just the White House, but also to the echoes in the media. Does the media have that sort of responsibility that you are implying?

The media bears enormous responsibility because they were proactive. The New York Times and The Washington Post were pro-active, they were trying to advance the administration story. Clearly, Judith Miller had an ideological agenda. I think Michael Gordon probably had one too. Now that I have seen his awful reporting on Iran and the IED's which, by the way, has been contradicted again and again and he's not being held accountable. You figure those two guys were trying to advance the arguments of the Bush administration because they wanted to start a war.

But they weren't running the Times. Arthur Sulzberger and Howell Raines were running the paper.

Right. The only good reporting we've seen on Raines tell us his mindset was 'we have to prove to the administration that we're not liberals, that we're not anti-war. That we have to overcompensate for a reputation for being a liberal.' It's probably more complicated than that, but that still gets you pretty close.

How would you compare the level of media skepticism and the caliber of reporting today on Iraq against five years ago? Has there been a shift?

I don't think there's been much of a change. There was a sort of incredulity when the whole story fell apart. And then a kind of a silence. Then some recriminations. But what's the result? The first thing you see is The New York Times sitting on their NSA wiretap story for a year, not publishing it. Why wasn't it published before the 2004 election? The Washington Post not naming the countries where the CIA secret prisons were. Like, we wouldn't really want to know where all this stuff is actually happening? What we're seeing is a lot of self-censorship, not aggressively wrong reporting.

I don't see any big institutional shift. There was Michael Gordon, Judith Miller's partner-in-crime, right out there on the front page recently with those stories about the Iranian government providing roadside bombs in Iraq to kill American soldiers though no one could prove it.

But there's been an enormous political shift in the last five years. The Bush administration and the war itself have declined enormously in popularity since then. Why are you arguing it isn't reflected in the tone of the media?

You'd think it would be safer now to be more aggressive, you're right. What I suspect is that half the Democratic Party is still telling the bigwigs in the media is that we can't pull out of Iraq. And, remember, to pull out of Iraq is to undermine our entire foreign policy since 9/11. I've always followed Walter Karp's dictum that the press does not act, rather it is acted upon. There's always this relationship between the big media and the national political leadership. The first doesn't move much without the latter. And, really, the political shift hasn't been as great as some would think.

You don't consider the midterm elections of 2006 and the taking of Congress by the Democrats to be significant?

If the shift had been as big as I would have liked and in the direction I would have liked, (Pennsylvania Democrat) John Murtha would be House Majority Leader now. Murtha is key and not being named Majority Leader tells you everything about where the party is now. Here's a guy who's got seniority, he's a pork-barrel guy, he knows how to deliver, he's close to the Pentagon, he's got impeccable party credentials and a Marine Corps background, but they wouldn't make him party leader. He's too anti-war. The party, right away, said no-no, we're not getting out of Iraq, we're not going to force the issue with Bush even after the 2006 elections. Rahm Emanuel slated a lot of pro-war candidates for the Democrats and they won.

So the reporters aren't hearing any sort of unified voice of skepticism and opposition from the Democratic leadership. Until that happens, you're not going to see the press shift,



As the war in Iraq completes its fifth year this week, The Huffington Post is featuring interviews with and essays by those journalists, elected officials, policymakers and former military officials w...
As the war in Iraq completes its fifth year this week, The Huffington Post is featuring interviews with and essays by those journalists, elected officials, policymakers and former military officials w...
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Time magazine ran a story long before the war began showing concentric circles centered on Baghdad reaching across the Atlantic Ocean (!) as the range of Saddam's nuclear attack capability within a few years. Even a rank amateur on ballistic missiles knew that no such capability was anywhere to be seen, but there it was.

I think the story here is partly the utterly provincial hysteria of Manhattan and D.C. We need among other things simply to decentralize the major news media. They were all too close to the 9/ll event to regain any objective competency for years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 03/14/2008
- Erdgeist I'm a Fan of Erdgeist 78 fans permalink
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Most Americans have the ethos of mobsters. Violence is good; greed is good; having endless desires is good. In this respect, the press is doing fine--much of it is lies and trash.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 03/14/2008
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Good luck finding any thing out about Iraq, With a goverment BLACK OUT on video of any bombing aftermath. TV don't go if it can't film. Not even Al Jazeera or CCTV (china).


    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 03/14/2008

Mr. Cooper:
John MacArthur has given you a great foundation to begin creating an edifice of reality if you so have the courage to do such.
Mr. Cooper, if you have the courage, try starting with the actual toll this war has taken on our troops.
Mr. Cooper why have you as a member of the media acquiesced to the Bush/McCain republican administration barring of photographers and the public from viewing the number of flag draped caskets returning to the US?
Mr. Cooper you and your colleagues have allowed the Bush/McCain republican administration to under represent the number of deaths by failing to do your due diligence.
Mr. Cooper why haven't you had the courage and wherewithal to challenge the Bush/McCain republican administration to only portray the number of soldiers who have died on the field of battle as the only number that is reported?
The Bush/McCain republican administration's reported numbers do not account for the number of troops who commit suicide or the number of troops who die after being sent for medical treatment outside the theater of combat.
Moreover this administration has narrowed the traditional use of the definition of "theater of combat," in its’ effort to diminish the number of deaths reported.
Mr. Cooper, for once sir, please have the courage to be pro-active and do your research make use of Nexis/Lexis searches and use your web skills - the local papers throughout the US will mention the deaths of soldiers from their communities do the math people.
Mr. Cooper don't just stop there is a vast paper trail at the Department of Defense: survivor’s benefits, coroners’ reports, death notifications....
The White House does not want to keep those flag draped coffins from public view for honorable purposes.
Mr. Cooper show some courage and stop allowing talking points, press releases and "sources within ..." to feed you claptrap. Be a journalist sir not simply a purveyor of fiction.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:23 PM on 03/14/2008

Hell, I thought the war in Iraq was over.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 03/14/2008
- amanda85 I'm a Fan of amanda85 108 fans permalink

Ah, the irony, our comments on censorship will be screened by a bunch of minions so afraid of upsetting the corporate fascists who pay their salaries...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 03/14/2008
- Citizen54 I'm a Fan of Citizen54 16 fans permalink

Too bad Mr MacArthur isn't running one of the major newspapers.

I fear it's all going to happen again, with the presidential election in particular. Already we can see the major media giving a free pass to the sainted John McCain.

Anyway, if you're reading this, Mr MacArthur: Thanks for continuing to put out Harper's, a great magazine.

[And can I have one of those grants now, please?]

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 03/14/2008
- KeysDan I'm a Fan of KeysDan 23 fans permalink

To so many of us who not only were opposed to the war buid-up in 2002, but also, protested it, John MacArthur's reasons are very familiar Additional questions were raised as to the ability of Saddam to mount such extensive programs in the face of ten-years of international surveillance and economic sanctions, on-the-ground weapons inspectors criss-crossing the country, and suspicious long-term goals on the part of the neocon infrastructure to topple the Iraqi government. With oil men in the White House, surely questions should have arisen with respect to the gigantic oil reserves of the country which by their lights was really our oil that happened to be under their sand. The country fell for the "crack" and dangerous Iraqi Republican Guard during the 1992 Gulf War--which proved so tough as to collapse in a few days, The spectre of this (now devastated) army was cranked up once again in 2002 along with the fear of imminent mushroom clouds. The falsified documents and photos to bolser the case for the 1992 Gulf War, showing Iraqi troops on the border of Saudi Arabia and racing on to Mecca did not do much to engender confidence a second time around. Senator Bob Graham, Chair of the of Senate Intelligence Committee, was another real patriotic voice in the wilderness. seriously questioning the "grave and gathering" need for war. Containment was working, but the neocons weren't having it--and this was way before 9/ll (in a letter sent to President Clinton in 1998). Many Democrats, including Senator Clinton, voted for the military action resolution, for various reasons including putting, foolishly, trust in Bush, and maybe remembering the negative fall-out from the Democratic senatorial resistance in 1992. (except Al Gore, who voted for the Gulf war, and helped nail the vice presidency nomination). However, Senator Obama gave an anti-war speech in 2002 and it has become the engine of his campaign, including his claim of having good judgment. I agree, however, I have been waiting to hear the grounds for his judgment in the face of the propaganda and tenor of the times. His speech mentions being against "dumb" wars. but does not detail the specific information and data that lead to his good judgment. Elaboration of his thinking on this critical issue would be interesting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 03/14/2008
- sufi66 I'm a Fan of sufi66 30 fans permalink
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Let's not forget Lewis Lapham's writings in Harpers, The Nation, Mother Jones, and The Progressive- if we are going to mention the few journalistic sources that didn't miss the obvious government lies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 03/14/2008
- iPolitics I'm a Fan of iPolitics 33 fans permalink

profits over truth. proftis over journalism. it's not just iraq.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 03/14/2008
- shadow322 I'm a Fan of shadow322 7 fans permalink
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This version of American apathy is going to be the death of us as a world leader. We have become so tired that many of us no longer care. We no longer expect our own government to follow our laws. We no longer protest a lack of professionalism in FEMA or our EPA for fear of being told "so you no longer support the troops." A 10 trillion dollar deposite is too large of a concept for our private feeble minds to comprehend - isn't it? I don't care if we allow tainted drugs to be distributed with tainted beef that should have been recalled 2 years ago before it was consumed. Lead paint on toys - my kids are grown! 16 million illegals in my country taking jobs for lower wages thus reducing middle American labor bargaining tools - so what, I wish their government would publish a booklet on how to get over on my own people - right! I have even seen Bill Gates publically compliment the policies of this administration - they're doing us so much good, aren't they? My country is being raped, just please don't accuse me of being against the troops. I'll sit back and take it - not!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 03/14/2008
- noamjunior I'm a Fan of noamjunior 85 fans permalink

MacAurthur is right on in his analysis of the media- and interviews like this is why I keep coming back to huffpo- but huffpo is very much guilty of the same head-in-the-sand approach to Iraq. we are at war and people are dying - but huffpo gives us trivial back-and -forths between obama and Clinton

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 03/14/2008

Well, that's just freakin' swell.

How many people died while the media cowards refused to be honest, and then "lamented" their cowardice?

Do your jobs or get out of the profession.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 03/14/2008

~ Rahm Emanuel slated a lot of pro-war candidates for the Democrats and they won.

This demonstrates why The Clintons and the DLC will have to go before the Democratic Party can have any relevance as anything other than a branch of the gop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 03/14/2008
- mingusman I'm a Fan of mingusman 8 fans permalink
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Must also be why so many Dems were trying to pass the FISA bill with Bush's desired telecom immunity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 AM on 03/15/2008
- lastams I'm a Fan of lastams 50 fans permalink

Look at how nicely MSM follows acceptable guidelines in determining what is news.
First and foremost of concern to average Americans today is the economy and the price of gasoline.
When the subject is covered at all, the public is presented with graphs and charts and blame is given to market conditions, hurricanes, and fear of disruptions at some Indonesian outpost.
Yet occasionally leaking through the bubble is the fact that oil companies are making astronomical profits. Somehow even the blindest Bushie has trouble reconciling this fact. It is truly a stretch to believe that these profits are purely accidental, and that Exxon/ Mobile is just forced to reap the rewards.
Poor them.
And how about the Saudis? How often are they mentioned on the news?
How often does one hear that the Saudis set production quotas for EVERY SINGLE OPEC NATION?
How often does one hear of profit sharing agreements that have not only made THE Kingdom rich beyond belief, but have elevated the oil companies to Kingdom status as well?
How often does one hear that the Saudis support not only the Sunni insurrection in Iraq, but terrorist groups worldwide? That they have re-invested much of their vast wealth in the American infrastructure, to the point where they have a stranglehold on our economy?
No, they’re the while elephant in the room that no one likes to talk about.
In the meantime, the consumer filling his tank detects a strong odor in all this, but he can’t quite put his finger on what it is … afterall, finding real answers on the news is practically impossible.
At the end of the day, before things become too too obvious, the administration will need to expand the conflict into Iran; divert all our attentions while the Saudis and Exxon get richer and richer.
They’ve already gotten rid of their biggest obstacle, Admiral Fallon, and have another carrier group en route to the Gulf.
Expect 4 bucks a gallon while the bombs rain on Terran and the Exxon execs and Saudi Princes share a quiet toast.
Here’s to a well controlled corporate media, and a very gullible American public.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 03/14/2008
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