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Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Michelle Malkin :: Townhall.com Columnist
The newspaper of wreckage
by Michelle Malkin
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When is a "secret" not a secret?

When The New York Times decides, in the interest of saving its old gray hide, that it is not.

On June 22, the paper trumpeted its expose of "a secret Bush administration program" to track terror finances. The banking program, reporters Eric Lichtblau and James Risen made unmistakably clear, was a "closely held secret." The front-page story referred to the secret nature of the program no less than eight times. A Times-produced Web video featuring Lichtblau promoted a brief interview in which he "reveal(ed) a secret Bush administration program to access financial records."

But by July 2, smarting from the public backlash against its blabbermouth coverage, the Times crew was backpedaling faster than circus monkeys on barrels hurtling over Niagara Falls. Suddenly, the "secret" was no secret at all.

Everybody who's anybody has known about the secret program all along, silly. New York Times ombudsman Byron Calame's belated defense of the Times' expose of the monitoring of the SWIFT banking program contained this revealing passage:

"There was a significant question as to how secret the (monitoring of the SWIFT banking program) was after five years. 'Hundreds, if not thousands, of people know about this,' (Executive Editor Bill) Keller claimed he was told by an official who talked to him on condition of anonymity."

"Hundreds, if not thousands, of people" have known about the program before the Times blabbed about it. Well, there's a scoop. So, why wasn't this reported in the original story and reflected in the original, front-page headline?

There was no printed follow-up from lapdog Calame about Keller's assertion, which goes a good bit further than the claim by Times' apologists Richard Clarke and Roger Cressey. That mind-reading duo wrote in a Times op-ed that terrorists already assumed their financial transactions were being monitored. Calame curiously neglected to note that Keller's claim contradicted both the tone and facts presented in the Times' initial coverage by reporters Lichtblau and Risen.

Which is just as well, since Lichtblau himself is now contradicting his own story, too. On CNN's "Reliable Sources," facing withering criticism from talk radio host Hugh Hewitt, Lichtblau blustered:

"When you have senior Treasury Department officials going before Congress, publicly talking about how they are tracing and cutting off money to terrorists, weeks and weeks before our story ran. USA Today, the biggest circulation in the country, the lead story on their front page four days before our story ran was the terrorists know their money is being traced, and they are moving it into -- outside of the banking system into unconventional means. It is by no means a secret" (emphasis added). Hmm. What was that headline over Lichtblau's story again? Oh, yeah: "Bank Data Sifted in Secret by U.S. to block terror." Meanwhile, finance regulators and top government officials in Belgium (who apparently aren't among the "hundreds, if not thousands" who knew about the program) have ordered a probe into SWIFT, which is regulated by the Belgian central bank and answers to Belgian law. Bush-undermining Eurowheedlers are launching a debate in parliament over the program next week, and a private human rights lobbying group has filed formal complaints against the SWIFT banking consortium in 32 countries.

Lesson No. 1: Never trust the Times' headlines.

Lesson No. 2: Never trust what's printed under the Times' headlines.

Lesson No. 3: Never trust what comes out of the mouths of the Times' editors and reporters.

Avoid the newspaper of wreckage, and help keep American safe.

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About The Author

Michelle Malkin makes news and waves with a unique combination of investigative journalism and incisive commentary. She is the author of Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild .

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©Creators Syndicate
buh-BYE
"is it just me or have I not read at least 12 versions of of this same article by the the right wing punditry?"

The problem's just you, clownboy. Now head on back to the vast diversity of opinion that is the Daily Kos, and tell 'em how you showed the righty robots up. G'wan now. Atta boy. Give 'em a ChimpHitler for us!

liberal lefties have no clue
Yes left angle it's you.

What talking points?

If you think those on the right are "unified" what ever, just see what is happening to Joe Lieberman in Conn?

Look at how the way out liberal blogs are leading the Democrats down the wrong road.

The reason you may have read 12 versions of this is because it's the truth. The NY Times has no reason or right to publish this information. No one elected the Times to any office which would enable them to release this information.

NY Times financial revelations
If the NYT actually KNEW that the information it had was classified and they were asked not to publish it then the NYT was in possession of stolen property and profited from the revelation and "SALE" of that stolen then they should be prosecuted under NY State law for "possesion of stolen property".
Documents that are "Classified" do not appear in public unless they are stolen or are removed from their files without authorization. Ask Sandy Berger!!

The New York Times:
"All the news that's unfit to print."

Very good Mishelle
What I would like to know is why has'nt the Government started a prob into the times getting this story? I think that jerk publisher should be put up against the wall and shot alnong with his editores and reporters. Treason is treason weather you use the 1st amendment as an excuse or not. If the Government does not proscute them through a Gran Jury and a trial and then take them out and shoot them. That leaking of secrets would then halt.

The Times continues Word War

The SWIFT episode recalls a 100-day story by David Sanger and Marc Lacey that the NY Times ran in 2001. It claimed that early battles in Washington had taught George Bush the need for compromises. However, the story offered no evidence that he hadn't been aware that a President had to compromise on legislation and on policies and programs, nor that he was not disposed to meet opponents halfway, nor did the story provide any evidence of compromises that he had reached or was considering, which resulted from, presumably, his sudden discovery of something he had no doubt learned years ago in Washington and during his service as Texas governor.

In that story, as in the Lichtblau-Risen story, the point was to damage the President and his Administration, by whatever verbal means possible. Evidence and truth play marginal roles in the work of propagandists masquerading as journalists. To this former newspaper reporter, the NY Times and much of the news media are a disgrace. Yes, the media in other countries are horrific. But people ought to be able to trust that what they read and hear from the news media in this country is fair and true.

If, and it's a huge if, the terrorists knew of the SWIFT program, how did they know? Did Hambali, the guy who ordered the Bali bombing, know before being collared? If he knew after, why and how did he know? Those would be the questions responsible journalists who believe as Bill Keller claims they believe would have asked, and the asking would have sufficed to keep the story out of the newspaper. Who was revealing secrets? Why? Some “news” ought not be printed or disseminated. Common decency and common sense led journalists once to keep some things private. Such restraints have been chucked, mostly, one believes, because nailing a political opponent matters more to journalists now than restraint or decency or truth.

Finding that the Times has crossed a boundary is not the work of "mind-numbed robots." It is the sober conclusion of people who recognize that the Times is not at war with terrorism, it’s in a Word War with Americans. Those who violated oaths ought to be prosecuted. What of The Times? It will survive and do well. In our fractured society, enough fanatics of the left will snap up the newspaper and enough advertisers will lay out big bucks to keep the paper running most nicely, thank you. But it is the newspaper of wreckage, and deserves contempt from more rational Americans.

The Times continues Word War

The SWIFT episode recalls a 100-day story by David Sanger and Marc Lacey that the NY Times ran in 2001. It claimed that early battles in Washington had taught George Bush the need for compromises. However, the story offered no evidence that he hadn't been aware that a President had to compromise on legislation and on policies and programs, nor that he was not disposed to meet opponents halfway, nor did the story provide any evidence of compromises that he had reached or was considering, which resulted from, presumably, his sudden discovery of something he had no doubt learned years ago in Washington and during his service as Texas governor.

In that story, as in the Lichtblau-Risen story, the point was to damage the President and his Administration, by whatever verbal means possible. Evidence and truth play marginal roles in the work of propagandists masquerading as journalists. To this former newspaper reporter, the NY Times and much of the news media are a disgrace. Yes, the media in other countries are horrific. But people ought to be able to trust that what they read and hear from the news media in this country is fair and true.

If, and it's a huge if, the terrorists knew of the SWIFT program, how did they know? Did Hambali, the guy who ordered the Bali bombing, know before being collared? If he knew after, why and how did he know? Those would be the questions responsible journalists who believe as Bill Keller claims they believe would have asked, and the asking would have sufficed to keep the story out of the newspaper. Who was revealing secrets? Why? Some “news” ought not be printed or disseminated. Common decency and common sense led journalists once to keep some things private. Such restraints have been chucked, mostly, one believes, because nailing a political opponent matters more to journalists now than restraint or decency or truth.

Finding that the Times has crossed a boundary is not the work of "mind-numbed robots." It is the sober conclusion of people who recognize that the Times is not at war with terrorism, it’s in a Word War with Americans. Those who violated oaths ought to be prosecuted. What of The Times? It will survive and do well. In our fractured society, enough fanatics of the left will snap up the newspaper and enough advertisers will lay out big bucks to keep the paper running most nicely, thank you. But it is the newspaper of wreckage, and deserves contempt from more rational Americans.

Dear Left Angle...
Remember Townhouse? http://www.tnr.com/blog/theplank?pid=21574

Now, there's a unified voice. Or, unified silence when approproate.

The Republican Press Echo Box..
is it just me or have I not read at least 12 versions of of this same article by the the right wing punditry? I will say this: Once the rnc talking points are decided on a particular
issue, look for the "unified voice" of the RNC and its minions to repeat them until everyone yells "mercy"...my god what a bunch of unthinking robots.

A Clue For Dave
Perhaps you are unaware that the CIA and State Department are both littered with Clintonistas, career leftists and traitors whose goal is to undermine the Bush Administration regardless of the affects of their actions on national security. The leakers must be found and prosecuted--maybe long prison terms for these traitors will cause their compatriots to think twice before engaging in treasonous and criminal behavior. While the authors must be granted immunity to force them to identify the leakers, the editors and publisher of the NYT should also be prosecuted. Freedom of the press does not extend to acting as Osama's intelligence service.

NYT & Treason
The NYT "outed" the details of this program for a variety of reasons, all related to the interests of the NYT, regardless of the interests of the United States and its citizens. (NOTE: The interests of the NYT are frequently indistinguishable from the interests of the American left and America's enemies; and, always antithetical to the interests of the Bush Administration.)

However, from this point forward, the NYT is merely a means to an end - the end of finding, prosecuting and punishing the individual(s) who committed the treasonable act of "outing" the details of this program to the NYT. If identifying the source(s) of this treason requires that "Pinch", Bill Keller and the reporters spend a few weeks at Abu Graib, or Gitmo, or is some previously secret prisons in Eastern Europe, so be it.

The conviction of the source(s) for treason and the subsequent execution of the source(s) will result in the ultimate punishment the "Rag of Record" has worked so hard to "earn" and so richly deserves. Far from reversing the decline in NYT's subscriptions, this incident will accelerate the decline.

Right on Michelle!
The NYT has long been using the "power of the press" to persuade public opinion, in an attempt to control political outcome. You can be sure if the White House were Democratic, this story would not have been printed.

Rather than printing the truth in news, the NYT uses the Liberal methods of lies and distortion to promote their Liberal Democratic ideology. Without regard for the security of the United States or the safety of it's citizens. As far as I'm concerned the NYT can be called a newspaper of treason!

A Clue
If you have a secret and want to keep it a secret, don't tell a newspaper.
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