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NY Times Buried David Barstow's Reluctant Pentagon Vindication on Christmas Day

By Clay Waters | December 27, 2011 | 17:02

A  A

An April 20, 2008 New York Times story by David Barstow, “MESSAGE MACHINE: Behind TV Analysts, Pentagon’s Hidden Hand,” won a Pulitzer Prize for the explosive claim that the Pentagon had cultivated “military analysts” in a “trojan horse” campaign to generate favorable news coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the terrorist prison at Guantanamo Bay.

On December 1 of this year, the Washington Times reported that an investigation by the Pentagon’s inspector general, spurred by Barstow’s reporting, found no wrongdoing, and quoted a spokesman for former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld saying the New York Times should return its Pulitzer. But the New York Times itself did not report the Pentagon's vindication until Christmas Day, on page A20. 

From the Washington Times report by Rowan Scarborough:

The Pentagon's inspector general has released his final report on a Donald H. Rumsfeld-era program for briefing TV and radio military analysts, concluding for a second time that there was no wrongdoing.

The three-year investigation by the inspector general marks the fourth time a federal agency has found no improper conduct in the program.
....
On possible wrongdoing cited in the 2008 New York Times story, the report says: "We also reviewed the specific examples mentioned in the New York Times article. Based on our interviews, we did not find that the RMA outreach participants used the RMA outreach activities to further their own or the affiliated Defense contractor's interests."

....

Said Keith Urbahn, spokesman for former Defense Secretary Rumsfeld: "Two things ought to happen, though they never will. One, the New York Times should give back its Pulitzer for a story that is now proven to be a fabrication. And two, Sen. Carl Levin should reimburse U.S. taxpayers for what must be the millions of dollars squandered in pursuit of repeated investigations that he ordered to fit his partisan agenda. And while they're at it, the New York Times and the senator from Michigan ought to apologize to the uniformed military officers whose reputations were maligned by their attacks."

Story Continues Below Ad ↓


 

But the New York Times itself did not report the Pentagon’s vindication until Christmas Day, when most people are occupied with family and fun, and buried it on page A20 under the headline “Pentagon Finds No Fault In Ties to TV Analysts.” Barstow (who bashed the Tea Party in an ahistorical 4,500-word front-page hit piece in February 2010) also wrote the Christmas Day Pentagon vindication story, and his defensive take was considerably more jaundiced than Scarborough’s. Of course, Urbahn’s demand for a Pulitzer return did not appear.

A Pentagon public relations program that sought to transform high-profile military analysts into “surrogates” and “message force multipliers” for the Bush administration complied with Defense Department regulations and directives, the Pentagon’s inspector general has concluded after a two-year investigation.

The inquiry was prompted by articles published in The New York Times in 2008 that described how the Pentagon, in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks, cultivated close ties with retired officers who worked as military analysts for television and radio networks. The articles also showed how military analysts affiliated with defense contractors sometimes used their special access to seek advantage in the competition for contracts. In response to the articles, the Pentagon suspended the program and members of Congress asked the Defense Department’s inspector general to investigate.

In January 2009, the inspector general’s office issued a report that said it had found no wrongdoing in the program. But soon after, the inspector general’s office retracted the entire report, saying it was so riddled with inaccuracies and flaws that none of its conclusions could be relied upon. In late 2009, the inspector general’s office began a new inquiry.

The results of the new inquiry, first reported by The Washington Times, confirm that the Pentagon under Donald H. Rumsfeld made a concerted effort starting in 2002 to reach out to network military analysts to build and sustain public support for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

About the Author

Clay Waters is the director of Times Watch, an MRC project tracking the New York Times. Click here to follow Clay Waters on Twitter.
  • Anti-Military Bias
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Comments

One thing to remember about the mainstream media

Submitted by CO2Maker on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 5:13pm.

They are the 1%.

Who has an opinion? Who has something to say? Everyone! Who has access to major media outlets? Not everyone! Only the very well paid, well-heeled, well-schooled, well-opinionated get to play with ideas. Think of them as the Wall-Street bankers of information distribution. They are the 1%. They are the interviewers and reviewers and presenters. They are the questioners of presidential candidates!

They are the 1%.

Don't forget that.

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The New York Times

Submitted by Tiger on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 5:30pm.

has many Pulitzers to return beginning with Walter Duranty's whitewash of Stalin.

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I suppose...

Submitted by almostacowboy on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 5:45pm.

...the Times is grumbling that we knaves should be grateful for their even mentioning it.

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As usual, by the time the

Submitted by motherbelt on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 5:55pm.

As usual, by the time the story is revealed as worthless, the damage has been done, and most won't even see the reversal.
I have no doubt that "the Pentagon orchestrated favorable war coverage" is already in the library of liberal canards, and will be used in the future, as if this never happened.

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Ask Ray Donovan, Secretary of Labor

Submitted by CO2Maker on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 6:13pm.

Acquitted of larceny and fraud, he asked, "Which office do I go to get my reputation back?"

Good luck with the retractions and clarification made in out of the way places on slow news days.

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A bell cannot be un-rung.

Submitted by Free Stinker on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 8:05pm.

A bell cannot be un-rung.

 

   /// Sarah Palin Fan since July 11, 2007 ///    خال

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But the bell doesn't appear to have been rung just to hear the

Submitted by Jer on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 8:24pm.

ding-dong:

"...Donovan served under a cloud of accusation. The FBI background check for his confirmation hearings had turned up allegations that Schiavone Construction had extensive mob contacts. In particular, Donovan was linked to conspiring with the reputed New Jersey organized crime figure William "Billy the Butcher" Masselli. At his hearings, Donovan claimed only to have met Masselli three times, but an FBI wiretap of Masselli's telephone revealed over three hundred mentions of Donovan. Although the Senate had found no reason to reject his confirmation, the FBI's inquiry set in motion the machinery of investigation, and it did not stop...."

source.

In any event, Donovan doesn't seem to have suffered inordinately since his litigation ordeal.  A business success, he is currently part-owner of one of the most exclusive country clubs in the world.

Jer

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Very good, jer.

Submitted by almostacowboy on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 10:54pm.

You report exactly like the NYT. I guess the part about the grand jury finding insufficient evidence for a warrant must have slipped your mind.

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Not at all, cowboy...

Submitted by Jer on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 11:13pm.

Just providing a little background info. I linked the entire article which details Donovan's acquittal. And I thought it worthwhile to note that he hasn't exactly become a forlorn and forgotten wastrel living under a bridge--his reputation in tatters.

Jer

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Opps

Submitted by Boudin on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 11:54pm.

Guess you didnt figure anyone would read it, eh

Seek Truth, Defend Liberty
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Jer wants to show off the

Submitted by LAM SON 719 on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 12:49am.

Jer wants to show off the Eric Holder T shirt he got for Christmas.

Non, je ne regrette rien. "You aren't angry because I might be a racist, you're angry because you know I'm right".
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It's an instant classic, LAM SON...

Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 4:14am.

Holder on the front...Che` on the back.

Jer

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Sweet!

Submitted by Newsbubba on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 7:58am.

Holder in the front, and Che behind.  It's anatomically correct, at least.

Comrade Bubba
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Actually, Boudin, I figured most would read it...

Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 4:20am.

That was one of the principal reasons for linking it.

It wasn't exactly a lengthy, time-consuming biography--brief, and sufficiently covered the essentials.

Jer

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mob connections?

Submitted by Agnostic on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 8:16am.

A construction company? You jest?

I wonder if anyone checked out the construction companies associated with the Big Dig? Never mind - their work is so stellar as to be beyond reproach. After all, it was run just as if the government were running the project themselves.

 

. . Socialist = Modern Liberal = Parasitoid
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Could you find some background on this guy?

Submitted by The Vet on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 2:57am.

   He said a very similar thing after being acquitted by an investigation.

Said retired Army Col. Ken Allard, one of the investigated military analysts: "Where do we go to have our reputations restored after four federal investigations and who knows how many millions spent? I meant every word of that letter I sent to Issa: This was a media-political cabal of congressional Democrats and the New York Times. And, oh, by the way, it turned out that, just as in war, the first reports were wrong."

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Of Course He Does.

Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:02am.

He's a master at complicating the obvious and disguising the truth so as to show off his intellectual prowess in building complicated fantasies, so that he can be admired by fellow liberals. Then, for more psychological oddness, he comes here to be spanked by his betters. I can't say it's healthy, but it's what he gets off on. Sick, really.

---- Let us all eviscerate the trolls and fill their carcasses with bile and venom.
Visions and Principles blog
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Master?

Submitted by Boudin on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:07am.

Seems every thing has been downgraded

Seek Truth, Defend Liberty
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Ask Ray Donovan, Secretary of Labor

Submitted by CO2Maker on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 6:14pm.

Acquitted of larceny and fraud, he asked, "Which office do I go to get my reputation back?"

Good luck with the retractions and clarification made in out of the way places on slow news days.

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explosive claim

Submitted by Injest on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 11:41pm.

won a Pulitzer Prize for the explosive claim that the Pentagon had cultivated “military analysts” in a “trojan horse” campaign

And the sneaky “Trojan horse” was the “military analysts” saying their sources at the Pentagon tell me that? How could the average Joe Sixpact know these stories and info was coming from the Pentagon!

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Well, now, THAT's a surprise...

Submitted by Jer on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 6:47pm.

So the Pentagon cleared the Pentagon of violating any Pentagon guidelines after interviewing the public relations spokesperson for the Pentagon chief and the media military analysts who were allegedly influenced by the Pentagon.  Case closed. And that cost millions? Whatever the price tag it was clearly a waste of money.

Jer

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Typical...

Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 12:59am.

But in all your smear-by-insinuation, you fail to point out that the Pentagon was following the protocols established to determine guilt. So if you have a problem with that, then needless to say, you will have a problem with any large organization who follows similar procedures. So either everyone who has an internal vetting process cannot be trusted (not just the military), or you have determined that the Pentagon will cover its backside at all costs, and therefore, NO internal process used by the Pentagon can be trusted.

Of course, stating it like that reveals your illogical position, which you take pains to camouflage.

---- Let us all eviscerate the trolls and fill their carcasses with bile and venom.
Visions and Principles blog
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Huh?

Submitted by The Vet on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 2:23am.

...protocols determine guilt? Wha....?... large organizations follow similar procedures? Huh? ...internal vetting processes that cover backsides? Ah-woo? Wait. No internal process can be trusted to do what? Huh? Illogical position on what? Huh? Do you listen to yourself when you type out such incomprehensible piffle talk?

Do us all a favor and stay away from trying to counter any antithetical posts. Stick to the insinuations of  homosexuality. It is what you do best.

---- Let us all incinerate the trash and fill the landfills with bags and vermin.

Vacuums and Pom Pom Blog

Please everyone. I am desperately selling my blog here. Please visit so my lonely existence will be vindicated.

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Dude?

Submitted by The Vet on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 2:21am.

Do you not understand what Inspector General's do?

Independence
The inspector general is nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. An inspector general may only be removed by the president, who must notify the Congress of the reasons for such a removal. The inspector general has independent authority within the Department to initiate and conduct audits, investigations, and special assessments in areas involving the programs and operations of the Department.

The inspector general has authority to "have direct and prompt access" to the secretary of defense "for any purpose pertaining to the performance of the functions and responsibilities" of the inspector general (IG Act 6.a.6). The inspector general has the authority to "select, appoint, and employ such officers and employees as may be necessary" (IG Act 6.a.7), "directly contract for program services" (IG Act 6.a.9) and "maintain legal counsel who report directly to the Inspector General" (IG Act 3.g).

The secretary of defense may prohibit the inspector general from initiating, carrying out, or completing an audit or investigation, or from issuing a subpoena if the secretary determines that each prohibition is necessary to preserve the national security interests of the United States. Exercise of such power requires notification to Congress within thirty days to include a statement of the reasons for the exercise of such power (IG Act 8).
 

Are you saying the Inspector General of the DOD is corrupt or influenced? That is a very serious charge.

Are you also insinuating the GAO is corrupt as well?

The Government Accountability Office (GAO), Congress' auditing arm, later said the program followed regulations.

So the Inspector General of the Department of Defense and the General Accounting Office are not to be believed?

How about the FCC?

Democrats pressed the Federal Communications Commission to find that the analysts had violated federal law, but the FCC has issued no report.

Is the FCC not to be trusted as well?

And what are your recommendations? There were 4 (FOUR) investigations and intense pressure from Congress to change the findings and still you dismiss it as some kind of internal back slapping wink wink it is all just a show to get people off our back game that is to be played when people complain?

I thought you were serious Uncle Jer. What happened?

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I fear Jer will not be happy

Submitted by Boudin on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 2:40am.

When he awakes? I would of had no idea where to find this info. Very nice work Mr Vet!

Seek Truth, Defend Liberty
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Fear not, Boudin...I'm whistling a happy tune even whilst I

Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 4:34am.

type this reply.

You DO realize that the VET [military...20-year US Navy veteran] is part of the conspiracy covering up for the Pentagon, do you not?

Jer

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Vet...

Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 4:38am.

Pay no heed to my response to Boudin above. And you are right. I temporarily took leave of my senses. I won't let it happen again.

It must have been the holiday nog.

Uncle Jer

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s'ok.

Submitted by The Vet on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 9:20am.

Tenacious the idiot will be along soon to call us gay like he always does. And you missed my goof. Inspectors general is the plural.

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On the topic of Inspector General of the DoD.

Submitted by The Vet on Fri, 01/13/2012 - 8:15am.

Here is another report from the DoD IG exonerating a good man.

DoD Report Says McChrystal Profile Inaccurate, Rolling Stone Responds

But the Department of Defense is still maintaining McChrystal and his staff, who were quoted in the article making disparaging comments about Obama administration officials, were not at fault. An Inspector General report released Monday after a Freedom of Information Act request has cleared the general and his staff of any wrongdoing.

How did I come upon that?

WSJ - Antiwar Reporting

In the Rolling Stone article, Mr. Hastings sketched a trip to Paris in April 2010, when the McChrystal team allegedly made the inflammatory comments, without attributing most quotes to specific individuals. In "The Operators," he names names. We now discover that the large majority of the incendiary statements came from a 33-year-old lieutenant commander. In "The Runaway General," Mr. Hastings attributed the lieutenant commander's assertions at various times to a "team member," an "aide" and an "adviser," leading readers to conclude that the statements emanated from a broad range of Gen. McChrystal's staff members. Moreover, an investigation by the Defense Department's Inspector General found insufficient evidence to attribute some of the offending quotes to team members and determined that other quotes had been taken out of context
 

THIS IS IMPORTANT * THIS IS IMPORTANT  *  THIS IS IMPORTANT

According to members of Gen. McChrystal's team, Mr. Hastings represented himself as a supporter of the Afghan war and the U.S. military upon meeting the team in Paris. When "The Runaway General" was published, he dismissed accusations that he was antiwar, explaining that his views of the war "are critical but that shouldn't be mistaken for hostile." In "The Operators," he states unabashedly: "I hated the war."

THIS IS IMPORTANT AS WELL

Like David Halberstam and Neil Sheehan, Mr. Hastings ignores the harm that his reporting caused to America's overseas interests. The firing of Gen. McChrystal removed the one American who enjoyed the confidence of Afghan President Hamid Karzai and of Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, chief of staff of Pakistan's army. It also widened the gulf between Mr. Karzai and Washington. Mr. Karzai became convinced that the White House had removed Gen. McChrystal as another slap in his face for disregarding American lectures. To the Afghan president, it was inconceivable that the U.S. government would fire its top military officer because of unattributed quotes in a pop-culture magazine.

It was a slap in the face. A 4 star general got sacked because of an article by an anti-war turd that was full of trash.

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I was with you right up to...

Submitted by almostacowboy on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 9:23am.

...the FCC. They are definitely a corrupt organization.

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What's the problem.....?

Submitted by NeoKong on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 7:16pm.

It sounds like the operational model of the Journolist. Did anyone get a Pulitzer for exposing that....?

Follow me on Twitter
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You talkin' to me?

Submitted by Jer on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 7:59pm.

You talkin' to me?

Then who the hell else are you talkin' to?

;-)

Jer

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⇒ Jer

Submitted by Cool Arrow on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 5:18am.

How many times must I tell you Mark David Chapman is still alive and you can't channel him yet.

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Another prize in the ash heap.

Submitted by wingnut55 on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 8:15pm.

Since the Nobel Prize has been devalued because of it being given to Jimmy Carter for lasting peace in the Middle East, and given to President Obama for being elected to office. Since the Oscar has been devalued by it being given to a movie that has been proven to be a lie (An inconvenient truth). Since the Grammys has been devalued by being given to the Dixie Chicks to show contempt for the general public. Now, so the Pulitzer has been given for a story that was based on false premiss, so, once again a valued prize has been made worthless by the PC police.

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One could be forgiven

Submitted by SaguaroJack on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 8:58pm.

for mistaking the NY Times as the journal of the Liars Club.

.

You were born American. That's the best break anybody ever got.
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Why give it back?

Submitted by Newsbubba on Tue, 12/27/2011 - 9:34pm.

"give back its Pulitzer for a story that is now proven to be a fabrication"  Why?

Clearly the PP was given BECAUSE they so successfully smeared the Pentagon, the Defense Department, and the members of the uniformed services!

As a member of the uniformed military officer "fraternity," the New York Times, and Senator Carl Levin can kiss my ass.  No apology necessary.

Your day will come soon .

Comrade Bubba
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keeping the pulitzer

Submitted by Agnostic on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 8:09am.

They kept Duranty's against decades of protest so why wouldn't they keep this one. Never let the facts get in the way of a good smear or be ashamed of the reward received for the lies.

. . Socialist = Modern Liberal = Parasitoid
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How many is a hock moddy?

Submitted by Cool Arrow on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 5:14am.

FOX just reported from Iran that the trial of a mere hock moddy began today.

Is it more than a brazilian?

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The usual deranged fascist anus orifices with godhood delusions

Submitted by russedav on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 8:46am.

The usual deranged fascist anus orifices with godhood delusions. NYT's usual evil denizens are incapable of the truth except by accident or when serving their devil pimp's objectives.

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