After weeks of saying nothing, the editors of the New Republic magazine have stepped out of their batcave to inform the world that they still believe in Scott Beauchamp's "reports" from Iraq.
For his part, Beauchamp is starting to look more and more like Memogate's Bill Burkett, the Texas moonbat who repeatedly told different versions of his story to Dan Rather and Mary Mapes:
Beauchamp’s refusal to defend himself certainly raised serious doubts. That said, Beauchamp’s words were being monitored: His squad leader was in the room as he spoke to us, as was a public affairs specialist, and it is now clear that the Army was recording the conversation for its files.
Story Continues Below Ad ↓The next day, via his wife, we learned that Beauchamp did want to stand by his stories and wanted to communicate with us again. Two-and-a-half weeks later, Beauchamp telephoned Foer at home and, in an unmonitored conversation, told him that he continued to stand by every aspect of his story, except for the one inaccuracy he had previously admitted. He also told Foer that in the September 6 call he had spoken under duress, with the implicit threat that he would lose all the freedoms and privileges that his commanding officer had recently restored if he discussed the story with us.
The magazine's editors, meanwhile are getting all Ratherian, demanding the Army to completely disprove Beauchamp's "reports" instead of the other way around:
The New Republic is deeply frustrated by the Army’s behavior. TNR has endeavored with good faith to discover whether Beauchamp’s article contained inaccuracies and has repeatedly requested that the Army provide us with documentary evidence that it was fabricated or embellished. Instead of doing this, the Army leaked selective parts of the record—including a conversation that Beauchamp had with his lawyer—continuing a months-long pattern by which the Army has leaked information and misinformation to conservative bloggers while failing to help us with simple requests for documents.
We have worked hard to re-report this piece and will continue to do so. But this process has involved maddening delays compounded by bad faith on the part of at least some officials in the Army. Our investigation has taken far longer than we would like, but it is our obligation and promise to deliver a full account of our findings.
Peggy Noonan has a good column in today's OpinionJournal that pretty much sums up the situation here:
Everyone in journalism thought first of Stephen Glass. I actually remember the day I read his New Republic piece on the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington in 1997, a profile of young Republicans as crude and ignorant pot-smoking alcoholics in search of an orgy. It, um, startled me. After years of observation, I was inclined toward the view that there's no such thing as a young Republican. More to the point, I'd been to the kind of convention Mr. Glass wrote about, and I thought it not remotely possible that the people he painted were real. I also thought: Man, this is way too convenient. The New Republic tends to think Republicans are hateful, and this reporter just happened to be welcomed into the private world of the most hateful Republicans in history.
On the Thomas stories, which I read not when they came out but when they began to come under scrutiny, I had a similar thought, or a variation of it. I thought: That's not Iraq, that's a Vietnam War movie. That's not life as it's being lived on the ground right now, that's life as an editor absorbed it through media. That's the dark world of Kubrick and Coppola and Oliver Stone, of the great Vietnam movies of the '70s and '80s.
If that's what you absorbed during the past 20 or 30 years, it just might make sense to you, it would actually seem believable, if a fellow in Iraq wrote for you about taunting scarred women, shooting dogs, and wearing skulls as helmets. This is the offhand brutality of war. You know. You saw it in a movie.
Bryan Preston at Hot Air also nails it:
[New Republic editor Franklin] Foer can spin and twist his conversations with Beauchamp and various Army officers all he wants. He can suggest that the Army is being devious with him, that it’s strong arming Beauchamp, whatever. But if he can’t verify, after all this time, the existence of that mass grave, and since he now has official records documenting that his reporter has lied to somebody, Foer has no choice but to consider Beauchamp’s credibility as beyond repair and his stories as fatally flawed.
But he’s not going to do that. He’s going to continue to focus on the leak and make the Army out to be the villain. That’s been his standard tactic throughout, and that attitude probably contributed to TNR’s publishing Beauchamp’s fables in the first place.
—Matthew Sheffield is the creator of NewsBusters and its Executive Editor.



















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Comments Policy
Article 134 of the UCMJ—Disloyal statements
October 26, 2007 - 14:53 ET by jay_1975Elements:
(1) That the accused made a certain statement;
(2) That the statement was communicated to another person;
(3) That the statement was disloyal to the United States;
(4) That the statement was made with the intent to promote disloyalty or disaffection toward the United States by any member of the armed forces or to interfere with or impair the loyalty to the United States or good order and discipline of any member of the armed forces; and
(5) That, under the circumstances, the conduct of the accused was to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the armed forces or was of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces.
Maximum punishment.
Dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and confinement for 3 years.
I hope they throw the book at the lying piece of trash.
To paraphrase, faith is the
October 26, 2007 - 14:54 ET by fitzfongTo paraphrase, faith is the evidence of things not seen. I guess that makes Scott Beauchamp God to the left wing.
They are going to milk this
October 26, 2007 - 14:59 ET by Right2thePointThey are going to milk this a long as they can, not only to try to cover their own a$$, but to keep having time and energy wasted by the right so that hopefully some other stuff by the left can slip by under the radar while many are distracted.
Only problem is they can't grasp that we can walk and chew bubble gum at the same time..a task they have never managed.
Yeah, keep hope alive, New
October 26, 2007 - 15:24 ET by drillanwrYeah, keep hope alive, New Republic ...
Good cripes!
Screw Beauchamp
October 26, 2007 - 15:37 ET by SFCMACHe knew what the hell he was doing. He’s an attention whore who willingly allowed himself to be used by TNR. In the process, he lied, denigrated his fellow Soldiers, and caused an outrageous distraction that his unit did not need.
If Beauchamp's own words in the interview or the lack of factual evidence wasn't enough to convince Foer that he'd been Glass'd, then he's really stuck on stupid. TNR is still trying to cover its ass. Admitting they fucked up beyond belief might have saved at least a shred of credibility. Just reading the transcripts and Beauchamp’s blithe responses makes me want to vomit. TNR has claimed throughout this sordid espisode that the Army forbid Beauchamp to comment or speak to the media. That, as evidenced by the transcripts, is an out and out lie. Beauchamp was free to talk, TNR knew this, but told him to keep quiet. Then they turn around and accuse the Army of gagging him.
Foer needs to step back, take a breath, and write a detailed apology for their (collective) journalistic malfeasance. Redactions have become nothing more than cover-ups and lame excuses instead of dignified, truthful explainations.
Congratulations, TNR. Your credibility is in the crapper.
"On the Eighth Day God Created the United States Army and the Devil Stood at Attention"
TNR still believes in Scott
October 26, 2007 - 20:37 ET by MikeBTNR still believes in Scott Beauchamp. Okaaaay. Linus still believes in the Great Pumpkin. Little kids still believe in Santa Clause. Poor people still believe that Democrats care about them. And Dingy Harry Reid believes that Rush said that anyone in the military who disagrees with the war is a "phony soldier". To paraphrase Jerry Lee Lewis: A Whole Lotta Stupid Goin' On.
"A communist is someone who reads Marx. An anti-communist is someone who understands Marx." Ronald Reagan
}}---> Liberal believers
October 27, 2007 - 03:24 ET by Cool ArrowAnd those Liberals who do believe in God can't bring themselves to pray for the defeat in Iraq their country loathing brothers crave.