In their watchdog role of keeping the public informed, the New York Times has over the years disclosed government secrets regarding anti-terrorism tactics, overseas prisons, interrogation tactics, and military tactics, that critics contend have harmed the effectiveness of the programs and put America and our military at greater risk.
In fact, in 2008, the Times even published the name of an interrogator who got Khalid Shaikh Mohammed to talk, against the wishes of the interrogator’s lawyer and the CIA. The interrogator and his family fear for their lives, but that’s okay, because the public has a right to know.
So when Times journalist David Rohde was captured by the Taliban and held for seven months, the Times was going to report that, right? After all, doesn’t the public have a right to know about the threats they may face while traveling in Afghanistan?
As it turns out, the New York Times doesn’t think we do. Mithridate Ombud previously posted on how the Times kept Rohde’s capture secret for seven months and still won’t won’t divulge many details of his capture and escape now that he’s safe.
Bill Keller wrote in a memo today "the consensus of experts we consulted -- and the judgment of the family -- was that a storm of publicity would at best prolong David's captivity by increasing his apparent value, and could well put him in imminent danger." Somehow I think that's a lesson that will be forgotten as soon as someone in a uniform faces the same fate.
Times executive editor Bill Keller said, "The more you talk about who did what ... the more you're writing a playbook for the next kidnapping."
Yes, and the more you talk about how interrogators get information out of terrorists, the more you’re writing a playbook for terrorists to prepare for interrogation. The more you publicize NSA wiretapping techniques or bank monitoring techniques, the more you’re letting the terrorists know how to avoid surveillance.
In defending it’s reporting on the program monitoring bank transactions, the New York Times ombudsman Byron Calame said that the program really wasn’t much of a secret:
”My original support for the article rested heavily on the fact that so many people already knew about the program that serious terrorists also must have been aware of it.”
That, despite the fact that the Times trumpeted the fact that it was a “secret” Bush administration program in both the headline and the text and that it helped capture the most wanted Qaeda figure in Southeast Asia. Apparently there were some “serious terrorists,” such as those on the most wanted list, who were not aware of it to the degree that they could avoid it.
Nonetheless, if the Times wanted to stick by its previous reasoning it could have reported the story of David Rodhe’s kidnapping, because the Times had in the past published stories about the kidnapping of Jill Carroll while she was captive, and Carroll told her story after she was freed, so any “serious terrorist” would already know how to capture a journalist.
The Christian Science Monitor could only keep Carroll’s kidnapping secret for one weekend before it was reported by other media. There were 40 other news outlets that knew about Rohde’s capture, but apparently their editors give more credence to the New York Times than they do to the CIA when approached with concerns for someone’s safety.
The Times’s most egregious violation of personal safety in publishing secrets is the case of CIA interrogator Deuce Martinez. Martinez was instrumental in getting Khalid Shaikh Mohammed to talk, and he didn’t even have to resort to what the Times would consider “torture.”
The Times published the story of Martinez’s history as an interrogator who refused to learn waterboarding and instead chose to “[build] a rapport with the most ruthless of terrorists.”
The Times used his story as a means to question CIA interrogation techniques and wrote about Martinez’s education, employment, and details of his interrogations that would make him identifiable to those he interrogated.
That’s the reward you get from the Times for not waterboarding people.
The Times could have written a story about his interrogation techniques without naming him and without going into his personal life and still gotten across their point about alternatives to enhanced interrogation methods.
But, the Times couldn’t do that, because they put their big story above the safety of those serving our country.
Ombudsman Clark Hoyt said:
Scott Shane, the reporter, and his editors said that using the name was necessary for credibility. Martinez was, after all, the central character in the story. They said that nobody provided evidence that Martinez would be in any greater danger than the scores of others who have been identified in the news media for their roles in the war against Al Qaeda. Those include other former C.I.A. officers, the warden at Guantánamo, military prosecutors, the lawyer who wrote Justice Department memos justifying harsh interrogation techniques, and even a New York Port Authority policeman who helped arrest a terrorist.
Cleaver tact the Times employs there, rationalizing the identification of an interrogator by pointing out that they and other media outlets had already identified other individuals at risk of terrorism. I suppose that would be like someone running a Ponzi scheme then defending him or herself by saying that Bernie Madoff had already done the same thing.
Identifying an interrogator, against the wishes of himself and the CIA, is worse than identifying a journalist already in captivity. Exposing the NSA wiretapping program can be said to be in the public interest because the public may be having their privacy violated, but actually using the name of an interrogator doesn’t serve the public in any justifiable way, even by the Times’s standards. They simply put him and his family at risk for no reason other than to get a big story.
I can only hope that in the future Times gives our military and our intelligence community the same respect for their safety that they give their reporters.
—Mitchell Blatt is the editor of the foreign affairs blog Bombs and Dollars.



















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HMMMMMMMMMMMMM
June 22, 2009 - 14:27 ET by rick007Sounds to me like he was just over there teaching them how to use propaganda to their benifit. NYT style
Question for Mr. Keller
June 22, 2009 - 15:47 ET by allanf(In my best Dan Rather style) Sir, I say this with all due respect. But Sir the public needs to know the public has a right to know.
Was the New York Times actively printing stories at the behest of the Taliban to gain their favor and the release of your reporter?
Doesn't the public need to know?
Great Question
June 22, 2009 - 18:43 ET by evilcontractorI think a reasonable person (read: not a liberal) could easily make the case the Times have been publishing anti-USA stories for some time. This would it make it difficult to prove a pro-taliban slant was caused to gain a favorable outcome in the case of a kidnapped reporter (who I'm very glad was able to escape by whatever means). After all, it's only news if the Times says it news. Right?
Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened. Sir Winston Churchill
www.btreasures.com
Missing Point -
June 22, 2009 - 14:41 ET by FastEdInterrorgators hurt bad guys, and using the logic of the left, naming the "journalists" would only embolden the terrorists. It doesn't have to make sense, it's the nyt's after all, and if one of theirs were to be hurt, then there would be a possible loss of readership. (make USA bad, more terror readers, opposite would lose readers)
There is no sense in being stupid, if you can't prove it! - my dad V
Mitchell... Two Words
June 22, 2009 - 14:43 ET by bigtimerMitchell...
Two Words here ....Thank You.
I was discussing this very issue yesterday as Keller was all over the place with my other half...there is nothing like the hypocrisy, treason as far as I am concerned the NYTs (and WaPo) have done during a time of war, which they receive Pulitzer's for....and this is suppose to be something the majority of us out here give a rats rear about, after-the-fact....
Count me out...(glad the guy is fine, sure we'll see some big book soon)
Especially with all that is going on now internationally...and domestically too.
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
Bt, Keller has been a seditious slime for as long...
June 22, 2009 - 14:53 ET by ThalpyBt, Keller has been a seditious slime for as long as I can remember. He has no allegiance to us or our country. Your points are right on target.
Thalpy... I despise
June 22, 2009 - 15:06 ET by bigtimerThalpy...
I despise Keller, have for a very long time...the NYTs goes without saying.
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
What do you expect??
June 22, 2009 - 15:16 ET by kdoliverI was discussing this at work today. What do you really expect liberals to do. They do not believe in good and evil---until (drum roll please) it happens to someone they know. If it does not effect them directly, then we can ignore it, harm others, etc. However, once it becomes (drum roll again) PERSONAL then the standards change. This is why logic is always better than emotion.
http://thelazytriath...
The remaining question -
June 22, 2009 - 15:31 ET by acumenWas Nancy Pelosi briefed by the NY Times about Rhodes capture and did she offer any objection to the NY Times use of censorship?
Bloggers should put the
June 22, 2009 - 15:35 ET by snaggletoothieBloggers should put the Times on notice that, from now on, the same rules will apply to Times employees that the Times extends to the rest of the world. Then Times employees will know what to expect. And reporters for the Times can make an imformed decision as to whether they want to work under the same conditions that they happily apply to everyone else.
oh Snag,
June 22, 2009 - 17:01 ET by boomerconI LIKE that!!
Please please get that ball a-rolling!
"...and still won’t
June 22, 2009 - 15:41 ET by sherlock1"...and still won’t won’t divulge many details of his capture and escape now that he’s safe."
Two things smell about this whole deal:
1. There is no reason this info needs to be protected, and in fact the manner of his capture and captivity could prove useful to others in avoiding kidnapping, or in rescuing kidnap victims.
2. Families do not typically want news of their kidnapped loved ones suppressed - they usually wanted it shouted from the rooftops so that governments stay focused on their rescue.
No, the only hting that makes sense here is that the NYT needs to cover up the fact that one of its reporters spent 7 months embedded with the enemy, and writing a book about it that they probably promised would treat them sympathetically.
The reason the family didn't want it public was indeed because they were afraid that if it was, he would be in danger, but not in the way the NYT wants you to assume. No, they realized he was only in danger if a rival group found out about him and tried to demand he be handed over to them - or killed. He was safe where he was, and at the right time, he walked home with the material he needed for his book.
The NYT is lying, and in effect giving false advice to others in order to cover themselves. This is an utter disgrace.
Interesting
June 22, 2009 - 15:56 ET by UpNorththought, Sherlock. And possible right on the money.
I'm still "concerned" that the NYT ignored our "right to know". After all, he's a public figure, so that makes anything about him fair game, at least according the the NYT's rules. I expect that there really is a big book deal in this for the "reporter". Maybe a made-for-TV movie too?
I Agree with UpNorth
June 22, 2009 - 16:41 ET by karelingSherlock has indeed made a fascinating observation about a possible book deal.
And it's always amused me that for all the outrage from the left over Valerie Plame's outing, she still grabbed her 15 minutes by writing a book about it and posing with her husband for Vanity Fair.
So, Kareling - how'd Plame's book do anyway?
June 22, 2009 - 16:46 ET by acaiguanaI have a nefarous reason for asking. Does that make me bad FTC?
ACA
...
Quoted from: 'Acaiguana notes from the Underground' (Soon to be at theaters near you)
Easy to Believe
June 22, 2009 - 19:00 ET by evilcontractorWhy are we rushing to believe the NYTimes? What kind of proof can they offer? How do we know they aren't just making this up to slow down their declining readership? Did the Taliban have the same facilities to hold this brave reporter as the USA provides to real terrorist at GITMO? We demand proof. We demand interviews with the captors. We demand pictures of the prison camp this reporter was held. We demand the Red Cross and other International Non-Governmental Organizations inspect. We demand the truth!
Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened. Sir Winston Churchill
www.btreasures.com
Never at a loss for excuses
June 22, 2009 - 15:52 ET by mattmNever at a loss for excuses of their hypocrisy, are they?
NYT
June 22, 2009 - 18:10 ET by east tennessee johnLet's see, spike a story to save one their own;OK. Publish info that protects the rest of us and potentially subject us to risk, that's OK too. All the news that's fit to print my ass.
When you're more concerned
June 22, 2009 - 18:24 ET by gmaniac1When you're more concerned about journalist than the people that defend this country's freedom, there is a serious malfunction.
When the people fear the government it's called tyranny, when the government fears the people it's called liberty!
Alterior motives?
June 22, 2009 - 20:34 ET by BKeyserI saw this on HotAir the other day. I'm so suspicious of the NYT and their motives, I would not be surprised if something more sinister is at play here. I know nothing of the journalist David Rohde, and I hope he has not suffered during this period, but, he did apparently claim that his driver remained behind with his captors to join their cause. I know of Stockholm Syndrome, I studied it at Bragg during a counter-terrorism course while in the USMC. It's possible the driver is a victim of SS, or maybe he decided this best suited his chances for survival and release. It's also possible he came to embrace the ideology of the Taliban. But Rohde was held captive for how long? Without a hint of it here? For what? And how many Americans were held by the Taliban for more than a week and still have a head? I don't know but I would not be surprised to see a whole host of pro-Taliban/anti-American Military articles in the Times authored by- or as told by- Rohde in the near future. And maybe, just maybe, this is why the Times didn't go public with this.
Or, maybe conspiracy theories have just gotten the better of me on this one... I hope that's the case.