Democracy Now! speaks with Newsweek journo Michael Isikoff and Editor and Publisher editor Greg Mitchell -- who thinks NYT executive editor Bill Keller should fire Judith Miller and apologize to the paper's readers.
Some excerpts:
AMY GOODMAN: On the phone to talk with us about these latest developments is Michael Isikoff, investigative reporter with Newsweek. His latest article is about Karl Rove's lawyer, Robert Luskin. It’s called “Karl Rove’s Consigliore.” We're also joined on the phone by the editor of Editor and Publisher, Greg Mitchell. And we welcome you both to Democracy Now! I wanted to start with Greg Mitchell. Your response to the weekend's revelations in The New York Times, both the article, the extended article, not written by Judith Miller, and Miller's report of her four hours of testimony before the grand jury.
GREG MITCHELL: Well, I wrote a column shortly after it came out, saying that Miller must be fired, and that at the minimum, Keller, the editor, owed the readers an apology for what he had allowed to transpire there, basically, as we had been writing for two or three years, that Judith Miller is a train wreck as a reporter and that she has committed deep crimes against journalism.
AMY GOODMAN: In what way?
GREG MITCHELL: Well, starting with her reporting on Iraq – of course, we don’t want to dwell on that. That’s been written about a great deal in the past, where basically she helped grease the path to war, which is bad enough, but her conduct in the whole Plame affair, both in terms of what she admits in her article in the Times on Sunday, that she cannot remember any of the people who mentioned Valerie Plame to her, which is absolutely impossible to believe.
I think one key thing we have to point out – often in these cases when people search their memories from a couple of years back, you can sometimes believe they can’t remember such a thing, because something did not seem important at the time, but this period where more than one person leaked Plame's name to Miller, of course, that blew up into a front page story after the Robert Novak column. So there's absolutely no way she would have forgotten that information at the time.
AMY GOODMAN: Were you surprised by her Pentagon clearance?
GREG MITCHELL: No. We reported it – I believe we were first to report it in September 2003. In fact, we have sort of rerun that article on our web site today, in which we revealed that status and raised questions about it at the time. The reason it's significant – and I'm sure some listeners are wondering why that's significant in the Plame case – is because as the Times articles this weekend made clear, as Miller admitted, Libby discussed classified information with her. So, this would make him indictable for breaking the Espionage Act, particularly if she did not have any clearance. So, it's incredibly relevant to the Plame investigation right now.
AMY GOODMAN: Michael Isikoff, your response, overall, but then specifically about what this means for Karl Rove and Scooter Libby, the reports this weekend in your rival, Time, that Karl Rove and Libby will either resign or take a paid leave of absence, if they're indicted.
MICHAEL ISIKOFF: That's inevitable. You can’t serve at a high level of the United States government in the White House if you are under indictment. So, I don't think it's any surprise. I think everybody would expect, if they are indicted, they would at a minimum have to take a temporary leave and couldn't continue to serve.
I – you know, look, clearly, the Judith Miller testimony, as described in her own account and in the Times article, is problematic for Libby. I mean, it clearly implicates him in discussing Joe Wilson's wife's employment at the C.I.A. prior to the time that it was – to the Robert Novak column, and that's been a central thrust to the investigation.
What's fascinating, if you read Judy Miller's account closely, is it's very clear she is still trying to be protective of Scooter Libby, and in fact, as I sort of reread it this morning, I saw point by point where, if she is on the stand, as presumably she would be, if Libby gets indicted and the case goes to trial, the defense lawyer for Libby could go through her account and find passages where she is giving information that could be helpful to Libby's defense. She has the classified clearance. He didn't mention that she was a covert operative. In fact, she assumed from what he told her that she was an analyst, and not an operative. Point by point, you can go through that, and you know, I think – and my guess is that Judy Miller is, you know, agonizing, herself, didn't want to testify at all, still feels a loyalty to her source, and is still trying to be protective of him. ...
AMY GOODMAN: Greg Mitchell, of Editor and Publisher, what about the level to which Judith Miller has clearly, right until now, dictated the coverage in the lead-up to war and now the coverage of the whole Valerie Plame case?
GREG MITCHELL: Well, it's amazing the way she hijacked the newsroom there and prevented the Times itself from writing much about her case, and as we learned perhaps most shockingly, for those who can still be shocked about this, yeah, Keller himself and possibly others at the papers killed stories or prevented stories from being reported on the broader Plame case starting this past summer, because they were afraid that they might anger the prosecutor, Fitzgerald, or somehow raise further problems for her.
AMY GOODMAN: Explain.
GREG MITCHELL: Well, it's simply they were afraid – they were putting the protection of her or any danger for her that could occur in any of their reporting over the public's right to know or the newspaper's mission. They didn't want to report stories, even that were not directly related to her case, that might make the prosecutor mad, in which case he would be tougher on her.
AMY GOODMAN: But specifically, the pieces that they killed?
GREG MITCHELL: Well, they were pieces related to the Plame probe. I'm not sure that the Times story this weekend was that specific on what they were. There were numerous, as it was described, numerous stories and story ideas that were submitted to Keller or other editors that the order came down from on top. And this was the problem throughout this entire period. The publisher and the editor of the paper were so concerned about the Miller case that they were – they allowed that case to consume their concerns, and dictate the coverage, and this is, you know – this is simply unacceptable, and why so much of the Times newsroom was in turmoil over this.
AMY GOODMAN: And the issue of Judith Miller being taken off covering weapons of mass destruction.
GREG MITCHELL: Well, again, the revelation in the Times stories was that Bill Keller took her off that, which, you know – I'm not sure he's supposed to get any credit for that. It seemed to be a no-brainer when she had provided possibly the worst coverage of any major reporter on that subject, but his incredible admission that even though he, as the editor of the paper, had ordered her off, somehow she kept wheedling her way back onto the beat. And what an admission for the top editor to say he could not control her, and I think that's the thread that runs through all this is the incredible things that the leadership at the paper allowed her, the special privileges that were given to her, that she was able to run, as she called herself – “Miss Runamok” was her nickname for herself. And there's an incredible hidden story there on how Judith Miller was given this – especially given her track record on W.M.D.’ s, it would seem like she should have been the one person that you would rein in, not the one person that you would let run free.