UNITED
NATIONS -
5 April 2005
www.MaximsNews.com
/ --
The editorial page of
the New
York Times recently led
with a justifiably outraged
condemnation of George W. Bush's
choice for United Nations
ambassador--John Bolton, a famously
outspoken anti-UN and antimultilateral
ideologue.
How
ironic, then, that the Times's
news editors had previously dispatched
to the UN a reporter tight with the
same Boltonite unilateralist clique--a
reporter who has written about alleged
wrongdoing at the UN in such an
exaggerated way as to cast the
organization and its leadership as
almost beyond redemption.
When
she began her work at the UN, Judith
Miller was still under a cloud for her
starring role in the
Iraq Invasion Follies, in which she hyped
Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass
destruction and Al Qaeda ties--claims that
greatly buttressed the White House case
for war but that ultimately proved
unfounded [see Baker, "'Scoops'
and Truth at the Times,"
June 23, 2003].
The
Times,
which has since published a series of mea
culpas, placed Miller in a quasi
quarantine, according to insiders at the
paper.
Yet she re-emerged, amazingly,
still writing about Iraq
-- now from an oblique angle: the UN's
alleged mismanagement of the
Iraqi Oil for Food program.
In
January 2004 the
Iraqi daily Al-Mada listed 270 people
suspected of profiting while enabling
Saddam's government to evade oil sales
restrictions.
By
April an independent UN inquiry was under
way, headed by former Federal Reserve
chair Paul Volcker.
In
May Miller was put on the story.
Several Times
sources say they believe Miller requested
the assignment. Miller did not respond to
interview requests, and Times
executive editor Bill Keller declined to
comment.
To
be sure, the UN is an institution needing
reform, and the Oil for Food program,
troubled.
Volcker
found that the Oil for Food chief, Benon
Sevan, acted in a way that "presented
a grave and continuing conflict of
interest" and was "ethically
improper"-- and can't explain cash he
received.
The
report did not, however, suggest that
Sevan's actions indicated widespread or
higher-level graft.
But
an examination of Miller's work shows that
she used contrivances of tone and framing
and selective citation of biased sources
to create a headline- generating
super-scandal--one that Volcker's newest
(March 29) report confirms to be thus far
without serious foundation.
Since
October 22 she has produced no fewer than
twenty-one articles on the matter, nine of
them centered on criticism by Capitol Hill
figures with no love for the UN.
She
reported the scandal, GOP senators and
House members investigated and she
reported the investigations themselves as
evidence that corruption was far more
widespread than the facts indicated.
And
through many of her articles echoed the
mantra of Republican senator and key
source Norm Coleman's Wall Street
Journal op-ed, "Kofi Annan Must
Go."
In
January, when Volcker released internal UN
audits, Miller's framing was subtly but
significantly different from that of other
journalists.
The
LA Times lead characterized the
audits as showing "lax
oversight," while Miller attempted to
tie the shortcomings directly to Annan,
reporting that the audits "criticize
an office, led by a former top aide
to...Annan."
Only
in Miller's thirteenth paragraph do we
read that "Mr. Volcker said that the
internal audits 'don't prove anything,'
but do show how the United Nations was
urged to tighten up its supervision of the
program.
'There's
no flaming red flags in the stuff,' he
said."
When
Volcker's February interim report
similarly failed to sweepingly condemn the
institution, Miller's tone turned
disdainful.
Casting
the document as "eagerly and
skeptically awaited by United Nations
critics" and "months
overdue," she pointedly reported that
"conservatives and other critics have
accused [Volcker] of being insufficiently
impartial and independent."
Miller
left it to others--including the Financial
Times's Claudio Gatti--to suggest that
violations of the Oil for Food rules had
been tacitly tolerated by US authorities.
Miller's
articles also conspicuously dismiss the
program's role in keeping Iraq
WMD-free, a point that would remind
readers of her transgressions in the
pre-war period.
Miller's
bias has been most apparent in her
spotlighting of consulting work Kofi
Annan's son did for a Swiss-based company,
Cotecna Inspection Services, which won a
UN contract for monitoring Oil for Food
deliveries into
Iraq.
Granted,
nepotism makes for poor governance and
great newspaper copy--and Kojo Annan's
behavior raises serious questions, but
Miller's Times articles have
relentlessly sought to tie UN problems
directly to the elder Annan, long a target
of America's unilateralist right.
In
one piece, Miller practically dragged
Ambassador John Danforth, well-known for
his moderate views and comparative
affection for the UN, to the witness
table.
"Pressed
by reporters on Monday... Danforth...
specifically declined to say he had
confidence in Mr. Annan's
leadership," wrote Miller on December
1.
In
comparison, the Washington Post's
UN correspondent, Colum Lynch, also quoted
Danforth but left out the "declines
to support" formulation, even though
Lynch was presumably one of the
"reporters" who, Miller claimed,
were pressing Danforth.
Similar
slant was evident in advance coverage of
the latest Volcker report, chiding Kofi
Annan for inadequate vigilance over his
son's dealings with Cotecna.
The
Associated Press leads with
"investigators...will not accuse
[Annan] of corruption," and the Wall
Street Journal notes, "The panel
has concluded that there is no evidence
Mr. Annan rigged... procurement... exerted
undue influence... or ever sought or
received improper financial
benefits." [emphasis added.]
But
Miller's piece (bylined with UN bureau
chief Warren Hoge) says that the report
"will come as a setback for the
beleaguered secretary general," and
waits till paragraph seven to offer a more
reluctant vindication of Annan: "the
commission has not uncovered any evidence
[of corruption]."
Another
co-bylined Miller piece, in the March 29 Times,
focuses on Volcker revelations that
Annan's former chief of staff had
assistants toss Oil for Food files.
Only
lower in the article, under the subhead
"Oil Report to Say Aide to Annan
Culled Files," do we read that the
files were his personal copies of
originals stored elsewhere, and that he
insists it was a routine culling to clear
out space.
The
Times story the next day on the report
itself, written by Hoge alone, somewhat
grudgingly acknowledged the panel's
conclusion that Annan "had not
influenced the awarding of" the
contract to his son's former
company.
Miller,
too, was in that issue--with another
itty-bitty alleged malfeasance.
"United
Nations diplomats" (not American, by
any chance?) released an internal UN
report about a UN office with a
thirteen-person staff and a budget of $2
million criticizing such practices as
sexual innuendo and using staff for
personal errands--hardly unique in corners
of vast enterprises.
The
report, dated February 16, was
conveniently provided to journalists as
the new Volcker report appeared.
Given
the consequences of Miller's shilling for
Bush Administration unilateralists during
the run-up to the UN-opposed Iraq invasion, it seems remarkable that her
editors would grant her a similar role in
covering the complex Oil for Food
scandal--especially given the Times's
unique role in setting the global news
agenda and establishing perceptions.
As
one diplomat from a Western country put it
to me, "I think there is a more
balanced and nuanced picture of the Oil
for Food program to be
presented."
In
a brief conversation, Hoge told me that
Miller had been brought into this story
specifically to do investigative
reporting.
But
her work bears little resemblance to
classic journalistic gumshoeing.
So
what's her real contribution?
I
asked another Times colleague who
has worked with Miller.
He
replied, "They feel that, through her
work, people in positions of power speak
on the pages of the New York Times.
Whether it is true or not is another
issue."
RussBaker@MaximsNews.com
Russ
Baker
Over
the past two decades, Baker has
produced hundreds of stories, most of
them for magazines and newspapers --
but also for television and radio --
on a broad range of topics, from
political revolutions to revolutionary
humor. He has pursued stories in
Europe, Asia, Africa and the
Caribbean.
Baker
covered Hutu-Tutsi massacres in
Central Africa, the fall of the Berlin
Wall and the overthrow of the longtime
Romanian dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu. He spent one and a half
years as a correspondent and
investigative reporter based in the
former Yugoslavia. When not wrestling
with traditional hard-news and
politics, he writes essays and
critiques, and profiles colorful and
controversial figures, from the
notorious murderer-on-the-run Ira Einhorn
to the irreverent tv
culinary hero, Iron Chef Morimoto.
He is currently directing and
producing his first documentary film.
Baker
has received Society of
Professional Journalists, Mencken and
Common Cause awards, served as a
panelist for the national conference
of Investigative Reporters &
Editors, and been a member of the
adjunct faculty at Columbia University's
Graduate School of Journalism. He
appears frequently in the electronic
media to discuss current events.
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