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Russ
Baker
MaximsNews
Contributor
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Judith Miller,
of The New York Times, whose articles
on Weapons of Mass Destruction preceded the
Iraq war, is now
covering the United Nations.
Judith
Miller and the UN
|

Russ
Baker is
an award-winning investigative journalist and
essayist. This article first appeared on AlterNet.
Available for Media
Interviews: RussBaker@MaximsNews.com
See
also: The
U.N., The New York Times & Judith Miller,
Russ Baker, MaximsNews, 5
April 2005.
UNITED NATIONS - 27 June 2005 / www.MaximsNews.com
/ As
a media critic, I spend what feels like far too much
time trying to persuade people that most reporters
are not sloppy, agenda-driven, biased, or
lazy.
But
it seems that whenever I get up on my high horse,
back into the news rides Judith Miller.
Miller,
a longtime star at The New York Times, has a
formidable track record of egregious violations of
journalistic standards and best practices, and a
habit of sending the public off on what turn out to
be wild goose chases.
Relying
on a small circle of highly interested parties
(often anonymous "sources"), she became
the leading journalistic purveyor of the fallacy
that Saddam Hussein had WMD and that he was tied to
Al-Qaeda.
Despite
having essentially admitted in a written apology,
long ex post facto, that its reporter helped to
promote a fallacious rationale for an unnecessary
invasion and catastrophically protracted occupation,
the Times has not put Miller out to
pasture.
Instead,
it has moved her at her request to another
challenge: covering scandal wherever it might rear
its head within the United Nations.
This is
an ironic assignment, since it was the success of
the UN's peaceful approach to controlling WMD in
Iraq that underlined the wrongheadedness of the
pro-invasion clique that supplied Miller with her
faulty "scoops."
Over the
past year, she has produced a plethora of stories,
chock full of innuendo and allegation but short of
independent journalistic verification, suggesting
that UN Secretary General Kofi Annan is a bad man
and perhaps a corrupt one, and that, by extension,
the UN is hardly worth respecting and funding, much
less including in geopolitical decision-making.
Most of
Miller's sleuthing centers on contracts handed out
in connection with the so-called Oil for Food
program (which got indispensable staples to the
Iraqi people during the embargo).
Miller's
articles typically take murky evidence and create in
readers' minds the sense that there's something
deeply wrong in the UN's command structure, when in
fact, there may not be.
At
worst, the malfeasance there pales by comparison to
what goes on in Washington day after day.
Since
March, Miller has been largely invisible, but last
week she returned to the UN dirt beat with a
vengeance.
On June
15, she came up with goods that at first looked
damning.
Her
article, "Investigators To Review Hint of Annan
Role in Iraq Oil Sales," dealt with a memo that
seemed to indicate that Secretary General Kofi Annan
may have had more contact with a UN contractor for
whom his son worked than he had previously
admitted.
Miller
makes it clear that the company in question,
Cotecna, has been belatedly forthcoming with
information about how it got the UN contracts. But
in the penultimate paragraph, she drops this little
bomb:
"A
new internal audit showed that Cotecna had not made
the $306,305 in payments that [a UN investigative]
panel said might have gone to Kojo Annan [Kofi
Annan's son]."
Is she
being deliberately opaque or is this just bad
writing?
What she
is actually saying in this throwaway paragraph is
that the allegation behind her many previous
stories, about a corrupt link between Kojo Annan and
the company that got a UN contract, may be
unfounded.
If the
whole thing is a tempest in a teapot, why is that
possibility raised only near the end of the article?
Two days
after that article appeared, the Times ran
another in which Miller shared a byline with the Times'
estimable UN bureau chief, Warren Hoge.
Their
jointly bylined article is headlined
"Contractor Now Denies He Talked With Annan on
Oil-for-Food Bid."
What
does that mean?
It means
that the very source in Miller's earlier piece is
now changing his story.
It also
means that Times editors are sufficiently
concerned to include this as an entirely separate
article in a paper always short of space for
important stories.
This
article notes that this is the second time that the
source, a one-time business partner of Kojo Annan,
has revised his story about what his partner's
father might have known about UN contract
favoritism.
If this
source is known to be unreliable, why write an
article every time he's quoted saying something
harmful to Kofi Annan (and, perhaps not
coincidentally, useful to Miller's friends in the
neocon community, who are ever eager to discredit
the United Nations).
Remarkably,
the Miller-Hoge piece actually quotes the Secretary
General himself, chastising unspecified
"reporters" (read: Miller):
He
urged reporters "to resist the temptation to
substitute yourself for the Volcker (UN
investigative) commission."
Would
Miller have put that obvious slap at her into her
own article if she weren't forced by her editors?
By
Monday, June 20, it became clear that there really
was something wrong with Miller's reportage. Of just
four corrections in the print edition, one was about
her reporting; although, it didn't name her.
(The
paper would take a big leap forward if it would
simply say, "An article on Friday by Judith
Miller incorrectly stated....)
The
first correction was of a photo caption that
misidentified someone named Toni as Tony. The second
correction, presumably dubbed of lesser import than
the misapplication of a given name, was Miller's.
Here is
Miller's original wording:
This
is not the first time that Mr. Wilson has recanted
a statement involving the secretary general and
his son.
The
March report of the Volcker committee records an
interview with Mr. Wilson last January in which he
recounted a conversation with Kofi Annan in
November 1998, when Mr. Annan's son was still a
consultant for the company, about a potential
conflict of interest in Cotecna's bid.
The
Volcker report said that 15 to 20 minutes after
the interview, Mr. Wilson called the investigator
to change the conversation date to after Kojo
Annan had left Cotecna.
Here is
the language of the correction:
An
article on Friday about a contractor who said in a
1998 memo that he had met with the United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan, shortly before the
contractor's company received a contract under the
oil-for-food program for Iraq, but who then
recanted the report, referred incorrectly to an
earlier episode in which the man was reported to
have recanted a statement.
In
March, the panel appointed by the United Nations
to investigate the program reported that the man
had changed his story of a conversation with Mr.
Annan, saying that it was actually in 1996, not
1998.
The
report did not say the man changed his account to
say that the conversation took place after Mr.
Annan's son, Kojo, was no longer working for the
company.
If this
all seems laughably convoluted, that's because of
the way the Times corrections department
obscures what is really going on.
Still,
taking together Miller's article and the correction,
one can see what she was implying:
That the
man was deliberately lying to somehow draw attention
away from the Annan family.
Yet, as
the correction says, that is not what he was doing
-- he was simply correcting a date.
After so
many mistakes, it's becoming apparent to anyone
(including perhaps the entire Times newsroom)
that Miller is a problem.
She's
Inspector Clouseau turned loose by the Perle/Cheney
gang, bumbling her way through a fragile and
dangerous world, leaving reputations shredded,
international relations damaged, and facts scattered
far and wide.
Why top
management at an institution that is normally fierce
about staff errors continues to tolerate this is a
continuing mystery.
RussBaker@MaximsNews.com
Russ
Baker is a freelance journalist and essayist. He
is currently involved with launching a nonprofit
organization dedicated to revitalizing investigative
journalism.
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