July 05, 2006
The Newspaper Of
Wreckage
By
Michelle Malkin
When is a "secret"
not a secret?
When The New York Times
decides, in the interest of saving its old gray hide,
that it is not.
On June 22, the paper
trumpeted its expose of "a secret Bush
administration program" to track terror finances.
The banking program, reporters Eric Lichtblau [email
him] and James Risen [email
him] made unmistakably clear, was a "closely held
secret." The front-page story referred to the secret
nature of the program no less than eight times. A
Times-produced Web video featuring Lichtblau
promoted a brief interview in which he "reveal(ed) a
secret Bush administration program to access financial
records."
But by July 2, smarting
from the public backlash against its blabbermouth
coverage, the Times crew was backpedaling faster
than circus monkeys on barrels hurtling over Niagara
Falls. Suddenly, the "secret" was no secret at
all.
Everybody who's anybody
has known about the secret program all along, silly.
New York Times ombudsman Byron Calame's
belated defense of the Times' expose of the
monitoring of the SWIFT banking program contained this
revealing passage:
"There
was a significant question as to how secret the [monitoring
of the SWIFT banking program] was after five years.
'Hundreds, if not thousands, of people know about this,'
[Executive Editor Bill] Keller claimed he was
told by an official who talked to him on condition of
anonymity."
"Hundreds, if not
thousands, of people" have known about the program
before the Times blabbed about it. Well, there's
a scoop. So, why wasn't this reported in the original
story and reflected in the original, front-page
headline?
There was no printed
follow-up from lapdog Calame about Keller's assertion,
which goes a good bit further than the claim by Times'
apologists Richard Clarke and Roger Cressey. That
mind-reading duo wrote in a Times op-ed that
terrorists already assumed their financial transactions
were being monitored. Calame curiously neglected to note
that Keller's claim contradicted both the tone and facts
presented in the Times' initial coverage by
reporters Lichtblau and Risen.
Which is just as well,
since Lichtblau himself is now contradicting his own
story, too. On CNN's
"Reliable Sources," facing withering criticism from talk radio
host
Hugh Hewitt, Lichtblau blustered:
"When
you have senior Treasury Department officials going
before Congress, publicly talking about how they are
tracing and cutting off money to terrorists, weeks and
weeks before our story ran. USA Today, the biggest
circulation in the country, the lead story on their
front page four days before our story ran was the
terrorists know their money is being traced, and they
are moving it into—outside of the banking system into
unconventional means. It is by no means a secret"
(emphasis added).
Hmm. What was that
headline over Lichtblau's story again? Oh, yeah:
"Bank Data Sifted in Secret by U.S. to block terror."
Meanwhile, finance regulators and top government
officials in Belgium (who apparently aren't among the
"hundreds, if not thousands" who knew about the
program) have ordered a probe into SWIFT, which is
regulated by the Belgian central bank and answers to
Belgian law. Bush-undermining Eurowheedlers are
launching a debate in parliament over the program next
week, and a private human rights lobbying group has
filed formal complaints against the SWIFT banking
consortium in 32 countries.
Lesson No. 1: Never trust
the Times' headlines.
Lesson No. 2: Never trust
what's printed under the Times' headlines.
Lesson No. 3: Never trust
what comes out of the mouths of the Times'
editors and reporters.
Avoid the newspaper of
wreckage, and help keep American safe.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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