A prominent national security reporter for the Los Angeles Times routinely submitted drafts and detailed summaries of his stories to CIA press handlers prior to publication, according to documents obtained by The Intercept.
Email exchanges between CIA public affairs officers and Ken Dilanian, now an Associated Press intelligence reporter who previously covered the CIA for the Times, show that Dilanian enjoyed a closely collaborative relationship with the agency, explicitly promising positive news coverage and sometimes sending the press office entire story drafts for review prior to publication. In at least one instance, the CIA’s reaction appears to have led to significant changes in the story that was eventually published in the Times.
“I’m working on a story about congressional oversight of drone strikes that can present a good opportunity for you guys,” Dilanian wrote in one email to a CIA press officer, explaining that what he intended to report would be “reassuring to the public” about CIA drone strikes. In another, after a series of back-and-forth emails about a pending story on CIA operations in Yemen, he sent a full draft of an unpublished report along with the subject line, “does this look better?” In another, he directly asks the flack: “You wouldn’t put out disinformation on this, would you?”
Dilanian’s emails were included in hundreds of pages of documents that the CIA turned over in response to two FOIA requests seeking records on the agency’s interactions with reporters. They include email exchanges with reporters for the Associated Press, Washington Post, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and other outlets. In addition to Dilanian’s deferential relationship with the CIA’s press handlers, the documents show that the agency regularly invites journalists to its McLean, Va., headquarters for briefings and other events. Reporters who have addressed the CIA include the Washington Post‘s David Ignatius, the former ombudsmen for the New York Times, NPR, and Washington Post, and Fox News’ Brett Baier, Juan Williams, and Catherine Herridge.
Dilanian left the Times to join the AP last May, and the emails released by the CIA only cover a few months of his tenure at the Times. They show that in June 2012, shortly after 26 members of congress wrote a letter to President Obama saying they were “deeply concerned” about the drone program, Dilanian approached the agency about story that he pitched as “a good opportunity” for the government.
The letter from lawmakers, which was sent in the wake of a flurry of drone strikes that had reportedly killed dozens of civilians, suggested there was no meaningful congressional oversight of the program. But Dilanian wrote that he had been “told differently by people I trust.” He added:
Not only would such a story be reassuring to the public, I would think, but it would also be an opportunity to explore the misinformation about strikes that sometimes comes out of local media reports. It’s one thing for you to say three killed instead of 15, and it’s another for congressional aides from both parties to back you up. Part of what the story will do, if you could help me bring it to fruition, is to quote congressional officials saying that great care is taken to avoid collateral damage and that the reports of widespread civilian casualties are simply wrong.
Of course, journalists routinely curry favor with government sources (and others) by falsely suggesting that they intend to amplify the official point of view. But the emails show that Dilanian really meant it.
Over the next two weeks, he sent additional emails requesting assistance and information from the agency. In one, he suggested that a New America Foundation report alleging that drone attacks had killed many civilians was exaggerated, writing that the report was “all wrong, correct?”
A number of early news accounts reported that more than a dozen people died in the June 4, 2012, drone strike that killed Al Qaeda leader Abu Yahya al-Libi in Pakistan. But in a June 20 email to the CIA, Dilanian shared a sentence from his story draft asserting that al-Libi had died alone. “Would you quibble with this?” he asked the CIA press officer.
On June 25, the Times published Dilanian’s story, which described thorough congressional review of the drone program and said legislative aides were allowed to watch high-quality video of attacks and review intelligence used to justify each strike. Needless to say, the agency hadn’t quibbled with Dilanian’s description of al-Libi’s solitary death. Video provided by the CIA to congressional overseers, Dilanian reported, “shows that he alone was killed.”
That claim was subsequently debunked. In October of 2013, Amnesty International issued a report, based on statements from eyewitnesses and survivors, that the first missile strike targeting al-Libi killed five men and wounded four others. Al-Libi was not even among those victims; he and up to fifteen other people died in a follow up attack when they arrived at the scene to assist victims. Some of those killed were very likely members of al Qaeda, but six were local tribesmen who Amnesty believed were there only as rescuers. Another field report published around the same time, this one by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, also reported follow-up drone strikes on civilians and rescue workers — attacks that constitute war crimes.
Dilanian has done some strong work and has at times been highly critical of the CIA. For example, in July 2012 he wrote a piece about sexual harassment at the agency that angered the press office. In reply to an email from a spokesperson, Dilanian said that complaints about his story were “especially astonishing given that CIA hides the details of these complaints behind a wall of secrecy.”
But the emails reveal a remarkably collegial relationship with the agency. “I am looking forward to working with you, Ken,” a newly hired agency flack wrote him in a March 1, 2012, email.
“Hooray!” Dilanian replied. “Glad to have you guys.”
On March 14, 2012, Dilanian sent an email to the press office with a link to a Guardian story that said Bashar Al-Assad’s wife had been buying a fondue set on Amazon while Syrian protesters were gunned down. “If this is you guys, nice work,” he wrote. “If it’s real, even better.”
The emails also show that Dilanian shared his work with the CIA before it was published, and invited the agency to request changes. On Friday April 27, 2012, he emailed the press office a draft story that he and a colleague, David Cloud, were preparing. The subject line was “this is where we are headed,” and he asked if “you guys want to push back on any of this.”
It appears the agency did push back. On May 2, 2012, he emailed the CIA a new opening to the story with a subject line that asked, “does this look better?”
The piece ran on May 16, and while it bore similarities to the earlier versions, it had been significantly softened.
Here’s the original opening, from Dilanian’s email:
Teams of CIA officers, private contractor and special operations troops have been inserted in southern Yemen to work with local tribes on gathering intelligence for U.S. drone strikes against militants, U.S. officials and others familiar with the secret operation said.
Here’s the version that was published:
In an escalation of America’s clandestine war in Yemen, a small contingent of U.S. troops is providing targeting data for Yemeni airstrikes as government forces battle to dislodge Al Qaeda militants and other insurgents in the country’s restive south, U.S. and Yemeni officials said.
In another case, Dilanian sent the press office a draft story on May 4, 2012, reporting that U.S. intelligence believed the Taliban was growing stronger in Afghanistan. “Guys, I’m about to file this if anyone wants to weigh in,” he wrote.
On May 7, 2012, the AP, Dilanian’s current employer, broke a story about a secret CIA operation that “thwarted an ambitious plot by al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen to destroy a U.S.-bound airliner.” The next day, Dilanian sent the CIA a detailed summary of a planned piece that followed up on (and took issue with) the AP story. “This is what we are planning to report, and I want to make sure you wouldn’t push back against any of it,” he wrote.
Dilanian also closely collaborated with the CIA in a May 2012 story that minimized the agency’s cooperation with director Kathryn Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal on their film about the assassination of Osama bin Laden, Zero Dark Thirty. Republicans had been criticizing the Obama Administration for revealing classified details about the operation to Boal and Bigelow while withholding them from the public.
“My angle on this is that…this is a pretty routine effort to cooperate with filmmakers and the sort of thing the CIA has been doing for 15 years,” Dilanian wrote in an email to Cynthia Rapp, the head of the agency’s press office. “This is a storyline that is in your interest, I would think, to the extent you could provide information about how routine it is to offer guidance to entertainment people who seek it out—including ones who are Democrats!—it would show that this latest episode is hardly a scandal.”
Dilanian’s pitch appears to have worked. His subsequent story included an on the record comment from CIA spokesman Todd Ebitz. One year later, internal CIA documents released under the FOIA showed that the agency’s office of public affairs—the same people Dilanian had been working with–had asked for and received changes to the Zero Dark Thirty script that portrayed the agency in a more favorable light.
Reached by The Intercept for comment, Dilanian said that the AP does not permit him to send stories to the CIA prior to publication, and he acknowledged that it was a bad idea. “I shouldn’t have done it, and I wouldn’t do it now,” he said. “[But] it had no meaningful impact on the outcome of the stories. I probably should’ve been reading them the stuff instead of giving it to them.”
Dilanian said he was not sure if Los Angeles Times rules allow reporters to send stories to sources prior to publication. The Time’s ethics guidelines, however, clearly forbid the practice: “We do not circulate printed or electronic copies of stories outside the newsroom before publication. In the event you would like to read back quotations or selected passages to a source to ensure accuracy, consult an editor before doing so….”
Bob Drogin, the Times’ deputy bureau chief and national security editor, said he had been unaware that Dilanian had sent story drafts to the CIA and would have not allowed him to do it. “Ken is a diligent reporter and it’s responsible to seek comment and response to your reporting,” he told me. “But sharing story drafts is not appropriate.”
AP spokesman Paul Colford told The Intercept that the news organization is “satisfied that any pre-publication exchanges that Ken had with the CIA before joining AP were in pursuit of accuracy in his reporting on intelligence matters,” adding that “we do not coordinate with government agencies on the phrasing of material.”
Dilanian’s emails were included in a FOIA request that sought communications between the CIA and ten national security reporters sent from March to July 2012. That request turned up correspondence between the press office and Dilanian, Adam Goldman, then at the AP and now at The Washington Post, Matt Apuzzo, then at AP and now at The New York Times, Brian Bennett of The Los Angeles Times, Siobhan Gorman of The Wall Street Journal, Scott Shane of the New York Times, and David Ignatius, a Washington Post columnist.
It’s impossible to know precisely how the CIA flacks responded to reporters’ queries, because the emails show only one side of the conversations. The CIA redacted virtually all of the press handlers’ replies other than meager comments that were made explicitly on the record, citing the CIA Act of 1949, which exempts the agency from having to disclose “intelligence sources and methods” or “the organization, functions, names, official titles, salaries, or numbers of personnel employed by the Agency.” The contents of off-the-record or background emails from CIA press handlers clearly don’t disclose names, titles, or salaries (which can easily be redacted anyway); they may disclose sources and methods, depending on whether you view manipulation of American reporters as an intelligence method. (The Intercept is appealing the redactions.)
The emails also show that the CIA asked the Post‘s Ignatius to speak at a May 2012 off-the-record conference, “Political Islam’s Future: Challenges, Choices, and Uncertainties,” for U.S. government intelligence analysts and policymakers. The invitation was extended in an email from the press office, which said that the conference organizers “would like you to draw upon the insight from your field experience, reporting, and broad network of contacts during the lead up to the Arab Spring to share how journalists sense that major political, social, or religious changes are in the making.”
Ignatius replied that he would be “pleased and honored to do this,” but unfortunately he would be traveling in Europe on the day of the conference. The CIA then proposed “a smaller round table with our…folks sometime in the future.”
“Smaller round table would be great,” Ignatius replied.
Ignatius told The Intercept that the round table never took place. But he confirmed that he had previously spoken to the CIA twice since 2005. “I talked to them about how journalists collect information,” he said. “It was meant as an admonition and a caution about the need to get things right and not to bend to political pressure and to have systems in place to catch errors.”
Ignatius said he had gotten approval of his editors before he spoke to the CIA, and didn’t see any conflict or problem with addressing the agency. “There’s a very sharp line between our profession and the intelligence business and it shouldn’t be crossed,” he said. “I talked to them about what I’d learned as an editor and the importance of getting it right. I wasn’t sharing any [sensitive] information with them.
Records released in response to another FOIA request, seeking information about journalists who had been invited to address or debrief CIA employees, show that several Fox News reporters have visited the agency.
Fox News’ Bret Baier gave an address about the importance of charity in 2008 (which was reported at the time), and the then-ombudsmen for NPR, The Washington Post, and The New York Times (Jeffrey Dvorkin, Michael Getler and Daniel Okrent, respectively), appeared together on a CIA panel. The event description said that journalism “shares some of the same missions that intelligence analysts have—presenting information in an unbiased fashion and challenging prevailing opinions.” The ombudsmen, the invitation said, could help the CIA “see how journalists deal with some of our common professional and ethical difficulties.” (It’s not clear from the documents when the ombudsmen event was held, but it would have been in 2009 or before.)
In 2007, Juan Williams, then at NPR in addition to his role at Fox News, gave a “standing-room-only” speech sponsored by the agency’s Office of Diversity Plans and Programs. During his speech Williams praised CIA personnel as “the best and brightest,” and said Americans admired the agency and trusted it “to guide the nation and the nation’s future.”
Williams also spoke about Nelson Mandela, saying he was an example of a leader who “came from outside the system.” There was a certain irony here—the CIA played a key role in Mandela’s 1962 arrest by the South African apartheid regime, which resulted in him spending 28 years in prison—which Williams was either unaware of or politely chose not to note.
Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP
A saying from WW2 “Believe nothing you see or hear and only one half of what you see .Very appropriate today.
Great work. Now how do we get the word out about this to the masses?
Don’t blame “Uncle Sam” for your own greed. Greed is intricately interwoven in human genes . Greed therefore cannot be eliminated unless done through genetic engineering. The trick is not to fight greed but to control it to acceptable socially responsible levels. Some are successful in doing that , some are not. But all must be aware of the true nature of their greed and keep trying to control it, or suffer the consequences of it. The world is so interconnected now that when one falls from great heights one will take down many along with it and cause greater pain all around than one feares. One journalist’s waywardness can taint the whole community of journalists slurring the image of journalism itself.
And that’s the way it is in the demented states of america.
That the CIA spends lavishly to cultivate the MSM is no secret.
“Dilanian said that the AP does not permit him to send stories to the CIA prior to publication… “I probably should’ve been reading them the stuff instead of giving it to them.”
Huh? Reading your pre-published stories to the flack is different from just sending them a copy? Meaning they have to take the time to record the conversation and transcribe it themselves before they “push back”? Geez, while the AP hopefully fires this egg-sucker, the CIA will gain a loyal drone in the PR office.
Let’s see the guy’s picture at least.
Not sure if anyone else has cited this article by Nima Shirazi confirming Dilanian’s complicity (in his own words) with government propagandists – but it’s a very good read:
http://www.wideasleepinamerica.com/2014/09/dilanians-dizzying-defense-propaganda.html
Apologies re: re-posting Don Midwest USA’s link – gotta’ love this “ever evolving” comment section.
“you may find this hard to believe – U.S. government officials are not in the habit of elaborate disinformation campaigns.” – Ken Dilanian, LA Times
One of my favorite quotes from the article by Nima Shirazi.
Not only is this “journalist” a prostitute for the government’s “truth machine” – he’s incredibly stupid.
“The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.” – Bertrand Russell
Juan Williams a (Panamanian born) African-American CIA spy whore working undercover for a few extra bucks to put in his kids bank accounts. Man have you no shame?
Juan Williams another African-American CIA spy whore working undercover for a few extra bucks to secure his family’s future.
Here is an article of one of the guys featured in the article.
This interchange shows that he kisses the asses of the powers that be
A reporter contacted him recently. Here is the title of his article and a link
Dilanian’s Dizzying Defense & Dissemination of Disinformation:
My Own Discussion with the ‘CIA’s Mop-Up Man’
http://www.wideasleepinamerica.com/2014/09/dilanians-dizzying-defense-propaganda.html
There should be a “wall of journalistic propaganda shame” site on the web that lists the names of reporters not to be trusted because their complicity has tainted their objectivity.
I just hope this is something I never read about “The Intercept”, which is now my homepage and, IMHO, the best interpretative news source on the planet. Keep up the good work, TI.
It is hard to decide who is more despicable, the CIA or the reporter in this lie generating machine. Both are supposed to serve the public, but at least the CIA can claim it is not their job to tell the truth to the public.
Given the cooperation between journalism and FBI and CIA, we should not be surprised when journalists are arrested and even executed by groups they are reporting (eg. spying) upon. Information gathering and sharing with opponents is the essence of spying which is subject to the death penalty even here in the US.
Given that The LA Times, along with most mainstream media, is run by the CIA through Operation Mockingbird this is no shock. In fact it is a GIVEN. If you don’t believe me please research it.
Either a journalist has confidence in a story, the way it was investigated and the accuracy of the details collected before writing a story, or it should be killed — never written. It is why news organizations have libel insurance — allowing those inaccurately quoted or misrepresented to sue for damages, including private and government agencies. Having a story previewed and changed by anybody other than trusted editors who have faith in their reporters, is contrary to the principle of a free press. The reporters mentioned in this story are not real journalists but little more than PR copywriters and political hacks — known as the dark side — and, once exposed, should be expelled from the profession of journalism: fired.
Unfortunately, these shoddy exposed journalists were instead often promoted in one way or another.
So, looks like the Vichy Armenian hack Dilanian has earned a Roger Maris asterisk after his story’s bylines, so everyone will remember he has zero credibility as a real journalist, and is simply a mouthpiece for the Establishment. He’s no “Babe Ruth” of the Press.
I’m more focused on the mass influence of Tokyo Roses like Kevin Costner. Go back and look again at the last two films he made, where he extols the virtues of the CIA, alleges Russia will try to “destroy the US dollar”, and his co-star raves about how wonderful the Federal Reserve banking system is.
I think the CIA WROTE the SCRIPTS. Can we start our own “Tokyo Rose” awards to hand to the most egregious offenders of basic journalism?
lol, Costner is still cashing in on No Way Out! If we KNOW the government grooms the press to enjoy privileged communications, then who do we think is tipping off Hollywood? An Old Dutch Prince? Way to blow it, James BilderBond.
I called out at least two such slanted stories in the comments. One can detect them when the author uses kid gloves on killings and uses weasel words and makes excuses for admin. or Pentagon officials. One must read between the lines as corporate news is no longer news.
Even the CIA acknowledges is had a stable of media whores
https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol52no2/intelligence-in-recent-public-literature-1.html
With the assurance, of course, that this is all in the past.
I don’t really see the news here. A journalist trying to be nice with his sources so they give him stories. A PR department doing its job by trying to take advantage of that kind of journalists. We see it every day in every country and in every kind of field, not just intelligence. Readers and employers (and even many journalists) don’t value real journalism. This is what we get. I almost feel sorry for this dilanian.
Is it the software glitch making comments shrink, rather than grow. That’s a slippery-slope folks.
How disgusting and criminal.
This man and the Times have blood on their hands. Think how many innocent lives might have been, and even now with murderous U. S. drone strikes continuing, would be spared if this disgusting and criminal individual had not sought to “reassure” the American public. For shame.
So glad to see Ken Silverstein here at Intercept. He is a terrific journalist. I hadn’t read anything from him since his obituary to Alexander Cockburn. Hope to see more of him here.
If you search “Operation Mockingbird” you will see that reporters have manipulated the truth to serve the CIA for decades. One should always assume that Main Street Media is lying. Look at the reporting on Russia and Ukraine. Mostly lies to serve the government desire for global dominance. One should always ask (when reading MSM) “Why are they telling me this?” That question will lead you to the real truth more often than not.
What’s up with the variability in mail-headings on the same subjects, as well as with the variable misspellings of recurrent names of recipients, mailers and newspaper outlets?
These are not just copy-pasted e-mail messages, which makes me wonder if it involves text edited (to unverifiable degrees) at later dates, or strings of fake correspondence all together
I would like to say I’m shocked at this news but I read to many articles that read like a press release from the 3 letter govt. office that they want to spin in the news cycle. This confirms it.
I do think, however, it is OK for reporters to send an advanced copy inspire a response when an official or agency has been uncooperative, but this is TOTALLY different than seeking permission from the people and agencies you report on, which is what Dilanian did. Shameful!
Again, sharing what you’re copy with the subject of a story is not a violation of SPJ. The violation is when Dilanian crossed over and became an enabler of official spin and lies. Not all news outlets have the same policy on sharing advanced copies of stories. But my ethics compass navigates towards transparency with the subject of a story in advance of publication — especially when you’re about to throw them under the bus. If the story is good to go on Tuesday, you should be more than willing to share it with the subject of a story on Monday — to invoke a response. A famous scene in All the President’s Men showed Carl Bernstein reading an advance copy of a story to a groggy John Mitchell in the middle of the night — and it inspired a response which ran the next day.
Only 1 word will suffice to David Ignatius, Ken Dilanian, and the L.A. Times with regards to being the mouthpiece of the U.S. govt: WHORES!
“Thomas Jefferson” is right on. Absolutely correct. The U.S. media is nothing more than a huge propaganda machine, and the minions working for them are indeed “whores.” “Putains,” “catains,” putas, etc. For Benito Mussolini I don’t like to “quibble” but Bill Clinton has already determined what the meaning of “is” is. Benito and Bill make good partners. One is stupid and the other is a liar.
Perhaps the metaphor is wrong. Whores simply rent out their persons; they don’t sell their souls.
People are judging this reporter to be overly deferential. However, part of the problem is the everyday meaning of words often differs from the jargon used in a national security context. For example, ‘would you quibble with this?’ sounds overly solicitous, but it is quite possible that when the CIA has a ‘quibble’ with something you have done, it can be quite serious.
Similarly, “I am looking forward to working with you, Ken,” may sound too collegial, but the actual message could be “I’ll be watching you very carefully, Ken”.
All reporters do something akin to his practice, he just went too far, as he suggested. I’m more of a mind to cast 99% in this movie rather than castigate the ones CIA no longer has use for, while pretending to honor the spirit of FOIA requests.
When “6 companies own most of the news (radio,print,magazines) and these same people go to lunch,parties ,political events together what do you expect to happen. These batards are criminals and violate at will with consequence …..wake up ! Wake up!
Excellent work. I do think an explanation for redactions would be in order. There is way too much of it to not ask.
I should add that the numerous inclusions of his name could easily have been redacted, had they wished to. Why didn’t they? I think that question should be asked as well.
It confirms the elusiveness of accountability for journalists. The only thing the reader can do is look at the consistency of output over time. If it shows a lack of robust challenges to the government narrative, it’s reasonable to conclude that the scribe’s been co-opted, be it for reasons of ego, fame, money or, likely, all three. He/she will insist, unpersuasively, that that’s not the case. The only defense to intellectually bankrupt work product is the refusal to consume it.
I know it does not concern life or death but I promise you that financial news outlets do the same thing. Everything to keep the kool aid flowing.
Great stuff.
Gives an insight into the in-bed-ed journalists’ understanding of ‘adversarial journalism’- where everyone outside ‘the complex’ is considered the adversary.
Here’s a link to the SpyCulture site, which is the work of Tom Secker who researches the collaborations between US agencies and Hollywood (amongst other things); he likes to send the odd FOIA request and has received back and put up the list of DoD collaborated films:
http://www.spyculture.com/documents/page/4/
There’s lots more there for the interested.
The article here quotes Dilanian’s comment about fifteen year’s involvement in the film industry, but of it course goes way back.
“Reassuring the public” about drone murders?
This man has blood on his hands.
Fuck C.I.A Fuck F.B.I they’re murders soo big murders
He is not a reporter, he’s a propagandist. There’s a BIG difference.
Interesting.
I fear this is just this tip of the iceberg. The actual job of a reporter is to get in the government’s Kool-Aid and serve the public interest. But some reporters at the highest levels, like David Gregory and Judith Miller, have made a career out of kissing “official” asses in exchange for access. I’m glad to see a reporter finally called out for violating the public trust. To help the CIA spin and minimize the carnage from drone strikes is unforgivable. Ken Dilanian needs to leave the profession immediately.
This reminds me of when Adm. Wm Fallon called Gen. Petraeus an “ass kissing little chickenshit”
Submitting your drafts to the CIA for punch up is in the pursuit of accuracy? That is excellent bullshit.
Question: When the government redacts information on documents they release, they’re ostensibly doing so because of national security concerns. But the redactions here aren’t on communications between government employees with security clearances, they’re with members of the press who likely don’t hold any kind of security clearance. If they’re hiding information for the sake of national security, why were they sharing that information with uncleared members of the press?
So-called journalists – really courtiers as Chris Hedges calls them – like Dilanian should be banned from the profession for betraying its foundational principles of seeking truth & forcing accountability from the ruling elite. In an interview with Reality Asserts Itself, Chris Hedges articulated the essence of this phenomenon as follows: “Most journalists at institutions like the Times (NY Times) are careerists. The mainstream media is a tool of corporate propaganda. The relationship between the media and government is a circular mendacity. The intellectual class in this country is either silent or complicit in abuse of power and the corporate, militarized state.” I’m sure Chris would say about this story that it proves his point.
Thank you Glenn & the Intercept for refusing to compromise your integrity.
While the sycophantic collusion between this reporter and our home-grown gestapo is disturbing enough, I’d like to see a follow-up on the practice of quoting official sources when it was all just made up in their heads first and then sent up for approval. Where I come from we call that bullshit.
Investigative reporting should not start out with an agenda – one should investigate and then report the facts, rather than create propaganda out of thin air and attribute it to sources. Editors need to start verifying and editing information before publication. It’s unconscionable that the Times editor had no idea their boy was was running interference for the CIA. Can’t trust the government, can’t trust the press. Kind of makes one feel helpless and insignificant – mission accomplished.
Sad this is not astonishing. Disturbing and insidious as it is. Consider this Michael Hastings and James Gandolfini died on the same day. One ostensibly from an auto accident, one from a heart attack. What else do they have in common ? Zero Dark Thirty.
What a snake. And another reason you should Not buy the stories the MSM is telling about Ukraine. The truth is far different from what we are reading.
No surprise, though. I actually had a run-in with a “writer” who was working for military intelligence, using psyops on citizens. That is Supposed to be illegal, since this was long before all those awful “patriot” laws. I think it still is, but anything gets by these days. Many “writers” are in the pay of our intel agencies. After all, people will tell a writer anything, in hopes of being published and getting their story out there. Instead, they take it in the neck:
Perfectly legal per Smith-Mundt Modernization Act of 2012.
THAT should be the story, front page, every news paper in America. Merging of news and phsy ops is a very dangerous as well as powerful tool, that should be illegal. Here is a Pulitzer prize waiting to happen for someone brave enough to investigate and publish it
I keep waiting for the results of what is in the black boxes recovered from MH17 that went down over eastern Ukraine killing 298 people. This was immediately blamed on the “pro-Russian rebels” and now it appears that the conversations found on the black boxes are to be “classified”?:
http://21stcenturywire.com/2014/07/25/mh17-verdict-real-evidence-points-to-us-kiev-cover-up-of-failed-false-flag-attack/
http://21stcenturywire.com/2014/08/26/results-of-mh17-investigation-to-remain-classified/
If the results of the investigation into the downing of this airliner are to remain “classified” as an American citizen I reject this completely. I want to know the truth. the whole truth and nothing but the truth regarding what happened on July 17th at 5:23 pm in the skies above eastern Ukraine. And the sooner the better.
Having the CIA edit your work is a sign of zero journalistic ethos. Who knows what crap they fed him.
Pravda is not dead, it just smells funny.
Not so much Pravda as Völkischer Beobachter from Nazi Germany, which was the a polite paper than Der Sturmer. A more polite Fox News.
Ken Silverstein! Is Omidyar poaching all the best journalists in the business, or what?
A very warm welcome, Ken.
Ken Silverstein is a KO artist. This is a murderers row right now.
I worry Omidyar is actually a real life Bond villian, but I’m glad they’re getting paid. I just hope they don’t all wind up at the bottom of a volcano. Stay safe guys.
Awlakis for America,they spew,we stew,as propaganda and selective reporting keep US in the dark,a black hole of mis and disinformation, and giant fingers pointed at others while our own depredations ,and our master Israel’s, are never fingered,or just assigned to histories dustbin,as truth and justice have no allure to these monsters.
Joan,karma can be a bitch.
Good article by Ken Silverstein. Exposing the actual practices of Main Stream Media, that exerts such massive power of influence, is indeed valuable. The practice of allowing a critical article to be vetted, and altered, by the very subject of the critique prior to publishing should never happen. I would suggest that checking the facts before publishing is better done without the subject of the critique being even aware of the pending article. If there is any doubt as to accuracy – after all avenues of checking facts are exhausted other than alerting the subject – then do not publish those facts at all in case they are not accurate. This may cause some articles to be ditched.
Awww, isn’t that cute? The CIA likes to refer to themselves as “folks.” Same as how Obama likes to refer to the people that the CIA tortured as “folks.” “We tortured some folks.”–President of the United States of America — Barack Obama
There are folks, and then there are folks.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/aug/01/obama-cia-torture-some-folks-brennan-spying
http://online.wsj.com/articles/obama-u-s-crossed-a-line-by-using-enhanced-interrogation-1406928167
Looking forward to more articles demonstrating clear collusion between mainstream media outlets and the CIA.
Feel free to name the offenders.
Excellent article.
Absolutely. The CIA is a very dangerous organisation. They actually own many publications through front companies.
I strongly suspect both Dilanian and Michael Hirsh actually visited one of those agency recruiting booths at whatever college they attended…
Great piece, Ken, and thank you!
Ken Dilanian stated “I probably should’ve been reading them the stuff instead of giving it to them.” IMO he realizes that phone conversations would not be subject to FOI disclosure. I doubt he has any other regrets about his methods of composing a story. When he is dealing with the private firms in the security industry he doesn’t have such embarrassing disclosures to worry about.
Thank you for disclosing the political agendas of main stream press in the US. Unfortunately you are preaching to the choir. This is my primary concern about the Intercept. Most people will never be exposed to the truths that are disclosed and discussed here. I worry that the consolidating of so many of the press dissenting voices at one location will make it easier for entrenched power to discredit the entire sight instead of confronting the facts of individual articles. Will the Intercept be thought of in the 21st century like most US citizens viewed the Nation in the 20th century? IMO the employees and particularly the reporters of the Intercept need to be extremely cautious. Not only are your journalistic efforts going to be subject to attack, but it is quite possible you will be in physical danger. Remember Michael Hastings. Do not gather in one location. Do not travel together. I have no proof of danger, but I believe that the threat is real. Work together as a team with stated goals.
No matter how powerful and concentrated the hierarchies become, there is much power in the masses. As Noam Chomsky stated, “At some point, people recognize what the structure of power and domination is and commit to doing something about it. That’s the way every change in history has taken place.” Keep your focus on the elites who continually try to fracture people into smaller groups.
I love how the government sees no need to protect the reporters’ emails while redacting their own employee’s responses. And these are the journalists the government actually likes! Not that any of it should have been redacted, but the message is clear.
A little confusion here:
You say:
“On May 7, 2012, the AP, Dilanian’s current employer, broke a story about a secret CIA operation that “thwarted an ambitious plot by al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen to destroy a U.S.-bound airliner.” The next day, Dilanian sent the CIA a detailed summary of a planned piece that followed up on (and took issue with) the AP story.”
So Dilanian was pre-alerting the CIA when he was at AP. But later:
“Reached by The Intercept for comment, Dilanian said that the AP does not permit him to send stories to the CIA prior to publication, and he acknowledged that it was a bad idea.”
But AP spokesman Paul Colford made no comment on Dilanian breaking AP’s rules?
What follows is a link to an old article by Dilanian about fusion centers, with co-author Brian Bennett — a flash-in-the-pan piece without much, if any, follow-up, as I recall. (There were some interesting comments back then, but I’m not seeing any comments at all, now.) What I wouldn’t give to see more of Dilanian’s emails, especially any that are related to the following:
“Anti-terror data centers criticized”
“The facilities threaten civil liberties and do little for security, Senate panel says.”
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/oct/03/nation/la-na-fusion-centers-20121003
Excellent work.. (Looking forward to more.)
Great report. Is there also not some rich irony in a reporter clearly not seeming to be aware that emails with govt flaks are subject to FOIA requests? I mean, I have no doubt at all that reporters often have this type of dialog with govt PR types, but to drop a whole draft article into an email requesting comment? That’s pretty bad. Credit I guess to Dilanian for not making excuses, I imagine many others would have dug themselves in.
Keep naming the names of ‘access journalists’ so we can see whom they are truly serving: themselves at the public’s expense.
Exactly, there should be a list of them on the frontpage. Maybe a browser extension like Greenhouse?
Real journalism’s alive and well at The Intercept.
Great job!
There’s a reporter that would be a perfect fit in a Nazi regime.
What was Juan thinking when he lauded the CIA “to guide the nation and the nation’s future”? It is not a proper role of intelligence agencies to “guide the nation”. It is their task to generate reliable intelligence to inform policy makers who actually do “guide the nation”. Not the same thing at all.
It makes perfect sense that Dilanian wrote a piece about sexual harassment inside the agency. That would portray him as adversarial to the agency and deflect attention from the fact that he is helping protect the agency from criticism and oversight. While sexual harassment is a serious problem, it is something the agency can easily apologize for, unlike its main missions of torturing, terrorizing and killing people at random all over the globe.
Should Dilanian even have been given the byline for these stories? It sounds like the CIA essentially wrote them.
“AP spokesman Paul Colford told The Intercept that the news organization is “satisfied that any pre-publication exchanges that Ken had with the CIA before joining AP were in pursuit of accuracy in his reporting on intelligence matters,” adding that “we do not coordinate with government agencies on the phrasing of material”
Well, that doesn’t square with “The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media.” -William Colby, former CIA Director, cited by Dave McGowan in “Derailing Democracy“
Insofar as David Ignatius, he’s been a premier CIA media prostitute for a very long time. Rather than his disclaimer, look at what he writes and who has endorsed his work:
http://ronaldthomaswest.com/2013/05/18/david-ignatius-body-of-lies/
^
And it can’t hurt to delve a bit deeper into the CIA manipulation of information, Wikipedia is a scintillating example:
http://ronaldthomaswest.com/2014/02/05/intelligence-agencies-wikipedia/
^ This one dig into the carcass to expose the actual maggots
Thanks for that link.
I bet this story will rattle a few windows.
Incidentally, comparing the two ledes about the Yemen story, above, I can’t help but notice that the CIA rewrite (“In an escalation of America’s clandestine war in Yemen…”) was a lot more clunky than the original. My Journalism professor would’ve given it a C-, the ethics issues aside. The copy editors’ desk did have some usefulness, back in the day.
Also, Glenn’s old meme, that present-day reporters often just sit there and re-write gov’t press releases and press-conference statements, will have to be revised. Now we know that some reporters have the get-go to go out, yes sir!, and check with their subjects to see if they have any quibble with the story draft.
Just imagine how Watergate would have gone if Woodward or Bernstein had gone to H.R. Haldeman and asked, “Do you have any quibble with this? This is where we’re headed. Does this look better?”
Curious that Woodward and Bernstein stopped short in their investigation, and never did explain the real purpose of the break-in. Who were they protecting?
Ken, great work as usual. I love the waffling by the AP and Times.
Thank you for posting all of the documents. I like the focused story, but I also want to see what other tidbits might be contained in the package.
Good story. But I’m still mystified why all of these Intercept articles name names when exposing the bad actions of reporters, politicians, and other individuals, but never name names (routinely blot them out, in fact) when exposing the banal evil of individuals functioning within the state security apparatuses, the military, etc.? Surely that pressure needs to be applied.
Yohocoma,
The article mentions that the FOIA contents they received had been redacted. I don’t think the Intercept redacted any of these documents.
As far as other articles you are referencing you would need to go on a case by case basis. Sometimes the materials they are reporting on are already redacted such as in this case, and sometimes they are redacting classified material based on their own minimization processes. These processes have often been explained by Glenn personally or within the article itself.
I haven’t seen an explanation from Greenwald or other writers here why they routinely redact names of intel/military employees doing bad things. It’s that minimization I am questioning.
Reporters/journalists/editors walk a fine legal line when it comes to national security related matters. OK, maybe not shills like Mr. Mop-Up Man.
But given the current climate of federal legal persecution of journalists, I can see how the Intercept in particular would need to exercise some care just to protect their own skins. Moreover, wouldn’t it be a PR debacle of some magnitude if someone or someones were exposed to injury that could in some way be linked, speciously or otherwise, to an Intercept article? That is just the opportunity to pounce that the pro-spooks/Snowden-basher crowd is waiting for.
“Officials” often warn of a clear and present danger to third parties if the truth gets out. It’s a form of blackmail intended soley to conceal official misconduct.