THE DUAL PERSONALITY OF WALL STREET JOURNAL

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000403550004-4
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RIPPUB
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K
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3
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 26, 2012
Sequence Number: 
4
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Publication Date: 
October 1, 1985
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OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403550004-4 ARTICLc . ON PAGE WASHINGTON TIMES 1 October 1985 MEDIA ANALYSIS / Don Kowet The dual personality of Wall Street Journal The Wall Street Journal seems the picture of per- fect health. Nearly 2 million Americans purchase the newspaper every day. Eager advertisers queue up weeks in advance. But behind that ruddy-cheeked, reassuring front page (still six col- umns, no photographs), critics say that The Wall Street Journal is suf- fering from a severe case of schizophrenia, one that threatens to blur its identity as a newspaper. The Journal, they argue, has become a confusion of contradic- tory voices, its traditional Keynesian cant colliding against the syllogisms of supply-side edito- rials. Critics even claim to hear Karl Marx babbling in the back- ground. In mid-September, the Soviet news agency Toss was crow- ing over a Journal article alleging that members of the Nicaraguan resistance were committing atrocities on unarmed Nicaraguan civilians. The seed of this schizophrenia charge, said Journal editor Robert Bartley in an interview, was sown at "an acrimonious dinner I had with the Washington bureau in 1980. The way I handled that was a mistake, and it's spawned this end- less series of stories." At that dinner, members of the Washington bureau accused Mr. Bartley of heavy-handed editing of their columns and keeping them from his editorial pages. Now, said Mr. Bartley, "We run pieces by the Washington bureau on our editorial page. You don't see that in most newspapers.' Mr. Bartley called the "schizophrenia" charge "one of the most overdone stories in the history of journalism" Yet others insist that the tension between various parts of the news- paper existed long before 1980 - and persisted long after it. Earlier this year, for instance, several Jour- n7 editors and writers reportedly wanted the newspaper to punish- Gregory A. Fossedal, after the young conservative editorial writer had turned up `:across the table" at a White House Star Wars briefing, helping White House staffers. As late as last week, a front-page Journal headline blared "Military Secrecy Rises, With Pentagon Hid- ing Billions of Outlays." The article charged that the Pentagon's "black budget" (alleged secret expendi- tures) "has shot up at least 50% for fiscal 1986..:' The specific source of this rev- elation was The Center for Defense Information, which Journal writers Roy J. Harris Jr. and Robert S. Greenberger identified as "an inde- pendent research group often critical of administration policies :" Critics contend that if The Cen- ter for Defense Information is an "independent research group,"then so is The Institute for Policy Stud- ies. The Center is a spinoff of the institute, which is putative father of the fanatic Mother Jones and a family of left-wing propagandists. M r. Bartley and The Institute for Policy Studies are about as compatible philosophically as Jack Kemp and Fidel Castro. Mr. Bartley, hired by the newspa- per in 1962, worked as a reporter in Chicago and Philadelphia, and as an editorial writer in New York, before being assigned to Washing- ton, D.C. At the time, recalled a former Washington-based Journal staffer, "everybody in Washington loved everybody in New York. There were no turf problems, mainly because the editorial page never left New York" Both Washington and New York shared a common world view, added the source, - "the old guard Republican view of the world." Robert Bartley changed all that. In 1971 Mr. Bartley moved to New York. In 1972 he became edi- tor of the Journal's editorial page. He surrounded himself with con- servative writers who were seeking fresh solutions to the problems plaguing the American economy. A young Bartley prot6g6 named Jude Winniski started shuttling between New York and Washington. "That was the first conflict that Bartley had with Al Otten, the Washington bureau chief:' Mr. Win- niski recalled. "Otten protested that 'Winniski is going to Washington once a month at least, and intrud- ing on our turf: " These rumbles over turf soon turned ideological.. Mr. Winniski was discovering, through the work of others, supply-side economic theory. At first Mr. Bartley was skeptical. It took Mr. Winniski two years to convince him, Mr. Bartley said later, at the rate of "an inch a day." But once Mr. Bartley was con- vinced that supply-side could be the savior of America's sagging economy, he would become its most resolute prophet in print. The Washington bureau refused to swal- low the new editorial sacrament. The schism was also aggravated by Watergate. (~~ artley decided that the Washington establishment was not giving Nixon a fair shake, and more or less appointed me to be Nixon's defense attorney on the editorial page:' said Jude Winniski. "That upset the guys in the Washington bureau " The special prosecutor's office stopped leaking stories to the Jour- nal's Washington bureau, reserving its tips for the rival Washington Post and The New York Times. Mr. Bartley became editor of the newspaper in 1979. In 1983, Peter Kann became associate publisher and Norman Pearlstine his new managing editor. The Journal's internal structure only added to the confusion. Unlike other periodicals, such as The New York Times, where A.M. Rosenthal is editor-in-chief of all the newspa- per, "Bartley and Pearlstine are on the same level of the organizational chart," a source noted. "They can't pull rank on one another. If they have a conflict they have to take it outside of the Journal to Dow-Jones [owners of the Journals and of course that almost never happens." Worse, under Mr. Kann and Mr. Pearlstine The Wall Street Journal was about to assume a brand new persona, swelling, say the critics, the symptoms of psychosis. Continual Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403550004-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP9O-00965ROO0403550004-4 The New York Times had both enlarged and improved its business section, as had The Washington Post, and the Times-Mirror and Knight-Ridder newspaper chains. Business Week was resurgent, Forbes was booming. Dozens of specialty publications were begin- ning to intrude on the Journal's franchise. Mr. Kann and Mr. Pearlstine began a balancing act, attempting to list their ship far enough to port to allow a broader base of readers to be hauled on board, while keep- ing the Journal's elite cargo of movers and shakers lashed securely to the deck. New features were added to the "second front" page, including more personal-finance stories aimed at democratizing the news- paper's readership. News columns began bemoaning the plight of the poor and the unemployed. Sections of the newspaper seemed to be splitting at the seams, drifting left or right, wherever the current of commerce flowed fast- est. And from every ideological vantage point, the Journal was slinging insults at the stunned, stranded "empire makers ... who, an ad boasted, "lead the largest corporations" Mobil, after an arti- cle it deemed unfair, announced a boycott of the newspaper, refusing to give the Journal interviews or advertising dollars. The newspaper's growing identity-crisis was com- pounded by continuing inter- nal friction. In Septem r 1983, Mr. Pearlstine app inted Albert Hunt as chief of the per's Washington bureau. Mr. Hunt, a 20-year Journal veteran with high-visibility in Washington (he is married to PBS correspondent Judy Woodruff) and a personal friend and political ally of Mr. Pearlstine, used his clout to carve out space on the Journal's back page, where his writers could publish their opinions, on occasion contradicting Mr. Bartley's editori- als. Earlier this year, the Washington bureau was complaining again, after Mr. Bartley's editorial staff retained Fred Barnes (a Washington-basedwriter) to write an article about a Washington political figure. "The split [at the Journal] really reaches beyond the [political] par- ties," said Mr. Barnes, now a senior editor at The New Republic mag- azine. "It's a question of whether you view the world the way the Washington establishment does, or the way the conservative visionar- ies do:' Nowhere is that visionary view more blatant than in the ideological marriage-of-convenience between Mr. Bartley and Journal investiga- tive reporter Jonathan Kwitny, who on occasion has sent out soft Valen- tines about Cuba. In 1984, Mr. Kwitny published a book called "Endless Enemies;' in which he reviled American foreign- policy makers in general, and the Reagan administration in particu- lar, for their failure to permit for- mer Third World "colonies" to develop their own resources and become self-sustaining nations free of crippling debt. Mr. Kwitny, a 1960s Peace Corps graduate, revealed his Marxist slant in an interview session with Publisher's ee y magazine. "... There's a widespread impression here that when Third World countries can't repay their debts to American banks and the IMF,"' said Mr. Kwitny, "they're rip- ping us off. But it is in fact the banks and the big international manufacturing companies that are ripping us off ... We help set up those one-party governments over- seas, all in the name of fighting communism.. International corpo- rations imposing themselves on the world with our assistance - I don't like that any more than I like socialism." According to his critics, Mr. Kwitny'ss front-page Journal ieces could have run uncensore in of er Jones or Counter-Spy,? the defunct publication of turn- coat Phillip Agee. n act r. witn 's critics charge, one o is most publicized articles was base on material bor- rowed from Mr. gee. Mr. Kwitny wrote a Journal article in T9$i d'is- cre it~m~a -1-ate Department "Whiite Pa eSr on Salvador (which revea e t at t e ovtets and their satellites were supplying clandestine mi ita ai to a va- doran guerrillas). Mr. Agee owfed fat Mr. Kwitny a cribbed tTie criti ue of t the white Paper rom the Counter-Spy c one, The Covert Action Information Bulletin, with - out giving Mr. gee proper credit. I n the current Columbia Journal- ism Review, responding to a critical letter to the editors from Accuracy In Media chairman Reed Irvine, Mr. Kwitny said that, "When Agee raised the issue of pla- giarism, I did not even remember that a paper he wrote was in the voluminous file I had assembled on the White Paper." More recently, Mr. Kwitny tus- sle with two other leading con- servatives. An Aug. , article Z he wrote (part of a series) sug- gested complicity by Michael een, o the Center tor rate is and nternationa totes at Georgetown University, and author Claire Sterling in an a ege CIA scheme to get a met Au i Agca to sa t at t e Soviets and Bulgarians were e m the plot to kill the pope. On Aug. 26, the Journal printed letters of denial from both Mr. Ledeen and Mrs. Sterling, followed by an editor's note stating that, "The Journal stands by its stories:' Last Wednesday, however, in an article about the Agca affair writ- ten by editorial writer Gordon Crovitz, managing editor Norman Pearlstine admitted that Mr. Kwitny had erred. Mr. Pearlstine's statement was couched in unmis- takable lawyer-ese. .. One article in the series" said r. Pearlstine, "may have left the unintended and erroneous impression that Mr. Pazienza (the prime villain in Mr. Kwitny's CIA scenario] supplied information to Mrs. Sterling regarding the attempte assassination o the pope. t e extent t at sucTi an impression may have 66n-created Ire ret and a ogize for tt .: i onat an Kwitny's appar- ently inaccurate reference to Mrs. Sterling, following on the heels of his controversial piece last year on Rep. Geraldine Ferraro (tainting the Democratic vice-presidential candidate with tales of her late father-in-law's Mafioso contacts) lower his stock at the newspaper? Not likely. "Kwitny," said Jude Winniski, "is no problem to the editorial page. Bartley is one of his defenders. The Wall Street Journal editorial page is not 'conservative,' " Mr. Winniski added. "It's a radical page in every sense." "Jon did a pretty good job for us on the Ferraro story," said Mr. Bart- ley, "and took a lot of heat for it. I think he ran into a little trouble here with the Pazienza story," Mr. Bartley added, "but who's fault that was is still in question. You have to figure out what kind of game Pazienza's playing." But despite Mr. Bartley's pre- dictable public defense, an inside source insisted that Mr. Bartley definitely is no admirer of Jona- than Kwitny. What kind of game is The Wall Street Journal play- ing? Sources said that Mr. Kwitny's article on Mrs. Ferraro was orig- inally destined to appear in a page- one news column. When news Continued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP9O-00965ROO0403550004-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403550004-4 staffers compiatnea that it was a smear, Mr. Bartley put it on his edi- torial page. Mr. Bartley, in that instance (and in others), found Mr. Kwitny useful to the editorial page. The radical visionaries "don't like foreign aid," another conserva- tive writer explained, "and Kwitny says that foreign aid's been bad, although not for conservative rea- sons" "In some ways," said Mr. Bartley, "it would be easier to live in two different worlds and never talk to each other. I think the real story is," Mr. Bartley added, "that this is one of the few papers in the United States where the editorial writers and the news department do talk to each other." But is that noisy dialogue really the sharp debate that it seems, or is there a hidden harmony beneath the counterpoint? Mr. Bartley is a radical critic of bail-outs and protectionism and anything else that cramps purist free enterprise. He believes that unbridled economic growth is the path to salvation, and criticizes businessmen who put their self- interest before their free- enterprise principles, complaining about their "lack of ideological seriousness, a kind of hypocrisy." Mr. Kwitny's own radicalism (his scathing Journal catalogues of capitalism's flaws) highlights that "hypocrisy" from another angle, as do the occasional columns contri- buted by Alexander Cockburn. Mr. Cockburn, in a Sept. 12 Jour- nal article on a Castro-hosted conference on the Third World debt crisis, urged readers to recognize that Fidel Castro was right when he said that the debt should be can- celed. Mr. Kwitny might argue, as he did in "Endless Enemies," that the Third World debt crisis is a piece of villainy concocted by interna- tional bankers and manufacturers. Mr. Bartley's editorial page might argue that the international financial community shouldn't have thrown good money after bad in the first place. A Journal editorial last week in no way contradicted the analyses of Mr. Cockburn and Mr. Kwitny, calling the debt crisis a "do-it-yourself project" for the debtor nations and calling on the Reagan administration to introduce "the marvel of supply-side reforms- ... to the countries that need them most" The viewpoints fit one on top of the other, like the layered skin of an onion. Somehow, on the pages of The Wall Street Journal, the right has met the left at the point where the political spectrum turns a full cir- cle. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403550004-4