WEB OF LIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000403690003-0
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 13, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 5, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000403690003-0.pdf85.69 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403690003-0 '1/ .,..,e, C 1c>-Ptp p WASHINGTON POST 5 October 1986 Leph Laitin Web of--Lies The reader outrige over The Post's publishing "..b Woodward's revelation last week that our govern. went has been conducting a carefully planned program ougive false infor- mation to the `American people matched the anger of those in the past month who were offended at some ethnic and religious articles car- ried in this paper. But in this new outpouring of anger, it is odd that the vehement reaction was to The Poet's printing things that were true. There was not a shred of indignation that T?te Post, along with other news media, had unknowingly printed lies. It is also interesting to note that both the Truth and the lies were provided by government officials. What it boils down to is that the government was telling big fibs and The Post was telling big truths. So who gets castigated? It is a sorry state of affairs. Every day, government spokesmen put a "spin" on the facts to make the administration look good. I imagine that's been standard operating proce. dure since George Washington's ad- ombudsman ministration. As for the government's slicing the truth a little thin, in day-to-day operations, that's what newspeople get paid for-they're not stenographers simply taking down what's told them:. Their job is to ask questions, panning for nuggets of gold. But when the government tells out- right lies that are.sometimes impossi ble to disprove, this requires a whole new look at government. In contemporary. times, all adminis- trations have been guilty of lying. A Pentagon spokesman' in the Kennedy- Johnson era said the-government had a right to he to Men & itself. The presi- dent who made it a: campaign issue thati he would never lie to the American people had his press secretary the press when he. -felt the mWead occasion; demanded it. The Nixon administration was laced with untruths foisted on the American people, and.it paid the heavi- est price for it. .. . In this recent- exercise in official government deceit, it was a case of amateur night: grown men acting like children, but playing with a dangerous toy, which is disinformation-a word, incidentally, coined by the Soviets that refers to the practice of slipping into the system negative stories for the purpose of confusing the enemy. (Moscow's speedy"advice to the Unit- ed States of its disabled nuclear sub off the East Coast may well have been an inspired effort- to capitalize on Washington's embarrassment by showing how the Kremlin levels with the American people.) Secretary of State Shultz, no friend of the Russians, defends the employ. ment of the carehdlly planned web of lies, which is an effort, intentional or otherwise, to corrupt the press. He quotes Winston. -Churchill's World War II observation that In time of war, the truth is so precious it must be attended by a bodyguard of lies." Secretary Shultz thus compares a desert rat like Moammar Gadhafi with a monster like Adolf Hitler. This is a situation impossible to defend, even for so honorable a man as George Shultz., It is curious that Secretary Shultz's defense did achieve one purlgyye he hardly intend. ed: unequivocal confirmation of Bob Woodward's story, which the White House was ineptly denying. And where will all this leave government officials who do tell the truth? There are only. two criticisms I have of Bob Woodward's story. He was too hard on, The Wall Street Journal, which carried the first "disin. formation" article; after all, it was the victim, not the perpetrator. And he should have raised the question of whether the disinformation gang had been testing the -.eaters for some months prior to The Journal article and perhaps planted one or two fabri- cated stories in The Post. It is desirable that we do not return in the wake of thiS"unfortunate affair to the post-Watergate era, when the Woodward-Bernstein school of jour- nalism spawned anew breed of corre- spondent who cruelly. cross-examined rather than skillfulyinterviewed, who considered government officials guilty until they proved 'themselves inno- cent. This unpt'otuctive syndrome had just about worn off in Washing- ton, but here we are again. The American. people are best served when there exists a healthy arm's-length relationship between government and the news media. I hope and pray for the sake of the American people that, in this uneasy balance between government and the news media, neither side ever wins a decisive victory. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403690003-0