THE DUTY TO PUBLISH

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 22, 2013
Sequence Number: 
9
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 29, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2.pdf131.34 KB
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by-d -07 TUE 07 : 03 BUFPFPF I I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/22 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2 4 2 - P , NEW YORK TIMES cFP 2 91967 OREIGN AFFAIRS I Flora Lewis- !sb Woodward of The wadWtgtgi $ . now damned Is an old newspaper maxim. next time there Is a delka matter of So it comes as a epoch to read am.- The Duty to Publish Ile First AaroMment Forbids t the veracity ct ueuz. cal. Oliver orth Cm8ress to T pass any law rum MUL ,~ the tagufujaga of Rear ftwaift" d.titrktfng the freedom of speech The familiar question has to be ttbhee press. It says nothing about 'again in another vereioa: What titer freedom not to publish. or the editors of The W_ ship gqm pet dear and. . trhtdhpld lnprmatlan of know and when did they know It? de r nth nd u ra public import for It Is dlstastef I to criticise the megabuck book. major compstitor d the But debate and interpretation of work for, and I hesitated at , Bt the special protecttoa afforded the this Is a serious 1"M of principle for of theVto - k~ dot the amt d Sal UN prep. the and there fa a rick s ut? tjj~ able. The press, including The Wash Hanel gUare0ft gtwhich we llall lgton Past, regularly argues that it if* the judMmt the when to publish material that can be em- and how Is seen to turn an sheer cool- the nation as a mto the auednmi d arid the easier impact. It will not make it sier co assert the pttbiic s right to pain fail where it ma y publish and be k Y gist could have an post pow tforp mto the recent Oalgrp- $M Iraoontra hearings, How many editorials were there question. 1be time h takes to produce a sooktb it hearingsanded. bd?fore 7be p em of moral obgp~ 100 can of Gary It was The Miami Herald that motwtoed a rather shabby bout to catch W. mart at dalliattot But The Wash. llp hl~uw gfan Past that reported that It had tins which it toot ea Mr- Hark direstseft a puma mint os Ids candidacy for Pmaident. Later it was reported dumb"s t this bdormatlon cams from Mr. apartumm air. 8a aM whose r P T'? 7?he Waskin ton Post ddo Wed its soy Atnwtg other revelations Mr Woad- lion as being ld th , . e m be. wad reports that Mr. Caney knew of cause It matters kr kp the diversion to Nicaraguan contras of know about the chars die proftits from tucrst arms gabs t o Iran; that Mr. Casey soiiekad Saudi Arabia's aid first to try to apassaoaie and then to bribe the I.abatieas mssbN. M- leader Sbelk Mohammed 1Rttsseb Padlalish not to attach Amer can Ie - ; that Mr. C my Paaap I trevdreo>tsu at Coo- "ON" lbe k" W-Examovervi Mr. Woodward and another re- Porter weate about the attempted as- sassination at sbeft Padlallah a- are antrinsk to 1W 1__ at ethics that am support am justify the llt `Bohai pmtectlon for - lorming the puWlc. It 4sremoarkaat Aw Ma that Mr. Woodward pried so .much sensitive information art at Mr. Casey. It is even more surprising that ~a lgood reporter, who worts for a would sit an such an explosives l .e-_ fors ch a o, article b JIM dno*j ft it as a That doesn't help the dw a t, 4-' tetulterTerist raryw maplon uunding task Of defending prom sicked by the C.I.A.' The Post and freedom and acatrate information did then know that Mr. Casey against the myriad interests seeking enlisted ousted on,.which missed the car r1Igh diu0r% deceive or suppresa, The get but hied a10 skis publish also Implies a a rp tYt suburb. people in a Bel- 9MUtY to let the public know im torpor- or. tant news without delay. It is an els- Asamtang Mr. Woodward is tegiag NOW of credibility. th O be troth about what Mr. Cagy cis. dosed to ham -and of net, that would 4e another so:aodal - did he dhr his Information to tie Ocngrsploaal 1n estigators sad to the special prese, questions to over with Apparently, Mr. Woodward felt ra: H eved by 'Mr. Casey'b death of any Promise Of __ . =crVC7 no o But may hnd Mr. died on May s. Cas" as the honaD earirll were startioL they ran stttnitcer. GhwA Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/22 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/22 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2 Condmied from Page Al thus the political triumph, of Hojatolis- Jam Rafsanjani. But the practical ef- fect of Hojatolislam Rafsanjani's ap- parent victory on Iran's policy is not speaker has clear. The parliamentary been the main spokesman for Iran's uncompromising war with Iraq and has appeared committed to the export of Iran's fundamentalist Islamic revo- lution. The political rivalries in Iran are being fought on complex personal levels under an overall banner of Shiite Islamic fundamentalism, making such conceptions as "radicals" and "moder- ates" inapppplicable. Mr. Hashemi's most important duty had been running the World Is1WLc Movement, whose goal was to eexport Iran's Islamic fundamentalist revolu- tion. The committee, under the chairman- ship of Ayatollah Montazert, supported Shiite radicals, principally the Party of God in Lebanon, and such other organi- zations as The Call. in Iraq. Western iptaWgpO&AViclals have said the Iranian directorate and Its Lebanese and other affiliates are be- lieved to be linked to such acts of ter- rorism as the suicide truck bombbp of the United States Marine barracks and two United States Embassy balld- ings in Beirut in 1983 and the kidn-p- Rafsanjani, the Sph filter of Parliament. It was Hojatolislam Rafsanjani met American negotiators, including former national security adviser Rob. ert C. McFarlane, who were trying swap weapons for the Americans het hostage in Lebanon. Mr. Hashemi's faction revealed the meeting to the Lebanese weekly A Shiraa and that led to disclosures that grew into the Iran-contra affair. His execution appeared to indicate Ayatollah Mliomeini's support, and aping of Americans to Lebanon. Mr. Hashemi's brother, Hadt, Is a son-in-law of Ayatollah Montazert. and such family relations are politically important in Iranian society. Mr. Hashemi was also a close associate of AyaIoU h Montazeri's sm. . Under the rule of Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi. Mehdt Hashemi was con- victed of strangling Ayatollah Shamsa- badi, a religious leader who supported the existing order. He was freed from prison after the revolution in 1979. in addition to disclosing Hojatolis- lam Ratsanjani's meeting with the Americans, r. Hashemi was also re- ported to be involved in an incident last fall in which a Syrian diplomat, be-' lieved to be a top inutiftwo. opera- ft was briefly kidnapped in Teheran. ; _~/ 3 f -ZIZ- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/22 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301310009-2