'Obama’s
Wars': The Real Story Bob Woodward Won’t Tell
by Russ Baker
WhoWhatWhy.com
Just one year
before the publication of "Obama's Wars," Bob Woodward became a
player in his own book-in-progress. He morphed into his true identity:
Warrior Bob. Actually, there's an even deeper persona,
Agent Woodward – but we're getting ahead of ourselves.
In June of
2009, Woodward traveled to Afghanistan with General Jim Jones, President
Obama's National Security adviser, to meet with General Stanley
McChrystal, then the commander of forces there. Why did Jones allow
this journalist to accompany him? Because Jones knew that Woodward
could be counted on to deliver the company line – the military line.
In fact, Jones was essentially Woodward's patron.
The New
Republic's Gabriel Sherman wrote
at the time that
…Jones was
a guest of Woodward at his wife Elsa Walsh's fiftieth birthday
party held at Sally Quinn and Ben Bradlee's house. He and Elsa
were glued to Jones at the cocktail party before the dinner started…
In September
of last year, McChrystal (or someone close to him) leaked to Woodward
a document that essentially forced President Obama's hand. Obama
wanted time to consider all options on what to do about Afghanistan.
But the leak, publicizing the military's "confidential" assertion
that a troop increase was essential, cast the die, and Obama had
to go along. Nobody was happier than the Pentagon – and, it should
be said, its allies in the vast military contracting establishment.
The website
Firedoglake chronicled the developments in a pungent essay:
Apparently
General McChrystal and the Petraeus cabal aren't willing to wait
for their Commander in Chief to set the strategy. Prior to the
President's interviews, McChrystal's people were already telling
journalists that they were "impatient with Obama" as Nancy
Youssef reported. This "Power
Play," as I mentioned last night, included a veiled threat
that McChrystal would resign if he didn't get his way.
And sure
enough, just hours after the Commander in Chief was on the airwaves,
somehow McChrystal's classified report hit the Washington
Post … compliments of Bob Woodward no less.
Wow, what
a coincidence!
This episode
highlights a crucial aspect of Bob Woodward's career that has been
ignored by most of the media. Simply put, Woodward is the military's
man, and always has been.
For almost
four decades, under cover of his supposedly "objective" reporting,
Woodward has represented the viewpoints of the military and intelligence
establishments. Often he has done so in the context of complex inside
maneuvering of which he gives his readers little clue. He did it
with the book Veil,
about CIA director William Casey, in which he relied on Admiral
Bobby Ray Inman, a rival of Casey's, as his key source. (Inman,
from Texas, was closely identified with the Bush faction of the
CIA.) The book was based in part on a "deathbed interview" with
Casey that Casey's widow and former CIA guards said never took place.
Typically,
Woodward uses information he gets from his main sources to gain
access to others. He then gets more secrets from them, and so on
down the line. His stature – if that's the word – as a repository
of this inside dope has been key to the relentless success machine
that his media colleagues have perpetuated. The New York Times
review
of his Obama book laid out the formula:
In Obama's
Wars, Mr. Woodward, as usual, eschews analysis and commentary.
Instead, he hews to his I Am a Tape Recorder technique, using
his insider access to give readers interested in inside-the-Beltway
politics lots of granular detail harvested from interviews conducted
on background, as well as leaked memos, meeting notes and other
documents. Some of this information is revealing about the interplay
of personality and policy and politics in Washington; some of
it is just self-serving spin. As he's done in his earlier books,
Mr. Woodward acknowledges that attributions of thoughts, conclusions
or feelings to a person were in some cases not obtained directly
from that person, but from notes or from a colleague whom the
person told – a questionable but increasingly popular method,
which means the reader should take the reconstructed scenes with
a grain of salt.
And then, thanks
to all this attention, and even with that grain of salt, the book
went to #1.
But might there
be more to Woodward and his oeuvre than just questionable work practices?
Well, let's see. Woodward granted former CIA director George H.W.
Bush a pass by excluding him from accounts of Iran-Contra, which
occurred while the notorious intriguer was vice president under
the notoriously hands-off Ronald Reagan. (When I asked Woodward
about this for my book Family
of Secrets, he replied, "Bush was…What was it he said at
the time? I was out of the loop"?) Later Woodward got exclusive
access to H.W.'s son. He spent more time with George W. Bush than
did any other journalist, writing several largely sympathetic books
about his handling of Iraq and Afghanistan before playing catch-up
with prevailing sentiment and essentially reversing course.
Now, for a
bit of cognitive dissonance. Woodward's signature achievement
bringing down Richard Nixon turns out not to be what we all
thought. If that comes as a surprise, you have missed a few books,
including bestsellers, that put pieces of this puzzle together.
(Family of Secrets has several chapters on the real Watergate
story, but there are others that present detailed information, including
those by Len Colodny and Robert Gettlin, James Rosen, Jim Hougan
and others.)
Here's the
deal: Bob, top secret Naval officer, gets sent to work in the Nixon
White House while still on military duty. Then, with no journalistic
credentials to speak of, and with a boost from White House staffers,
he lands a job at the Washington Post. Not long thereafter
he starts to take down Richard Nixon. Meanwhile, Woodward's military
bosses are running a spy ring inside the White House that is monitoring
Nixon and Kissinger's secret negotiations with America's enemies
(China, Soviet Union, etc), stealing documents and funneling them
back to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. They then give what they stole
to columnist Jack Anderson and others in the press.
That's not
the iconic Woodward of legend, of course – so it takes a while for
this notion to settle in the mind. But there's more – and it's even
more troubling. Did you know there was really no Deep Throat, that
the Mark Felt story was conjured up as yet another layer of cover
in what became a daisy chain of disinformation? Did you know that
Richard Nixon was loathed and feared by the military brass, that
they and their allies were desperate to get Nixon out and halt his
rapprochement with the Communists? That a bunch of operatives with
direct or indirect CIA/military connections, from E. Howard Hunt
to Alexander Butterfield to John Dean – wormed their way into key
White House posts, and started up the Keystone Kops operations that
would be laid at Nixon's office door?
Believe me,
I understand. It sounds like the "conspiracy theory" stuff that
we have been trained to dismiss. But I've just spent five years
on a heavily documented forensic dig into this missing strata of
American history, and I myself have had to come to terms with the
enormous gap between reality and the "reality" presented by the
media and various establishment gatekeepers who tell us what's what.
Given this
complicity, it's no surprise that when it comes to Woodward's latest
work, the myth-making machine is on autopilot. The public, of course,
will end up as confused and manipulated as ever. And so things will
continue, same as they ever were. Endless war, no substantive reforms.
Unless we wake up to our own victimhood.
Reprinted
with permission from WhoWhatWhy.com.
October
6, 2010
Russ
Baker is an award-winning investigative reporter. He has written
for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Nation,
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Village
Voice and Esquire and dozens of other major domestic and
foreign publications. He has also served as a contributing editor
to the Columbia Journalism Review. Baker received a 2005
Deadline Club award for his exclusive reporting on George W. Bush’s
military record. He is the author of Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in
the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America
(Bloomsbury Press, 2009); it was released in paperback as Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and
the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. For more information
on Russ’s work, see his sites, www.familyofsecrets.com
and www.russbaker.com.
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