Wednesday Reading: Wired Responds to Glenn Greenwald’s Critique of their Bradley Manning Coverage

Bradley Manning

Good Morning! Minkoff Minx is under the weather today, so I thought I’d write a little about the latest Wikileaks/Bradley Manning themed blog war between Glenn Greenwald of Salon and Kevin Poulsen of Wired.

Via Memeorandum, it appears that Glenn Greenwald struck a few nerves when he wrote his recent post accusing Wired of journalistic malpractice, because a response has been posted at the Threat Level blog.

Here is a bit of what Greenwald had to say:

For more than six months, Wired’s Senior Editor Kevin Poulsen has possessed — but refuses to publish — the key evidence in one of the year’s most significant political stories: the arrest of U.S. Army PFC Bradley Manning for allegedly acting as WikiLeaks’ source. In late May, Adrian Lamo — at the same time he was working with the FBI as a government informant against Manning — gave Poulsen what he purported to be the full chat logs between Manning and Lamo in which the Army Private allegedly confessed to having been the source for the various cables, documents and video that WikiLeaks released throughout this year. In interviews with me in June, both Poulsen and Lamo confirmed that Lamo placed no substantive restrictions on Poulsen with regard to the chat logs: Wired was and remains free to publish the logs in their entirety.

Despite that, on June 10, Wired published what it said was only “about 25 percent” of those logs, excerpts that it hand-picked. For the last six months, Poulsen has not only steadfastly refused to release any further excerpts, but worse, has refused to answer questions about what those logs do and do not contain. This is easily one of the worst journalistic disgraces of the year: it is just inconceivable that someone who claims to be a “journalist” — or who wants to be regarded as one — would actively conceal from the public, for months on end, the key evidence in a political story that has generated headlines around the world.

In June, I examined the long, strange and multi-layered relationship between Poulsen and Lamo, and in that piece raised the issue of Wired’s severe journalistic malfeasance in withholding these chat logs.

The Wired article is divided into two parts–the first part written by Wired editor Evan Hanson and the second part written by Poulsen. Greenwald’s point is that Wired is holding back on some of the evidence that led to Manning’s arrest. In his defense of Poulsen, Hanson skirts that issue by appearing to claim that only he and Poulsen know best which parts of the Manning-Lamo logs should be released to the public.

Armchair critics, apparently unhappy that Manning was arrested, have eagerly second-guessed our motives, dreamed up imaginary conflicts and pounded the table for more information: Why would Manning open himself up to a complete stranger and discuss alleged crimes that could send him to prison for decades? How is it possible that Wired.com just happened to have a connection with the one random individual Manning picked out to confide in, only to send him down for it?

Not one single fact has been brought to light suggesting Wired.com did anything wrong in pursuit of this story. In lieu of that, our critics — notably Glenn Greenwald of Salon, an outspoken Wikileaks defender — have resorted to shocking personal attacks, based almost entirely on conjecture and riddled with errors.

Of the chat logs, he writes:

We have already published substantial excerpts from the logs, but critics continue to challenge us to reveal all, ostensibly to fact-check some statements that Lamo has made in the press summarizing portions of the logs from memory (his computer hard drive was confiscated, and he no longer has has a copy).

Our position has been and remains that the logs include sensitive personal information with no bearing on Wikileaks, and it would serve no purpose to publish them at this time.

That doesn’t mean we’ll never publish them, but before taking an irrevocable action that could harm an individual’s privacy, we have to weigh that person’s privacy interest against news value and relevance.

This is a standard journalistic balancing test — not one that we invented for Manning. Every experienced reporter of serious purpose recognizes this, and the principal is also embodied in the Society of Professional Journalists’ code of ethics:

Recognize that gathering and reporting information may cause harm or discomfort. Pursuit of the news is not a license for arrogance…. Only an overriding public need can justify intrusion into anyone’s privacy. Show good taste. Avoid pandering to lurid curiosity.

Hansen claims that Wired is protecting Manning’s privacy by their refusal to publish the remaining 75% of the logs that they have kept secret. But why should we believe that? Aren’t they really protecting Lamo while he (as Greenwald argues), as the only source of knowledgeable information about the contents of the logs:

has been allowed to run around making increasingly sensationalistic claims about what Manning told him; journalists then prominently print Lamo’s assertions, but Poulsen’s refusal to release the logs or even verify Lamo’s statements prevents anyone from knowing whether Lamo’s claims about what Manning said are actually true.

In addition, Greenwald argues that:

There are new, previously undisclosed facts about the long relationship between Wired/Poulsen and a key figure in Manning’s arrest — facts that Poulsen inexcusably concealed [and] Subsequent events gut Poulsen’s rationale for concealing the logs and, in some cases, prove that his claims are false.

And on top of all that, Greewald points out that Poulsen himself reported that Lamo is a “convicted felon” who was “involuntarily hospitalized” for psychiatric problems shortly before his on-line interactions with Manning.

In the second part of Wired’s defense, Poulsen claims that Greenwald’s accusations against him are based on false information:

On Monday, Salon.com columnist Glenn Greenwald unleashed a stunning attack on this publication, and me in particular, over our groundbreaking coverage of WikiLeaks and the ongoing prosecution of the man suspected of being the organization’s most important source. Greenwald’s piece is a breathtaking mix of sophistry, hypocrisy and journalistic laziness.

I can’t wait for Greenwald’s response to that!

Poulsen’s piece is basically a screed in which he accuses Greenwald of multiple violations of journalistic ethics. Poulsen discusses his long-time relationship with Lamo, but as far as I can tell, Poulsen’s only information about Manning comes secondhand from Lamo.

Wired.com was the first to report, last June, on the then-secret arrest of Pfc. Bradley Manning. I learned of the arrest from Adrian Lamo, a well-known former hacker on whom I reported extensively from 2000 to 2002. It was Lamo who turned Manning in to the Army and the FBI, after Manning — isolated and despondent — contacted him online and began confiding the most intimate details of his life, including, but by no means limited to, his relationship with WikiLeaks, and the vast databases he claimed to have provided them.

Co-writer Kim Zetter and I followed up the story four days later with a piece examining Manning’s motives. The Washington Post had just run a fine story about Manning’s state-of-mind: At the time of his discussions with Lamo, he’d been through a bad breakup and had other personal conflicts. But I felt — and still do feel — that it’s a mistake to automatically ascribe Manning’s actions to his feeling depressed. (For one thing, his breakup occurred after the leaking.) There’s an implicit political judgment in that conclusion: that leaking is an aberrant act, a symptom of a psychological disorder. Manning expressed clear and rational reasons for doing what he did, whether one agrees with those reasons or not.

So we went into the logs of the chats Manning held with Lamo — which Lamo had provided Wired and The Washington Post — and pieced together a picture of why Manning took his historic actions, based on his own words (“Suspected Wikileaks Source Described Crisis of Conscience Leading to Leaks”). As a sidebar to the article, we published excerpts from those chat logs.

Poulsen argues that “everything of consequence” about Manning from the logs has already been published. But why should we believe Poulsen when he has a long-time relationship with Lamo and no relationship with Manning?

You’ll have to read the rest to get the entire convoluted explanation. Most troubling to me is that neither Hansen nor Poulsen mentions the treatment that Manning is getting in prison–that by any civilized country’s standards, he is being tortured.

We’ll have to stay tuned for Greenwald’s response to all this. I’ll bet it will be a doozy. Meanwhile, what do you think?

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UPDATE 1 9:42AM Eastern: Greenwald has a response up now. He begins with this:

Last night, Wired posted a two-part response to my criticisms of its conduct in reporting on the arrest of PFC Bradley Manning and the key role played in that arrest by Adrian Lamo. I wrote about this topic twice — first back in June and then again last Sunday. The first part of Wired’s response was from Wired.com Editor-in-Chief Evan Hansen, and the second is from its Senior Editor Kevin Poulsen. Both predictably hurl all sorts of invective at me as a means of distracting attention from the central issue, the only issue that matters: their refusal to release or even comment on what is the central evidence in what is easily one of the most consequential political stories of this year, at least.

That’s how these disputes often work by design: the party whose conduct is in question (here, Wired) attacks the critic in order to create the impression that it’s all just some sort of screeching personality feud devoid of substance. That, in turn, causes some bystanders to cheer for whichever side they already like and boo the side they already dislike, as though it’s some sort of entertaining wrestling match, while everyone else dismisses it all as some sort of trivial Internet catfight not worth sorting out. That, ironically, is what WikiLeaks critics (and The New York Times’ John Burns) did with the release of the Iraq War documents showing all sorts of atrocities in which the U.S. was complicit: they tried to put the focus on the personality quirks of Julian Assange to distract attention away from the horrifying substance of those disclosures. That, manifestly, is the same tactic Wired is using here: trying to put the focus on me to obscure their own ongoing conduct in concealing the key evidence shining light on these events.

In a separate post, I fully address every accusation Hansen and Poulsen make about me as well as the alleged inaccuracies in what I wrote. But I’m going to do everything possible here to ensure that the focus remains on what matters: the way in which Wired, with no justification, continues to conceal this evidence and, worse, refuses even to comment on its content, thus blinding journalists and others trying to find out what really happened here, while enabling gross distortions of the truth by Poulsen’s long-time confidant and source, the government informant Adrian Lamo.

The link to Greenwald’s previous post goes to “page not found.” I’ll update when he fixes the link. About the substance of the argument between Greenwald and Poulsen, Greenwald writes:

The bottom line from Hansen and Poulsen is that they still refuse to release any further chat excerpts or, more inexcusably, to comment at all on — to verify or deny — Lamo’s public statements about what Manning said to him that do not appear in those excerpts. They thus continue to conceal from the public 75% of the Manning-Lamo chat. They refuse to say whether Lamo’s numerous serious accusations about what Manning told him are actually found anywhere in the chat logs. Nor will they provide the evidence to resolve the glaring inconsistencies in Lamo’s many public tales about the critical issues: how he came to speak to Manning, what Lamo did to include these disclosures, and what Manning said about his relationship to WikiLeaks and his own actions. Every insult Wired spouts about me could be 100% true and none of it changes the core fact: Wired is hiding the key evidence about what took place here, thus allowing Lamo to spout all sorts of serious claims without any check and thus drive much of the reporting about WikiLeaks.

UPDATE 2: Jane Hamsher also has a post up on this story. She writes:

You would have to have been f&#%ing r#*&rded to believe that in an era of unprecedented intolerance for press leaks of any kind, that the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division, the FBI, the NSA, the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations and the Cyber Defense Crime Center knowingly and willingly not only allowed convicted hacker Adrian Lamo to hold on to chat logs that contained sensitive classified information, but to distribute them unexpurgated to the press.

I only see two possibilities. One, Wired had the chat logs before Lamo made any calls to authorities, and was a party to whatever subsequently happened. Or two, the copies of the chat logs that have been given to the press have been done so at the instigation of the US government, and with their full approval.

Of course there’s always c) all of the above, which is what I’m guessing is the most likely scenario.

Firedoglake has posted a database of all the available information on interactions between Manning, Lamo, and the U.S. government.

Stay tuned….


18 Comments on “Wednesday Reading: Wired Responds to Glenn Greenwald’s Critique of their Bradley Manning Coverage”

  1. bostonboomer says:

    Post updated with Greenwald’s latest

  2. Pat Johnson says:

    The more I read about this stuff the more confused I become.

    Who are these people? What is their purpose? What is to be gained by either side in these revelations? Is it all about power, money, fame? I have no idea.

    I have always found it difficult to accept one lowly PFC was capable of downloading and spiriting out information without sending some pretty big red flags to his superiors. It still makes little sense when judged from a distance.

    Greenwald raises some pertinent questions regarding these people which is just leading to more and more questions that no one seems willing to answer.

    But is seems clear to me at least that Assange is being portrayed as either a “rapist” or a complete cad when it comes to his personal life which is simply a way of diverting attention from Wikileaks and those who fed the machine.

    It bothers me that even at this phase of the “investigation” I am no more settled in my own mind as to what this is all about.

    Color me stupid but I’m still conflicted.

    • I’m still conflicted as well, Pat.

    • bostonboomer says:

      Hi Pat,

      Manning wasn’t just a “lowly Pfc.” He was an intelligence specialist. He therefore had access to information on Iraq and Afghanistan. The leaks that are currently coming out probably didn’t come from Manning. These diplomatic cables were in a database that was accessible to more than 2 million people. Assange hinted that the cables were leaked by someone who walked out with a disc.

      Wikileaks has gotten leaks from numerous sources. Bradley Manning is just the person that the Obama administration wants to pin the blame on. We have no idea if his arrest was justified or if there is any evidence against him, because the government–and “journalists” at Wired and the Wapo (at least) have kept the logs secret in order to protect government informant Adrian Lamo.

      • bostonboomer says:

        This dispute isn’t specifically about Julian Assange or Wikileaks. It is about our government’s treatment of whistleblowers (unique in U.S. history) and Obama’s policy of indefinite detention without probable cause and condoning of torture.

    • Minkoff Minx says:

      I am conflicted as well Pat and Wonk. I am so glad that the information is being released, but I am still skeptical about the thing. Not the real validity of the information that wikileaks released, or the treatment/torture of Manning, but the drama of the people involved. I have just been taking all this stuff and digesting it like a bovine, I want to chew it all over repeatedly before I declare if it is bullshit or not.

  3. Pat Johnson says:

    Does anyone else get the feeling that we are living in a Tom Clancy novel?

    I don’t usually buy into conspiracy theories but having watched a series on AMC called “Rubicon” I am beginning to think we are closer to that conclusion than we think.

  4. dakinikat says:

    It’s obvious that there’s something still out there in the tons of things yet to be released that must be damaging. Just yesterday, the Atlantic printed some ridiculous neocon drivel on how the leaks are hurting democracy efforts in Zimbabwe from a doctoral candidate that has to be either kissing up to the state department or the CIA for a job.

    I mean really, any one with any serious knowledge of the region and Mugabe has to know this is some kind of plant. I mean Mugabe has a history of trying to assassinate Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai. Five years ago he had some one try to run him down with a car. The country is a mess and any one that says one little cable set off Mugabe with any knowledge of the history of that country over the last 10 years has to be a CIA plant.

    There has to be something out there in the scads of remaining documents they have yet to release that’s big. I’ve never seen the powers that be turn out this much crap on a few people. It’s worse than the Pentagon papers which first put on display how fond our government is of lying to us. To not notice this stuff is obvious propaganda is to be dense.

    Great job distilling the big parts of this story BB!!! Thanks!!

    • Branjor says:

      WikiLeaks has a lot of potential and may yet turn out to be important, but one thing that worries me about it is the sheer amount of the material, touching on all sorts of things. At least the Pentagon papers were just about our relations with Vietnam and how our gov’t lied to us about it. WikiLeaks are about so many different things that it will be a miracle if anything is done about any of those things. Maybe it will be worth it if just a few things are focused on and acted on.

      • bostonboomer says:

        Wikileaks isn’t about getting anyone to act on things. It’s about revealing the criminal activities of governments and by doing that causing chaos that will lead to change. As I understand his manifesto, Julian Assange isn’t an activist in the traditional sense. He’s trying to do something bigger than deal with specific issues.

        While the recently released diplomatic cables touch on many issues, they are are only a small part of what has been leaked through Wikileaks. If you don’t think the evidence of U.S. war crimes or of the U.S. actions in Yemen are important, then I’m at a loss to understand what “important” means to you.

        • Branjor says:

          By important I mean will it lead to anything substantive being done. The U.S. war crimes and drone attacks on Yemen were known before the cable leaks. I happen to think the information about the drug tests done in Nigeria were important. Not that we didn’t know drug tests were being done on poor populations who couldn’t consent, but I didn’t know about that specific one before the leak. Now it just remains to see what will be done about it. IMO, WikiLeaks will be important if it inspires actions which lead to changes, not so much if it doesn’t.

          • bostonboomer says:

            If what determines the value of Wikileaks is whether it results in specific actions, then most investigative journalism is worthless. I can’t agree with that.

            To me the exciting thing about Wikileaks is that it gives an outlet to whistleblowers–ordinary people who have inside knowledge about government and corporate corruption. It’s why I love the internet–the elites can no longer control the flow of information and keep us in the dark about what is really happening.

            No, we didn’t know the truth about the murders in the video that Bradley Manning gave to Wikileaks. No, we didn’t have evidence that the U.S. government was forcing the government of Yemen to hide U.S. involvement in bombings there. We may have suspected it, but that is different from knowing.

  5. bostonboomer says:

    Child of the Rosenbergs explains why the Obama administration’s use of the unconstitutional espionage act of 1917 against Manning and/or Assange is so outrageous.

    My parents were executed under the Unconstitutional Espionage Act.

  6. HT says:

    What is happening is horrendous. The sheer volume of the leaks is difficult, so how to deflect attention, concentrate all the might of the government against the leaker and the publisher – put them in the spotlight to distract from the things that governments are doing. Deflect, dodge, defer. I thought that governments would have learned from past mistakes. I was wrong, they haven’t learned anything. How sad is that.

    • dakinikat says:

      The press that is holding the leaked cables hasn’t let the majority of it out yet. They’re still going through it all. I think it’s important to realize it’s not all out and it’s all being sorted through by major newspapers in Europe and here so it’s not being released helter skelter … the detractors are trying to say that and it’s simply not true. That’s why I think there’s such a massive attack going on on Assange and their trying to break down Manning. There has to be something in there they don’t want out …