When Edward Snowden decided to expose the administration's massive surveillance program, the CIA contractor turned to journalists he knew would be sympathetic.
By approaching the
Guardian's Glenn Greenwald, a liberal columnist for a liberal newspaper,
and filmmaker Laura Poitras, who Greenwald has credited with "exposing
truths that are adverse to U.S. government policy," Snowden was
following an increasingly common path for leakers of sensitive material:
Find a like-minded soul in the media. And in doing so, they are
bypassing the establishment press, which is then forced to play
catch-up.
True, Snowden wound up
sharing part of his scoop with national security reporter Bart Gellman,
who wrote about the government's Internet surveillance for his former
newspaper, the Washington Post. But the fact that Gellman and the Post
balked at the source's request that they commit to publishing all of his
batch of Power Point slides—prompting Snowden to say he could no longer
give Gellman the story exclusively—underscores why some leakers have
grown wary of journalists who play by a traditional set of rules.
Gellman has said the Post consulted with administration officials about
the story and withheld some details at their request.
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Howard Kurtz
When I asked Greenwald on
CNN why the source had approached him, he cited a history of "supine
behavior, subservient behavior in the American media." Greenwald pointed
to multiple examples of news organizations having sat on classified
information "at the request of the U.S. government," most notably The
New York Times delaying publication of the Bush administration's
warrantless phone surveillance for nearly a year.
Greenwald told me he's
not worried about getting caught up in a leak investigation, but if Rep.
Peter King has his way, such journalists would be in legal jeopardy.
"If they knew that this was classified information -- I think action
should be taken, especially on something of this magnitude," the New
York Republican told CNN's Anderson Cooper. He added that in such major
cases "there is an obligation, both moral but also legal, I believe,
against a reporter disclosing something which would so severely
compromise national security." Fortunately, there is no chance that
King's position, which would criminalize journalism, will become law.
Greenwald also works for
the American subsidiary of a British paper, which may have felt more
freedom to expose U.S. secrets than its American counterparts. (British
media are more cautious at home because of their country's strict libel
laws.)
If that was Snowden's
reasoning—and he certainly put his full trust in Greenwald, inviting him
to his Hong Kong hideout—he is hardly alone.
Twice in the last year,
sources with liberal leanings have handed bombshell material to David
Corn, the liberal
One was Scott Prouty,
the bartender who secretly recorded Mitt Romney saying at a fundraiser
that he would never get the votes of 47% of Americans who had become
addicted to government benefits. Prouty not only gave the tape to Corn
after communicating through an intermediary—Jimmy Carter's grandson—but
revealed his identity to MSNBC's Ed Schultz.
Opinion: Your biggest secrets are up for grabs
It was his "civic duty"
to leak the tape of the top-dollar fundraiser, Prouty said: "There's a
lot of people that can't afford to pay $50,000 for one night, one
dinner, and I felt an obligation for all the people who can't afford to
be there."
Curtis Morrison, a
liberal Kentucky activist, turned to Corn after secretly recording
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his strategists discussing
ways to discredit actress Ashley Judd, a potential challenger for his
seat. Morrison came out publicly on the liberal website Salon, saying:
"I don't subscribe to the lie that activism and journalism can be
separated." That, of course, runs counter to the prevailing view in the
Old Media, although newer players from the Huffington Post to the Daily
Caller delight in delivering journalism with a topspin.
WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange split the difference when he did his massive dump of State
Department cables in 2010, giving them to the Guardian but also to two
establishment outlets, The New York Times and Germany's Der Spiegel.
But after the Times
published a critical profile of Assange, he bypassed the paper months
later in releasing a new batch of 250,000 documents to the Guardian and
other European outlets. (The Guardian thoughtfully shared its haul with
the Times.)
Snowden, like Assange
(now holed up in London's Ecuadoran embassy while he ducks sexual
assault charges), wanted to control the story. That is evident in the
video interview he gave Greenwald, in which Snowden speaks quietly but
passionately about being appalled by the surveillance state. But that
personalized approach has also made him the overriding issue, an easier
and more polarizing debate for the media than government spying and
illegal disclosures.
The same technology that
enabled the administration to keep track of Google searches and
Facebook postings also allowed Snowden to gain instant fame by beaming
his image around the world.
Once sources who wanted
public attention had little choice but to approach the mainstream media;
that's why Mark Felt dealt with Bob Woodward and Daniel Ellsberg went
to the Times. But although Snowden opted to work within the media
system, some activists now prefer to be their own broadcasters.
Opinion: Massive spying on Americans is outrageous
James O'Keefe, the
conservative activist who pulled off stings against ACORN and National
Public Radio, didn't have to hand his undercover video to a news
organization. While he has sometimes favored conservative outlets,
O'Keefe packages the material himself (and, in the case of ACORN,
engaged in misleading editing). O'Keefe told me in 2011 that "reporters
do a lot of stenography in this country," but that "real investigative
reporting is showing things for what they are."
O'Keefe's contention
that the press isn't doing its job carries echoes of Greenwald's
argument, from the other end of the spectrum, that the press is
subservient to political power. Little wonder, then, that journalists
such as Greenwald and Corn are grabbing big scoops that once might have
belonged to the MSM.
What may be lost is the
media's role as neutral arbiter, a sense that they are holding their
sources accountable even while disseminating their information. But in
the age of the partisan press, traditional journalists may simply have
to take a back seat to those more in tune with the leakers.
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