Seymour Hersh: The Man Who Knows
Too Much
by: Rachel Cooke, The Guardian
UK
www.truthout.org/, November 5,
2008
He exposed the My Lai massacre, revealed
Nixon's secret bombing of Cambodia and has hounded Bush and Cheney
over the abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib ... No wonder the Republicans
describe Seymour Hersh as "the closest thing American journalism
has to a 'terrorist.'" Rachel Cooke meets the most-feared
investigative reporter in Washington.
Every so often, a famous actor or
producer will contact Seymour Hersh, wanting to make a movie about
his most famous story: his single-handed uncovering, in 1969,
of the My Lai massacre, in which an American platoon stormed a
village in South Vietnam and, finding only its elderly, women
and children, launched into a frenzy of shooting, stabbing and
gang-raping. It won him a Pulitzer prize and hastened the end
of the Vietnam war. Mostly, they come to see him in his office
in downtown Washington, a two-room suite that he has occupied
for the past 17 years. Do they like what they see? You bet they
do, even if the movie has yet to be made. 'Brad Pitt loved this
place,' says Hersh with a wolfish grin. 'It totally fits the cliché
of the grungy reporter's den!' When last he renewed the lease,
he tells me, he made it a condition of signing that the office
would not be redecorated - the idea of moving all his stuff was
too much. It's not hard to see why. Slowly, I move my head through
180 degrees, trying not to panic at the sight of so much paper
piled so precipitously. Before me are 8,000 legal notepads, or
so it seems, each one filled with a Biro Cuneiform of scribbled
telephone numbers. By the time I look at Hersh again - the full
panorama takes a moment or two - he is silently examining the
wall behind his desk, which is grey with grime, and striated as
if a billy goat had sharpened its horns on it.
And then there is Hersh himself, a
splendid sight. After My Lai, he was hired by the New York Times
to chase the tail of the Watergate scandal, a story broken by
its rival, the Washington Post. In All the President's Men, Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein's book about their scoop, they describe
him - the competition. He was unlike any reporter they'd ever
seen: 'Hersh, horn-rimmed and somewhat pudgy, showed up for dinner
in old tennis shoes, a frayed pinstriped shirt that might have
been at its best in his college freshman year and rumpled, bleached
khakis.' Forty years on, little has changed. Today he is in trainers,
chinos and a baggy navy sweatshirt and - thanks to a tennis injury
- he is walking like an old guy: chest forward, knees bandy, slight
limp in one leg. There is something cherishably chaotic about
him. A fuzzy halo of frantic inquiry follows him wherever he goes,
like the cloud of dust that hovers above Pig Pen in the Charlie
Brown strip. In conversation, away from the restraining hand of
his bosses at the New Yorker, the magazine that is now his home,
his thoughts pour forth, unmediated and - unless you concentrate
very hard - seemingly unconnected. 'Yeah, I shoot my mouth off,'
he says, with faux remorse. 'There's a huge difference between
writing and thinking.' Not that he has much time for those who
put cosy pontification over the graft of reporting: 'I think...
My colleagues! I watch 'em on TV, and every sentence begins with
the words: "I think." They could write a book called
I Think.'
But we must backtrack a little. Before
the office, there is the breakfast joint. Hersh and I meet at
the Tabard Inn, a Washington hangout so gloomily lit I could do
with a torch. He has poached eggs and coffee and 'none of that
other stuff, thanks'. (I think he means that he doesn't want potatoes
with his eggs). Like everyone in America just now, he is on tenterhooks.
A Democrat who truly despises the Bush regime, he is reluctant
to make predictions about exactly what is going to happen in the
forthcoming election on the grounds that he might 'jinx it'. The
unknown quantity of voter racism apart, however, he is hopeful
that Obama will pull it off, and if he does, for Hersh this will
be a starting gun. 'You cannot believe how many people have told
me to call them on 20 January [the date of the next president's
inauguration],' he says, with relish. '[They say:] "You wanna
know about abuses and violations? Call me then." So that
is what I'll do, so long as nothing awful happens before the inauguration.'
He plans to write a book about the neocons and, though it won't
change anything - 'They've got away with it, categorically; anyone
who talks about prosecuting Bush and Cheney [for war crimes] is
kidding themselves' - it will reveal how the White House 'set
out to sabotage the system... It wasn't that they found ways to
manipulate Congressional oversight; they had conversations about
ending the right of Congress to intervene.'
In one way, it's amazing Hersh has
anything left to say about Bush, Cheney and their antics. Then
again, with him, this pushing of a story on and on is standard
practice. Though it was Woodward and Bernstein who uncovered the
significance of the burglary at the Watergate building, Hersh
followed up their scoop by becoming one of Nixon's harshest critics
and by breaking stories about how the government had supported
Pinochet's 1973 coup in Chile, secretly bombed Cambodia and used
the CIA to spy on its domestic enemies. His 1983 book about Nixon,
The Price of Power, is definitive. So far as the War on Terror
goes, Hersh has already delivered his alternative history - Chain
of Command, a book based on the series of stories he wrote for
the New Yorker in the aftermath of 9/11 and following Bush's invasion
of Iraq. Among other things, Hersh told us of the bungled efforts
to catch Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan; of the dubious business
dealings of the superhawk Richard Perle - a report that led to
Perle's resignation as chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy
Board (Hersh alleged that Perle improperly mixed his business
affairs with his influence over US foreign policy when he met
the Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi in 2003. Perle described
Hersh as 'the closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist'
and threatened to sue before falling oddly silent); and of how
Saddam's famous efforts to buy uranium in Africa, as quoted by
President Bush in his 2003 State of the Union speech, were a fiction.
Most electrifying of all, however, was his triple salvo on the
abuse of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib. It was Hersh who first
revealed the full extent of this torture, for which he traced
the ultimate responsibility carefully back to the upper reaches
of the administration. 'In each successive report,' writes David
Remnick, the editor of the New Yorker, in his introduction to
Chain of Command, 'it became clear that Abu Ghraib was not an
"isolated incident" but, rather, a concerted attempt
by the government and the military leadership to circumvent the
Geneva Conventions in order to extract intelligence and quell
the Iraqi insurgency.' As Remnick points out, this reporting has
'stood up over time and in the face of a president whose calumny
has turned out to be a kind of endorsement'. Bush reportedly told
Pakistan's president, Pervez Musharraf, that Hersh was 'a liar';
after the third of his reports on Abu Ghraib, a Pentagon spokesman
announced that Hersh merely 'threw a lot of crap against the wall
and he expects someone to peel off what's real. It's a tapestry
of nonsense.'
Earlier this year, Hersh turned his
attention to Iran: to Bush's desire to bomb it and to America's
covert operations there. But while Hersh believes the President
would still dearly love to go after Iran, the danger of that actually
happening has now passed. Events, not least the sinking of the
global economy, have moved on. So he is shortly to write about
Syria instead, which he has recently visited. In the dying days
of the Bush administration, he says, it is noticeably easier to
meet contacts - Cheney, the enforcer, is a lot less powerful -
and the information he is getting is good. By coincidence, it
was in Syria that he first heard about what was going on inside
Abu Ghraib, long before he saw documentary evidence of it. 'I
got in touch with a guy inside Iraq during the Prague Spring after
the fall of Baghdad, a two-star guy from the old regime. He came
up to Damascus by cab. We talked for four days, and one of the
things we talked about was prisons. He told me that some of the
women inside had been sending messages to their fathers and brothers
asking them to come and kill them because they'd been molested.
I didn't know whether it was GIs playing grab ass or what, but
it was clear that the women had been shamed. So when I first heard
about the photographs, I knew they were real. Did I think the
story would be as big as it was? Yeah. But was it as big as My
Lai? No.' Only a handful of relatively lowly military personnel
have so far been punished for their part in the abuse, and Colonel
Janis Karpinski, the commander of the Iraqi prisons, was merely
demoted (from Brigadier General), in spite of the fact that the
Taguba Report, the internal US army report on detainee abuse that
was leaked to Hersh, singled her out for blame. 'And John Kerry
wouldn't even use it [Abu Ghraib] in his campaign. He didn't want
to offend the military, I assume.'
Four decades separate My Lai and Abu
Ghraib. You have to ask: wasn't it appalling for him to be investigating
US army abuses of civilians all over again? Didn't he think that
lessons might have been learnt? Yes, and no. It made him feel
'hopeless', but on the other hand, war is always horrible. In
1970, after his My Lai story, he addressed an anti-war rally and,
on the spur of the moment, asked a veteran to come up and tell
the crowd what some soldiers would do on their way home after
a day spent moving their wounded boys. With little prompting,
the traumatised vet described how they would buzz farmers with
their helicopter blades, sometimes decapitating them; they would
then clean up the helicopter before they landed back at base.
'That's what war is like,' he says. 'But how do you write about
that? How do you tell the American people that?' Still, better
to attempt to tell people than to stay feebly silent. What really
gets Hersh going - he seems genuinely bewildered by it - is the
complicit meekness, the virtual collapse, in fact, of the American
press since 9/11. In particular, he disdains its failure to question
the 'evidence' surrounding Saddam's so-called weapons of mass
destruction. 'When I see the New York Times now, it's so shocking
to me. I joined the Times in 1972, and I came with the mark of
Cain on me because I was clearly against the war. But my editor,
Abe Rosenthal, he hired me because he liked stories. He used to
come to the Washington bureau and almost literally pat me on the
head and say: "How is my little Commie today? What do you
have for me?" Somehow, now, reporters aren't able to get
stories in. It was stunning to me how many good, rational people
- people I respect - supported going into war in Iraq. And it
was stunning to me how many people thought you could go to war
against an idea.'
As for the troop 'surge' and its putative
success, he more or less rolls his eyes when I bring this up.
'People are saying quietly that they are worried about Iraq. This
is nothing profound, but by the time the surge got going, ethnic
cleansing had already happened in a lot of places. There was a
natural lull in the violence. The moment we start withdrawing,
and relying on the Shia to start paying members of the Awakening
[the alliance of Sunni insurgents whose salaries were initially
paid by the US military, and who have helped to reduce violence
in some provinces]...' His voice trails off. 'And the big bad
bogeyman is Saudi Arabia. There's an awful lot of money going
to Salafist and Wahabist charities, and there's no question they'll
pour money into the Awakening, and they're so hostile to Shi'ism
and to Iran that how can you possibly predict anything other than
violence? How do we get out of this? There is no way out. We have
a moral obligation to the people of Iraq that goes beyond anything
that anyone's talking about. The notion that it's their problem,
that we should just leave... I mean, can you believe what we've
done to their society? Imagine the psychosis, the insanity, that
we've induced.' He stabs the yolk of one of his poached eggs,
and sets about his toast like he hasn't eaten in days.
Seymour M Hersh (the M is for Myron)
was born in Chicago, the son of Yiddish-speaking immigrants from
Lithuania and Poland (he has a twin brother, a physicist, and
two sisters, also twins). The family was not rich; his father,
who died when Seymour was 17, ran a dry-cleaning business. After
school he attended a local junior college until a professor took
him aside, asked him what he was doing there and walked him up
to the University of Chicago. 'Chicago was this great egghead
place,' Hersh says. 'But I knew nothing. I came out of a lower-middle-class
background. At that time, everyone used to define themselves:
Stalinist, Maoist, whatever. I thought they meant "miaowist".
Seriously! Something to do with cats. Among my peers, they all
thought I would write the great novel, because I was very quick
and cutting. I've just read Philip Roth's new novel [Indignation],
and the arrogance of his character reminded me of that certitude.
I was always pointing out other people's flaws.' He went to law
school but hated it, dropped out and wound up as a copy boy, then
a reporter for the local City News Bureau. Later he joined Associated
Press in Washington and rose through its ranks until he quit for
a stint working for the Democrat senator Eugene McCarthy. Pretty
soon, though, he was back in journalism. 'Using words to make
other people less big made me feel bigger, though the psychological
dimension to that... well, I don't want to explore it.' His wife
of 40 years, Elizabeth, whom he describes as 'the love of my life'
in the acknowledgements of Chain of Command (they have three grown-up
children), is a psychoanalyst. Doesn't she ever tell him about
his ego and his id? He looks embarrassed. 'No, no... marriage
is ... different. When you live with someone you don't ... The
hardest part for her is when she tells me to take out the garbage
and I say: "Excuse me? I don't have time. I'm saving the
world."' Later, however, he tells me that journalism, like
psycho analysis, is about 'bringing things into focus'.
He was a broke freelance working for
a new syndication agency when he got wind of My Lai. A military
lawyer told him that a soldier at Fort Benning, a Georgia army
base, was facing a court martial for murdering at least 109 Vietnamese
civilians. Hersh rocked up in Benning and went on a door-to-door
search, somehow avoiding the officers on base, until he found
Lieutenant William L Calley Jr, a boyish 26-year-old otherwise
known as Rusty. He asked the former railway pointsman if they
could talk, which they did, for three hours. They then went to
the grocery store, got steaks, bourbon and wine, and talked some
more at the apartment of Calley's girlfriend. Calley told Hersh
that he had only been following orders, but nevertheless he described
what had happened (it later turned out that soldiers of the 11th
Brigade killed 500 or more civilians that morning). Soon after,
36 newspapers ran the story under Hersh's byline. Some, however,
did not carry it, in spite of the fact that Calley's own lawyer
had confirmed it, among them the New York Times. The scoop caused
not only horror but disbelief. Hersh, though, was not to be put
off. 'By the third story, I found this amazing fellow, Paul Meadlo,
from a small town in Indiana, a farm kid, who had actually shot
many of the Vietnamese kids - he'd shot maybe 100 people. He just
kept on shooting and shooting, and then the next day he had his
leg blown off, and he told Calley, as they medevac-ed him: "God
has punished me and now he will punish you."' Hersh wrote
this up, CBS put Meadlo on the TV news, and finally the story
could no longer be ignored. The next year, 1970, he was awarded
the Pulitzer prize.
How does Hersh operate? The same way
as he's always done: it's all down to contacts. Unlike Bob Woodward,
however, whose recent books about Iraq have involved long and
somewhat pally chats with the President, Hersh gets his stuff
from lower down the food chain. Woodward was one of those who
was convinced that WMD would be found in Iraq. 'He does report
top dollar,' says Hersh. 'I don't go to the top because I think
it's sorta useless. I see people at six o'clock in the morning
somewhere, unofficially.' Are they mostly people he has known
for a long time? 'No, I do pick up new people.' But with new contacts
he must be wary; there is always the danger of a plant. His critics
point to what they regard as his excessive use of unnamed sources.
Others accuse him of getting things wrong and of being gullible.
A low point came in the Nineties, when he embarked on a book about
Kennedy, The Dark Side of Camelot. Hersh was shown documents that
alleged the President was being blackmailed by Marilyn Monroe,
and though he discovered that they were fake in time to remove
all mention of them from his book, the damage to his reputation
had already been done - and the critics let rip anyway, for his
excitable portrayal of JFK as a sex addict and bigamist. There
was also the time, in 1974, when he accused the US ambassador
to Chile, Edward Korry, of being in on a CIA plot to overthrow
President Allende. Some years later, Hersh had to write a long
correction; it ran on page one of the New York Times. As a Jew,
his mailbag since 9/11 has also included letters from readers
who denounce him as a self-hater (later, at this office, he shows
me one of these: its author, an MD with a Florida postcode, accuses
him of being a 'kapo' - the kapo were concentration camp prisoners
who worked for the Nazis in exchange for meagre privileges).
His supporters, though, believe that
his mistakes - and even the wilder allegations he sometimes makes
in speeches - should always be put in the context of his hit rate.
A former Washington Post reporter, Scott Armstrong, once put it
this way. Say he writes a story about how an elephant knocked
someone down in a dark room. 'If it was a camel, or three cows,
what difference does it make? It was dark, and it wasn't supposed
to be there.' Hersh himself points out that, since 1993, he has
been up against the stringent standards of the New Yorker and
its legendary team of fact checkers. 'By the way, all my inside
sources have to deal with the fact checkers, and they do. People
find it hard to believe that, I don't know why.' And then there
is his editor, David Remnick. 'I never love editors,' he says.
'But David is smart and he has great judgement.' How often does
he check in with Remnick? 'I'm sure he would tell you less often
than I should. He gets pretty angry with me. Sometimes we have
these rows where I won't take his calls. He says no to a lot of
stuff - stuff I think the editor would die for! Admittedly, it
is not the Seymour Hersh weekly. But sometimes he'll say: "We
are not going to publish this kind of stuff 'cos it's frigging
crazy."' It was Tina Brown, formerly of Tatler and Vanity
Fair, who brought him to the New Yorker. 'What's-her-name... yeah,
Tina. She gave me a lot of money, and she said: "Just go
do it!" But she used to worry. She'd call me up and say,
"I sat next to Colin Powell at dinner last night and he was
railing about how awful you are." So I would say, "Well,
that's good." And she'd say, "Is it?" And I'd tell
her, "Yes, it is."'
Does it worry him that he is sometimes
described as the 'last American reporter'? Who is coming up behind
him? 'A friend of mine wants to put $5m into a chair for investigative
journalism for me, but why would I want to do that? Look, the
cost of running my kind of work is very high, and a lot of stories
don't even work out. I know a wonderful journalist who works on
the internet. I called friends of mine at the Times and the Post.
But he hasn't been hired because he would cost a lot of money.'
But Hersh is in his seventies (he is a year younger than John
McCain, though you'd never know), he can't keep going forever.
Or can he? Most reporters start out hungry but somewhere along
the way are sated. Not Hersh. 'I have information; I have people
who trust me. What else am I going to do? I love golf and tennis
and if I was good enough, I'd be professional. Since I'm not,
what am I gonna do? Why shouldn't I be energetic? Our whole country
is at stake. We have never had a situation like this. These men
have completely ruined America. It's so depressing, my business!'
Yet he seems chipper. 'No, I'm not chipper. I don't know how to
put where I am... I don't take it that seriously. I've been there:
up, down, back up. I do a lotta speeches, I make a lotta money,
I proselytise.' Does he like making money? 'Are you kidding? I
do!'
After we finish breakfast, he takes
me to the office. He is eager to put off the moment when he must
get on with his Syria piece. The more time he wastes with me...
well, the morning will soon be over. Inside he points out a few
choice interior-design details - the Pulitzer (it nestles among
dozens of other awards), the framed memo from Lawrence Eagleburger
and Robert McCloskey to Henry Kissinger, their boss at the State
Department, which is dated 24 September 1974, and reads: 'We believe
Seymour Hersh intends to publish further allegations on the CIA
in Chile. He will not put an end to this campaign. You are his
ultimate target.' Then he roots around in a cairn of paper for
a while - quite a long while - eventually producing a proof of
one of his articles with Remnick's editing marks on it. I've never
seen anything so harsh in my life. Practically every other sentence
has been ruthlessly disembowelled. 'Yeah, pretty tough, huh?'
He also shows me one of his own memos to a contact. It makes reference
to the current administration. 'These guys are hard-wired and
drinking the Kool-Aid,' it says, deadpan. He laughs. He's getting
cheerier by the minute. Soon it will be time for lunch! Now he
puts his feet on the desk, removes one training shoe and jauntily
waves the sweaty sole of a white sock at me. A couple of calls
come in. He is concise bordering on cryptic. Finally an old Times
colleague arrives. 'I knew this guy when he had hair!' Hersh shouts
as this fellow and I pass in a small area of floorspace not yet
covered by books or papers. I'm leaving, but Hersh doesn't get
up and he doesn't say goodbye. A breezy salute - and then his
eyes fall ravenously on his pal.
Seymour
Hersh page
Home Page