Seymour (Sy) Myron Hersh
(born April 8, 1937) is a United States Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist and author based in Washington, D.C. He is a regular contributor to The New Yorker
magazine on military and security matters.
His work first gained worldwide recognition in 1969 for exposing the My Lai Massacre and its cover-up during the Vietnam War, for which he received the 1970 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting. His 2004 reports on the US military's mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison gained much attention.
Hersh received the 2004 George Polk Award for Magazine Reporting [1] given annually by Long Island University to honor contributions to journalistic integrity and investigative reporting. This was his fifth George Polk Award, the first one being a Special Award given to him in 1969.
In 2006 he reported on the US military's plans for Iran, which allegedly called for the use of nuclear weapons against that country. [2] In 2008 he reported on US covert action plans against Iran. [3]
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SEYMOUR HERSH TICKETS
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Early years
Hersh was born in
Chicago to
Yiddish-speaking
Lithuanian Jewish parents who emigrated to the US from
Lithuania and
Poland and ran a dry-cleaning shop in a tough section of
Chicago's South Side [4]. After graduating from the
University of Chicago, Hersh began his career in journalism as a police reporter for the City News Bureau in 1959. He later became a correspondent for
United Press International in
South Dakota. In 1963 he went on to become a Chicago and
Washington correspondent for the
Associated Press. During the
1968 presidential election, he served as press secretary for the campaign of Senator
Eugene McCarthy. Later that year, Hersh was hired as a reporter for the Washington Bureau of
The New York Times
, where he served from 1972 to 1975 and again in 1979. Hersh was also active in investigating the
Central Intelligence Agency's
Project Jennifer.
His 1983 book
The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House
won him the
National Book Critics Circle Award and the
Los Angeles Times
book prize in
biography. In 1985, Hersh contributed to the
PBS television documentary
Buying the Bomb
.
Selected stories
My Lai Massacre
On November 12, 1969, Hersh broke the story of the
My Lai Massacre, in which hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese civilians were murdered by
US soldiers in March 1968. The report prompted widespread condemnation around the world and reduced public support for the
Vietnam War in the United States. The explosive news of the massacre fueled the outrage of the
US peace movement, which demanded the withdrawal of US troops from
Vietnam. It also reportedly led a few more potential draftees to file for
conscientious objector status. Hersh wrote about the massacre and its cover-up in
My Lai 4: A Report on the Massacre and Its Aftermath
and
Cover-up: The Army's Secret Investigation of the Massacre at My Lai 4
.
Project Jennifer
In early 1974 Hersh had planned to publish a story on
Project Jennifer, the code name for a CIA project to recover a sunken
Soviet navy submarine from the floor of the
Pacific Ocean.
Bill Kovach,
The New York Times
Washington, DC bureau chief at the time, said in 2005 that the government offered a convincing argument to delay publication in early 1974—exposure at that time, while the project was ongoing, "would have caused an international incident." The
NYT
eventually published its account in 1975, after a story appeared in the
Los Angeles Times
, and included a five-paragraph explanation of the many twists and turns in the path to publication. It is unclear what, if any, action was taken by the
Soviet Union after learning of the story.
KAL 007
In his 1986 book
The Target is Destroyed
(Random House), Hersh alleged that the Soviet shooting down of
Korean Air Flight 007 in September 1983 was due to a combination of Soviet incompetence and United States intelligence operations intended to confuse Soviet responses.
Later releases of government information confirmed that there was a
PSYOPS campaign against the Soviet Union that had been in place from the first few months of the Reagan administration. This campaign included the largest US Pacific Fleet exercise ever held, in April to May 1983. The report states that the Soviets, "probably didn't know (KAL 007) was a civilian aircraft" and uses Hersh's book as a reference for the PSYOPS campaign.
[5]
Mordechai Vanunu and Robert Maxwell
In his 1991 book
The Samson Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal and American Foreign Policy
, Hersh wrote that Nicholas Davies, the foreign editor of
The Daily Mirror
, had tipped off the Israeli embassy in London about
whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu. Vanunu had given information about
Israel's nuclear weapons program first to the
The Sunday Times
and later to the
Sunday Mirror
. At the time, the
Sunday Mirror
and its sibling newspaper, the
Daily Mirror
were owned by media magnate
Robert Maxwell who was alleged to have had contacts with Israel's
intelligence services. According to Hersh, Davies had also worked for the
Mossad. Vanunu was later lured by Mossad from London to Rome, kidnapped, returned to
Israel, and sentenced to 18 years in jail. Davies and Maxwell published an anti-Vanunu story that was claimed to be part of a
disinformation campaign on behalf of the Israeli government.
[6]
Hersh repeated the allegations during a press conference held in London to publicize his book. No British newspaper would publish the allegations because of Maxwell's famed litigiousness. However, two British MPs raised the matter in the
House of Commons, which meant that
British newspapers were able to report what had been said without fear of being sued for
libel. Maxwell called the claims "ludicrous, a total invention," although perhaps coincidentally, he sacked Nick Davies shortly thereafter.
[7]
Attack on pharmaceutical factory in Sudan
On August 20, 1998, Hersh strongly criticized the destruction of the
Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory, the largest pharmaceutical factory in
Sudan—providing about half the medicines produced in Sudan—by United States
cruise missiles during
Bill Clinton's presidency.
[8]
Iraq
Hersh has written a series of articles for
The New Yorker
magazine detailing military and security matters surrounding the US-led
invasion and subsequent occupation of
Iraq. In a 2004 article, he alleged that Vice President
Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld circumvented the normal intelligence analysis function of the
CIA in their quest to make the case for the
2003 invasion of Iraq. Another article,
Lunch with the Chairman
, led
Richard Perle, a subject of the article, to call Hersh the "closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist."
[9]
A March 7, 2007 article entitled, "The Redirection" describes the recent shift in the Bush Administration's Iraq policy, the goal of which is to "contain" Iran. Hersh points out that, "a by-product of these activities has been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that espouse a militant vision of Islam and are hostile to America and sympathetic to Al Qaeda."
[11]
In May 2004, Hersh published a series of articles which described the treatment of detainees by US military police at
Abu Ghraib prison near
Baghdad,
Iraq.
[12] The articles included allegations that private contractors contributed to prisoner mistreatment and that intelligence agencies such as the CIA ordered torture in order to break prisoners for interrogations. They also alleged that torture is a usual practice in other U.S. prisons as well, e.g., in
Afghanistan and
Guantanamo. In subsequent articles, Hersh claimed that the abuses were part of a secret interrogation program, known as "
Copper Green". According to Hersh's sources, the program was expanded to Iraq with the direct approval of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, both in an attempt to deal with the growing insurgency there and as part of "Rumsfeld's long-standing desire to wrest control of America's clandestine and paramilitary operations from the C.I.A."
[13] Much of his material for these articles was based on the Army's own internal investigations.
[14]
Scott Ritter points out in his October 19, 2005 interview with
Seymour Hersh that the US policy to remove
Saddam Hussein from power started with President
George H. W. Bush in August 1990. Ritter concludes from public remarks by President Bush and Secretary of State
James Baker that the economic sanctions would only be lifted when Saddam Hussein was removed from power. The justification for sanctions was disarmament. The CIA offered the opinion that containing Saddam Hussein for six months would result in the collapse of his regime. This policy resulted in the US military invasion and occupation of
Iraq.
MR. HERSH: One of the things about your book that's amazing is that it's not only about the Bush Administration, and if there are any villains in this book, they include Sandy Berger, who was Clinton's national security advisor, and Madeleine Albright.
Another thing that's breathtaking about this book is the amount of new stories and new information. Scott describes in detail and with named sources, basically, a two or three-year run of the American government undercutting the inspection process. In your view, during those years, '91 to'98, particularly the last three years, was the United States interested in disarming Iraq?
MR. RITTER: Well, the fact of the matter is the United States was never interested in disarming Iraq. The whole Security Council resolution that created the UN weapons inspections and called upon Iraq to disarm was focused on one thing and one thing only, and that is a vehicle for the maintenance of economic sanctions that were imposed in August 1990 linked to the liberation of Kuwait. We liberated Kuwait, I participated in that conflict. And one would think, therefore, the sanctions should be lifted.
The United States needed to find a vehicle to continue to contain Saddam because the CIA said all we have to do is wait six months and Saddam is going to collapse on his own volition. That vehicle is sanctions. They needed a justification; the justification was disarmament. They drafted a Chapter 7 resolution of the United Nations Security Council calling for the disarmament of Iraq and saying in Paragraph 14 that if Iraq complies, sanctions will be lifted. Within months of this resolution being passed--and the United States drafted and voted in favor of this resolution--within months, the President, George Herbert Walker Bush, and his Secretary of State, James Baker, are saying publicly, not privately, publicly that even if Iraq complies with its obligation to disarm, economic sanctions will be maintained until which time Saddam Hussein is removed from power.
That is proof positive that disarmament was only useful insofar as it contained through the maintenance of sanctions and facilitated regime change. It was never about disarmament, it was never about getting rid of weapons of mass destruction. It started with George Herbert Walker Bush, and it was a policy continued through eight years of the Clinton presidency, and then brought us to this current disastrous course of action under the current Bush Administration. [15]
Iran
In January 2005, Hersh alleged that the U.S. was conducting covert operations in
Iran to identify targets for possible strikes. This was dismissed by both the US government and the
Government of Iran. Hersh also claimed that
Pakistan and the United States have struck a "Khan-for-Iran" deal in which
Washington will look the other way at Pakistan's nuclear transgressions and not demand handing over of its
nuclear proliferator A Q Khan, in return for
Islamabad's cooperation in neutralising Iran's nuclear plans. This was also denied by officials of the governments of the US and Pakistan.
In the April 17, 2006 issue of
The New Yorker
,
[16] Hersh reported on the
Bush Administration's purported plans for an
air strike within Iran. Of particular note in his article is that an American nuclear
first strike (possibly using the
B61-11
bunker-buster nuclear weapon) is under consideration to eliminate underground Iranian
uranium enrichment facilities. In response, President Bush cited Hersh's reportage as "wild speculation."
[17]
When, in October 2007, asked on presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton's hawkish views on Iran, Hersh claimed that Jewish donations were the main reason for these:
According to estimates made in early 2007, Clinton was the favourite candidate in the race for Jewish donations, which to that point made up half of the donations given to national
Democratic candidates.
[19]
While speaking at a journalism conference recently, Hersh claimed that after the
Strait of Hormuz incident, members of the Bush administration met in vice president
Dick Cheney's office to consider methods of initiating a war with Iran. One idea considered was staging a
false flag operation involving the use of
Navy SEALs dressed as Iranian PT boaters who would engage in a firefight with US ships. This idea was shot down. This claim has not been verified.
[20]
Lebanon
In August 2006, in an article in
The New Yorker
, Hersh claimed that the
White House gave the green light for Israel to plan and execute an attack on the mounting threat of
Hezbollah in
Lebanon. Supposedly, communication between the
Israeli government and the US administration about this came as early as two months in advance of the capture of two Israeli soldiers and the killing of eight others by Hezbollah prior to the
Israel/Lebanon conflict in July 2006.
[21] The US administration has denied these claims. On November 20, Hersh claimed in
The New Yorker
that a CIA analysis based on technical intelligence found no conclusive evidence of a secret Iranian nuclear weapons program.
[22]
Criticisms
Kennedy research
Hersh's 1997 book about
John F. Kennedy,
The Dark Side of Camelot
, made a number of controversial assertions about the former president, including that he had had a "first marriage" to a woman named
Durie Malcolm that was never terminated, and that he had a close working relationship with mob boss
Sam Giancana. In a
Los Angeles Times
review,
Edward Jay Epstein cast doubt on these and other assertions, writing, "this book turns out to be, alas, more about the deficiencies of investigative journalism than about the deficiencies of John F. Kennedy."
[23] Responding to the book, historian and former Kennedy aide
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. called Hersh "the most gullible investigative reporter I've ever encountered."
[24]
A month before the book's publication, newspapers, including
USA Today
, reported Hersh's announcement that he had removed from the galleys, at the last minute, a segment about legal documents allegedly containing JFK's signature.
[25] A paralegal named Lawrence Cusack had shared them with Hersh and encouraged the author to discuss them in the book.
[26] Shortly before Hersh's publicized announcement, federal investigators began probing Cusack's sale of the documents at auction.
After
The Dark Side of Camelot
became a bestseller, Cusack was convicted by a federal jury in Manhattan of forging the documents and sentenced to a long prison term.
[27] The documents signed by "John F. Kennedy" included a provision, in 1960, for a trust fund to be set up for the institutionalized mother of
Marilyn Monroe.
In 1997 the Kennedy family denied Cusack's claim that his late father had been an attorney who had represented JFK in 1960.
Use of anonymous sources
Hersh, like most investigative journalists, makes frequent reference to anonymous sources in his reporting; some have criticized this usage, implying that some of these sources are unreliable or even made up. In a review of Hersh's book,
Chain of Command
,
conservative commentator
Amir Taheri wrote, "As soon as he has made an assertion he cites a "source" to back it. In
every case
this is either an un-named former official or an unidentified secret document passed to Hersh in unknown circumstances... By my count Hersh has anonymous 'sources' inside 30 foreign governments and virtually every department of the U.S. government."
[28]
David Remnick, the editor of
The New Yorker
, maintains that he is aware of the identity of all of Hersh's unnamed sources, telling the
Columbia Journalism Review
that "I know every single source that is in his pieces.... Every 'retired intelligence officer,' every general with reason to know, and all those phrases that one has to use, alas, by necessity, I say, 'Who is it? What's his interest?' We talk it through."
[29]
In a response to an article in
The New Yorker
in which Hersh alleged that the U.S. government was planning a strike on
Iran,
U.S. Defense Department spokesman
Brian Whitman said, "This reporter has a solid and well-earned reputation for making dramatic assertions based on thinly sourced, unverifiable anonymous sources."
[30]
Speeches
Those who criticize Hersh's credibility especially point to allegations Hersh has made in public speeches and interviews, rather than in print. In an interview with
New York
magazine, Hersh made a distinction between the standards of strict factual accuracy for his print reporting and the leeway he allows himself in speeches, in which he may talk informally about stories still being worked on or blur information to protect his sources. "Sometimes I change events, dates, and places in a certain way to protect people... I can’t fudge what I write. But I can certainly fudge what I say."
[31]
Some of Hersh's speeches concerning the Iraq War have described violent incidents involving U.S. troops in Iraq. In July 2004, during the height of the
Abu Ghraib scandal, he alleged that American troops sexually assaulted young boys:
In a subsequent interview with
New York
magazine, Hersh regretted that "I actually didn’t quite say what I wanted to say correctly...it wasn’t that inaccurate, but it was misstated. The next thing I know, it was all over the blogs. And I just realized then, the power of—and so you have to try and be more careful."
[ In his book, Chain of Command
, he wrote that one of the witness statements he had read described the rape of a boy by a foreign contract interpreter at Abu Ghraib, during which a woman took pictures.][
]
Bibliography
- Hersh, Seymour M. (foreword) (2005) in Scott Ritter: Iraq Confidential: The Untold Story of the Intelligence Conspiracy to Undermine the UN and Overthrow Saddam Hussein
(Hardcover), Nation Books, ISBN 1-56025-852-7
- Hersh, Seymour M. (2004). Chain of Command: The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib
. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-019591-6.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1998). Against All Enemies: Gulf War Syndrome: The War Between America's Ailing Veterans and Their Government
. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-42748-3.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1997). The Dark Side of Camelot
. Little, Brown & Company. ISBN 0-316-36067-8.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1991). The Samson Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal and American Foreign Policy
. Random House. ISBN 0-394-57006-5.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1986). The Target Is Destroyed: What Really Happened to Flight 007 and What America Knew About It
. Random House. ISBN 0-394-54261-4.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1983). The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House
. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-44760-2. hosted by Third World Traveler
- "Huge CIA Operation Reported in US against Antiwar Forces, Other Dissidents During Nixon Years" by Seymour Hersh, New York Times
, December 22, 1974 — Hersh's article detailing CIA covert operations which eventually led to the formation of the Church Committee.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1972). Cover-up: the Army's secret investigation of the massacre at My Lai 4
. Random House. ISBN 0-394-47460-0.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1970). Chemical And Biological Warfare
. Panther Books. ISBN 0-586-03295-9.
- Hersh, Seymour M. (1970). My Lai 4: A Report on the Massacre and Its Aftermath
. Random House. ISBN 0-394-43737-3.
See also
- My Lai Massacre
- Church Committee (United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities
. Hersh's December 22, 1974 New York Times article on CIA operations was the main reason for the creation of this committee)
- Ari Ben-Menashe
- Mordechai Vanunu
- Robert Maxwell
- Opposition to war against Iran
References
- George Polk Awards for Journalism press release
- The Iran Plans
- Preparing the Battlefield: The Bush Administration steps up its secret moves against Iran
- The Avenger: Sy Hersh, Then and Now
- A Cold War Conundrum Benjamin B. Fischer, 1997
- The US campaign to free Modechai Vanunu
- Maxwell's body found in sea
- The Missiles of August
- CNN.com - Transcripts
- http://slate.msn.com/id/2097188/
- Annals of National Security: The Redirection: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker
- Torture at Abu Ghraib
- The Gray Zone
- Key excerpts from the Taguba report - Nightly News with Brian Williams - MSNBC.com
- Scott Ritter and Seymour Hersh: Iraq Confidential
- The Iran Plans
- Bush Calls Reports of Plan to Strike Iran 'Speculation' - New York Times
- LiveLeak.com - Seymour Hersh: 'Jewish Money Controls Presidental Candidates'
- "Hillary the Favorite in Race for Jewish Donations - Forward.com"
- Think Progress » To Provoke War, Cheney Considered Proposal To Dress Up Navy Seals As Iranians And Shoot At Them
- Watching Lebanon
- Hersh: Bush administration arranged support for militants attacking Lebanon
- "Hersh's Dark Camelot", ''Los Angeles Times, December 28, 1997
- "Hersh's History", Barbara Comstock, ''National Review'', May 20, 2004
- Moore, Martha T. "Disputed Kennedy Papers Investigated - Documents Called Forgeries Subject of Criminal Probe." USA Today October 16, 1997, p. 2A.
- Grove, Lloyd. "Was The Handwriting On The Wall? The Long Tangled Tale of Seymour Hersh and the Forged JFK Papers." Washington Post October 27, 1997, p. C1
- "Man Convicted of Sale of Kennedy Forgeries - Documents Were Source For Book." ''The Washington Post'' May 1, 1999, p. C2. No byline.
- "Many Sources But No Meat", Amir Taheri, ''The Sunday Telegraph'', September 19, 2004
- "The Avenger: Sy Hersh, Then and Now", Scott Sherman, ''Columbia Journalism Review'', April 2003
- "Hersh: U.S. mulls nuclear option for Iran", CNN, April 10, 2006
- Sy Hersh Says It’s Okay to Lie (Just Not in Print). The runaway mouth of America’s premier investigative journalist. By Chris Suellentrop. Published April 11, 2005