The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Thu Mar 18 2010
Columns
Norman Solomon

The Pentagon vs. press freedom
January 23, 2007

We often hear that the Pentagon exists to defend our freedoms. But the Pentagon is moving against press freedom.

Not long ago, journalist Sarah Olson received a subpoena to testify in early February in the court-martial of U.S. Army Lt. Ehren Watada, who now faces prosecution for speaking against the Iraq war and refusing to participate in it. Apparently, the commanders at the Pentagon are so eager to punish Watada that they’ve decided to go after reporters who have informed the public about his statements.

People who run wars are notoriously hostile to a free press. They’re quick to praise it -- unless the reporting goes beyond mere stenography for the war-makers and actually engages in journalism that makes the military command uncomfortable.

Evidently, that’s why the Pentagon subpoenaed Olson. They want her to testify to authenticate her quotes from Watada -- which is to say, they want to force her into the prosecution of him. “Army lawyers are overreaching when they try to prosecute their case by drafting reporters,” the Los Angeles Times noted in a Jan. 8 editorial.

The newspaper added: “No prosecutor should be able to conscript any reporter into being a deputy by compelling testimony about a statement made by a source -- or go fishing for information beyond what a reporter presents in a story -- unless it’s absolutely vital to protect U.S. citizens from crime or attack. This principle should apply whether or not the source was speaking in confidence, or whether or not the reporter works for a media organization.”

Olson is a freelancer whose reporting on Watada has appeared on the widely read Truthout.org website and has aired on the nationwide public radio program “Making Contact.” (Full disclosure: I was a founder of that program and served as an advisor.) For a number of years, she has been doing the job of a journalist. Now, in its dealings with her, the Pentagon is despicably trying to trample on the First Amendment.

As the LA Times editorialized, “there is something especially chilling about the U.S. military reaching beyond its traditional authority to compel a non-military U.S. citizen engaged in news-gathering to testify in a military court, simply to bolster a court-martial case. ... Sustaining the military subpoena would set a troubling precedent. It’s time for the Army to back off.”

But the Army hasn’t shown any sign of backing off -- despite an outcry from a widening range of eminent journalists, mainstream media institutions and First Amendment groups.

“Trying to force a reporter to testify at a court-martial sends the wrong signal to the media and the military,” said the president of the Military Reporters and Editors organization, James W. Crawley. He commented: “One of the hallmarks of American journalism, as documented in the Bill of Rights and defended by our armed services, is a clear separation of the press and the government. Using journalists to help the military prosecute its case seems like a serious breach of that wall.”

By sending subpoenas to Sarah Olson and to another journalist who has reported on Watada (Gregg Kakesako of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin), the Pentagon is trying to chip away at the proper role of news media.

Two officials of the PEN American Center, a venerable organization that works to protect freedom of expression, put the issue well in a recent letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates: “If Olson and Kakesako respond to these subpoenas by testifying, they will essentially be participating in the prosecution of their source. Reporters should not serve as the investigative arm of the government. Such a role compromises their objectivity and can have chilling effects on the press.”

Writing for Editor & Publisher magazine, Sarah Olson summed up what is at stake: “A member of the press should never be placed in the position of aiding a government prosecution of political speech. This goes against the grain of even the most basic understanding of the First Amendment’s free press guarantees and the expectation of a democracy that relies on a free flow of information and perspectives without fear of censor or retribution.”

And Olson added: “You may ask: Do I want to be sent to prison by the U.S. Army for not cooperating with their prosecution of Lieutenant Watada? My answer: Absolutely not. You may also ask: Would I rather contribute to the prosecution of a news source for sharing newsworthy perspectives on an affair of national concern? That is the question I wholly object to having before me in the first place.”

The Pentagon’s attack on journalism is an attack on the First Amendment -- and an attempt to drive a wedge between journalists and dissenters in the military. Resistance is essential for democracy.

____________________________

Norman Solomon’s book “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death” is out in paperback. For more information about Pentagon moves against journalists, go to: www.FreePressWG.org


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Click here to visit Harvey Wasserman's Solartopia.org.

Don't forget to check out articles from 2008 and 2009

Norman Solomon

"Channeling Suze Orman"
  December 28, 2007

"Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2007"
  December 23, 2007

"The mad corporate world of Glenn Beck"
  December 20, 2007

"The USA's human rights daze"
  December 14, 2007

"The media and class warfare"
  November 22, 2007

"Good news for Americans -- your wages are flat!"
  November 22, 2007

"The pro-war undertow of the Blackwater scandal"
  October 31, 2007

"The United States of Violence"
  October 19, 2007

"How Sputnik contributed to the marriage of science and weaponry"
  October 8, 2007

"Sputnik, 50 years later: the launch of techno-power"
  October 5, 2007

"Political "science" and truth of consequences"
  October 1, 2007

"Here’s the smell of the blood still"
  September 12, 2007

"Six years of 9/11 as a license to kill"
  September 11, 2007

" Thomas Friedman: Hooked on war"
  September 6, 2007

"Let’s face it: the warfare state is part of us"
  August 23, 2007

"Let us now praise an infamous woman -- and our own possibilities"
  August 8, 2007

"Media Corrections We’d Like to See"
  August 5, 2007

"Media blitz for war: the big guns of august"
  August 2, 2007

"Media spin on Iraq: we're leaving (sort of)"
  July 26, 2007

"From the grave, a Senator exposes bloody hands on Capitol Hill"
  July 21, 2007

"A bloody media mirror"
  July 5, 2007

"War at the remote"
  June 20, 2007

"Deadly illusions, rest in peace"
  May 27, 2007

"On the media horizon: "We invest, you decide""
  May 6, 2007

"Bowing down to our own violence"
  April 22, 2007

"Awful truth about Hillary, Barack, John... and Whitewash"
  April 12, 2007

"The Martin Luther King you don't see on TV"
  April 4, 2007

"While McCain walks in McNamara’s footsteps"
  April 2, 2007

"The pragmatism of prolonged war"
  March 13, 2007

"Making an example of Ehren Watada"
  February 7, 2007

"The Pentagon vs. press freedom"
  January 23, 2007

"The headless Horseman of the Apocalypse"
  January 10, 2007




Read Articles by Year:
2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2010
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer