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Drugs, CIA, media.


When the San Jose Mercury News The San Jose Mercury News is the major daily newspaper in San Jose, California and Silicon Valley. The paper is owned by MediaNews Group. Its headquarters and printing plant are located in North San Jose next to the Nimitz Freeway (Interstate 880).  apologized for Gary Webb's three-part series on the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency.


(1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy).
 contras, and crack cocaine, it earned a pat on the head and a doggie biscuit. "Courageous gesture," said The New York Times. "Commendable," said The Washington Post.

These were the same papers, along with the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
, that did all they could to undermine the series when it first appeared. "We're going to take away that guy's Pulitzer," one L.A. Times reporter said, according to an article by Peter Kornbluh in CJR CJR Columbia Journalism Review
CJR Career Job Reservation
CJR Culpeper Regional Airport (airport code, VA)
CJR Commodity Jurisdiction Request
 (formerly Columbia Journalism Review The Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) is an American magazine for professional journalists published bimonthly by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism since 1961. ). Kornbluh quoted another staffer saying he was "assigned to the `get Gary Webb team.'"

Well, they got their man. Webb has been pulled off his beat and exiled to a small suburban bureau 150 miles from his home. "I said things they didn't like," Webb told me. He said publicly that he found the paper's apology "nauseating," and he disputed the statement by Jerry Ceppos, the paper's executive editor, that Webb supplied only notes for follow-up stories, not the stories themselves.

Webb is not blameless blame·less  
adj.
Free of blame or guilt; innocent.



blameless·ly adv.

blame
 in this episode. He may have overreached with some of his claims. For instance, as Ceppos noted, Webb did not know for a fact that "millions in profits" went to the contras. That was an estimate. And Webb appears to have exaggerated the extent to which the CIA connection played a pivotal role in the crack epidemic in the United States.

But the story did demonstrate, for the first time, that individuals connected with the CIA and the contras were selling illegal drugs in the United States. That's a huge story, and it deserved follow-up, not deep-sixing.

"The Washington news media has conducted its own cover-up," Robert Parry told me. And that cover-up goes back over a decade." Parry should know. He, along with Brian Barger, broke the story of the CIA and drugs in 1985 when they were working for the Associated Press.

But because of media hostility, their story didn't make much of a splash. "We faced relentless attacks by the Reagan Administration, and the Washington press corps aggressively did not want the truth," says Parry.

Parry now runs the Media Consortium, an investigative-reporting outfit, which has just launched a new magazine called I.F. In its premiere issue, Parry writes about the media's bungling bun·gle  
v. bun·gled, bun·gling, bun·gles

v.intr.
To work or act ineptly or inefficiently.

v.tr.
To handle badly; botch. See Synonyms at botch.

n.
 of the story. Even though the media had a voluminous report from Senator John Kerry on the CIA's dirty drug hands, even though they had entries from Oliver North's diaries referring to drug trafficking by the contras, they barely went near the story, Parry notes.

"Ironically, it was not until Webb's series in 1996 that the major newspapers acknowledged, in a backhanded way, that their dismissal of the contra-drug allegations in the 1980s had been wrong," he writes. They did this by saying Webb's story was old news. Parry substantiates this claim by quoting from an October 4, 1996, article in the Los Angeles Times, which stated: "The allegation that some elements of the CIA-sponsored contra army cooperated with drug traffickers has been well-documented for years."

Webb is not the only journalist who has been under attack. George Hodel worked on the San Jose Mercury News from Nicaragua. "Just as Webb has been under personal attack in the United States, I have faced efforts from former contras to tear down to demolish violently; to pull or pluck down.
- Shak.

See also: Tear
 my reputation in Nicaragua," Hodel wrote in a recent dispatch for the Media Consortium. "Ex-contras also have harassed Nicaraguan reporters who have tried to follow up the contra-cocaine evidence. In one paid advertisement, Oscar Danilo Blandon Oscar Danilo Blandón Reyes headed Nicaragua's agricultural imports under Anastasio Somoza. He had a Master's Degree in marketing. When the Somoza government was overthrown in 1979, Blandón fled to the United States, and then raised money for the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN), a , a drug trafficker who has admitted donating some cocaine profits to the contras in the early 1980s, called me a `pseudo-journalist' and accused me of having some unspecified links to an `international communist organization.'" Blandon was a central figure in the Mercury News series.

Adolfo Calero, the former contra chief who was also mentioned in the series, took matters further, Hodel said. In a Nicaraguan newspaper, Calero referred to leftist left·ism also Left·ism  
n.
1. The ideology of the political left.

2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left.



left
 Nicaraguan journalists as "deer" and sympathetic foreign reporters as "antelopes." Hodel is Swiss. "The deer are going to be finished off," Calero wrote. "In this case, the antelopes too."

To subscribe to I.F. or to contact the Media Consortium, write Robert Parry at 2200 Wilson Blvd., Suite 102-231, Arlington, VA 22201.

As a result of the Mercury News apology, I'm afraid many Americans will conclude that the CIA has no connection with the illegal drug trade. This is far from the truth. That's why we assigned Alfred W. McCoy Alfred W. McCoy (b. 1945) is a historian and a Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He earned his B.A. from Columbia College[1], and his Ph.D in Southeastern Asian history from Yale University.  to set the record straight. He's the author of The Politics of Heroin: The CIA's Complicity in the Global Drug Trade. His historical account will give you a picture you didn't find in The Washington Post, The Washington Post, The

Morning daily newspaper published in Washington, D.C., the dominant paper in the U.S. capital and one of the nation's leading newspapers. Established in 1877 as a Democratic Party organ, it changed orientation and ownership several times and faced
 New York Times, or the Los Angeles Times.
COPYRIGHT 1997 The Progressive, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
Author:Rothschild, Matthew
Publication:The Progressive
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Aug 1, 1997
Words:796
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