Misplaced Pages

Michael R. Gordon

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hornplease (talk | contribs) at 06:37, 8 September 2007 (as it says in the reference). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 06:37, 8 September 2007 by Hornplease (talk | contribs) (as it says in the reference)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Michael Gordon at Camp Doha, Kuwait, before the invasion of Iraq in 2003

Michael R. Gordon is the chief military correspondent for The New York Times . Together with Judith Miller, he wrote most of that paper's coverage of the Bush administration's case for war with Iraq in 2002. During the first phase of the Iraq war, he was the only newspaper reporter embedded with the allied land command under General Tommy Franks, a position that "granted him unique access to cover the invasion strategy and its enactment". He and General Bernard E. Trainor have written two books together, including the best-selling Cobra II.

As an author

Together with Bernard Trainor, he has written two books: The Generals' War: The Inside Story of the Conflict in the Gulf, which covers the 1991 Gulf War, and Cobra II, which covers the Iraq War begun 2003.

The General's War won high praise from several critics and decisionmakers, with then Defense Secretary Dick Cheney describing it as "a fascinating account of the war" that he would "recommend" "as something that gives them a different element of some of the key decisions that were made." Jim Lehrer described it as "A superb account and analysis of what went right and what went wrong in the Gulf War"; and Eliot Cohen, writing in Foreign Affairs, called it "the best single volume on the Gulf War."

Cobra II, which "focuses on the rushed and haphazard preparations for war and the appalling relations between the major players," won praise from Lawrence D. Freedman in Foreign Affairs, who wrote that "the research is meticulous and properly sourced, the narrative authoritative, the human aspects of conflict never forgotten." Gordon's paper, the New York Times, called it "a work of prodigious research", adding that it "will likely become the benchmark by which other histories of the Iraq invasion are measured." The New Republic, while calling the book "splendid", wrote that "Gordon and Trainor remain imprisoned in an almost exclusively military analysis of what went wrong...(which)..unintentionally underplays the essential problem in Iraq--the problem of politics."

Coverage of Iraq prior to invasion

As one of the journalists, together with Judy Miller, writing most of the Times' coverage on the presence of WMD in Iraq prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003, Gordon's articles, among others, were the subject of a mea culpa Editor's Note published by the paper on its front page in 2004, that said while much of "what we reported was an accurate reflection of the state of our knowledge at the time, much of it painstakingly extracted from intelligence agencies that were themselves dependent on sketchy information", there were a number of instances that were "not as rigorous as it should have been" and that the administration's case "was insufficiently qualified or allowed to stand unchallenged". The Note further said: "Some critics of our coverage during that time have focused blame on individual reporters. Our examination, however, indicates that the problem was more complicated."

Responding to criticism in the New York Review of Books that "many people challenging the administration's assertions" were not quoted in Gordon and Miller's coverage and that it was "revealing that Gordon encountered so few of them", even after David Albright "made a special effort to alert Judith Miller to the dissent", Gordon wrote "I stand by my assertion to Mr. Massing that the notion that Iraq had some form of WMD was a widely shared assumption inside and outside of the government. I made that comment not to excuse any limitations on the part of the media but to paint the context in which American intelligence was prepared and discussed. Mr. Massing takes that assertion out of context, and he cites Mr. Albright's work to challenge that observation though his work actually supports it."

Opinions on 2007 troop 'surge'

After an interview with PBS' Frontline in January 2007 in the course of which he explicitly supported a 'surge' in Iraq, the then Times public editor reported that "Times editors have carefully made clear their disapproval of the expression of a personal opinion about Iraq on national television by the paper's chief military correspondent, Michael Gordon." Gordon had told Charlie Rose that "as a purely personal view, I think it's worth ... one last effort for sure to try to get this right. ... I think that there is the chance to accomplish something." The Washington bureau chief of the newspaper said that Gordon had ""stepped over the line on the 'Charlie Rose' show." The paper's response and Gordon's subsequent apology led its local tabloid rival, Rupert Murdoch's New York Post to run an editorial saying that the Times wished to "squelch any talk of possible victory" and "didn't want America to win in Iraq" .

Coverage of Iraqi insurgency

Following Gordon's February 10, 2007 front-page story in which he wrote that there was "an increasing body of evidence" that suggested "an Iranian role" in supplying the "deadliest weapon aimed at American troops in Iraq", Editor & Publisher published an examination of the story, stating that since Gordon "on his own, or with Judith Miller, wrote some of the key, and badly misleading or downright inaccurate, articles about Iraqi WMDs in the run-up to the 2003 invasion" the fact that the sources were all anonymous "civilian and military officials from a broad range of government agencies" should be viewed with caution. Byron Calame, the Times' public editor responded to concerns about the article and its author by stating, first, that "Mr. Gordon has become a favorite target of many critical readers, who charge that the paper's Iran coverage is somehow tainted because he had shared the byline on a flawed Page 1 W.M.D. article. I don't buy that view, and I think the quality of his current journalism deserves to be evaluated on its own merits.", but proceeded to indicate that Gordon's article used anonymous government sources, that the claims reported about Iran "needed some qualification" about whether they were based on evidence or inference and that the reader "deserved a clearer sense" of whether the beliefs reported represented a consensus and that "editors didn't make sure all conflicting views were always clearly reported".

Calame's successor as public editor, Clark Hoyt, criticised the paper's military reports, quoting several articles by Gordon, as slipping "into a routine of quoting the president and the military uncritically about Al Qaeda's role in Iraq," and said that they failed "in using the language of the administration" that identified Al Qaeda with Al-Qaeda in Iraq, which Hoyt said was not the consensus opinion on the subject. A report on the subject from Editor & Publisher indicated "E&P and other news outlets last week had noted the same tendency in the Times in the reporting of Michael R. Gordon and others." A major article the following Friday carrying Gordon's byline , discussed the president's view on Al-Qaeda in Iraq, saying "his references to Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, and his assertions that it is the same group that attacked the United States in 2001, have greatly oversimplified the nature of the insurgency in Iraq and its relationship with the Qaeda leadership", leading to puzzlement among some observers .

References

  1. Gordon's page at the New York Times.
  2. ^ "Engdame: Interviews", WGBH Public Broadcsting, Boston, 11 January 2007.
  3. "Cobra II", at the Pantheon Books website.
  4. Cobra II, reviewed by Lawrence Freedman, Foreign Affairs, Sep/Oct 2006.
  5. "Optimism Goes to War", by David Rieff, The New Republic, April 12, 2006.
  6. "Michael Gordon's Molehill Becomes A Mountain" Columbia Journalism Review, 30 Jan 2007
  7. "From the Editors: The Times and Iraq". The New York Times, 26 May, 2004.
  8. "Now They Tell Us", by Michael Massing, The New York Review of Books, Volume 51, Number 3
  9. "'Iraq: Now They Tell Us': An Exchange" The New York Review of Books, Volume 51, Number 6.
  10. "Spotting Freelancer Conflicts", by Byron Calame, The New York Times, 28 January 2007.
  11. ^ "Gray Lady in Winter", by Christopher Griffin, Armed Forces Journal.
  12. "A ban on 'Victory'", New York Post, 4 February 2007.
  13. "Deadliest Bomb in Iraq is Made by Iran, U.S. Says",
  14. "'NYT' Reporter Who Got Iraqi WMDs Wrong Now Highlights Iran Claims", Editor and Publisher, 11 February, 2007.
  15. "The Public Editor: Approaching Iran Intelligence With Intelligent Skepticism", by Byron Calame, , 25 February, 2007.
  16. "Seeing Al Qaeda Around Every Corner", by Clark Hoyt, The New York Times, 8 July 2007.
  17. " 'NYT' Public Editor Hits Paper's Surge in Blaming 'al-Qaeda' in Iraq ", Editor and Publisher, July 08, 2007
  18. "Bush Distorts Qaeda Links, Critics Assert", New York TimesSelect, July 13, 2007, Friday
  19. "Pot, Meet Kettle: 'NYT' Hits Bush For Al-Qaeda Claims -- After Public Editor Blamed Paper", Editor & Publisher, July 13, 2007: "But just last Sunday, Clark Hoyt, the paper's new public editor, had criticized the paper for doing much the same, in increasingly pointing to al-Qaeda influence and failing to point out the distinction between the newly-formed Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia group and Osama bin Laden's operation. Gordon had written many of those faulty (in Hoyt's view) stories."



Categories: