The NYT's Ostrich Act on JFK Assassination Getting Old
Nobody’s perfect. But it’s hard to think of anything as unworthy of a high-quality journalistic institution as the
New York Times’ decades-long determination to
never, ever,
find any reason to question the original story spun by the Warren
Commission on the JFK assassination. No matter how much new evidence has
come out to the contrary.
It reminds a bit of the forever-blinkered character Sgt. Schultz on the old tv show Hogan’s Heroes (“I see NUUU-singg”—here’s a good clip, watch first minute or so…)
Ask any reporter, privately, what he or she thinks on this issue.
Putting aside those who will demur on the basis of not having read
widely on the topic (a surprisingly large number), you’ll find most
believing that the “lone nut” or “Leftist loner” narratives about Oswald
are utter junk. This would certainly apply in the New York Times newsroom.
And yet just the other day, there was
this obituary.
It’s about Warren Leslie, a Dallas reporter who wrote a book on
right-wing animosity toward JFK in Dallas at the time of the
assassination.
Yet, skip down to paragraph 17, and you have this
contradictory little morsel:
"the lone suspect in the assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald, far from being a right-winger, was an ardent leftist with Communist sympathies."
It’s just neatly slipped in as if it’s an uncontested fact, like the day’s sports scores.
Why take this angle? I called and e-mailed the obituary writer, Times staffer
Dennis Hevesi, to ask him, but did not hear back by the time this was
posted. In any case, it’s unfair to single Hevesi out, since this has
been a long-standing Times policy on the matter.
Indeed, the obituary was typical of The Times’ way of
handling the subject—every so often, run a kind of “curiosity” piece
about some reporter or character, but then subtly undercut their
findings.
Take the paper’s coverage of former Washington Post reporter and author Jefferson Morley’s ongoing research on Oswald, which again points toward Oswald not being a “leftist sympathizer” or Communist agent at all. The Times article,
generally sympathetic toward Morley, actually began with the following
disclaimer, which essentially contradicted the article’s thrust:
“Is the Central Intelligence Agency covering up some dark secret about the assassination of John F. Kennedy? Probably not.”
We have to wonder if that opening nullifier was dictated from on
high. After all, though Scott Shane, who wrote that piece, called
Morley’s reporting “meticulous,” for some reason the article never
provides the name of Morley’s book (“Our Man in Mexico”) nor provides a link to it, but quotes the main “no-conspiracy” author, and cites the name of his book instead.
There are literally hundreds of interesting, often excellent books on
the JFK assassination. The vast majority of those written by serious
researchers and scholars, and backed by extensive documentation and
footnotes, come down on the side of Oswald having been recruited years
earlier to do covert work for US government entities—with the
“left-winger” story serving as constructed cover until his untimely
demise.
I myself ran into the depth of the subterfuge and the institutional
resistance to disturbing revelations while researching the Bush family’s
past for my investigative history, Family of Secrets. I
learned, for example, of George H.W. Bush’s secret intelligence
connections, which preceded his CIA directorship by several decades. I
learned that the elder Bush had a lifelong friendship with a
Dallas-based Russian émigré (anti-communist) oil and intelligence
operative named George de Mohrenschildt—who himself was of intense if
passing interest to the Warren Commission. And I learned that de
Mohrenschildt had essentially guided Oswald for a good part of the year
before the assassination.
There’s paperwork on all this, even a letter on the topic of Oswald
from de Mohrenschildt to Bush, with Bush’s reply. Plus connections
between de Mohrenschildt and right-wing Dallas moguls of exactly the
sort that the late Mr. Leslie wrote about more generally.
Nothing on this Oswald-de Mohrenschildt-Bush connection has ever been mentioned by The Times (save a one-sentence pooh-pooh in the paper by the late establishment historian Stephen Ambrose in 1992.) However, The Times did cover
de Mohrenschildt’s suicide, shortly after his final correspondence with
Bush and shortly before he was expected to testify before the new House Select Committee on Assassinations.
Speaking of which, The Times rarely reminds readers that the House committee itself concluded
that Kennedy’s death was probably the result of an elaborate conspiracy
(i.e., it was not a “loner” operation), but with no Soviet or Cuban
government involvement.
How to explain this see-no-evil act? There are many reasons that news
organizations will not tell the whole story, or fudge what could be
revealed. Whatever is behind this shameful failure, reporters and
editors know that the JFK assassination is just “too hot to handle,”
that it is a kind of electrified third rail that can destroy a
journalism career. But even well-founded fear—of being ridiculed,
marginalized, demoted, or otherwise penalized—is no justification for
this unrelenting pattern of behavior at an institution that promotes
itself as a “paper of record.”
Anyone who calls him- or herself a journalist must be willing to take
risks for the truth. After all, if the public can’t count on
journalists to get it right on the big stories, why should they trust us
on the rest? And if journalism can’t be trusted, democracy is on a
slippery slope.