Why Won't The Press Admit That CIA Director John Brennan Lied?

from the questions-questions dept

We've been writing a bit about CIA director John Brennan and his continuing to misrepresent the truth and outright lie. As you probably know, back in March, Senator Dianne Feinstein revealed that the CIA had spied on the computer network being used by the Senate Intelligence Committee to investigate the CIA's torture program. As Feinstein revealed, while the computers had been set up by the CIA (for security reasons), there was a written agreement that everything on them would be considered the Senate's, and that the CIA was not to look at them. The CIA violated this agreement, after realizing (upon being questioned in a Senate hearing) that the Senate had in its hands a draft of the so-called "Panetta Report" -- an internal review of all the documents the CIA had given to the Senate staffers, which more or less confirmed all their findings about the CIA torture program. Apparently, the CIA never intended to turn over that report to the Senate staffers, but did. Rather than realize its mistake, the CIA then snooped on the network and more, including Senate staff emails.

When Feinstein first revealed this, Brennan insisted:
"Let me assure you the CIA was in no way spying on [the committee] or the Senate."
That was a lie. Soon after, Brennan tried to release his side of the story, which we noted actually appeared to confirm nearly all of the details of Feinstein's story. And yet, the mainstream press dutifully reported that Brennan had "denied" Feinstein's claims. He did not. He denied claims she did not make in a such manner as to look like he was denying her actual charges.

After the CIA's Inspector General Report came out, confirming all of Feinstein's claims (and much more, including that Brennan's CIA had further misrepresented the truth in trying to claim that it was the Senate staffers themselves who had broken the law), Brennan sent an apology letter. And yet, he's spent the last few weeks denying he lied, claims that are completely undermined by the CIA itself.

So here's the thing: why won't the press say that Brennan lied?

Dan Froomkin, over at the Intercept, recounts most of this history in what he calls an "anatomy of a non-denial denial," and then raises the point of why won't the press actually call out Brennan for lying:
The reason you so infrequently see the word “lie” in elite media news stories is that the editors generally take the position that even when someone has said something clearly not true, a reporter’s use of the word “lie” — rather than, say, “misspoke” or “was incorrect” — requires knowledge of the subject’s intent to deceive. And a fair-minded journalist, they argue, can’t be sure what’s going on in someone else’s head.

But when someone who has so clearly uttered a non-denial denial has to go back and explain how he intentionally responded to an accusation in a very circumscribed or elliptical way, and how that answer was mischaracterized as a denial — and how he made no attempt to correct the record – isn’t that prima facie evidence of intent to deceive?

Even though the non-denial denial isn’t in itself strictly speaking a lie, when examined in context, isn’t that exactly what it is?
Froomkin notes, (as we did at the time in part, thanks to his own research) that most of the press just ate up Brennan's initial denial (which, as we stated, actually confirmed the details, while denying stuff Feinstein did not accuse the CIA of doing). Only a few put in some caveats:

Politico, the New York Times, Reuters and the Wall Street Journal all pretty much cast Brennan’s statements as a blanket denial.

But I was pleasantly surprised by the AP (“He denied that the CIA ‘hacked’ into the computer network in remarks on Tuesday but did not address the question of a search”) and the Los Angeles Times (he offered carefully worded remarks that did not dispute the actions Feinstein said had taken place, but did deny that they constituted ‘spying’ on the Senate.”)

But, as he notes, it didn't matter. Brennan got what he wanted. People thought he denied it, and now he can deny denying it, and pretend he's been telling the truth all along, when he's been doing nothing but deceiving pretty much everyone to avoid admitting the truth. That's called lying. And the press should call it that.

Froomkin dreams of a day when the non-denial denial is no longer an effective tool -- and for that to happen, the press will need to actually not fall for tricks like this. And they could start by calling a lie a lie.
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Filed Under: cia, dianne feinstein, hacking, john brennan, journalism, lies, non-denial denial, senate, senate intelligence committee, spying


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  • icon
    rw (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 7:04am

    Just another reason to NEVER believe main stream press.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:25am

      Re:

      Never believe any press. Read between the lines and pay more heed to what is not said and HOW what is said instead of what is actually being said.

      The reason that the English language has such popular appeal is because its so messed up it easily allows politicians to speak in such a way that they can mislead others while acting like they never actually lied. Any honest person knows better, but how many honest people are there really?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:30am

        Re: Re:

        Orwell's essay 'Politics and the English Language' should be a must read in high school

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          Uriel-238 (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 10:00am

          'Politics and the English Language by George Orwell

          For me it was first-year college. A lot of kids read Animal Farm and Nineteen-Eighty-Four in intermediate school, but I read them later -- and realized that the latter at least might be a bit too violent for kids...or even adults.

          Meh. Fairy tales often included brutality.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          DannyB (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 11:02am

          Re: Re: Re:

          > Orwell's essay 'Politics and the English Language' should be a must read in high school

          This is a bad idea for two reasons:
          0. It unfairly would require all high school students to have the ability to read.
          1. It would unduly distract students from sports
          2. It makes students less useful worker bees for future exploitation by corporate overlords.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Groaker (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:52am

        Re: Re:

        You can't even read between the lines anymore. Nothing that is happening make sense other than Cheney's shadow government running everything.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Violynne (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 7:41am

    Given all the reports out of what happens to journalists these days, it's not surprising to see why many aren't going to risk pissing off anyone who works for the NSA, CIA, and even the FBI.

    Who wants "extra attention" during a TSA pat down because a name magically appears on a list.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 7:53am

    Because, oddly enough, the press lie too. The onyl difference is the scale.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Groaker (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 7:59am

    What did anyone expect?


    Such behavior on the part of the Executive branch and their lapdogs is the reason for the existence of TechDirt and many similar blogs.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:04am

    The press are spineless mouthpieces that are in it for the money. They're entirely incapable of reporting actual news.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:28am

      Re:

      Actually they in it more for the prestige along with the shock and awe... then the money which there is plenty to be had if you go high enough.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      DannyB (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 11:11am

      Re:

      Joseph Goebbels said: If you repeat a lie often enough, it becomes the truth.

      So that explains why CNN keeps repeating the same stories over and over and over.
      In Wolf Blitzer's monotone voice grating on and on.

      I quit watching a year and some months ago and, strangely, I don't feel any less informed. The things that did it for me was how they didn't cover SOPA and how they did cover Snowden.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        DannyB (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 11:13am

        Re: Re:

        Oh, and because they have ditzy air-head anchors who ask intelligent questions like:

        Could global warming have anything to do with solar coronal mass ejections?

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:11am

    It's ok. It's clear that no one in the intelligence community tells the truth, and nothing happens. Take a look at Clapper lying to Congress under oath and that sack of shit even stated he told the 'least untruthful' answer...

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Just Another Anonymous Troll, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:21am

    He didn't lie, that's why no one called him out on it. Silly Masnick!
    From the Obama Administration Dictionary:
    lie: Any statement differing from what the government wants the truth to be.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:27am

    We know that, during Bush Sr.'s time as CIA director the agency would pay journos under the table to slant their CIA coverage favorably.

    It would not surprise me if this program continued in some form. Just look at how deferential someone like Ken Dinlian has been in his coverage

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Peter (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:28am

    It's a good question...

    You know, I continue to believe (although the evidence is against me at this point) that the MSM is TRYING to do it's job as well as it can. But then this obvious lie (which Froomkin has done a good job of exposing as a blatant lie) as well as a mountain of others, goes completely unreported. It boggles my mind -- I almost cannot get my head around it. It almost seems like the MSM, all of them, are purposely lying at this point.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:32am

      Re: It's a good question...

      Because they are. The feel they have to, or else they'll "lose access" to high officials. Rule of thumb: any news outlets that have access to high officials should be considered an outright propaganda arm and largely ignored.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Sheogorath (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:34am

    Question answered

    Why Won't The Press Admit That CIA Director John Brennan Lied?
    Because 'Freedom of the Press' is now a myth. Simples!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 8:46am

    We had Bush Jr. and members of congress start multiple wars built on lies about weapons of mass destruction. The international community still brings this up all the time.

    Our nation is run by liars and deceivers, just like every other country is. Once you accept this fact, it's easier to see through all the lies and misleading statements.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:34am

      Re:

      Well my liar is better than your liar... plus I just like mine more!

      ~Majority of R or D voters.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:08am

    turf wars

    Is this consistent with the "turf war" conspiracy theory among intelligence agencies?

    There were theories that the Snowden Affair was a CIA Operation, done in retaliation for the fall of former CIA director, Petraeus.

    google: petraeus + NSA

    There was a curious media campaign against the NSA and for Snowden.

    There was a curious lack of comments, about the Snowden Affair and the NSA, coming from the new CIA director, Brennan.

    Certain newspapers were alleged to be propaganda arms for certain intelligence agencies.

    google: CIA NSA Snowden turf war newspapers

    Now there is a curious media campaign for Brennan.

    Go figure.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:34am

    The public should take any circuitous statement by a politician as an admission of wrongdoing.

    They´re going to whine about being held to such a (or any) standard. But their job is still representing us and that gives us the power to set that standard. Our opinion of them is one of the few ways that we have left of achieving some form of achieving some form of accountability.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Uriel-238 (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:35am

    So we've given up on teaching our children the value of honesty, yes?

    When I was in school, honesty was regarded as a personal value. As a child and primary school student in the United States I was encouraged to tell the truth, and my classmates and I were advised that we should do so if we were personally to suffer for it, as that level of personal integrity was valued throughout the land. Honest Abe Lincoln, who would return the difference when he was overpaid in gratuity, was set as an ideal that our nation would follow.

    And as a naive kid, I believed my adult instructors.

    We don't teach kids that bullshit anymore, right? If you would suffer grief from the truth of a matter being revealed, you don't do like Lincoln, but like Bush or Obama or Brennan or Clapper and you lie your ass off until there is a clear and convincing evidence you were wrong. And then you claim misperception or a misunderstanding of the verbiage. Personal integrity is not about truth and honor but how well your posterior can emerge from a liability suit.

    That's what they're teaching in schools now, yes?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      GEMont, 1 Oct 2014 @ 5:07pm

      Re: So we've given up on teaching our children the value of honesty, yes?

      It might pay to note that many TV commercials now treat lying as an everyday thing done by everyone for no particular reason at all.

      Try watching a good movie (guaranteed to have maximum number of bad commercials) and counting the number of commercials that actually promote deception as a part of every day life.

      In fact, you might notice that most movies now have no good guy, or have a Good Bad-guy - a bad-guy who is actually just a misunderstood good guy who always just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

      The "heroes" of most new films now use torture and murder and deception and coercion to "win" the day.

      Integrity is being taught to be an obsolete concept.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    MM_Dandy (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:38am

    If you call a liar a liar you'll get censored

    Just ask Bill Simmons.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      DannyB (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 11:17am

      Re: If you call a liar a liar you'll get censored

      Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding!

      We have a winner.

      If any news outlet doesn't act as the government's mouthpiece, they lose access to government officials, press releases/conferences/briefings.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 9:43am

    You have come to one of the main points why people are seeking their news from other sources rather than the MSM coming from the most common delivery vehicle of the TV.

    The news has become so bias and slanted that I have a hard time just accepting the news at face value without wondering who they are supporting or what axe they wish to grind with this or that article.

    The news media here has been cowed by the security branches as well as the moneyed interests. The Obama administration will kick a news group out of the WH Press Corp for making news that casts him in an unfavorable light. Or look at James Rosen and what's happened to him as a certified journalist. While Rosen is standing for the integrity of a reporter being able to protect his sources, dang few others are willing to do the same.

    That they won't call a spade a spade is no longer a surprise. It's expected. So it comes out you can't trust the local news and media so why bother with giving them viewer time and ear time?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    techflaws (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 10:13am

    They wouldn't write 'torture' either. What did you expect?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Sep 2014 @ 10:24am

    This extremely evident in light of the current pres' constant lies

    The press not covering government leaders lies is old news, pardon the pun. Just look at all the lies that the current President tells and the lamestream media lets him get away with it. Not only that, they help him. Usually he is caught within days but the media still softballs the issue rather than calling him out on it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Padpaw (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 12:34pm

    If I recall someone looked into who owned the major news corporations in America and discovered everything is owned by about 6 people.

    What are the odds the news corporations are being paid off to report what the government tells them to report. Until of course it affects their rights, then they suddenly start caring about losing their rights. Never the rights of others it seems like.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 29 Sep 2014 @ 12:57pm

      Re:

      That's 6 corporations, not people. They own 90% of all news outlets (including most small local radio and newspapers). They are: Comcast, News Corp., Disney, Viacom, Time Warner, CBS.

      "What are the odds the news corporations are being paid off to report what the government tells them to report"

      It's a certainty. They're paid off in terms of favorable treatment when getting government contracts and licenses, mergers, and access to high level government people and functions.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Irving, 29 Sep 2014 @ 4:35pm

    I think it's cute that you think you have a free press....

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    GEMont (profile), 1 Oct 2014 @ 4:56pm

    TV is a social engineering tool.

    NEWS - Noise Expressed With Sincerity

    I have a very simple rule about TV:

    If its on TV, its not entirely true and may indeed be entirely false.

    If it is mostly or partly true, its because someone wants the true parts disseminated widely to support some other associated information that is false.

    All commercial claims should be considered entirely false.

    This is based on the ruling during the FOX TV case concerning reporting of truth about Genetically Modified Foods, where FOX won the case against the reporters when the judge stated that TV has no mandate requiring honesty and thus, there was no law against telling lies on TV.

    Where there is no consequence for lying, there is no need for truth, unless a modicum of truth suits the broadcaster's need at the moment.

    ---

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Oct 2014 @ 5:53am

    Why Won't The Press Admit That CIA Director John Brennan Lied?

    This one is easy.

    The press plays defense for the obama administration, it's what progressives do.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 2 Oct 2014 @ 8:21am

      Re:

      The press plays defense for the current power structure. They couldn't care less about what "camp" that power structure falls into. Just look at how the press handled Bush: cheerleading and defending all the way.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        GEMont (profile), 6 Oct 2014 @ 4:29pm

        Re: Re:

        Methinks that particular anonymous coward posting above was really a paid advertisement by the Fox TV network and should thus be considered as being designed to be entirely misleading. :)

        link to this | view in chronology ]


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