Ben Bradlee,
Secret-Government Stalwart
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Now that he has died, as you might
expect, my local newspaper is gushing all over Ben Bradlee. The Òlegendary Washington Post editor,Ó they call him. Not only was his death the top story on their
front page, it was also the lead story of the
Style section and the subject of their lead editorial and a column by former Post publisher Donald Graham. Online you can also find a glowing column by Richard
Cohen and a host of tributes by various
establishment luminaries, including President Barack Obama.
In her Style section encomium to Bradlee, Martha Sherrill writes, ÒNothing pleased Bradlee more than a piece that nailed the corrupt, pricked
a narcissist, uncovered a creep, exposed a phony, felled a climber and really
told it like it was.Ó
If that were true, one has to
wonder why The Post on BradleeÕs watch never had any stories fitting that
description. If, indeed, he did
like such articles, he should have really liked the article I did back in 1999,
except for the fact that he is the subject creep. It is reproduced here in full:
One of my favorite Hollywood villains is
veteran character actor, G. D. Spradlin. You might
remember him as the rotten basketball coach in One on One or the military college commandant protecting a
homicidal secret society in Lords of
Discipline. When someone is needed who just oozes shallow, sanctimonious,
corrupt authority, now that Fred Thompson has gone back to Washington to play
himself, the chances are better than even that the call will go out to Spradlin.
It was with considerable anticipation
and excitement, then, that I saw his name go up in the opening credits in the
new Watergate spoof called Dick. My guess
was that he had to be playing Attorney General John Mitchell. I really didn't
think he would be on the side conventionally portrayed as the "good
guys," but there he was as the boss of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, Washington Post editor, Ben Bradlee. It's true that the lampoon didn't portray anyone
on the Post team as exactly an
appealing character, but they still stood cinematically, as we have been given
to believe in real life, for truth and justice against official criminality.
One would like to believe that the
producers of Dick are really clued in to political reality instead of to the
fiction that has been spun out by our presstitutes,
and the Spradlin casting was actually a hidden
message to that effect. For all indications are that Ben Bradlee
is the archetypical character that Spradlin usually
portrays. The introduction to the third edition of Deborah Davis' book Katharine the Great is entitled "How This
Book Was Censored." Here is an excerpt:
In
researching the context of Katharine Graham's power, I found that both her late
husband Philip, from whom she inherited the newspaper in 1963, and Benjamin Bradlee, whom she hired as executive editor in 1965, had
been part of a group of men who worked with strategic information during the
Second World War. These men had gone on to use their skills in propaganda or
intelligence to create and reinforce peacetime definitions of patriotism. Their
careers in this way coincided with the formation of the modern news industry;
and it was not simply their access to the instruments of mass communication,
but also their style of political thinking, their identification with the
values of the state, which gave them and others of their background a disproportionate
influence on American political culture. The relation of such careers to
Katharine Graham's ability to destroy Richard Nixon is discussed in the book in
detail.
Benjamin
Bradlee as a young journalist was at the very heart
of the government's effort to order political thinking after the war. He spent
forty wartime months handling classified cables and codes on a naval destroyer,
then three years at the Washington Post
in the late 1940s under Philip Graham, who as a "liberal
anti-Communist" supported the search for traitors in government. In 1951, Bradlee went, with Graham's assistance, to the American
Embassy in Paris, where as a press attachŽ he became part of a covert operation
integral to America's foreign policy: the production of propaganda against
Communism. One purpose of the operation was to cast doubt on the patriotism of
western European Communists, many of whom had fought in the resistance and were
therefore trusted figures in post-war politics. They were discredited as
instruments of Stalin. The propaganda was disseminated throughout Europe by the
CIA, mainly in the form of newspaper stories appearing under the bylines of
pro-American foreign journalists.
In
the original edition of this book, Bradlee was
described as a State Department appointee who, while at the embassy, produced
CIA material occasionally, before returning permanently to journalism. Those
few lines, and other references to his past, Bradlee
denied vehemently. Rather than join the company of other prominent journalists
who now freely say they worked with the CIA in the 1950s because times were
different then, it was the patriotic thing to do, Bradlee
set about to discredit the book, and ruin me as a writer, by having friends
produce negative press stories.
We might add, for what it is worth, that
the subordinate he married in 1978 (for whom he left his wife of long
standing), the blond and much younger Sally Quinn, is the daughter of one of
the founders of the CIA, General William Quinn.
David Martin
August 8, 1999
Knowing what we do about Bradlee, one might weigh the credibility of his denial that the CIA had anything
to do with the murder of John Kennedy consort Mary Pinchot Meyer, who was
apparently a threat to spill some important beans about the assassination of
her lover:
As discussed previously, the CIA
connection with her death is really not all that mysterious. Mary had been
married to a high ranking CIA official, and as a
result, she knew people associated with the CIA. Ben Bradlee,
an extremely liberal journalist and a member of the group that initially broke
the Watergate scandal, is most zealous in denying a CIA connection that he
allegedly helped cover up. Phil Nobilem and Ron
Rosenbaum quote Ben Bradlee as saying in regards to
the CIA connection, "If there was anything there, I would have done it
[written the story] myself"
Concerning that subject, see also MaryÕs Mosaic: The CIA Conspiracy to John Kennedy, Mary
Pinchot Meyer, and Their Vision for World Peace by Peter Janney.
A more recent Hollywood movie than Dick moved me to write another
journalistic antidote to the propaganda poison that The Post is now pouring out about the Bradlee
legacy. That is ÒWatergate Lies Multiplied: The Fiction of
Frost/Nixon.Ó
Their multiple eulogies for Bradlee also stand in stark contrast to the raspberry of an obituary that The Post gave to the real journalist,
Joseph Sobran.
It shows us very clearly where the battle lines are drawn in the
country.
David Martin
October 22, 2014
Addendum
A reader has called my attention to
the fact that Bradlee engaged in obstruction of
justice in the murder of Mary Pinchot Meyer by burglarizing her house in search
of her diary after she was murdered.
After finding it, he turned it over to notorious CIA counterspy James
Jesus Angleton, described by author Noel Twyman as
the man who Òorchestrated the CIAÕs cover-up of the [JFK] assassination,Ó who
also happened to be an extreme partisan for Israel. BradleeÕs wife,
Tony, instructed Angleton to destroy the diary. Angleton failed to follow the
instructions and eventually returned what he said was the entire diary, and
Tony burned it. What is at least as
revealing as BradleeÕs justice obstruction in a murder
possibly related to the Kennedy assassination is that Bradlee,
the Washington bureau chief for Newsweek at
the time, was a friend of the high level
CIA man Angleton.
David Martin
October 23, 2014
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