I will be featured tonight -- with two of the few journalistic "heroes" of prewar Iraq coverage from Knight Ridder/McClatchy -- on Bill Moyers Journal on PBS stations tonight.
The lengthy segment probes the press reaction (mainly denying wrongdoing) to Scott McClellan's new book What Happened, the new Senate report on cooked intelligence in the runup to the attack on Iraq in 2003, and the possible threat of a U.S. move on Iran.
Many of us have long hailed the McClatchy guys -- Washington bureau chief John Walcott and ace reporter Jonathan Landay -- for being among the most persistent, and accurate, in questioning the administration's evidence in the runup to the war.
On the segment, taped yesterday, I observe: "There's been numerous opportunities, actually, just in the last few weeks for the media to do this self-assessment. ... You remember the fifth anniversary of the start of the war. Almost no media self-assessment at that time. Pointing fingers at everybody but themselves. There was the milestone of 4,000 deaths in Iraq. There was the fifth anniversary of 'mission accomplished.' Another great opportunity for this. We had the scandal of the Pentagon media generals — as they call them, 'message magnifiers' — we had that opportunity.
"Now we've had Scott McClellan. There's been at least six opportunities in the last two months for the media to do this long delayed and much needed self-assessment — self-criticism — to the American public, and it hasn't happened."
I will also be blogging at the Moyers site starting tonight. The Moyers show may air later in the weekend over some stations that are showing "pledge week" programming tonight.
Here is a link to the site for show:
http://www.pbs.org/...
*
Greg Mitchell's new book is So Wrong for So Long: How the Press, the Pundits -- and the President -- Failed on Iraq. He is editor of Editor & Publisher.