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In the weeks leading up to the November 2 election, the New York Times was
abuzz with excitement. Besides the election itself, the paper’s reporters
were hard at work on two hot investigative projects, each of which could have
a major impact on the outcome of the tight presidential race.
One week before Election Day, the Times (10/25/04) ran a hard-hitting and controversial
exposé of the Al-Qaqaa ammunition dump—identified by U.N. inspectors
before the war as containing 400 tons of special high-density explosives useful
for aircraft bombings and as triggers for nuclear devices, but left unguarded
and available to insurgents by U.S. forces after the invasion.
On Thursday, just three days after that first exposé, the paper was
set to run a second, perhaps more explosive piece, exposing how George W. Bush
had worn an electronic cueing device in his ear and probably cheated during
the presidential debates.
It's clear even from unenhanced photos that George W. Bush has been wearing
some kind of object under his clothing, both during the debates and at other
public appearances. The enhancements done by NASA scientist Robert Nelson show
a rectangular object with a long "tail"; in some shots a wire leading
over Bush's shoulder is visible. This configuration closely resembles a PTT
(Push To Talk) receiver with an induction earpiece, a device used by some actors,
newscasters and politicians to allow for inaudible voice communication in a
public setting. The particular model pictured here (which does not appear to
be the exact type Bush wore) was manufactured by Resistance Technology, Inc.
of Arden Hills, Minn.
The so-called Bulgegate story had been getting tremendous attention on the Internet.
Stories about it had also run in many mainstream papers, including the New York
Times (10/9/04, 10/18/04) and Washington Post (10/9/04), but most of these had
been light-hearted. Indeed, the issue had even made it into the comedy circuit,
including the monologues of Jay Leno, David Letterman, Jon Stewart and a set
of strips by cartoonist Garry Trudeau.
That the story hadn’t gotten more serious treatment in the mainstream
press was largely thanks to a well-organized media effort by the Bush White
House and the Bush/Cheney campaign to label those who attempted to investigate
the bulge as "conspiracy buffs" (Washington Post, 10/9/04). In an
era of pinched budgets and an equally pinched notion of the role of the Fourth
Estate, the fact that the Kerry camp was offering no comment on the matter—perhaps
for fear of earning a "conspiracy buff" label for the candidate himself—may
also have made reporters skittish. Jeffrey Klein, a founding editor of Mother
Jones magazine, told Mother Jones (online edition, 10/30/04) he had called a
number of contacts at leading news organizations across the country, and was
told that unless the Kerry campaign raised the issue, they couldn’t pursue
it.
"Totally off base"
The Times’ effort to get to the bottom of the matter through a serious
investigation seemed to be a striking exception. That investigation, however,
despite extensive reporting over several weeks by three Times reporters, never
ran. Now, like the mythic weapons of mass destruction that were the raison d’etre
for the Iraq War, the Times is thus far claiming that the Bush Bulgegate story
never existed in the first place.
Referring to a FAIR press release (11/5/04) about the spiked story, Village
Voice press critic Jarrett Murphy wrote (11/16/04), "A Times reporter alleged
to have worked on such a piece says FAIR was totally off base: The paper never
pursued the story."
Murphy told Extra! that his source at the nation’s self-proclaimed paper
of record—whom he would not identify—told him the information about
the bulge seen under Bush’s jacket during the debates, provided by a senior
astronomer and photo imaging specialist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, had been tossed onto the "nutpile," and was never researched
further.
In fact, several sources, including a journalist at the Times, have told Extra!
that the paper put a good deal of effort into this important story about presidential
competence and integrity; they claim that a story was written, edited and scheduled
to run on several different days, before senior editors finally axed it at the
last minute on Wednesday evening, October 27. A Times journalist, who said that
Times staffers were "pretty upset" about the killing of the story,
claims the senior editors felt Thursday was "too close" to the election
to run such a piece. Emails from the Times to the NASA scientist corroborate
these sources’ accounts.
Battle of the bulge
The Bulgegate story originated when a number of alert viewers of the first
presidential debate noticed a peculiar rectangular bulge on the back of Bush’s
jacket. That they got to see that portion of his anatomy at all was an accident;
the Bush campaign had specifically, and inexplicably, demanded that the Presidential
Debate Commission bar pool TV cameras from taking rear shots of the candidates
during any debates. Fox TV, the first pool camera for debate one, ignored the
rule and put two cameras behind the candidates to provide establishing shots.
Photos depicting the bulge and speculating on just what it might be (a medical
device, a radio receiver?) began circulating widely around the Internet, and
several special blog sites were established to discuss them. The suspicion that
Bush had been getting cues or answers in his ear was bolstered by his strange
behavior in that first debate, which included several uncomfortably long pauses
before and during his answers. On one occasion, he burst out angrily with "Now
let me finish!" at a time when nobody was interrupting him and his warning
light was not flashing. Images of visibly bulging backs from earlier Bush appearances
began circulating, along with reports of prior incidents that suggested Bush
might have been receiving hidden cues (London Guardian, 10/8/04).
Finally, on October 8, this reporter ran an investigative report about the
bulge in the online magazine Salon, following up with a second report (10/13/04)—an
interview with an executive of a firm that makes wireless cueing devices that
link to hidden earpieces—that suggested that Bush was likely to have been
improperly receiving secret help during the debates.
At that point, Dr. Robert M. Nelson, a 30-year Jet Propulsion Laboratory veteran
who works on photo imaging for NASA’s various space probes and currently
is part of a photo enhancement team for the Cassini Saturn space probe, entered
the picture. Nelson recounts that after seeing the Salon story on the bulge,
professional curiosity prompted him to apply his skills at photo enhancement
to a digital image he took from a videotape of the first debate. He says that
when he saw the results of his efforts, which clearly revealed a significant
T-shaped object in the middle of Bush’s back and a wire running up and
over his shoulder, he realized it was an important story.
After first offering it unsuccessfully to his local paper, the Pasadena Star-News,
and then, with equal lack of success, to the Post-Gazette in Pittsburgh, where
he had gone to college, he offered it to the Los Angeles Times. (In all his
media contacts, Nelson says, he offered the use of his enhanced photos free
of charge.) "About three weeks before the election, I gave the photos to
the L.A. Times’ Eric Slater, who shopped them around the paper,"
recalls Nelson. "After four days, in which they never got back to me, I
went to the New York Times."
Contradictory explanations
The Times was at first very interested, Nelson reports. There was, after all,
clearly good reason to investigate the issue. The White House and Bush/ Cheney
campaign had initially mocked the bulge story when it had run in Salon, first
attributing it to "doctored" photos circulating on the Internet (New
York Times, 10/9/04), and later claiming that the bulge, so noticeable in video
images, was the result of a "badly tailored suit" (New York Times,
10/18/04). Bush himself contradicted this White House and campaign line when
he told ABC’s Charles Gibson (Good Morning America, 10/26/04) that the
bulge was the result of his wearing a "poorly tailored shirt" to the
debate.
Now Nelson’s photos—the result of his applying the same enhancement
techniques to the debate pictures that he uses to clarify photo images from
space probes—rendered all these official if mutually contradictory explanations
obviously false. (A November 4, 2004 report in the Washington paper The Hill,
citing an unidentified source in the Secret Service, claimed that the bulge
was caused by a bulletproof vest worn by Bush during the debates, though this
had been specifically denied by the White House and by Bush himself—New
York Times, 10/9/04. In any event, no known vests have rear protuberances resembling
the image discovered by Nelson.)
Times science writer William Broad, as well as reporters Andrew Revkin and
John Schwartz, got to work on the story, according to Nelson, and produced a
story that he says they assured him was scheduled to run the week of October
25. "It got pushed back because of the explosives story," he says,
first to Wednesday, and then to Thursday, October 28. That would still have
been five days ahead of Election Day.
An indication of the seriousness with which the story was being pursued is
provided by an email Schwartz sent to Nelson on October 26—one of a string
of back-and-forth emails between Schwartz and Nelson. It read:
Hey there, Dr. Nelson—this story is shaping up very nicely, but my_editors
have asked me to hold off for one day while they push through a few other stories
that are ahead of us in line. I might be calling you again for more information,
but I hope that you’ll hold tight and not tell anyone else about this
until we get a chance to get our story out there.
Please call me with any concerns that you might have about this, and thanks
again for letting us tell your story.
But on October 28, the article was not in the paper. After learning from the
reporters working on the story that their article had been killed the night
before by senior editors, Nelson eventually sent his photographic evidence of
presidential cheating to Salon magazine, which ran the photos as the magazine’s
lead item on October 29. That same day, Nelson received the following email
from the Times’ Schwartz:
Congratulations on getting the story into Salon. It’s already all over
the Web in every blog I’ve seen this morning. I’m sorry to have
been a source of disappointment and frustration to you, but I’m very happy
to see your story getting out there.
Best wishes,
John
Not exactly the kind of message you’d expect a reporter to send to a "nut."
"The bar is raised higher"
In fact, Schwartz, Revkin and Broad, using Nelson’s photographic evidence
as their starting point, had made a major effort to put together the story of
presidential debate misconduct and deception. Among those called in the course
of their reporting, in addition to Nelson, who says he received numerous calls
and emails from the team, were Cornell physicist Kurt Gottfried, who was asked
to vouch for Nelson’s professional credentials; Bush/Cheney campaign chair
Ken Mehlman (information about this call was provided by a journalist at the
Times); and Jim Atkinson, an owner of a spyware and debugging company in Gloucester,
Mass., called Granite Island Group.
"The Times reporters called me a number of times on this story,"
confirms Atkinson. "I was able to identify the object Nelson highlighted
definitively as a magnetic cueing device that uses a wire yoke around the neck
to communicate with a hidden earpiece—the kind of thing that is used routinely
now by music performers, actors, reporters—and by politicians."
He adds, "The Times reporters called me repeatedly. They were absolutely
going after this story aggressively, though at one point they told me they were
concerned that their editors were going to kill it."
Efforts to learn more about the history and fate of this story at the New York
Times met for weeks with official silence. Several inquiries were made by phone
and email to Times public editor Daniel Okrent over a period of three weeks,
eliciting one response—an email from his assistant asking for the names
of Extra!’s sources at the Times. He was not provided with the sources,
but was given the names of the three reporters who worked on the piece, which
had been disclosed by Dr. Nelson. (At deadline time, Okrent did finally call,
and promised to seek the answer to the story’s fate. A week later, at
press time, he had yet to do so.)
One clue as to what happened at the Times is provided by a final email message
sent by Times reporter Schwartz to Nelson, who had written to Schwartz to alert
him that he had gone on to analyze photos of Bush’s back in the subsequent
two debates. Schwartz wrote:
Subject: Re: reanalysis of debate images more convincing than before
Dear Dr. Nelson,
Thanks for sticking with me on this. I don’t know what might convince
them—and the bar is raised higher the closer we are to the election, because
they don’t want to seem to be springing something at the last moment—but
I will bring this up with my bosses.
"Voters have a right to know"
Ironically, however, on November 1, the New York Times ran a story by reporters
Jacques Steinberg and David Carr, titled "Media Timing and the October
Surprise." The Times had been taking considerable heat from conservatives
and from the Bush campaign for running the Al-Qaqaa story, an investigative
piece critical of Iraq War leadership—and thus damaging to Bush’s
election campaign—so close to Election Day.
While the thrust of this article was a justification for the Times’ decision
to run the controversial missing-explosives story a week ahead of the election,
executive editor Bill Keller added a comment about the seemingly hypothetical
issue of running a damaging story about a candidate as close as two days ahead
of the voting:
I can’t say categorically you should not publish an article damaging to
a candidate in the last days before an election. . . . If you learned a day
or two before the election that a candidate had lied about some essential qualification
for the job—his health or criminal record—and there’s no real
doubt and you’ve given the candidate a chance to respond and the response
doesn’t cast doubt on the story, do you publish it? Yes. Voters certainly
have a right to know that.
Oddly, though, despite Keller’s having taken such a position, the Times
apparently chose not to run the Nelson pictures story on the grounds of proximity
to Election Day. Even more oddly, despite the fact that the Times had thoroughly
researched and reported Nelson’s story before deciding not to run it—even
after the story had run in both Salon and Mother Jones—the Times still
ducked (and continues to duck) the whole bulge story itself, ignoring an important
issue that it knew to be factually substantiated.
No mention of the Bush bulge was made in either the Times or the Washington
Post between October 29 and Election Day—aside from a one-line mention
in a New York Times Magazine essay by Matt Bai (10/31/04) that used the Bulgegate
story as an example of the paranoia of "political conspiracists":
A rumor that the president somehow cheated in the televised debates—was
that a wire under his jacket? was he listening to Karl Rove on a microscopic
earpiece?—flies across the Internet and takes hold in dark corners of
the public imagination.
The only subsequent reference to the bulge was a light post-election piece by
Times Washington reporter Elizabeth Bumiller (11/8/04), who cited the anonymously
sourced Hill story saying the bulge was body armor (an odd decision by the Times,
which officially frowns on unidentified sources even for its own pieces). She
reported that the White House tailor was miffed at having earlier been blamed
for the bulge by the White House.
“A lot of hoops”
While the New York Times seems to have been the only newspaper to write an
investigative story on the Bush bulge and then kill it, it was not the only
paper to duck the story about the bulge and its dramatic confirmation and delineation
by Nelson. In addition to the L. A. Times and the two local papers that showed
no interest, Nelson says that the same day he learned that his story had been
killed at the Times, October 28, he received a phone call from Washington Post
assistant managing editor Bob Woodward, famous for his investigative reports
on Watergate. "Woodward said he’d heard the Times had killed the
story and asked me if I could send the photos to him," says Nelson.
The JPL scientist did so immediately, via email, noting that he had also been
in touch with Salon magazine. He says Woodward then sent his photographs over
to a photo analyst at the paper to check them for authenticity, which Nelson
says was confirmed.
A day later, realizing time was getting short, Nelson called Woodward back.
Recalls Nelson: "He told me, 'Look, I’m going to have to go through
a lot of hoops to get this story published. You’re already talking to
Salon. Why don’t you work with them?'" (Several emails to Woodward
asking him about Nelson's account have gone unanswered.)
At that point Nelson, despairing of getting the pictures in a major publication,
went with the online magazine Salon. This reporter subsequently asked Nelson
to do a similar photo analysis of digital images of Bush’s back taken
from the tapes of the second and third presidential debates. The resulting photos,
which also clearly show the cueing device and magnetic loop harness under his
jacket on both occasions, were posted, together with Nelson’s images from
the first debate, on the news website of Mother Jones magazine (10/30/04).
What should affect elections?
Ben Bagdikian, retired dean of U.C. Berkeley's journalism school, held Woodward's
current position at the Washington Post during the time of the Pentagon Papers.
Informed of the fate of the bulge story and Nelson's photos at the three newspapers,
he said:
I cannot imagine a paper I worked for turning down a story like this before
an election. This was credible photographic evidence not about breaking the
rules, but of a total lack of integrity on the part of the president, evidence
that he'd cheated in the debate, and also of a lack of confidence in his ability
on the part of his campaign. I'm shocked to hear top management decided not
to run such a story.
Could the last-minute decision by the New York Times not to run the Nelson photos
story, or the decision by the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times not
even to pursue it, have affected the outcome of the recent presidential race?
There is no question that if such a story had run in any one of those major
venues, instead of just in two online publications, Bulgegate would have been
a major issue in the waning days of the campaign.
Given that exit polls show many who voted for Bush around the country listed
"moral values" as a big factor in their decision, it seems reasonable
to assume that at least some would have changed their minds had evidence been
presented in the nation’s biggest and most influential newspapers that
Bush had been dishonest.
"Cheating on a debate should affect an election," says Bagdikian.
"The decision not to let people know this story could affect the history
of the United States."
Investigative journalist Dave Lindorff is a regular columnist for CounterPunch.
His latest book is This Can’t Be Happening: Resisting the Disintegration
of American Democracy (Common Courage Press). His writings can be found at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
Spiking the Bush Bulge Story:
Confirmed
As Extra! went to press, New York Times public editor Daniel Okrent posted
a message on his website (12/21/04) confirming that his paper had, in fact,
killed a story about the device under George W. Bush’s suit. Here is the
text of Okrent’s message:
President Bush and the Jacket Bulge
Online discussion of the famous bulge on President Bush’s back at the
first presidential debate hasn’t stopped. One reporter (Dave Lindorff
of Salon.com) asserted that the Times had a story in the works about a NASA
scientist who had done a careful study of the graphic evidence, but it was spiked
by the paper’s top editors sometime during the week before the election.
Many readers have asked me for an explanation.
I checked into Lindorff’s assertion, and he’s right. The story’s
life at the Times began with a tip from the NASA scientist, Robert Nelson, to
reporter Bill Broad. Soon his colleagues on the science desk, John Schwartz
and Andrew Revkin, took on the bulk of the reporting. Science editor Laura Chang
presented the story at the daily news meeting but, like many other stories,
it did not make the cut. According to executive editor Bill Keller, "In
the end, nobody, including the scientist who brought it up, could take the story
beyond speculation. In the crush of election-finale stories, it died a quiet,
unlamented death."
Revkin, for one, wished it had run. Here’s what he told me in an e-mail
message:
I can appreciate the broader factors weighing on the paper’s top editors,
particularly that close to the election. But personally, I think that Nelson’s
assertions did rise above the level of garden-variety speculation, mainly because
of who he is. Here was a veteran government scientist, whose decades-long career
revolves around interpreting imagery like features of Mars, who decided to say
very publicly that, without reservation, he was convinced there was something
under a president’s jacket when the White House said there was nothing.
He essentially put his hard-won reputation utterly on the line (not to mention
his job) in doing so and certainly with little prospect that he might gain something
as a result—except, as he put it, his preserved integrity.
Revkin also told me that before Nelson called Broad, he had approached other
media outlets as well. None—until Salon—published anything on Nelson’s
analysis. "I’d certainly choose [Nelson’s] opinion over that
of a tailor," Revkin concluded, referring to news reports that cited the
man who makes the president’s suits. "Hard to believe that so many
in the media chose the tailor, even in coverage after the election."
See Also
Media Advisory: Okrent Charges
Extra! With "Distortion" (2/11/05)
Go to Original Article >>>
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