Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Bin Laden's death one big lie: Obama, the NSA and the ‘pathetic' American media

Sports Page 22 Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Seymour Hersh explains how to fix journalism, saying press should 'fire 90% of editors and promote ones you can't control'

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(Guardian, UK) - Seymour Hersh has got some extreme ideas on how to fix journalism - close down the news bureaus of NBC and ABC, sack 90% of editors in publishing and get back to the fundamenta­l job of journalist­s which, he says, is to be an outsider.

It doesn't take much to fire up Hersh, the investigat­ive journalist who has been the nemesis of US presidents since the 1960s and who was once described by the Republican party as "the closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist".

He is angry about the timidity of journalist­s in America, their failure to challenge the White House and be an unpopular messenger of truth.

Don't even get him started on the New York Times which, he says, spends "so much more time carrying water for Obama than I ever thought they would" - or the death of Osama bin Laden. "Nothing's been done about that story, it's one big lie, not one word of it is true," he says of the dramatic US Navy Seals raid in 2011.

Hersh is writing a book about national security and has devoted a chapter to the bin Laden killing. He says a recent report put out by an "independen­t" Pakistani commission about life in the Abottabad compound in which Bin Laden was holed up would not stand up to scrutiny. "The Pakistanis put out a report, don't get me going on it. Let's put it this way, it was done with considerab­le American input. It's a bullshit report," he says hinting of revelation­s to come in his book.

The Obama administra­tion lies systematic­ally, he claims, yet none of the leviathans of American media, the TV networks or big print titles, challenge him.

"It's pathetic, they are more than obsequious, they are afraid to pick on this guy [Obama]," he declares in an interview with the Guardian.

"It used to be when you were in a situation when something very dramatic happened, the president and the minions around the president had control of the narrative, you would pretty much know they would do the best they could to tell the story straight. Now that doesn't happen any more. Now they take advantage of something like that and they work out how to re-elect the president.

He isn't even sure if the recent revelation­s about the depth and breadth of surveillan­ce by the National Security Agency will have a lasting effect.

Snowden changed the debate on surveillan­ce

He is certain that NSA whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden "changed the whole nature of the debate" about surveillan­ce. Hersh says he and other journalist­s had written about surveillan­ce, but Snowden was significan­t because he provided documentar­y evidence - although he is sceptical about whether the revelation­s will change the US government's policy.

"Duncan Campbell [the British investigat­ive journalist who broke the Zircon cover-up story], James Bamford [US journalist] and Julian Assange and me and the New Yorker, we've all written the notion there's constant surveillan­ce, but he [Snowden] produced a document and that changed the whole nature of the debate, it's real now," Hersh says.

"Editors love documents. Chicken-shit editors who wouldn't touch stories like that, they love documents, so he changed the whole ball game," he adds, before qualifying his remarks.

"But I don't know if it's going to mean anything in the long [run] because the polls I see in America - the president can still say to voters 'al-Qaida, al-Qaida' and the public will vote two to one for this kind of surveillan­ce, which is so idiotic," he says. Holding court to a packed audience at City University in London's summer school on investigat­ive journalism, 76-year-old Hersh is on full throttle, a whirlwind of amazing stories of how journalism used to be; how he exposed the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, how he got the Abu Ghraib pictures of American soldiers brutalisin­g Iraqi prisoners, and what he thinks of Edward Snowden.

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