USA TODAY International Edition

Clock is ticking for CBS to probe Benghazi report

‘ 60 Minutes’ story needs a full- scale investigat­ion

- Rem Rieder USA TODAY

It’s a challenge for CBS News — and an opportunit­y.

The network has to thoroughly investigat­e what went so terribly wrong with the ill- fated 60 Minutes segment on the deadly attack on the U. S. mission in Benghazi, Libya.

And it has to be totally transparen­t about what it finds.

The network’s initial response to the broadcast’s problems hardly is cause for optimism. It played defense for nearly a week before conceding the obvious, that the report was fundamenta­lly flawed. It still has a chance to do the right thing.

But that thing must be much, much more than the largely detailfree apology and correction by correspond­ent Lara Logan we have seen so far. CBS has acknowledg­ed it made a big mistake by relying on security guard Dylan Davies, the “eyewitness” who had told his employer and the FBI that he had in fact been nowhere near the scene.

But it needs to determine and explain how it came to be that the broadcast ended up relying so heavily on such a slender reed to support such an explosive story. And it has to address a wide array of other questions that have been raised about the report.

Make no mistake: This is a big deal. 60 Minutes has long been a television jewel. It’s a bastion of serious broadcast journalism, a commodity of which there is not necessaril­y a surfeit. CBS News Chairman Jeff Fager, who is also executive producer of 60 Minutes, told The New York Times that the Oct. 27 fiasco was “as big a mistake as there has been” in the program’s 45- year history. ( USA TODAY ran a story quoting extensivel­y from the broadcast.)

And it had real- world consequenc­es. The broadcast reignited the Republican effort to use the Sept. 11, 2012, episode, in which U. S. Ambassador Christophe­r Stevens was killed, as a club to batter the Obama administra­tion.

( Benghazi is one of a number of scandals or “scandals” the GOP has flogged in an effort to score points against President Obama — think Operation Fast and Furious, the IRS targeting of political groups — but none has gained serious traction. The party could have saved its energy. Team Obama has given its foes an opportunit­y beyond their wildest dreams with the disastrous rollout of the Affordable Care Act.)

CBS says it has launched a “journalist­ic review” of the train wreck but has provided no details. When I asked 60 Minutes spokesman Kevin Tedesco to supply some, he replied via e- mail, “We decline to comment.”

When it does get around to commenting, CBS News needs to elucidate the book tie- in. Threshold Editions, a subsidiary of Simon & Schuster, published a book by Davies titled The Embassy House: The Explosive Eyewitness Account of the Libyan Embassy Siege by the Soldier Who Was There. The book was written under the pseudonym “Sergeant Morgan Jones,” the name Davies also used on the broadcast.

Guess who owns Simon & Schuster? Yep, CBS Corp. After the 60 Minutes story self- destructed, Threshold announced that it was suspending publicatio­n of the book. Good idea.

But the question remains: How much of a role did corporate synergy play in propelling such a dubious witness into a starring role?

The broadcast reignited the Republican effort to use the Sept. 11, 2012, episode as a club to batter the Obama administra­tion.

Also, how come the report never mentioned that Davies had written a book for a CBS subsidiary?

The CBS investigat­ors, er, reviewers also will definitely want to check out an excellent piece by Nancy A. Youssef of McClatchy Newspapers, which pokes numerous holes in the 60 Minutes report.

For example, Youssef writes that Logan repeatedly refers to al- Qaeda as being solely responsibl­e for the attack, and doesn’t mention Ansar al Shariah, an Islamic extremist group that she says has long been suspected of being behind the bloodshed.

The story continues: “It is an important distinctio­n, experts on those groups said. Additional­ly, al Qaida’s role, if any, in the attack has not been determined, and Logan’s narration offered no source for her repeated as- sertion that it had been.”

Credit also goes to the liberal group Media Matters, which from the get- go has done a fine job keeping the heat on the broadcast’s manifold shortcomin­gs.

When things go terribly wrong, the best response is to do everything you can to figure out why, in the hope that you can find guideposts for avoiding similar debacles in the future.

Confronted with the widespread fabricatio­n and plagiarism of reporter Jayson Blair, The New York Times ordered up and published a mammoth and devastatin­g reconstruc­tion of the mess. Faced with a similar scandal involving correspond­ent Jack Kelley, USA TODAY brought in a trio of distinguis­hed outside journalist­s to investigat­e.

Closer to home for CBS, when Dan Rather fronted a 60 Minutes II segment on President George W. Bush’s National Guard service that turned out to be based on questionab­le and quickly questioned documents, the network turned to a former attorney general no less, as well as the retired head of the Associated Press, to sort things out.

It’s critical that the “journalist­ic review” said to be underway at CBS turns out to be a serious, unblinking assessment of what transpired, and that the findings are shared fully with America’s news consumers. They deserve no less.

 ?? CBSNEWS. COM ?? Lara Logan, appearing on CBS This Morning, talks about CBS’ 60
Minutes apology about the Benghazi interview with Dylan Davies. New informatio­n raises questions about the interview.
CBSNEWS. COM Lara Logan, appearing on CBS This Morning, talks about CBS’ 60 Minutes apology about the Benghazi interview with Dylan Davies. New informatio­n raises questions about the interview.
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