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Judith Miller: No heroine's welcome for reporter who spent her summer in jail

by UK Independent (reposted)
Confusion and murk yesterday continued to surround the affair of Judith Miller, the New York Times reporter who emerged from her prison cell on Friday to testify in a two-year-old investigation into the alleged leaking by the White House of the name of an undercover CIA operative to her and other journalists.

The sudden surrender of Ms Miller to the district attorney investigating the case, Patrick Fitzgerald - who had sent her to prison in the first place for refusing to compromise her source before his grand jury - was so important to the New York Times that the newspaper made it its lead front-page story yesterday, and continued poring over the details of her actions for many column-inches inside.

Unfortunately for the paper more questions than answers have been thrown up by Ms Miller's abrupt volte-face.

Should she be celebrated as a media martyr who stood up for the right of reporters to protect the identities of sources? Or is this to do with her - and the paper's - mistaken reporting before the Iraq war of Saddam Hussein's purported stash of weapons of mass destruction?

The furore over Ms Miller and her motivations - her name is in the headline of every single political blog in America this weekend - is in a sense a sideshow to the investigation itself.

The true importance of her having at last testified on Friday is that the probe may now almost be over. And that could spell new trouble for President Bush, already reeling from the indictment of Tom DeLay, the former Republican House leader, last week and from the fall-out from Hurricane Katrina.

If Mr Bush is worried, so will be the New York Times. It has still not fully recovered from the mis-steps in its reporting on Iraq before the 2003 invasion.

In March 2004, the paper published an astonishing mea culpa, singling out six articles that had given credence to the administration's claims about weapons of mass destruction without sufficient evidence. Four of those were written by Ms Miller. Coincidentally, it was in the pages of the New York Times that this whole saga first started. There, in the summer of 2003, a former US ambassador to Gabon, Joseph Wilson, wrote an article directly criticising Mr Bush for one claim he had made prior to the invasion - that Saddam had been trying to import uranium from West Africa to help him build nuclear weapons.

Not true, wrote Mr Wilson, who earlier had made the same disclosures to The Independent on Sunday.

The questions on the table now are these: how was it that within days of the New York Times article, a number of journalists began learning that Mr Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, worked undercover for the CIA? Did they hear it from White House officials? Were they breaking the law in revealing her name? And did they do it as political pay-back on Mr Wilson for making his damaging criticism of the President?

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http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article316612.ece
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