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Seymour Hersh: Obama To Spotlight Syria
TERRY GROSS, host:
This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Terry Gross. My guest is Pulitzer Prize-winning
investigative reporter Seymour Hersh. He broke much of the Abu Ghraib story and
won a National Magazine Award for public interest in 2006 for his New Yorker
pieces on intelligence and the Iraq War.
Heâs still investigating the Bush administration for a book heâs writing. In
fact, he was in the headlines earlier this month when he said, during an event
at the University of Minnesota, that heâs learned that an operation of the
militaryâs joint special operations command reported directly to Vice President
Cheneyâs office. He described it as essentially an executive assassination
wing. Weâll talk about that a little later.
Letâs start with Hershâs article in the current edition of the New Yorker,
which is about a possible game-changer in the Middle East. The story is called
"Syria Calling: The Obama Administrationâs Chance to Engage in a Middle East
Peace."
Hersh reports that Syrian President Bashar Asad and Israelâs new Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu may be ready to negotiate if the U.S. acts as mediator.
Seymour Hersh, welcome back to FRESH AIR.
Now after the Israeli ceasefire in Gaza, you got an e-mail from the Syrian
prime minister, Bashar Asad, saying that although Israel was doing everything
possible to undermine the prospects for peace, quote, âwe still need to
conclude our serious dialogue to lead us to peace,â unquote.
But didnât Bashar Asad just say that Israel only spoke the language of blood?
Didnât he just call on the Arab world to boycott Israel and close Israeli
embassies in the region and sever contact with Israel? I mean, he said that
after the Israeli ceasefire in Gaza, which wasnât very long ago.
Mr. SEYMOUR HERSH (Author, "Syria Calling: The Obama Administrationâs Chance to
Engage in a Middle East Peace"): Absolutely, and thereâs nothing like the
dexterity of politicians and government leaders.
What happened, simply, and I think this is a significant fact, is that Israelâs
game plan to - whatever it really was, to destroy Hamas and I think to kill the
leadership - I think Israel failed much more than you might know from reading
all the newspaper accounts.
I think their goal, initially, was to really take out the leadership of Hamas.
The neoconservatives in the Bush days, they always used to use the model of the
Carthaginian War - now Iâm serious, salt the earth, the Third Punic War - and
it was to salt the earth and make it unlivable for Hamas to survive in Gaza.
Thatâs why the bombing was so intense. Thatâs why they were so persistent,
despite the large number of innocents killed and the horrible photographs that
we all saw.
Israel failed in that attempt; Hamas survived. Hamas wins by surviving, and I
think Bashar became - Iâve been told this by his senior aides, not by him, he
wouldnât speak that way to me, but his very close aides - said look this was
basically a debacle for the Israelis.
They lost in public opinion, they didnât get rid of Hamas. Look whatâs going on
now. The world is paying more attention to Hamas. Thereâs much more â many more
demands for the Israelis and for the United States to start dealing directly
with Hamas. This is very much in the picture.
I think weâre going to see soon, direct contacts from the West, certainly
starting with Europe, with Hamas. And so from that point of view, President
Asad had every reason to change his mind and decide letâs go ahead.
Heâs dealing with a weakened Israel. Heâs dealing with a new American president
who just might appreciate the fact that the president of Syria is willing to
turn away from his anger and try to seek peace. And I think thatâs all part of
the big game plan thatâs going on now.
GROSS: You say that Syriaâs ultimate aim in negotiating with Israel and using
the United States as the negotiator would be to persuade Obama to abandon the
Bush administrationâs strategy of aligning America with the, quote, âmoderate
Arab Sunni states.â Can you talk a little bit more about that as an ultimate
aim for Syria?
Mr. HERSH: Sure. Let me tell you first what happened. The Bush administration -
and Richard Cheney, the vice president, was very key in this â evolved the
policy that one could call â the Arabs, some of the Arabs very angrily would
call fitna(ph), an Arab word for Muslim brother fighting brother.
The policy basically was, letâs get the moderate, we call moderate, Sunni
countries; Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, all of which are not democracies, by
the way - so much for Bushâs talk about democracy; But get those three
countries, particularly the Saudis with their money, working with America and
also Israel.
They were sort of a combine. And all of them â Israel, America, the Sunni
countries â working against Shiite Iran.
The idea was to put pressure on Shiite Iran and also Shiite Hezbollah.
Hezbollah is the one-time terrorist group thatâs now a political unit inside
Lebanon, but itâs certainly totally Shiite. And so the idea was to get a Sunni
world - Sunnis are about 90 percent of the - make up 90 percent of the
population in terms of religion in the Arab world â get them against Iran and
Hezbollah. This was always the game plan. And what Asad wants to do - and of
course heâs going to these negotiations understanding itâs going to be very
tough to do, but heâs got a new partner now in Obama, and heâs putting â the
reason he was so open with me and others, Iâm sure, is they want to put as much
pressure on this White House as they can about these issues.
He wants the change the paradigm. You know, it is amazing. After eight years of
what I think will arguably be the worst president weâve ever had - not only
economically, as we all know, but in terms of foreign policy - there still is a
very interesting chance for peace.
Hereâs what the play is. We absolutely, to get out of Iraq, we really do need
the neighboring countries to help us. We need Syria, which has a lot of
influence with Iraq. We donât want Iraq to become cowboys and Indians, and we
donât want to see, as we pull out, we donât want to see internecine warfare
between the various warlords and war groups and the Sunnis and Shiites.
And one way of moderating, we do understand â this is clearly â Iâm not telling
anything that isnât - sort of the old cliché about not rocket scientists - we
need people like the Turks, the Syrians and the Iranians to help us get our way
out of â extract our troops and leave Iraq in some sort of reasonable position.
We also would love to have the Iranians, who have a lot of influence inside
Afghanistan. So what Basharâs trying to do is to get Washington to somehow find
a way â and boy, is this going to be hard â to open up with Iran on these
regional issues, open up with Syria, continue to work with the Turks - who are
very angry about Gaza but are staying there, theyâre still the Israeli ally,
the Turks â and somehow handle Israel in all of this.
Itâs a really difficult diplomatic problem as I know it. I ended my piece by
saying itâs going to be very hard to pull off. But just imagine if we could
pull it off. We would resolve so many problems in the Middle East.
GROSS: Well, what about Israel? Israel has a new prime minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, who is very conservative and hasnât really supported the peace
process in the past, but he appears to be willing to talk to Syria about the
Golan Heights.
So why is Netanyahu leaning, apparently, toward negotiating with Syria?
Mr. HERSH: Well, thatâs obviously a question that I spent a lot of time
worrying about and talking about. Thereâs no question heâs passing that message
now, quite avidly. In wonderful Israeli style, one of the messages that were
passed to the Syrians - privately, about six months ago, was during the
campaign, the Israeli election took place in February, and it was a very bitter
campaign â BB Netanyahu passed the word that he is going to continue the talks.
He might not do it for a few months, because when he wins the election, he
doesnât want to rush in the talks because he doesnât want people to think heâs
doing the talks that were started by the previous government.
He wants to make them his own - which is very Israeli, if you will. Heâs also
passed the message, repeatedly, to this administration. Why? Not because of any
noble gestures, itâs because they believe that the real target is Iran.
They believe that, as awful as things are with Hamas and the Palestinian - that
whole problem, the problem of suicide bombers - those are not strategic issues
for the Israelis. Itâs tactical issues that are being dealt with. You kill
somebody; they kill somebody.
For them, the Iranians are the big game. They think Iran is going to get a bomb
very soon and is crazy enough to use it against one of their major cities, even
though it would mean the end of Iranian civilization.
Thatâs what the Israelis profoundly believe. Thereâs no question about that,
and thatâs a serious issue. For the Israelis then, to cut a deal with Syria, in
their view, removes the threat from the north. They donât have to worry so much
about that border. They can shift the military, weapons and missiles from
targeting Syria more towards Iran, and more importantly, itâs a process of
isolation.
They believe that if you can get Syria into an agreement with the West,
inevitably, inevitably Syria will walk away from its obligations and its
responsibilities or its closeness to the Iranians. Thatâs just inevitable.
So thatâs a reason for some of the wise people in Israel want to do it without
even that many preconditions. Donât worry about what he says. Get him in the
deal because time will be to our advantage.
And then, if in two years, if we decide we have to bomb Iran, Syria will stay
out of it. Thatâs the Israeli view.
GROSS: The negotiations would be about, most specifically, the return of the
Golan Heights to Syria, which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Six Day
War.
Whatâs the importance of the Golan Heights both to Syria and to Israel?
Mr. HERSH: Well for Syria, itâs homeland. Itâs not a biblical land. Itâs not
like weâre talking about Bethlehem and the West Bank or something for the
Palestinians. It doesnât have that kind of biblical history. Itâs a area of a
lot of water. Itâs a mountainous region. A lot of snow collects there, a lot of
water runoff.
I mean, all kinds of water flows, and it flows indirectly from Syria into a
place called the Shaba Farms in southern Lebanon thatâs in dispute, too, and so
thereâs a lot of riparian rights. Water is going to be, as we all know, a huge
issue, and this always is a huge issue in the Middle East. So thatâs another
factor.
I think - what got me interested in this story last year, and I started working
on this well before Gaza last fall - I knew that in â there had been a series
of informal talks done through the auspices of the Turkish government between
Israel and the Syrians.
And in those talks, amazing progress was made, so I heard, to the point where
most of the major issues were done, the technical issues â whoâs going to get
what water? How are they going to deal with it? Whatâs the geographical
boundaries? Where will be the troops be display(ph) for Israel? Of course, the
Golan Heights is not only an area of water supply but also high land, an area â
you know, no country wants to give up the high land.
The Syrians could theoretically, in a war, use the higher position, the
elevated mountains, to fire shells at them, etcetera, etcetera. So from a
security point of view, sort of a tactical security point of view, they were
always considered important.
But it was more than that. I think now, because about 20,000 Israelis have
settled in the Golan Heights since 1967, itâs become an area of wonderful
wineries because of the mountainous region, and apparently the weather is just
perfect for growing grapes â boutique hotels. Itâs a wonderful place to go and
spend the weekend.
And so, thereâs also skiing there on Mount Hermon. Itâs one of the few places.
I think the Israelis will keep the skiing area, Mount Hermon, thatâs part of
the deal. And the only problem with the Israeli point of view was, of course
under international law, itâs well known that any country that takes land by
force has to return it. And they hadnât done that in this case.
GROSS: So how do you think negotiations between Syria and Israel, brokered by
the U.S., would play among the Syrian people?
Mr. HERSH: Oh, very well. Iâve actually looked into that. Thereâs a great deal
of eagerness to change the paradigm there, too, really, and they are really
eager to look to the West.
Iâm talking about the business class, and also donât forget it would improve
the economics of Syria. Right now, thereâs tremendous problems in education and
health care. He doesnât have enough money for good hospitals, he doesnât have
enough money for the better schools he needs, and President Asad is most
interesting.
Heâs demanding that every child age six and on, the second language they have
be English. I quote somebody as saying heâs been trying to say yes to us for
six years and we just havenât listened.
GROSS: You raised a question that obviously you donât have the answer to, but
Iâll ask you anyways. You raise the question: Will the Obama administration
have the diplomatic skills to pull this off? So from what youâve seen so far,
what are you thinking?
Mr. HERSH: You know, itâs always dangerous to ask somebody what you think. I go
nuts every time I watch cable TV shows, and they have reporters on that begin
every sentence with the word I think. You know, A, they donât; and B, they
donât know anything.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. HERSH: But on that basis, having said that, disqualifying myself, Iâll tell
you something about Obama. Heâs the first American president that understands
the Islamic world.
He grew up for â spent a few years in Indonesia at a time when the Wahabis and
the Saudis were very influential there. There was a lot of talk about various
kinds of different sects and tracts of the Muslim religious world were
competing for each other.
The other thing I wrote about is that he met with Jimmy Carter, the former
president, who is - for many American Jews, heâs sort of Darth Vader because
heâs been â he wrote a book, the previous book, the one before the one he
currently has, talked about Apartheid Israel, the notion of the way they treat
the Arabs is equivalent to Apartheid in South Africa.
And so they had a long talk, Mr. Carter and Mr. Obama. And by the way, Carterâs
people tell me it was the first time since Jimmy Carter left office in 1980
that heâs gone back to consult with an American president about current
affairs.
And itâs absolutely possible, and obviously they talked about not only the
Middle East a great deal, clearly Hamas and all these issues would be on the
table.
And so here you have a president, and we all know how smart he is, who is, as I
said, the most knowledgeable about Islam of any president weâve ever had, whoâs
very aware of the what the possibilities are in the Middle East, who is already
showing â his administration is already beginning to talk in terms, as they
said to the Syrians.
We understand that everything that, you know, that the connections, letâs say,
between Syria and Hezbollah, as I mentioned, arenât as direct as perhaps the
Bush people did.
So thereâs a lot of signs that for the first time, weâre going to have a
president thatâs going to be open-minded in terms of the Middle East - and by
that I mean always supporting Israel but not necessarily listening to
everything, every argument they make.
And that has immense possibility. In the article, I write very briefly about
the fact, Iâm amazed it hadnât been reported since, that basically, the Obama
administration played a role, I think a significant role, in convincing Israel
to get out of â stop the Gaza War before his inauguration.
Now, it could be Israel was going to do that anyway, but my understanding is
not, that there were some people certainly who wanted to go on for another week
into late January.
And Obama simply passed a series of message - not the president himself but
some of his senior aides - to the Israelis, making it clear that he wants the
bombing to stop and the soldiers out of Gaza before he does his speech on
inauguration day. And that happened, and thatâs not inconsiderable.
And at the same time, Iâm sure, he also passed a message to the Israelis
saying, you know, Iâm still going to be your ally - donât think that - but the
word no blank check gets into play.
GROSS: My guest is investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. His article about
Syria is in the current edition of the New Yorker. Weâll talk more after a
break. This is FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
GROSS: My guest is investigative journalist Seymour Hirsh. In the current
edition of the New Yorker, he writes that the Obama administration may be
moving toward mediating negotiations between Syria and Israel, and this is part
of a broader Middle East strategy that includes countering Iranâs influence.
So, I guess Iâm a little confused about what the motivation is here, whether
itâs to bring Iran into the fold or to isolate Iran. And is that depending on
whether itâs the American point of view or the Israeli point of view?
Mr. HERSH: Itâs depending on whether itâs the Syrian point of view or the
Israeli point of view. The Syrians, there are many people in Syria who tell me
despite what â Israel believes you could isolate Iran by cutting a deal - but
from the President Basharâs point of view, Bashar Asadâs point of view, I think
itâs probably the guess is that what he wants to do is use talks to bring Iran
into the fold.
He doesnât want to isolate Iran. He wants to get America to deal with Iran, to
bring them in, into the process, the peace process. For him, itâs all about the
process.
You start the process, and thatâs what he wants to do. And if nothing else,
this is an overwhelming argument for the process. And itâs going to put a lot
of pressure, I think, on Obama to go ahead and agree to be in the middle of
this process.
GROSS: So how do you think Iran would react to a peace agreement between Syria
and Israel? Everybody knows what they want Iran to do, but what do you think
Iran would do?
Mr. HERSH: Oh, I think theyâd be very hostile to it. I donât think theyâd want
it. I think publicly, theyâd say everybody should get back their country, but I
think privately, theyâd be very, very upset. And the simple answer to your
question is Iran will hate it, no question.
GROSS: President Obama sent that New Yearâs greeting video to Iran, and the
supreme leader of Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini, rebuffed him. But how do you
think Obama is seen among leaders of that region who are not our allies?
Mr. HERSH: Well, Iâve talked to some, obviously, because I traveled. Not
everybody - by the way, many people we think are our allies are perfectly
prepared to be quite scathing about us in private. That makes sense because of
the wars weâve pushed in the Middle East.
Basically, heâs, you know, heâs the great hope. And thereâs an election taking
place in a few months in Iran, and you have to measure everything by the
electoral politics because it is - really, they are mullahs, but they have
elections that matter there, very serious elections.
And Obamaâs been saying something very interesting about â heâs been talking,
when he mentions Iran - heâs talked a couple times now about mutual respect.
And what does the Arab world want from us? They want us to be respectful.
Theyâre tired of being taken for granted by us. They really want that.
And the other thing is, he used the language - he described it as the Islamic
Republic of Iran - and thatâs a different language. Heâs passing a message to
the Iranians which is, unlike the Bush administrationâs, forget about regime
change. Weâre not coming for you. We donât want to get rid of you. We want to
deal with you.
And whatever they say in response, I think heâs going to stay consistent on
language, changing the language. So you start with changing the language, and
heâs changed the language.
Itâs an amazing dance thatâs going to have to take place. And the problem is,
because of the economy, heâs not going to get to this for a little while. This
canât be something thatâs high on his agenda. Not because he doesnât want it
be, just common sense would say, heâs got to fix the ship of America.
Heâs got to get us working again. And this could an awful summer with people
out of jobs, and riots, and etcetera, etcetera, and I think everybodyâs worried
about that.
Iâm a cynic, and Iâll tell you on election night, I went to bed - when Obama
was a named president, I went to bed thinking I was going to sleep that night
with a beautiful virgin princess, and when I woke up in the morning, I said
okay, itâs a frog. And you have to deal with it as a frog, and you have to be
very skeptical - and I am.
And I look at it. And thereâs things heâs doing in Afghanistan that worry me.
But I donât think weâve ever had a president - maybe since Kennedy, who was
very, very bright, and so was Lincoln â with the brains this guy has and the
capacity to understand things this guy does.
And heâs also a Chicago pol, letâs remember that, but when it comes to the
Middle East, heâs going to be given a chance, and Bashar Asad is pushing that
envelope. Heâs being given a chance to make a huge difference. And to think
that after eight years we still have a reasonable chance of getting something
accomplished diplomatically, to get the world calmed down and focus on the
problems we need to focus on, itâs pretty amazing.
It just shows you the human race, weâre hard. Weâre hard to put down. We really
â thereâs a lot of good stuff in us.
GROSS: Seymour Hersh. His article, âSyria Calling,â is in the current edition
of the New Yorker. Heâll be back in the second half of the show. Iâm Terry
Gross, and this is FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Terry Gross back with investigative reporter
Seymour Hersh. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1970 for breaking the story of the My
Lai Massacre in Vietnam. More recently he broke much of the Abu Ghraib story
and won a national magazine award for public interest in 2006 for his New
Yorker articles on intelligence and the Iraq war. In the current edition of The
New Yorker, Hersh writes that a major change in American policy towards Syria
is underway.
Well, Seymour Hersh, I know a lot of our listeners are just waiting for me to
ask you about comments that you recently made at the University of Minnesota
where you were engaging in an onstage forum. And you said in that forum that
Vice President Cheney had an executive assassination ring. And you were talking
about the Joint Special Operations Command. You said under Bushâs authority
theyâve been going into countries, not talking to the ambassador or the CIA
station chief, and finding people on a list, and executing them and leaving.
Thatâs been going on in the name of all of us. Youâre saying that this
execution ring that was part of the Joint Special Operations Command reported
directly to Vice President Cheneyâs office. Iâm not even sure where to start on
this.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: So let me start with this, and this might sound like a weird question,
but donât the Special Forces, isnât a part of what they do - assassinate
people?
Mr. HERSH: Yeah, I mean, if they have specific knowledge that, letâs say,
thereâs a leading member of al-Qaida, I think the option is of course first to
capture, if possible, and also if youâve confirmed it and you also have
authority to do so. And by the way, let me just say this, I just â you canât
imagine the heartburn I must cause to my editors at The New Yorker when I say
things of the top that arenât as carefully structured as some of the stuff I
write. What happensâ¦
GROSS: And I want to make sure that this is â that itâs clear - this is not in
The New Yorker.
Mr. HERSH: Yeah, absolutely. Thatâsâ¦
GROSS: Thereâs comments that you made onstage as part of the ongoing research,
you found that that was part of the ongoing research that youâre doing for a
book.
Mr. HERSH: What it is, I was in a debate or a conversation with Walter Mondale,
the former vice president at the University of Minnesota. He teaches there now
and I was amazed Walter Mondale has come a long way. And he was almost radical
in his denigration of whatâs been going on in America in the past eight years.
And somebody asked me, are bad things still going on? And what I said was â and
hereâs where it gets complicated in terms of speaking and writing, I actually
didnât say anything more than I have written in The New Yorker.
Last summer I wrote a long article in The New Yorker about the Joint Special
Operations Command, thatâs the group youâre talking about, JSOC, we call it. In
the article I made the point that they are delegated by the president of the
United States under the law to operate with impunity, without any â without
telling, going anywhere, as I said, without telling the CIA station chief or
the ambassador going into a series of countries, the president - I think at
least 12 - the president has done by executive order, giving them that
authority. And kill people - kill people they think are al-Qaida or enemies of
the state or high-value targets.
And this information is not shared with Congress. And all of that was in The
New Yorker last summer. And Iâve written about JSOC two or three other times
because what I was writing last summer was they were engaging in a major
operation inside Iran, and as far as I know, elements of that operation are
still going on. So in terms of the basic story, if I were writing, and I was a
little more careful in nuance, and you know, damn it, I always forget thereâs
somebody in every audience with, you know, this is the day of the Internet and
media.
GROSS: Oh, you bet.
Mr. HERSH: You bet.
GROSS: Thereâs no way youâre going to say anything that isnât being recorded.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. HERSH: Yeah. It was snowy night and they expected a big crowd. They sold a
lot of tickets for it. It was one of those events in Minnesota. Anyway.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. HERSH: Freeze time it. By - in 2005, 2006, they were really banging on
people. The high-value targets, they were operating, JSOC was operating. You
got promoted from within by the number of kills you had. Iâm not exaggerating.
Congress knew nothing about it. When Congress asked to get into this program,
Iâm not talking about average congressman, Iâm talking about the guys who are
the senior players, in this case, the House Defense Appropriation Subcommittee
has a small group of four.
Dave Obey, the chairman of the committee, is one of them, and so is John
Murtha, the longtime former marine from Pennsylvania - longtime members of the
House. This is the most secret committee in Congress, and they couldnât get
access to whatâs going on. Under the law, any program that the military does
has to be funded by Congress. And I think Iâm going to write, and I didnât say
this publicly, but Iâll just say it right now, Iâm going to write that many of
these operations in the early days after 9/11 were probably funded off the
books by this White House, illegally.
So they didnât have to tell Congress anything. That pattern continued. So this
group in 2005, 2006, they were operating on their own. They were killing
people. Iâm not faulting the guys doing it. They were doing their job, but for
a certain period of time, all of the names were submitted to the vice
presidentâs office for a clearance process before. I donât how long that
continued. Iâm sure now itâs changed.
GROSS: So basically what youâre reporting here, among other things, is that
this team of Special Forces that was charged with assassinating high-value
targets was cleared only through the vice presidentâs office when it shouldâve
been cleared by Congress, as well.
Mr. HERSH: Well, the whole program wasnât told to Congress very much. Congress
may know something about it. They were very suspicious about it. In July of
last year, unfortunately itâs an election year, so anything that wasnât about
the election last summer didnât get much attention. I wrote that the senior
members of the Appropriation Subcommittee that deals with the most secret
issues were stunned when they were confronted with, for the first time, some
evidence of the extent of what the Joint Special Operations Command does.
Thereâs been a real problem in terms of this special unit. It isnât that the
way it got â what I said in Minnesota ended up in some blogs and on cable TV as
Cheney running a death squad. No. What happened is in the early days they would
clear through the vice president office their operations, who they were doing,
who they were going to hit, just as in the early days of Guantanamo.
And Iâve written about this when I wrote of Abu Ghraib. In the early days of
Guantanamo, when they had a prisoner in â02 and â03 and they wanted to escalate
the â what they donât call torture, but I will, the torture they used to
extract lousy information from them, you had to â it either had to be signed
off, in most cases, in cases of the serious prisoners - it had to be signed off
by Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of Defense, or Rumsfeld or somebody
that high in the Pentagon.
So when it came to the high-value target hunting killer teams, they need to
clear what they did with the vice presidentâs office. And thatâs what was going
on. Whether it still exists that way today, and that didnât come across in what
I said in Minnesota because I rather stupidly didnât make it clear that I was
talking about then as opposed to they, is that Iâm sure thatâs changed now.
And one reason itâs changed is that the man who ran that operation was promoted
by George Bush a few years ago to be in charge of all operations for the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. His name is Stan McChrystal. And so since you now have
somebody inside the Joint Chiefs of Staff who used to run the program, the idea
that these operations aren't known to the military is sort of silly. Of course
they are. But three years, two and a half years ago, no way.
GROSS: So, do you think that the kind of assassinations that youâre talking
about are still going on, but only with approval?
Mr. HERSH: I donât know whatâs going on with the Obama administration. I know
until the end of the Bush administration there was a lot of very ugly stuff
going on. Of course a lot of the stuff they did was very appropriate. The Joint
Special Operations Command, they would try and collect intelligence, they would
try and grab prisoners. But when they had to, if they had a high-value target,
and they were sure that they had a very bad guy, we would get him.
GROSS: Now, you said that some of the stuff that you described at the
University of Minnesota that made headlines, youâd already basically reportedâ¦
Mr. HERSH: Oh, absolutely. In The New Yorker.
GROSS: In The New Yorker. One of the difference is that onstage at the
University of Minnesota you called it an executive assassination ring. In The
New Yorker you talked about how the Bush administration wasnât requiring a
special finding from Congress before authorizing the assassinations. I mean the
language was much more technical in The New Yorker.
Mr. HERSH: Much better, much sensible, which is whyâ¦
GROSS: Did you have any regrets about calling it an executive assassination
ring?
Mr. HERSH: Well, actuallyâ¦
GROSS: I mean thatâs the kind of language that really makes headlines.
Mr. HERSH: It actually was winged, but donât worry about it. I mean becauseâ¦
GROSS: Oh, winged. Okay.
Mr. HERSH: I might just talk about it. But the point is that of course what I
said, executive assassination ring is a loaded phrase and was absolutely - I
donât dispute any of the facts, but using a phrase like that, thatâs the reason
why people like me, despite the fact that I scream and yell about editors,
really like editors.
GROSS: Congressman Dennis Kucinich is requesting an investigation into your
allegations about Cheneyâs office authorizing these assassinations without
congressional approval. And he doesnât want to wait until your book comes out.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: And so, what do you think of that idea, of a congressional
investigation?
Mr. HERSH: Well, I think if you probably checked with the House Defense
Appropriation Subcommittee, youâll find that after the article I wrote last
summer, they did begin an investigation. They did ask a few members of the
House Defense Appropriation Subcommittee to gather up the forces. The Defense
Appropriation Subcommittee in the House is unusual in that it has an
investigation arm that not many people know much about.
Itâs not a secret. Itâs just they have about a dozen guys, some of them FBI,
CIA, former GAO guys - Government Accounting Office people - that have done a
lot of investigations for them in classified areas. They did ask, the last time
I thought about it, I heard about it, they wanted to investigate the Joint
Special Operations Command because they were not being briefed.
Mr. Cheney said to them, well, Iâm not going to give you clearance. You cannot
have clearance for it. And they said, well, but weâre the most secret group. We
have clearance for the most things. And Cheney said, if you donât like what Iâm
saying, sue me. And thatâs the last I heard about it last fall. I donât know if
they got the clearance. I donât what this administration is going to do.
I just think Kucinich will probably find out if - I havenât talked to him. He
didnât call me, but if he had I wouldâve told him to go the House
Appropriations Committee to its chairman, David Obey of Wisconsin, and see what
theyâve done, because I know they were interested in the same issue.
GROSS: My guest is investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. After recording our
interview, we contacted the U.S. Special Operations Command for comment
regarding Hershâs assertions that former Vice President Dick Cheney authorized
JSOC operations to kill high-level targets.
They sent us the following response. Quote, âMr. Hershâs assertions are not
correct. The Joint Special Operations Command is a subordinate unit of U.S.
Special Operations Command. And like all U.S. military units reports through a
military chain of command to the Secretary of Defense and the president. The
vice president is not in the military chain of command and has no command on
control authorities over the U.S. military. Congress has oversight over all
U.S. forces, including special operations,â unquote.
Weâll hear more of our interview with Seymour Hersh after a break. This is
FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
GROSS: If youâre just joining us, my guest is Seymour Hersh and his article in
the current New Yorker is called âSyria Calling,â the Obama Administrationâs
chance to engage in a Middle East peace. You investigated the Bush
administration throughout the Bush administration, always looking for ways that
they might have been going beyond executive authority and taking on new powers.
And now that the Bush administration is over, youâre still investigating what
they did and where they might have violated the law. Is investigating that any
different for you as a journalist post Bush administration than it was during
the Bush administration? Are more people coming forward now, now that the
president and vice president are no longer in power?
Mr. HERSH: You know, itâs a great question because I did think, I had a lot of
people that had told me in the last year, Bush, call me next February. And so
far even people that are out are still cherry because, you know, and not so
much Bush, but Cheney really is, heâs really smart. In the article this week in
The New Yorker thatâs coming out this week, I mentioned that at one point last
fall Mr. Miliband, the young foreign secretary of Britain, unilaterally,
without telling the White House, made a trip to Syria to see President Assad.
And his intelligence chief, his MI6 chief before him. And Bush, Cheney didnât
know about it until it actually was - they were actually there. And Cheney, at
a meeting, and I do have, I can tell you, I do have access and have had, and
Iâve been very careful of how I use it - do a lot of stuff for meetings in the
White House. And at a meeting, he railed on about Perfidious Albion, you know,
that - the old Shakespeare term for England. And that was used during the
revolutionary war as a pejorative term for England.
Perfidious Albion, he said, he is â Cheney is really underestimated. Itâs easy
to make a caricature of him. Heâs very, very bright. And heâs also, in person,
much more open-minded in the sense, Iâm talking about not politically. You
could go and the most despaired people in the world go and have had social
evenings with him and his wife. And talking about â as long as you donât get
into politics, and movies and stuff like that, itâs â heâs easy to make a
caricature, but heâs much more formidable than people think - got a rap-clap
memory, understands bureaucracy much better, has been around forever, has had
every job.
GROSS: Are you saying that you think Vice President Cheney is still having a
chilling effect on people who might otherwise be coming forward and revealing
things to you about what happened in the Bush-Cheney administration?
Mr. HERSH: Iâll make it worse. I think heâs put people left. Heâs put people
back. They call it a stay behind. Itâs sort of an intelligence term of
(unintelligible). When you leave a country and, you know, youâre driven out,
you know, youâve lost the war, you leave people behind. So stay behind that you
can continue to have to contacts with for - to do sabotage, whatever you want
to do.
Cheneyâs left to stay behind. Heâs got people in a lot of agencies that still
tell him whatâs going on, particularly Defense, obviously, and also in the NSA.
Thereâs still people that talk to him. He still knows whatâs going on. Can he
still control policy up to a point? Probably up to a point, a minor point, but
heâs still there. Heâs still a presence and, again, because of the problems
this administration is having filling jobs, a lot of people who served in the
Bush-Cheney government - even in the White House people in the most
sophisticated staffs are still there.
You simply canât get rid of everybody. You may not even want some professional
people. But Cheney is - I would never call it admiration, but you know,
formidable. Yeah, this guy - this guy is the real McCoy.
GROSS: So one more thing, you for years been writing about basically the
present, or at least the present administration. And now youâre doing a book
thatâs about the past. Itâs about the Bush-Cheney administration, which is no
longer in power. So Iâd just like to briefly hear why youâre continuing to
investigate the Bush-Cheney administration, as opposed to spending all of your
time on whatâs happening now?
Mr. HERSH: I donât want to start analyzing what I do what I do. If I started
analyzing, Iâd, you know.
GROSS: Thatâs all right.
Mr. HERSH: God knows, you know. And I donât mean - Iâm not saying donât ask me
that question. Iâm just saying, you know, why do I always want to make - one of
the things you ask yourself, why do I want to spend my time making other people
look bad? What happened in my childhood that wants me to do this? Do you know
what I mean?
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. HERSH: But the bottom line is, I donât think we begin to nearly know what
happened.
GROSS: Right, okay.
Mr. HERSH: Iâm telling you, thereâs never been a government this secret. And
Bush, I mean, look, I can tell now, I can cherry-pick inside Obama like you
canât believe. I mean, you could just - itâs just like taking candy from a
baby. I mean, Iâll tell you, they had a very interesting principles meeting the
other week about Afghanistan. And I know an awful lot about it. Iâm not
bragging, Iâm just telling you.
You know, itâs just so much harder to work against Cheney right now. Even if
heâs out, itâs just so much more rewarding. One of the stories that got me very
early, years ago, there was a young officer assigned there - quite brilliant.
And thereâs something called the Situation Room in the White House where the
very bushy-tailed bright colonels and Navy captains go, and theyâre all going
to make admiral. And theyâre the guys who funnel all of the intelligence
reports from the CIA and the NSA for the National Security Advisor.
And one of the guys, this is in the middle of the Bush-Cheney years, after the
â after â04, and a guy comes in and heâs, you know, high up in his class at the
war college. You know, and by the way, we have - donât underestimate the
military.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. HERSH: Theyâre really good. When this guy read the regs and heâs there and
he discovers all of these top secret pieces of paper, urgent stuff thatâs
supposed to be, under the law, under the procedures, to immediately go to the
National Security Advisor, which would be - then it was Condoleezza Rice in the
first term.
And thereâs a law says that sheâs, in one case, the National Security Agency
which monitors communications, if they have something called a critic, an
urgent message for the president, within 10 minutes itâs got to be on the desk
- under the law or executive rules - has to be on the desk of the National
Security Advisor.
So this guy reads it, but everybodyâs giving everything to Scooter Libby, the
National Security Advisor for Cheney. And he starts saying, hey guys, weâre not
doing it right. Thatâs not supposed to go to the vice president, itâs supposed
to go to presidentâs person, Condi, not to Scooter. And heâs told, forget about
it. He makes a fuss. And one day he makes a move that do something for Condi,
and heâs 13,000 miles away the next Monday.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Right.
Mr. HERSH: Didnât lose his promotions. He managed to make his - got his two or
three stars, 13,000 miles away, you know, within a, you know, the orders were
cut, maybe it took him longer to move, but he was out of there quick. And itâs
an amazing place, you know, the more you know about it, the more fascinated
youâll get because they were controlling power.
GROSS: Seymour Hersh, thank you so much for talking with us.
Mr. HERSH: Glad to be here.
GROSS: Seymour Hersh is a staff writer for The New Yorker. His article in the
current edition is called âSyria Calling,â the Obama administrationâs chance to
engage in a Middle East peace. This is FRESH AIR.
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The Ghost Of Populism Walks Again â Again
TERRY GROSS, host:
You canât turn on the TV or read an article about Wall Street excesses these
days that doesnât label the public mood as populist rage. But our linguist,
Geoff Nunberg, isnât sure how thatâs different from just being angry.
Dr. GEOFF NUNBERG (Linguist): Rage is all the rage right now, particularly when
itâs of the populist sort. Over the last month, I counted almost 200 new
stories that paired populists with items like rage, fury and frenzy, four times
as many as in the whole of 2008. And there were more than 100 articles that
mentioned AIG along with Pitchfork, which was the implement that Stephen
Colbert obligingly brandished as he urged his listeners to join him in forming
an angry mob.
The cover of the most recent Newsweek announced a feature section called âThe
Thinking Manâs Guide to Populist Rageâ over a still from the 1931 film version
of âFrankensteinâ that shows the villagers in pursuit of the monster with
torches, cudgels and dogs. Tongue-in-cheek or not, those images suggest to
specters that the word populism triggers in a lot of people, demagoguery,
social disorder, mob rule and a new age of class warfare.
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Suzanne Garment warned Obama that you couldnât
just stir up a little bit of populism and turn it off when it gets
inconvenient. Populism is dangerous, she said, recalling the racism that
tainted some adherents of the original capital P Populists, the radical
movement that flourished in the western states and the south during the
depression of the 1890s.
But thatâs playing a little fast and loose with the P-word. Unless youâre
Stephen Colbert, itâs a big jump from figurative pitchforks to literal ones.
Whatever people are getting at when they talk about populist rage, it has only
a remote etymological connection to those earlier movements. In fact, the
small-p populist label that people have been throwing around was actually an
invention of the age of Nixon, not the age of McKinley.
For more than half a century after the original populists fell apart around
1900, their name was consigned to the dust bin of history, along with other
forgotten third-party movements like the Free-Soilers and the Greenbackers. It
was only with the political realignment of the late â60s that people revived
the word populism to describe the candidates who were wooing the votes of blue-
collar workers and white southerners who had abandoned their traditional
allegiance to the Democrats.
George Wallace was designated a populist, and so were Spiro Agnew and Hubert
Humphrey. By 1972, the historian C. Vann Woodward could write an article in The
New York Times called âThe Ghost of Populism Walks Again.â He marveled at the
way the word populist was suddenly turning up in improbable and unaccustomed
quarters that wouldâve astonished the 19th century agrarian radicals.
The historian Michael Kazin has said that populism is less an ideology than a
language. Whether they come from the left, right or center, populists claim to
speak for the values of decent ordinary people against the rich and powerful.
But of course there are a lot of ways to carve the world into us-es and thems.
You can pit the common man against economic royalists, the people who work hard
and play by the rules against the fat cats who work the system, the normal Joe
six-pack American against the out-of-touch chardonnay-sipping elite.
Given the ideological promiscuity, it isnât surprising that populist can be a
positive or negative word, sometimes in the same sentence. My populist has the
common touch, your populist is a pandering demagogue. But then any label that
can apply to both Lou Dobbs and Hugo Chavez has got to have a fair amount of
contextual flex built into it.
Still, whoeverâs deploying it, the language of populism always involves a
direct appeal to the emotions. Thereâs a lot of pop in modern populism. Its
immediate roots are in Hollywood and Nashville, not the political movements of
the 19th century. Listening to Reagan, Clinton or Palin at their populist best,
you donât hear any traces of the florid orotundities of William Jennings Bryan.
You hear the echoes of Frank Capra little man movies of the â30s, or of later
films like âOn the Waterfrontâ and â12 Angry Men,â or âNorma Raeâ and âRocky.â
In fact, the biggest risk of modern populism is less that it will devolve into
violence than it will tip from sentimentality into kitsch. Itâs a short step
from Mr. Smith and Mr. Deeds to Joe the plumber, or from Merle Haggard to Toby
Keith.
That helps to explain a curious linguistic difference between populist and
words like liberal and conservative. We readily describe politicians as
populists, but weâre hesitant to use the word for the people theyâre trying to
appeal to. We donât talk about populist Americans, populist voters, or populist
radio listeners. Itâs as if the targets of populist rhetoric arenât supposed to
be aware theyâre being worked on. So thereâs a certain condescension in all
those facile references to populist rage.
Sure, everybodyâs angry right now and with good reason, but why do we have to
reach for a special word populist when weâre talking about the anger directed
at the venality and arrogance of the rich, as if itâs inevitably the product of
class antagonisms? Donât I have grounds for being angry just in my capacity as
a citizen?
And for that matter, what entitles everyone to describe the anger as rage,
which is the word we use for a violent emotion born of helplessness and
powerlessness? Letâs credit Americans with a little common sense. What weâre
seeing is simply an outpouring of public indignation, not populist rage. And
that sound you hear isnât pitchforks, just a couple a hundred million people
talking back to their car radios.
GROSS: Geoff Nunberg is a Linguist who teaches at the School of Information at
the University of California at Berkeley. You can download Podcasts of our show
in our Web site freshair.npr.org.
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Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.