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Miller - The Story, the: a Reporters Journey

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Star reporter for The New York Times, the worlds most powerful newspaper; foreign correspondent in some of the most dangerous fields; Pulitzer winner; longest jailed correspondent for protecting her sources, Judith Miller is highly respected and controversial. In this memoir, she turns her reporting skills on herself with the intensity of her professional vocation. Judy Miller grew up near the Nevada atomic proving ground. She got a job at the New York Times after a suit by women employees about discrimination at the paper and went on to cover national politics, head the papers bureau in Cairo, and serve as deputy editor in Paris and then deputy at the powerful Washington bureau. She reported on terrorism and the rise of fanatical Islam in the Middle East and on secret biological weapons plants and programs in Iraq, Iran, and Russia. She covered an administration traumatized by 9/11 and an anthrax attack three weeks later. Miller shared a Pulitzer for her reporting. She turns her journalistic skills on herself and her controversial reporting which marshaled evidence that led America to invade Iraq. She writes about the mistakes she and others made on the existence in Iraq of weapons of mass destruction. She addresses the motives of some of her sources, including the notorious Iraqi Chalabi and the CIA. She describes going to jail to protect her sources in the Scooter Libby investigation of the outing of CIA agent Valerie Plame and how the Times subsequently abandoned her after twenty-eight years. The Story describes the real life of a foreign and investigative reporter. It is an adventure story, told with bluntness and wryness.

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ALSO BY JUDITH MILLER Germs Biological Weapons and Americas Secret War with - photo 1

ALSO BY JUDITH MILLER

Germs: Biological Weapons and Americas Secret War (with Stephen Engelberg and William Broad)

God Has Ninety-nine Names: Reporting from a Militant Middle East

One, by One, by One: Facing the Holocaust

Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf (with Laurie Mylroie)

Picture 2

Simon & Schuster

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New York, NY 10020

www.SimonandSchuster.com

Copyright 2015 by Judith Miller

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Simon & Schuster Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition April 2015

SIMON & SCHUSTER and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-866-506-1949 or .

The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event, contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

Interior design by Joy OMeara

Jacket design by Jason Heuer

Jacket images Shutterstock

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Miller, Judith, 1948

The story : a reporters journey / Judith Miller.First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition.

pagescm

1.Miller, Judith, 1948 2.Women journalistsUnited StatesBiography.I.Title.

PN4874.M492A32015

070.92dc23

[B]

2014039394

ISBN 978-1-4767-1601-5

ISBN 978-1-4767-1603-9 (ebook)

For friends, fellow journalists killed while telling the story:

Dial Torgerson

David Blundy

Daniel Pearl

Marie Colvin

And for Bill Safire, word warrior, who encouraged me to keep trying

CONTENTS
PROLOGUE

I thought I was doing well. In the spring of 2002, a year before the invasion of Iraq, I was at the peak of my profession. A member of an investigative unit at the New York Times , Americas most prestigious newspaper, I had been part of a small team that had just won a Pulitzer for our investigation before 9/11 into Al Qaeda and its growing threat to America. I had also received an Emmy that year, for a documentary based on Germs , a book I had written with Stephen Engelberg and William Broad, two respected Times colleagues. I had finally been lucky in love. For the past nine years I had been married to a brilliant publisher, a legend in his own profession, who was proud of my work and tolerated my frequent lengthy assignments often to dangerous places, especially in the Middle East, where I had been the papers Cairo bureau chief for several years.

I could not have imagined that three years later my reporting would be mired in controversy, or that some of my life-long assumptions about politics, foreign policy, and journalism would be tested and shattered.

At the start of the Iraq War in 2003, I was sent to cover it as the only reporter embedded in a secret army unit charged with finding the weapons of mass destruction that the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies concluded Saddam Hussein was hiding. Before and during the war, it was my job to report in the most timely way on what the US government believed to be true. It sounds easy. In the hypersecretive world of national security, it isnt.

The CIA and other intelligence agencies were convinced with high confidence that Saddam had chemical and germ weapons programs and was actively seeking a nuclear bomb. I got scoops about some of that intelligence. I hedged the assertions with all the proper qualifiers. Eventually, over the course of Americas long occupation of Iraq, more than six thousand chemical weapons or remnants of themsome containing mustard gas and sarin made before the 1991 warwere found and tragically sickened some American soldiers and Iraqis. While the Times and other news outlets claimed that these were not the weapons for which America had invaded, Saddams failure to acknowledge or account for them violated his pledges to the United Nations and was part of the administrations justification for war.

But the central, clearly newsworthy claim of some of my prewar stories was wrong. As we now know, Saddam did not have an active program to create and use WMD or stockpiles of such new, sophisticated weapons. The faulty intelligence on which the decisions of policy makers and politicians were based was used to justify a war whose consequences have thus far proven disastrous for the Iraqi people and America.

As the war began to go badly, controversy erupted not only over the governments missteps but also the medias role in publicizing the governments estimates, and my reporting, in particular. From a journalist whose boss, Bill Keller, once described as smart, relentless, incredibly well sourced, and fearless, I was suddenly being characterized as a pushy woman reporter who would do anything for a scoop, a warmonger who had helped sell and carry out the war.

A campaign against my reporting had been launched in the blogosphere by critics, some of whom have no idea what reporting involves; I sensed that they were reacting to the ill-fated war. But the false characterizations still stung. I often didnt know whether to laugh or cry. (I did a bit of both.) Accusations that I was a closet neocon or the most gullible

On WMD in Iraq, I had lots of company in government and the media. In hindsight, few of the officials whose decisions prompted the mess in Iraq understood what they were getting intonot those in 1991 who favored leaving Saddam in power, or those in 2003 who sought to bring democracy to Iraq by force. Wrong, too, were those who argued in 2007 as the war was failing that switching strategies and a surge of forces in Iraq would not affect Americas military fortunes there. So were those who claimed that America had finally won in Iraq, and those in 2010 who advocated pulling our troops out posthaste.

There is no shortage of mistakes about Iraq. Good grace, and honesty, require all of us who made them to admit error. This book is part of that process.

Over time questions about the rightness of the Iraq War both in its conception and outcome morphed in some quarters into a broad condemnation of the media and accusations that the pressnot the governmenthad taken the country to war. The charge was both untrue and toxic to our political discourse. But with newspapers under increasing economic pressure, the charges of warmongering felt like mortal threats to an institution and a profession to which I had devoted my life.

It was into this landscape that a federal investigation was launched to determine who had leaked the name of a CIA agent whose husband had accused the White House of having lied about Iraqs WMD. I received a federal subpoena demanding that I disclose the identity of sources who may have blown the agents cover. I went to jail to protect those sources, or so I thought.

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