[Mb-civic] The Value of Anonymity - Anne Applebaum - Washington
Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Nov 30 04:03:46 PST 2005
The Value of Anonymity
By Anne Applebaum
Wednesday, November 30, 2005; A23
Just a few days ago I spoke to a top government official who prefers to
remain anonymous. It wasn't the first time: We've met only once or
twice, but whenever I have a question pertaining to this official's area
of expertise, I don't hesitate to ask his opinion.
But he doesn't want to be quoted, this top government official, because
he works for an even more important person who wouldn't want his
subordinate's name appearing in print, particularly when his
subordinate's opinion runs contrary to his own. Nevertheless, I'd much
rather talk to my anonymous source off the record than speak to his more
important boss with tape recorders running. The latter would be harder
to reach, probably less well-informed, and certainly more platitudinous.
By contrast, my anonymous source will pick up the phone himself and tell
me his version of events in great detail.
I'm fortunate, since my form of journalism -- editorializing and
columnizing -- doesn't always require me to quote people, and I don't
think that the words of this particular source have ever been featured
in print. Nevertheless, thanks to Valerie Plame, a woman whose
significance to national security has still never been fully explained,
I've had many occasions to ponder my relationship with him in recent
months. After all, letters quoted by The Post's ombudsman in recent days
have included complaints that Post reporters involved in the Plame story
seem to be "literally or figuratively in bed with their subjects," or
that they deliberately go easy on sources. One letter writer thundered,
"The sad fact is that Bob Woodward, and by extension The Washington
Post, has an enormous vested interest in maintaining cozy relationships
with the White House."
Personally, I can testify that whenever I call the White House, I'm
invariably put through to the fourth assistant deputy undersecretary for
press relations, who doesn't know whether the president has an
immigration policy or not -- and if she did know, she wouldn't tell me.
But I'm not sure that my distinctly uncozy relationship with the White
House is a good thing, either for the government or for the reading
public. If I had an anonymous source, say, someone who thinks about
immigration or some other issue on behalf of the White House, and who
would actually be prepared to talk about it off the record, I might be
able to make a more accurate assessment, positive or negative, of what
the president's policy might be.
I am not saying anything new about the murky Plame case here (as if that
were possible) nor am I defending Bob Woodward, whom I've met perhaps
three times, and whose relationship with The Post both eclipses and
predates my own by several decades. Nor is it my intention to defend or
attack Judy Miller, whom I've never met at all. But I do think it's time
someone stood up and said something in favor of government officials who
speak off the record with journalists, and of the journalists who bother
to listen. After all, most public policy journalism doesn't involve CIA
leaks or undercover agents. Most of it involves explaining and
investigating the government's role in health care, economics, the
environment, education, foreign policy and trade. If there is no casual,
ordinary contact between journalists and government officials, and no
level of trust, then the quality of the information available to the
public about these issues will be extremely poor.
There is, of course, a balance to be struck: No, one doesn't want to get
in bed, literally or figuratively, with one's sources. Yes, the world
needs cynical journalists, aggressive journalists and friendless
journalists, as well as journalists about whom ex-presidents write
obituaries (as the late Hugh Sidey inspired former president Gerald Ford
to do last week). As the story of Deep Throat itself illustrated, many
of those who leak highly confidential information to journalists have
deeply mixed motives. The very best journalists try to understand those
motives and make sure they listen to other points of view as well.
Some of us will get the balance wrong -- there are bad and corrupt
journalists, just as there are bad and corrupt members of any other
profession -- and some of us will make mistakes. But the alternative to
a relatively open, relatively comfortable relationship between the press
and the government isn't exactly attractive. Earlier this week the owner
of a Jordanian newspaper visited The Post. He described his efforts to
open up the press in his country, to ease laws that restrict what topics
the press is allowed to address, and to create a newspaper independent
of government financing and influence. But ultimately, he said, the
legal system wasn't his worst problem. Far more troubling was the fact
that Jordanian government officials "feel no obligation" to say anything
to the press, on or off the record, at all. In Jordan, there are no
anonymous sources with whom members of the press are entangled, no
lower-level officials who can help shed light on events -- and as a
result, it's hard for the press to be relevant to politics. Is that
really the system we'd like to adopt in this country, too?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/29/AR2005112901102.html
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