New York Times Managing Editor Admits Pre-War Failings [1]
Submitted by Anne Landman [2] on
The managing editor of the New York Times [3], Jill Abramson, has admitted in a lengthy review [4] of Bob Woodward [5]'s latest book that the Times failed to publish enough front-page articles questioning the prewar intelligence on Iraq [6]'s weapons of mass destruction. Midway through her 3,000-plus word review of "The War Within [7]," Bob Woodward's latest book about George W. Bush [8]'s presidency, Abramson writes, "In 'Plan of Attack' Woodward acknowledges an error of his own: he admits he should have pushed The Washington Post to publish a front-page article about the flimsiness of the intelligence on W.M.D. I was Washington bureau chief for The Times while this was happening, and I failed to push hard enough for an almost identical, skeptical article, written by James Risen. This was a period when there were too many credulous accounts of the administration's claims about Iraq's W.M.D. (including some published in The Times and The Post)." Abramson admitted that at the time she "failed to grasp" the importance and the urgency of Risen's article.