Note to self: avoid Seth Mnookin

Seth Mnookin has a long Vanity Fair story about the Judith Miller saga at the New York Times. Few people at the Times look good, and Arthur Sulzberger Jr.comes off looking like an insecure, incompetent ass. That said, I still think that Mnookin does the biggest number on Miller. The devastating part is below: Miller, ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School at Tufts University and the author of The Ideas Industry.

Seth Mnookin has a long Vanity Fair story about the Judith Miller saga at the New York Times. Few people at the Times look good, and Arthur Sulzberger Jr.comes off looking like an insecure, incompetent ass. That said, I still think that Mnookin does the biggest number on Miller. The devastating part is below: Miller, it soon became clear, was not going to be an easy source to deal with. She initially refused to speak with [Times reporter Adam] Liptak because, she said, his story about her release from jail implied that she hadn't gotten a better deal from the prosecutor than the one that was available to her before she was imprisoned. She refused to speak with [Times reporter Janny] Scott because, she told friends, Scott had not bothered to write to her when she was in jail. (She also told people that she knew Scott was "judging" her.) At various points she wouldn't speak with [Times reporter Don] Van Natta either. On Tuesday afternoon, Van Natta approached Miller in the Times's newsroom. Miller immediately gave Van Natta a hug. "I'm so glad you're involved in this," Miller said. "Well, I'd really like to talk to you, now, if you have time," Van Natta replied. "I can't do it now," Miller answered. "I'm running off to go meet with Barbara Walters." "That was pretty amazing to me. I'm a colleague of hers, I'm trying to get an interview, and she doesn't have time for that, but she has time for Barbara Walters. And that night she did another one with Lou Dobbs." The next day, Van Natta ran into Miller again, in Bennett's Washington office; at that point, Miller told Van Natta she couldn't speak with him because Libby had given her permission to talk only to the grand jury. That's odd, Van Natta told her. On Monday in the newsroom, she had told the whole world Libby was her source.... The pressure only increased over the next week. Miller kept avoiding having on-the-record conversations with Van Natta; at one point, she complained to [Times executive editor Bill] Keller about Van Natta's line of questioning, and Van Natta felt she was trying to have him removed from the story. (Miller did something similar in my case. After I approached her for this story, she complained to the editor of this magazine and raised questions about my allegiances. She also wrote to me in an e-mail, "Seth, I read what you wrote about me in your book. You never bothered to check any of your alleged facts about me. I have absolutely no intention of talking to you." Three weeks later, after the story had been written and edited, she sent another e-mail that read, "When you are finished with your research, and want my input before you write, send me a list of questions." I sent Miller questions on two occasions, to which she never replied. Outside of noting that Miller's pre-war W.M.D. reporting was faulty?which Miller herself now acknowledges?there are barely any mentions of Miller in Hard News, my book about Howell Raines and the Times. What's more, while writing it, I tried to reach her numerous times for comment. She never responded.) Note to self: if Seth Mnookin calls me about anything, answer in full. Miller now has a quasi-blog -- I'll be curious to see if she responds to this piece. [Actually, Mnookin characerizes judithmiller.org as a website, "contain[ing] self-justifying posts and cherry-picked, laudatory articles"--ed. The man is clearly unfamiliar with blogs.]

Seth Mnookin has a long Vanity Fair story about the Judith Miller saga at the New York Times. Few people at the Times look good, and Arthur Sulzberger Jr.comes off looking like an insecure, incompetent ass. That said, I still think that Mnookin does the biggest number on Miller. The devastating part is below:

Miller, it soon became clear, was not going to be an easy source to deal with. She initially refused to speak with [Times reporter Adam] Liptak because, she said, his story about her release from jail implied that she hadn’t gotten a better deal from the prosecutor than the one that was available to her before she was imprisoned. She refused to speak with [Times reporter Janny] Scott because, she told friends, Scott had not bothered to write to her when she was in jail. (She also told people that she knew Scott was “judging” her.) At various points she wouldn’t speak with [Times reporter Don] Van Natta either. On Tuesday afternoon, Van Natta approached Miller in the Times’s newsroom. Miller immediately gave Van Natta a hug. “I’m so glad you’re involved in this,” Miller said. “Well, I’d really like to talk to you, now, if you have time,” Van Natta replied. “I can’t do it now,” Miller answered. “I’m running off to go meet with Barbara Walters.” “That was pretty amazing to me. I’m a colleague of hers, I’m trying to get an interview, and she doesn’t have time for that, but she has time for Barbara Walters. And that night she did another one with Lou Dobbs.” The next day, Van Natta ran into Miller again, in Bennett’s Washington office; at that point, Miller told Van Natta she couldn’t speak with him because Libby had given her permission to talk only to the grand jury. That’s odd, Van Natta told her. On Monday in the newsroom, she had told the whole world Libby was her source…. The pressure only increased over the next week. Miller kept avoiding having on-the-record conversations with Van Natta; at one point, she complained to [Times executive editor Bill] Keller about Van Natta’s line of questioning, and Van Natta felt she was trying to have him removed from the story. (Miller did something similar in my case. After I approached her for this story, she complained to the editor of this magazine and raised questions about my allegiances. She also wrote to me in an e-mail, “Seth, I read what you wrote about me in your book. You never bothered to check any of your alleged facts about me. I have absolutely no intention of talking to you.” Three weeks later, after the story had been written and edited, she sent another e-mail that read, “When you are finished with your research, and want my input before you write, send me a list of questions.” I sent Miller questions on two occasions, to which she never replied. Outside of noting that Miller’s pre-war W.M.D. reporting was faulty?which Miller herself now acknowledges?there are barely any mentions of Miller in Hard News, my book about Howell Raines and the Times. What’s more, while writing it, I tried to reach her numerous times for comment. She never responded.)

Note to self: if Seth Mnookin calls me about anything, answer in full. Miller now has a quasi-blog — I’ll be curious to see if she responds to this piece. [Actually, Mnookin characerizes judithmiller.org as a website, “contain[ing] self-justifying posts and cherry-picked, laudatory articles”–ed. The man is clearly unfamiliar with blogs.]

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School at Tufts University and the author of The Ideas Industry. Twitter: @dandrezner

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