2. At one point in our talks, the paper announced publicly that I would be reporting back to work in the newsroom by November 2. One of my lawyers interpreted this as an indication that Arthur was having second thoughts about whether an amicable settlement of our dispute was preferable to a dignified separation. But Matt Mallow, then a senior Skadden, Arps, partner and a friend, asked me a clarifying question: Even if I got a public apology from the paper, would I feel comfortable working again for the Times? Did I want to continue working for a paper that had “turned so quickly and easily on one of its own”? Would I ever again trust journalists who had, as Bob Bennett wrote in his memoir, “snatched defeat out of the jaws of victory” by assailing me after my almost three months in jail?
   3. I gave two interviews soon after I came out of jail: one to ABC’s Barbara Walters, whose father, a nightclub owner, had introduced my parents; and the other to Lou Dobbs, who was then at CNN and had run a clock at the top of the screen counting each day of my incarceration. I rejected numerous offers to write tell-all articles about jail and my fight with the paper and inquiries from filmmakers seeking my cooperation with a movie based on about my experience. In 2006 at the request of my lawyer, Floyd Abrams, who was involved in the project, I had lunch with Kate Beckinsale, the gifted actress who was preparing to play a reporter in a film about a court battle similar to mine. The film, Nothing But the Truth, written and directed by Rod Lurie, opened in the fall of 2007 went quickly to video distribution. Floyd was compensated. I did not participate.
   4. Libby’s version of their conversation is different. Libby told the grand jury that in response to Cooper, he had said that he did not know whether Cooper’s claim that Plame worked at the CIA was true. Cooper’s contemporaneous notes of their conversation support Libby’s description.
   5. Although Bush commuted Libby’s sentence, he still paid the hefty fine, served four hundred hours of community service, and had his law license revoked.
   6. John Rizzo, Company Man: Thirty Years of Controversy and Crisis in the CIA (New York: Scribner, 2014), p. 208. In his book, the former CIA general counsel challenged another of Plame’s complaints: she had not been forced out of the CIA by its indifference to her family’s personal safety, he asserted. In her memoir, Plame said that she was forced to leave Langley partly because her bosses had denied her pleas for added security for her and her young twins after her family had been explicitly threatened. But Rizzo, who had investigated her request for “round-the-clock security protection,” determined that neither she nor her family was in “any sort of danger.” As a result, he wrote, he had “reluctantly” concluded that the CIA “could not lawfully expend the considerable amount of taxpayer money that would be required to shield her from a nonexistent threat.” Plame’s book also revealed, among other things, that the CIA had recalled her from her first covert overseas assignment in 1997 because the agency feared that she “might be among the officers betrayed to the Russians by traitor Aldrich Ames,” the CIA official who spied for Russia for nine years before being caught in 1994. While the agency never determined whether Plame was among the compromised spies, the disclosure meant that it was not senior Bush officials who had ended Plame’s career overseas as a full-time undercover operative but a traitor within the CIA.
   7. My belated discovery of the importance of my notation of “Bureau” explained something that puzzled me during the defense’s cross-examination of me on the stand in 2007. Libby’s lawyers kept asking me whether other agencies, such as the State Department, had “bureaus” rather than “offices” or “divisions” or “directorates.” But since neither they nor I knew that Plame had used the State Department as cover for her CIA work, the questions seemed odd, and their intention, at least to me, unclear.
   8. Stan Crock, “Fair Game Glamorizes Distortions and Perpetuates Myths,” World Affairs, November 8, 2010, p. 4; http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/fair-game-glamorizes-distortions-and-perpetuates-myths.
   9. Rizzo, Company Man, pp. 206–7.
   10. Dick Cheney, interview, January 2014.
   11. O’Sullivan, who worked at the State Department before being sent to Iraq soon after the invasion in 2003, argues that “there was no Sunni partner” willing to work with US forces to oppose Al Qaeda until 2006. Until then, she said, the US military’s top brass was convinced that the occupation of Iraq by US forces was the root cause of the insurgency, rather than Sunni bitterness over having lost control of the state they had controlled until Saddam’s ouster.
   12. Thomas Donnelly and Gary J. Schmitt, “The Right Fight Now: Counterinsurgency, Not Caution, Is the Answer in Iraq,” Washington Post, October 26, 2003, http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/doc/409635877.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Oct+26%2C+2003&author=Tom+Donnelly+and+Gary+Schmitt&pub=The+Washington+Post&edition=&startpage=&dese=The+Right+Fight+Now%3B+Counterinsurgency%2C+Not+Caution%2C+Is+the+Answer+in+Iraq.
   13. Judith Miller, “A Witness Against Al Qaeda Says the U.S. Let Him Down,” New York Times, June 3, 2002, www.nytimes.com/2002/06/03/us/a-witness-against-al-qaeda-says-the-us-let-him-down.html. Despite my admiration of Fitzgerald’s vigorous prosecution of terrorists in the first World Trade Center bombing, I was one of the few journalists to write critically about his mistreatment of Essam Al Ridi, an Egyptian pilot who helped him convict Bin Laden’s personal secretary. Al Ridi told me, and an FBI agent quoted in my article agreed, that once Al Ridi’s usefulness as a witness ended, Fitzgerald did not honor promises he had made that he would not be penalized in the United States or mistreated in his native Egypt.
   14. “Innovation, A New York Times internal report,” March 24, 2004, http://www.scribd.com/doc/224332847/NYT-Innovation-Report-2014.
   15. Leonard Downie, Jr., The Obama Administration and the Press (New York: Committee to Protect Journalists, October 10, 2013), http://cpj.org/reports/2013/10/obama-and-the-press-us-leaks-surveillance-post-911.php.
   16. The news of Abramson’s firing stunned the media but generated little interest among readers, even at the Times. The front-page article about the dismissal of the first female head of the nation’s leading newspaper was only the tenth most emailed story of the day—behind a story entitled “Steak That Sizzles on the Stovetop” and Frank Bruni’s column, “Read, Kids, Read.” BuzzFeed’s Kate Aurthur, a former Times employee, wrote that Abramson “got fired with less dignity than Judith Miller, who practically started the Iraq War.”
   17. By late 2005, according to a Pew poll, 43 percent of Americans thought that America’s and Britain’s leaders were “mostly lying” when they claimed that Iraq had WMD before the war.
   18. “As New Dangers Loom, More Think the U.S. Does ‘Too Little’ to Solve World Problems,” Pew Research Center, August 28, 2014, www.people-press.org/2014/08/28/as-new-dangers-loom-more-think-the-u-s-does-too-little-to-solve-world-problems.
   INDEX
   A note about the index: The pages referenced in this index refer to the page numbers in the print edition. Clicking on a page number will take you to the ebook location that corresponds to the beginning of that page in the print edition. For a comprehensive list of locations of any word or phrase, use your reading system’s search function.
   Abdullah, Prince of Saudi Arabia, 106
   Abrams, Floyd, 245, 251, 263, 264, 271, 274, 275, 276, 280, 287, 303, 356–57n3
   Abramson, Jill, 54, 212, 356n20
   Chalabi and, 232
   Dowd as close friend, 265, 294, 356n20
   firing of, 320, 358n16
   Miller in Iraq War and, 175, 194
   Miller’s jailing and, 265
   Miller’s return to the Times after jail and “war on Judy,” 286, 287, 288–89, 290, 301
   Miller’s sources and, 235
   Miller’s stories restricted by, 237–38, 239
   Miller’s WMD reporting and, 205–12, 219, 228, 346n7
   on Obama’s White House, 320
   Plame leak and, 244, 309
   “The Times and Iraq” editor’s not
e and, 205, 225–26, 230, 347n10, 348–49n2
   as Washington bureau chief, 148, 175, 209, 291–92, 296, 355–56n18
   Abu Sayyaf, 149
   Achille Lauro, 88
   Afghanistan
   Abu Khabab camp, 140, 142, 143–44
   Bin Laden in, 139, 141
   biological weapons lab in, 132
   Faizabad, 140
   Miller interviews Massoud and jihadists, 138–39
   Miller visits with Laili Helms, Taliban interviews, 141–44
   Taliban in, 138, 141–44, 169
   terrorist training camps in, 134, 141, 146
   US misspending in, 22, 333n20
   US war in, 169
   Against All Enemies (Clarke), 343n12
   Agee, Philip, 351n1
   Aghion, Anne, 87
   Ajami, Fouad, 112
   Albright, David, 157
   Iraq’s efforts to acquire a nuclear bomb and, 219
   WMD aluminum tubes intelligence and, 213–14, 215, 216, 217, 220
   Alexandria Detention Center (ADC), 255–62, 265–71, 279, 292
   Alibek, Ken (Kanatjan Alibekov), 117–18, 121, 126, 129, 338n1
   All-Russian Institute of Phytopathology, Golitsino, Russia, 124
   Almodóvar, Pedro, 261
   Al Qaeda
   Bin Laden founds and funds, 137
   black flag of, 18
   Bush war on terror and, 148–49
   chemical and biological weapons programs, 134, 146
   Iraq and, 18, 27, 181, 210, 332n17
   jihad against the West, 146
   London bombings of 2005, 259, 265
   Miller’s investigation and stories, xi, 135–36, 137, 170–71, 226
   9/11 terrorist attacks, 147
   Reid shoe bombing attempt, 165
   Saddam Hussein and, 13, 207, 290–91
   spread of, 322
   US embassy bombings, Kenya and Tanzania, 132, 134, 140, 146
   US response to 9/11 and, 164–65
   American Colony Hotel, Jerusalem, 73
   America’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 123
   Ames, Aldrich, 351n1, 357n6
   Ani, Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-, 152
   Anson, Robert Sam, 261–62
   anthrax letter attacks, 165, 342n4
   early theories about Iraqi link, 150, 152, 222
   intelligence community and, 165
   Miller-Engelberg article on, 222–23, 348n22
   US source of spores, 151
   Anton, Michael, 165
   Apple, R. W., Jr. “Johnny,” 95, 97, 98, 99
   Gulf War coverage, 104
   Arab nationalism, 5
   Arafat, Yasser, 107, 110
   Oslo Accords and, 112
   Aral Sea, 115, 116, 127
   Armitage, Richard, 304, 352n6
   Arnold, Martin, 355n15
   Arrows of the Night (Bonin), 156, 341n1, 341n3, 350n9
   Ascari, Ismail, 336n3
   Ashcroft, John, 243
   Aspen Strategy Group, 62–63
   Aspin, Les, 47, 48, 60–64, 103, 336n1
   Assad, Hafiz al-, 69
   Atomic Soldiers (Rosenberg), 37–38
   Atta, Mohamed
   middle-class background, 77
   in Prague, 151–52, 207
   Aurthur, Kate, 358n16
   Ayres, B. Drummond, Jr., 95
   Aziz, Tariq, 134
   Baer, Robert, 341n3
   Baker, James A., III, 12, 19, 107, 311, 343n15
   Baker, Peter, 165, 315–16, 342n9
   Baquet, Dean, 135
   Baranger, Walt, 286
   Barnard College, 44, 50
   Miller commencement speech, 194–95
   Barringer, Felicity, 58
   Barstow, David, 148, 217, 265, 286, 289, 293, 316–17, 356n19
   Barton, Rod, 120, 345n8
   Barzani, Massoud, 24
   Bashir, Omar al-, 134
   Beckinsale, Kate, 356–57n3
   Beers, Rand, 343n12
   Behind the Times (Diamond), 335n3
   Bennett, Bob
   Keller-Abramson order to Miller for a first-person account of grand jury testimony and, 288, 289, 290
   Miller’s grand jury testimony and, 280, 281, 285
   Miller’s protection of sources case and, 263, 264, 268, 271–73, 274, 275, 276, 279, 294, 355n17
   Miller’s resignation and legal settlement, 294, 295, 296, 297, 321
   Berenson, Alex, 186
   Bergen, Peter, 136
   Bergman, Lowell, 293, 356n19
   Bernstein, Carl, 54–55
   Bernstein, Richard, 81, 87
   Biden, Joe, 19, 166
   Binder, David, 57, 95
   Bin Laden, Osama, 132
   in Afghanistan, 139, 141
   Al Qaeda begun by, 137
   Al Shifa pharmaceutical company, Khartoum, and, 134
   escape from Tora Bora, 149
   fatwa declaring war on America, 137, 147
   interview with Bergen, 136
   interview with John Miller, 137–38
   killing of, 322
   Miller declines interview, 136–38
   Miller’s early coverage of, xi, 135–36, 226
   9/11 terrorist attacks, 147
   Saudi Arabia ejects, 106, 337n2
   as terrorist financier, 136
   training camps run by, 140, 142
   US efforts to kill, 149
   US intelligence community and, 135
   WMD and, 132, 165
   Biohazard (Alibek and Handelman), 338n1
   biological weapons, 115–28
   Al Hakam, Iraq, 119, 120
   anthrax, 2, 115, 116, 119, 121–22, 127, 132, 165
   anthrax letter attacks, 150–52, 165, 222–23, 342n4, 348n22
   Bin Laden and, 132
   Biopreparat, 117
   botulinum toxin, 2, 119, 133, 150
   danger of rogue groups acquiring, 128
   Germs (Miller, Engelberg, and Broad), xi, 117, 122, 172, 174, 208, 223, 342n1, 342n4, 346n3
   Iranian attempts to acquire, 123, 124–25
   Iraqi germ bombs, 133
   Kelly as expert on, 195–99
   lethal pathogens, miscellaneous types, 123, 129
   Saddam’s program, xii, 26, 119–20, 133–34, 196–97
   smallpox, 116, 123, 127, 197, 198–99
   Soviet program, 115–16, 117, 121–22, 197
   Stepnogorsk, Kazakhstan, 121–22
   treaty banning, 116
   vaccination of Bush and Cheney, 150
   vaccination of Miller, 175
   vaccination of US military, 117, 198
   Vector research center, Siberia, 122–23
   Voz Island, Aral Sea, 115–16, 125–28
   White House botulinum false alarm, 150, 165
   Blair, Jayson, 184, 185–86, 193, 288, 317, 349n5
   Blair, Tony, 168, 195–96, 209
   Bleifuss, Joel, 349n4
   Blix, Hans, 209, 211
   Miller interview, 208, 227, 228
   Blundy, David, 8–11, 86
   Bojinka plot, 136
   Bolton, John, 262
   Bonin, Rich, 156, 157, 232, 341n1, 341n3, 350n9
   Boulenouar, Tewfik, 2
   Boyd, Gerald, 95, 147, 148, 164, 169, 172
   firing of, 191, 193, 194, 206, 209, 244, 297, 299
   Miller in Iraq War and, 175, 180, 183, 184, 187, 188, 190, 200–201, 209, 236
   Miller’s WMD reporting and, 190, 206, 345n7, 349n6, 350n8
   Times plagiarism scandal and, 184, 185–86
   Times staff revolt and, 185–86, 187, 193–94, 296
   Bradlee, Ben, 54–55
   Bragg, Rick, 344–45n3
   Braun, Carol Moseley, 259
   Bremer, L. Paul (Jerry), III, 22, 194, 314
   Brisbane, Arthur, 354–55n14
   Britain
   credibility gap, 358–59n17
   Iraq War and, 168, 195–96, 203, 209
   London bombings of 2005, 259, 265
   yellowcake claim and, 242, 282, 350n1, 35
3n4
   Broad, William, xi
   aluminum tube misinformation article, 217
   anthrax letter attacks article, 152, 348n22
   biological weapons reporting, with Miller, 116
   Clinton interview, with Miller, 131–32, 133, 338n1
   defectors as source, 118
   Germs, with Miller and Engelberg, xi, 117, 122, 172, 174, 208, 223, 342n1, 342n4, 346n3
   Iraq mobile germ lab stories, 209–10, 346n8, 347n9
   Miller’s collaboration with, 342n1
   as Times science reporter, 116
   UNSCOM’s search for Iraq’s WMD article, with Miller, 196
   WMD reporting, 210
   Brooks, James, 248
   Buckley, Susan, 271
   Burnham, David, 55
   Burns, John, 183, 188, 200, 202
   Bush, George H. W., 64
   Gulf War and, 12, 14, 102
   Iraq no-fly zone and, 16–17, 23–24
   Saddam Hussein and, 167
   Bush, George W.
   anthrax letter attacks and, 150, 165, 342n4
   biological weapon threat and, 198
   Iraq War and overthrow of Saddam decision, 17, 161, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 169, 272, 282, 284, 291, 312, 322, 339–40n2, 342n6
   Iraq War mistakes, 22
   Iraq War withdrawal and, 1
   Libby’s sentence commuted by, 305–6, 357n5
   neocons and, 154, 167
   nuclear 9/11 fears, 165, 166
   PDB (Presidential Daily Brief), 164–65
   post 9/11 response, 164–65
   “preventive war” strategy, 168, 343n13
   Saddam Hussein and, 13–14
   State of the Union address (2002), 169
   State of the Union address (2003), 211, 242, 282, 283
   State of the Union address (2003), retraction of “sixteen words,” 242, 353n4, 355–56n18, 356n19
   State of the Union address (2004), 232
   “the surge” and, 19, 311, 315
   vaccinations given to, 150
   war on terror, 148–49
   West Point address of June, 2002, 166, 170
   WMD and, 13–14, 155, 161, 164, 165, 184, 219, 242, 264–65, 344n5, 347–48n17
   yellowcake claim and, 242, 282, 350n1, 353n4
   Butler, Richard, 151, 160
   BuzzFeed, 358n16
   Byers, Steve, 261–62
   Byrne, Brendan T., 351–52n3
   Cacheris, Plato, 234–35
   Calame, Byron, 295, 301
   
 
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