Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

The Globe and Blatchford

by Paul Wells on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 3:00pm - 176 Comments

In 20 years in journalism I have never seen anything resembling the systematic and sustained repudiation to which Christie Blatchford, the Globe and Mail‘s marquee columnist, is being subjected by her own newspaper. There is room in any good paper for disagreements among colleagues, and frankly there should, for a long time now, have been room for more of that at the Globe. But this goes further. This is breathtakingly methodical. And I believe it was needed.

The story begins, more or less, on Saturday, Nov. 28, when Blatchford published the first of two columns on the Richard Colvin testimony and emails about allegations of detainee abuse in Kandahar. That column took the readable bits of “heavily redacted” emails as Blatchford’s proof that Colvin, whom she portrayed as a cloistered dilettante, had not found much to complain about when the alleged abuse was actually happening. By her second column, two days later, she had relegated Colvin to the category of a “so-called whistleblower” who  “spun himself into a hyperbolic fury,” not over anything he actually saw or heard on the job, but over the Globe’s own coverage of those allegations in 2006 and 2007.

Taken together, Blatchford’s arguments suffered from glaring flaws of fact and logic. As Parker Donham pointed out immediately, her articles of indictment against Colvin were mutually contradictory: “In other words, there was no torture; everyone knew there was torture. Colvin never complained about torture; Colvin was hysterical about torture. Colvin only discovered the torture problem in April 2007; by April 2007, everyone and his dog knew there was a torture problem.”

The second column, recall, ran on a Monday, a day when senior newsroom management figures are frequently spotted returning to work after weekends off. The very next day, on Tuesday, the pushback began. Paul Koring had a front-page story describing the government’s extravagant resort to redaction of memos even when the recipients of those memos were to be members of the Military Police Complaints Commission with the highest level of security clearance. Koring’s story quotes Stuart Hendin, a legal expert, saying: “I’m not sure ‘cover-up’ is the right word but someone is going to considerable lengths not to disclose what was known… It’s almost impossible for any independent authority to conduct a meaningful inquiry.”

The next day, Wednesday, it was reporters Steven Chase and Campbell Clark who revealed that Colvin removed parts of his warnings and scaled back his distribution list at the request of then-ambassador to Kabul Arif Lalani. On Thursday it was the editorial board that weighed in, with a toughly-worded editorial saying the government “continues to respond with contempt to reasonable, serious questions” and calling its behaviour “troubling,” “disturbing,” “farcical,” and “increasingly implausible.” When questions arise, the editorialists wrote, the goverment “throws up a smokescreen, forestalls disclosure and attacks the questioner. None of this inspires much confidence for those who seek the truth.”

By Friday, when the Globe ran a niggling, inaccurate correction to the first of Blatchford’s two Colvin columns, it was still possible to wonder just what the paper’s management made of its columnist’s work. I actually had a discussion with colleagues from other news organizations about that question on Friday evening. They saw the extraordinarily weasel-worded correction as proof that the paper was still trying to protect Blatchford. I said Globe corrections, like corrections at many other organizations, are always weasel-worded and that, in the context of the paper’s continuing coverage, it looked like the paper was more or less in the full-time business of repudiating its columnist. But on Friday, that remained an open subject for debate.

But the Globe has kept going. On Monday Koring introduced what the paper calls “proof of detainee abuse,” in contradiction of Peter MacKay’s repeated denials. And this morning, another editorial:

The record speaks for itself on what the Canadian government knows, or should have known, about the torture of Afghan detainees. It speaks far louder than the falsehoods from the government that have by now become routine. If these falsehoods are offered unintentionally, one wonders how senior government ministers can be so ignorant of the contents of such an important file.

Obviously the Globe‘s main target is, properly, the Government of Canada, whose signal failure to step up to its responsibility on a file that brings it perilously close to contravention of international law makes it a great big legitimate object of criticism. I don’t think hanging Blatchford out to dry has been the Globe‘s goal here. But because she wrote what she did, and Globe reporters keep finding what they do, hanging her out to dry has become necessary to the larger task.

A little context is relevant here. In 2008 Globe reporters Koring and Graeme Smith, shared, with Michèle Ouimet of La Presse, a Michener Award for public-service journalism for their coverage of the treatment of detainees in Afghanistan. The Michener is just about the most prestigious award you can get in this business in Canada;  anyone, in-house or out, who cavalierly dismisses the allegations at the heart of Koring’s and Smith’s work would be seen as attacking a source of the paper’s pride in itself. (In fact, parts of Blatchford’s second column could arguably be read as an attempt to reconcile her criticism of Colvin with the fact that much of what he alleges was first reported by her colleagues.) It would be normal to expect the paper to fight back, once provoked, with more of what won it the Michener in the first place: energetic, factually accurate reporting.

That’s the second thing worth mentioning. When John Stackhouse became the Globe’s editor earlier this year, and again when he named John Ibbitson as the new Ottawa bureau chief, the mood in some corners of the Prime Minister’s Office was nothing short of jubilant. Stackhouse was seen by Conservatives as friendlier than Edward Greenspon, and Ibbitson, who wrote two very good books about the triumph of the Harris Conservatives in Ontario, looked like a bonus. But the government’s clumsy and disingenuous handling of the detainee-abuse issue, echoed in the Globe‘s own pages by Blatchford, has consummated a nasty divorce between the government and the Toronto newspaper. It’s now abundantly clear that when the Conservatives are in trouble they cannot expect Stackhouse to give them port from the storm.

One last thing. Blatchford had a source, who clearly thought she would be a strong defender of the government and military once they came under fire. This was a reasonable assumption. Part of her extraordinary  value as a writer is her eagerness to act as the soldier’s tribune, a quality she sometimes indulges to excess. In 2008 when Rick Hillier retired, he compared the experience of leaving his career so he could write his memoir and give some speeches to “a sucking chest wound.” Blatchford was quick to pass along, without criticism, Hillier’s disgusting metaphor. So a year and a half later, someone decided she’d be an excellent conduit for a contradictory viewpoint on the detainee file. But her two columns have now been followed by a full week of brutal coverage for the government and military. I don’t know who Blatchford’s source was. But he or she had better not be in the military, because on the evidence at hand the person is an appalling tactician.

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  • Orson Bean

    Nice one. Sauce for the goose & all that. Hell, even a very good reporter like Terry Milewski can cross the line from journalist to advocate if he/she doesn't watch it. That email Milewski sent during the APEC affair was very damning — Milewski had crossed the line and become partisan. But that was IMO a lapse in an otherwise creditable career.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

    I recall from Col. Ian Hope's book that their commanders are promoted (or demoted) regularly on the basis of ruthlessness and resolve. But the average fighters, going by Graeme Fraser's video interviews from last year or the year before, is a pretty naive young Pathan, fighting for God and his tribe (not necessarily in that order). Objectively, they're probably "detestable murderers and scumbags" . . . but then so are most Afghan men. To believe Hillier, everybody with an AK, a moustache, and a bad case of bloodlust is in one corner, while in the other are singing children, grandparents, mystics, feminists, and Karzai. I haven't been to Afghanistan, but if it's anything like the Middle Ages then the average teenager probably knows how to kill with a knife.

  • Orson Bean

    I agree it's been apparent for some time that Blatchford is quite smitten by our boys in uniform and rightly admired the job they were doing on the ground there. But I think in this case her emotive style of journalism was a bad, inappropriate fit for an issue like this detainee abuse one. It's one thing to be a bit loose with the facts when describing some gangbanger murder trial in Toronto. It's quite another to be loose with the facts when dealing with a red-hot political potato with international and war crimes implications.

  • Orson Bean

    I guess there's the Watergate angle, or the Clinton-Lewinsky angle: i.e., the situation where it's not the initial wrong that actually causes the severe political damage, it's the cover-up. I could definitely see some political points being scored there (e.g., McKay looks vulnerable on that count). There are potential problems, though, such as (1) as so many have pointed out, will average Canadians really give a damn, when most of them probably share R. Hiller's view of the Taliban, and (2) what if it turns out that a Liberal defence minister or Foreign Affairs minister was not quite a Boy Scout on this file either?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/YYZ YYZ

      I can assure you that the Conservatives have lost at least one vote based on their HANDLING of this. (1) and (2) are irrelevant. If the Conservatives actually had just called an inquiry and said "yes we must investigate" they wouldn't be facing the backlash from people like me.

    • Holly Stick

      Orson Bean another sociopathic Conservative who doesn't care about our government's involvement in torture.

      • Orson Bean

        Huh? Where does it say that?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Andrew_not_PorC Andrew_not_PorC

    Who's Blanchard, and what does he have to do with Christie Blatchford?

  • Holly Stick

    That's how the Harperite Reformatories work; by smearing other people to cover their own lying asses.

  • playfair

    Globe and Mail is headed the wrong way, and need be rescues as soon as is possible. They are sounding more and more and even worse than the NP. So sad. Many people are leaving this paper.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/YYZ YYZ

      Your sentence structure automatically disqualifies you from commenting on what a newspaper should or shouldn't do.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Inkless Inkless

    Carol: Your points are taken. Am I permitted to point out that I gave at the office?

    http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/06/19/the-feeble-%E2…

    Incidentally, two other points:
    1) Why not start a blog? You'd certainly have readers.
    2) It's "Maclean's." Lower-case L.

  • researcher

    It depends on whether or not you know if you are on the Left side or the Right side of biff.

  • Patrick

    yes, they have wasted time if you are only concerned about winning the next poll, or the next election and looking at the amount of Reform-Alliance principles that the Conservatives have since compromised, they have shown a cynical pragmatism that would makes the Liberals look like they never knew the meaning of the word pragmatism.

    However, sometimes you just do things John, because they are right. And whether it's the Liberals, NDP or the Bloc asking the questions on this issue, I think they are doing so because torture is wrong, period. And taking a stand against is right, period.

  • Holly Stick

    John W: evidence that today's Conservatives are sociopaths. Decent people do not like our government's involvement in torture.

  • catherine

    Lots of Canadians took pride in Canada's reputation as a good international citizen and defender of human rights around the world. They care if that reputation is tarnished.

  • Mulletaur

    Thunder and lightning, very very frightening.

    Peter ? Christie ?

  • Mulletaur

    Conservatives are also, in their vast majority, decent people who believe in civil rights and the rule of law. They also do not like the idea of our government handing people over to be tortured. Please do not make the mistake of lumping all Conservatives together with a mindless, illiterate ConBot like 'John W'.

  • http://www.TennisVagabond.com Big Dave S

    Thanks for this. Steyn is a contemptuous windbag who can't write his way out of a paper bag. His so-called humour (which, mind-bogglingly) he's famous for, is at a grade three level. Even if he were a rigorourous fact checker he wouldn't deserve space in what I consider an otherwise excellent magazine.

  • http://www.TennisVagabond.com Big Dave S

    Hahaha

  • Orson Bean

    Steyn's basically a patrician version of Rush Limbaugh with a million dollar vocabulary. His schtick got stale a long time ago, the shark has been jumped. I did, though, support his side in that HRC brouhaha with the Muslim law students, but that's another issue.

  • John W.

    The Liberals, sadly, have made a big blunder in wasting several weeks of Question Period on this issue. Canadians don't give a damn what happens to Aghans. The Conservatives aren't losing anything on this issue and the Libs are wasting time. Even the NDP has now switched to environment.
    The Liberals also blew it when they wasted a few weeks on H1N1, a none issue that ended up making the Conservatives look pretty good, especially the Health Minister who avoided the usual Harper Team hate filled style.

    • John W.

      I wasn't rejoicing in the situation, just describing it.
      Being called a Conbot, whatever that is, is really something.

  • Karen

    ‘sucking chest wound’
    What’s disgusting about that? And what’s valiant about reporting the words of a Canadian who will live forever in our history?

    You don’t seem to have a good grasp of what journalism is as genre.

    • Paul Wells

      Ever had a sucking chest wound, Karen? Ask somebody who has — who's had a hole in his chest that collapses a lung, and been pretty sure he was about to die in horrible pain — how much he liked hearing a general use it to describe a comfortable early retirement.

      There's a hell of a lot you don't have a good grasp of.

      • Bob Beck

        Hillier's macho language ("scumbags," e.g.) has always made it difficult for me to take him seriously. He is, or was, a senior public servant, and perforce a public figure, not a raw recruit or warrant officer sitting around the mess. I wonder if he appreciated all the differences.

        (I also wonder if my other attempt to post this was "deleted by the administrator" because it contained a four-letter Anglo-Saxon word for excrement. If so, sorry about that).

      • gray

        I served in Petawawa when Hillier was a CO there, although not in his unit. "Sucking chest wound" was a fairly common expression in those days to describe some other unpleasant event in sort of a flip, black humour way. Just because it was the nastiest sort of wound you could imagine. Soldiers do that a lot. It is a form of coping.

        Without knowing for sure I'm guessing Hiller used the phrase in a conversation with someone he knew and trusted (Blatchford) and it wasn't meant for publication. Just a soldier talking like a soldier.

        • Orson Bean

          Nonsense. Wells thinks it's an inappropriate expression, therefore it's an inapprorpriate expression.

          That is all.

        • Bob Beck

          Perhaps, until late in his career, he didn't talk to reporters much, and so never learned that in practice there's no such thing as "not meant for publication."

          Even granting that, it would hardly excuse the "scumbags" nonsense, repeated in press conferences etc. It should be beneath the dignity of any self-respecting senior officer, let alone chief of defence staff (current or retired), to talk like that in public.

          Actually, what bothered me was less the thuggish language than the attempts to dictate, or at least influence, foreign policy. Generals should offer advice in private, not set themselves up as media stars or populist heroes.

          • gray

            The scumbag remark was a clarion call to Canada that the mission was changing in a way that Canadians did not understand then. Canada was going into a shooting war. I think it was quite deliberate and effective for that purpose. Generals should lead and thats what Hillier did. Mackenzie did the same thing in Sarajevo, becoming a media star, so that he could affect the situation. Did Hillier ask for the mission or influence FA policy? I guess we are still waiting for verdict of history on that.

            Finally I think that people who throw acid in the faces of girls who want to go to school are scumbags. Why euphemize.

          • Bob Beck

            Oh dear. So many threadbare rhetorical tropes, so little time. Where to begin.

            "Waiting for the verdict of history" was, if memory serves, a favourite catchphrase of dear old George W. Bush, hoping to excuse his various high crimes and misdemeanours. Not that Hillier's anywhere near Bush's league, of course. (Though he, Hillier, did accompany his original "scumbags" comment with some tiresome stuff about how They "hate our freedoms" — insulting to the meanest intelligence). But generals should lead their troops, not their political masters. I believe Hillier not only asked for, but demanded the current mission. Way, way out of line.

            But that's relevant only to democracy in Canada, such as it is. If the war in Afghanistan had anything to do with human rights, NATO and the US wouldn't be propping up the — yes — scumbags in power in Kabul and elsewhere in that country.

            Finally, I think that people who profess to believe that Western militaries will, or conceivably ever could, bring human rights to Afghanistan are talking like ignorant fools. Why, indeed, euphemize?

    • Marcus

      Karen. Journalism is not a "genre." "Superflewus" is not a word. Please educate yourself before you try to educate someone of far superior intellect. Thanks!

  • Holly Stick

    No, it's the ones who keep lying that Canadians don't care about people being tortured, or even that Canadians would approve. They need to learn that their views are repellent to all decent people. I do distinguish between conservatives in the usual sense of the word and the current political Conservatives who tend to be vicious rightwing Republican wannabe extremists.

  • Mulletaur

    That is exactly my point : there are many Conservatives of the large 'C' variety who also abhor torture and the abuse of human rights, particularly those who are more libertarian in their outlook. On the other hand, you are also right to point out that there are Conservatives who defend torture and who should be repudiated by those 'decent' Conservatives who are in the majority in their party.

  • Lynn C.

    Come on everybody …Blatchford has never been a professional. She's too much in the story. The only thing she probably does well is give journalistic bjs because that initial Saturday morning column read to this outsider as a complete shill for Hillier et al. You don't have to be in any loop to read between the lines of a blatchford column. To tell you the truth, she had been a little quiet in her columns lately (generally she bares her soul through her choice of words, metaphors…she's not too hard to figure out) so she fell off the wagon that Saturday when she and her maelstrom of an ego thought she had the government and military scoop of the year. The light on the marquee columnist will dim slowly at first and then pouf they will go out. Blatchford's is not the educated writer people who do read newspapers today want to read. Please writers, a reader today is an intelligent reader everybody else watches youtube.

    • Daveyy

      well at least she can be entertaining , an awful lot of our columnists don't seem to care whether or not more than 300 people read their usual drivel, ever try staying awake for an entire Jeffrey Simpson column ?

      • D. Mitchell

        Got to agree on Simpson. He isn't happy unless he can throw a bomb at Alberta (and increasingly Saskatchewan) and lament the death of an old Polar Bear.

        • Orson Bean

          It's not that the environment/climate change issue isn't important, but what I find about SImpson's columns is that he doesn't bring any fresh or interesting angle to the columns he writes on the subject. Simpson has no particular expertise or background on the issue, etc. Like most journalists, Simpson is interesting to read when he's writing about stuff within his natural comfort zone and area of expertise. Simpson's expertise is in Canadian federal politics and history and matters constitutional. He's written at least one very good book in the area (although that was many years ago). And I find that today, when he (occasionally) does write an interesting column, it's not on global warming, it's on plain ole Canadian politics.

  • Big Bad Dave

    Quite right. Those columns were disgusting.

    • Bob Beck

      Christie Blatchford is someone else I can't take seriously. After Sept. 11, 2001, she went to New York City and chose to use a subsequent column as an occasion to… bash feminism! "This triumph of the spirit belongs to men" was one choice phrase I recall, and more or less the theme of the piece. Of course the "triumph" in question was, in truth, the long, hard, dangerous slog through smoking ruins in search of body parts — since only 12 survivors were found, all on the first day.

      She raises bad taste almost to an art form.

  • Kaplan

    She lost me a number of years ago when she wrote "Concorde is concentrate of life" as her lead on a piece she wrote for the Post after the Air France Concorde exploded on takeoff.

    I mean, I get what she meant. It was just stupid, and it's hung life a cloud over anything she writes.

    It's my cross to bear…my own sucking chest wound, as it were.

    • WillyKlinton

      " It's my cross to bear…my own sucking chest wound, as it were. "

      "I feel your pain." -Bill Clinton, Remark at a primary campaign rally on March 16, 1992

      LOL!!!!!

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