by John F. Sugg
Did self-styled anti-terrorism
expert Steven Emerson help push the world toward nuclear war?
On Sunday, June 28, a sensational
story appeared in the British newspaper The Observer:
"Pakistan was planning nuclear first strike on India." The
stunning revelation that South Asia was on the brink of thermonuclear
war was credited to an unnamed "senior Pakistani weapons
scientist who has defected." The next day, papers on the Indian
subcontinent were full of the news. Shock spread and distrust mounted.
"The scenario is frightening," stated the Times of India
(6/29/98).
On Wednesday, July 1, a USA
Today report by Barbara Slavin named the defector, Iftikhar
Chaudhry Khan. The press scrambled to contact New York lawyer Michael
Wildes, who represents Khan in his attempt to get political asylum.
Emerson, in an odd role for a
journalist, worked behind the scenes to interest reporters in Wildes'
client. A top network news producer says his congressional sources and
news contacts were tipped to the story by Emerson. Slavin says she was
mainly convinced of the story's legitimacy because of one of the Observer's
three writers was associated with the prestigious military analysis
group Jane's, but that Emerson's involvement added credibility.
Attorney Wildes himself says, "Emerson was helpful in
corroborating information and making scientific clarifications."
As the story matured, skepticism
mounted about Khan, especially after sources in Pakistan described him
as "a former low-level accountant at a company that makes
bathroom fixtures." (San Diego Union-Tribune, 7/3/98) By
July 7, U.S. nuclear physicists had interviewed Khan and pronounced
him a fraud (USA Today, 7/7/98).
Emerson's priorities
Emerson has escaped notice in the
affair--but his efforts had helped craft a hard-to-erase public
perception that Pakistan was the bad guy among Asia's nuclear novices.
The role Emerson played may at
first seem perplexing. He presents himself as a journalist, yet he
handed off what appeared to be a major story to rivals. A closer look
at Emerson's career suggests his priority is not so much news as it is
an unrelenting attack against Arabs and Muslims. From this
perspective, his gambit with Khan seems easier to understand: Pakistan
is a Muslim nation, while India's nuclear program has long been linked
to Israel. As the Indian Express noted (6/29/98), Pakistani
politicians were "convinced that they were about to be attacked
by India, possibly with Israeli assistance."
Emerson's willingness to push an
extremely thin story--with potentially explosive consequences--is also
consistent with the lengthy list of mistakes and distortions that mar
his credentials as an expert on terrorism.
Those blemishes had, for a time,
seemed to drive Emerson from major news outlets. He has had to resort
to new tactics to maintain his anti-Muslim crusade--an
"anti-terrorism" journal that he uses as a soapbox,
associates whose reputations aren't as damaged as his, and, as in the
Khan episode, staying behind the curtains.
Emerson was back in the news last
August--when terrorist bombs shattered U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania. While most Americans watched the grisly nightly news in
open-mouthed dismay, self-styled anti-terrorism experts seemed to be
jostling with one another to grab a few minutes on Rivera Live,
the Today show and CNN. For a brief few days, they even
displaced the Monicagate pundits.
In the vanguard of the chattering
heads was Emerson, whose past errors were quickly forgotten in the
wake of African and Middle Eastern carnage.
"Middle Eastern Trait"
Emerson gained prominence in the
early '90s. He published books, wrote articles, produced a
documentary, won awards and was frequently quoted. The media, Capitol
Hill and scholars paid attention. "I respect his research. He
gets to people who were at the events," says Jeffrey T. Richelson,
author of A
Century of Spies.
As Emerson's fame mounted, so did
criticism. Emerson's book, The Fall of Pan Am 103, was chastised by
the Columbia Journalism Review, which noted in July 1990 that
passages "bear a striking resemblance, in both substance and
style" to reports in the Post-Standard of Syracuse, N.Y.
Reporters from the Syracuse newspaper told this writer that they
cornered Emerson at an Investigative Reporters and Editors conference
and forced an apology.
A New York Times review
(5/19/91) of his 1991 book Terrorist chided that it was "marred
by factual errors…and by a pervasive anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian
bias." His 1994 PBS video, Jihad in America (11/94), was
faulted for bigotry and misrepresentations--veteran reporter Robert
Friedman (The Nation, 5/15/95) accused Emerson of
"creating mass hysteria against American Arabs."
Emerson was wrong when he initially
pointed to Yugoslavians as suspects in the World Trade Center bombing
(CNN, 3/2/93). He was wrong when he said on CNBC
(8/23/96) that "it was a bomb that brought down TWA Flight
800."
Emerson's most notorious gaffe was
his claim that the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing showed "a Middle
Eastern trait" because it "was done with the intent to
inflict as many casualties as possible." (CBS
News, 4/19/95) Afterward, news organizations appeared less
interested in Emerson's pronouncements. A CBS contract expired
and wasn't renewed. Emerson had been a regular source and occasional
writer for the Washington Post; his name doesn't turn up once
in Post archives after Jan. 1, 1996. USA Today mentioned
Emerson a dozen times before September 1996, none after.
"He's poison," says
investigative author Seymour Hersh, when asked about how Emerson is
perceived by fellow journalists.
Dubious document
Yet Emerson seems irrepressible. In
1997, for example, an Associated Press editor became convinced
that Emerson was the "mother lode of terrorism information,"
according to a reporter who worked on a series that looked at American
Muslim groups.
As a consultant on the series,
Emerson presented AP reporters with what were "supposed to
be FBI documents" describing mainstream American Muslim groups
with alleged terrorist sympathies, according to the project's lead
writer, Richard Cole. One of the reporters uncovered an earlier,
almost identical document authored by Emerson. The purported FBI
dossier "was really his," Cole says. "He had edited out
all phrases, taken out anything that made it look like his."
Another AP reporter, Fred
Bayles, recalls that Emerson "could never back up what he said.
We couldn't believe that document was from the FBI files."
Emerson's contribution was largely
stripped from the series, and he retaliated with a "multi-page
rant," according to Cole. AP Executive Editor Bill Ahearn
does not dispute that the incident happened, but refuses to comment or
to release documents because the episode was deemed an "internal
matter." A ranking AP editor in Washington says: "We
would be very, very, very, very leery of using Steve Emerson."
Also during Emerson's lean years,
he scored a November 1996 hit in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
(11/3/96)--owned by right-wing Clinton-basher Richard Mellon Scaife,
who also partially funded Jihad in America. Considering Scaife's
patronage, it is not surprising that Emerson declared that Muslim
terrorist sympathizers were hanging out at the White House. Emerson
had a similar commentary piece printed three months earlier in the Wall
Street Journal (8/5/96), one of the writer's few consistent major
outlets.
Tampa's "terrorists"
His most fruitful media foray
during this period was at a Tampa, Florida, newspaper. Emerson's Jihad
in America video had, in part, targeted Islamic scholars at the
University of South Florida in Tampa. Following Emerson's leads, a
reporter for the Tampa Tribune launched a series of articles in
1995 titled "Ties to Terrorists." The series and subsequent
articles relied on Emerson as a primary source.
The Tribune's managing
editor, Bruce Witwer, wrote in a July 15, 1997, letter to an attorney:
"Emerson is an acknowledged expert in the field, while he may be
controversial. Emerson has the information. It is legitimate
information." But the information that Emerson is
"controversial"--much less Emerson's record of mistakes and
the allegations of bias that swirl around him--has never been
disclosed by the Tribune to its readers.
The Tribune's articles
lacked balance and fairness, according to other newspapers that have
covered the events, including the St. Petersburg Times and the Miami
Herald. The Herald (3/22/98) ran a lengthy analysis of the Tribune's
reporting and concluded the Tampa newspaper had ignored
"perfectly innocent" interpretations of activity, giving
vent only to characterizations that suggested "extremely dark
forces were on the prowl."
Among the Tribune's and
Emerson's charges are that Muslims, while at the University of South
Florida, were active Islamic Jihad commanders. Emerson told Congress:
"One of the world's most lethal terrorist factions was based out
of Tampa." If that's so, federal agents must have missed
something. Although the FBI and INS have been searching for clues for
more than three years, no charges have been filed.
Like Emerson, the Tribune
uses tenuous chains of association to bolster its claims that
individuals are linked to terrorist groups. For example, in one
article, the Tribune claimed that because an Islamic Jihad
leader had given a Reuters reporter, Paul Eedle, several
articles, including one interview published in a Tampa magazine, and
because material seized by federal agents in Tampa included a 1993
Jihad calendar, this proved an organizational linkage. The Tribune
(7/28/98), ignoring the stated purpose of the South Florida scholars
to collect material about and from all Middle East points of view,
stated: "Eedle's experience appears to tighten the relationship
between the Jihad and the Tampa group."
Eedle, when interviewed for this
article, said that while it was clear people in Tampa were sympathetic
to the Palestinian cause, "being given the magazine didn't prove
that there was any organizational link between Islamic Jihad and the
publishers of the magazine in Tampa."
Although no criminal charges have
been filed in the Tampa case, Emerson flatly states there is insidious
wrongdoing. In February 1996, Emerson claimed that Tampa Muslim
academics were directly involved in the 1993 World Trade Center
bombing (St. Petersburg Times, 2/10/96). "I am constrained
at this point from revealing some of those details," Emerson
said. "But they include money transfers, they include actual
reservations and planning for the conspirators in the bombing, and
they include visits back and forth between Tampa and New York and New
Jersey, between officials here of the groups [operating in Tampa] and
officials there."
Yet no federal record of such
allegations could be found. A Freedom of Information request to the
Justice Department seeking any information tying Tampa residents to
the World Trade Center bombing produced this reply from the Office of
the Deputy Attorney General: "Please be advised that no
responsive records were located."
Actions have been taken against a
couple of Emerson's targets. Emerson seemed to gloat (Miami Herald,
3/22/98) that one Tampa academic, Mazen Al-Najjar, has been jailed
during a deportation appeal since May 1997 based on secret evidence
that he is a national security threat. And he appeared gleeful that
another University of South Florida professor, Sami Al-Arian, was
removed from the classroom and is now unable to "propagate his
message to young students" (Miami Herald, 3/22/98).
Typical of Emerson's fact-checking, the university says no one has
ever alleged that Al-Arian, who is again teaching, brought politics
into the classroom.
"Arabaphobia"
This summer's U.S. embassy bombings
produced others who believed in Emerson's legitimacy. Geraldo
welcomed Emerson, as did NPR, Good Morning America and MSNBC's
Internight. Emerson popped an opinion piece into the Wall
Street Journal (8/8/98), that attacked Clinton for
"legitimizing self-declared 'civil rights' and 'mainstream'
Islamic organizations that in fact operate as propaganda and political
arms of Islamic fundamentalist movements."
Although he piously prefaces
diatribes by saying there are good Muslims and bad Muslims, it's a
hollow defense. He claimed, in a March 1995 article in Jewish
Monthly, that Islam "sanctions genocide, planned genocide, as
part of its religious doctrine."
Occasionally, Emerson outdoes
himself with hyperbole. In an inflammatory letter to the Voice of
America (12/2/94), he fumed that radical Muslims in the United
States are plotting the "mass murder of all Jews, Christians and
moderate Muslims." Buddhists, Wiccans and Scientologists are
apparently exempt in the apocalypse Emerson prophesies. Last year he
warned that "the U.S. has become occupied fundamentalist
territory" (Jerusalem Post, 8/8/97).
While Emerson makes incredible
claims about Muslim conspiracies that purportedly intend to commit
terrorism inside U.S. borders, he ignores the fact that far more of
these American atrocities, such as the anti-abortion bombings and
murders, are committed by apple-pie militant Christian
fundamentalists.
His denunciations are often backed
up only by allusions to unnamed law enforcement sources. "Emerson
makes unsubstantiated allegations of widespread conspiracies in
Arab-American communities and brushes aside his lack of documented
evidence by implying it only proves how clever and sinister the
Arab/Muslim menace really is," investigative reporter Chip Berlet
has written (Covert Action Quarterly, Summer/95). "This is
a prejudiced and Arabaphobic twist on the old anti-Semitic canard of
the crafty and manipulative Jew."
Emerson buffs, such as Sen. Jon Kyl
(R.-Arizona) provide the journalist with a podium from which to make
claims that are then recycled as part of the public record. A Kyl
subcommittee welcomed Emerson as a witness in February, allowing him
to present a 46-page harangue against mainstream American Muslim
organizations.
Savaging critics
When criticized by journalists,
Emerson retaliates with invective-laden letters, often from lawyers.
He has launched salvos at the Miami Herald, The Nation, Voice
of America, FAIR
(which publishes Extra!), and a Council on Foreign Relations
newsletter, as well as at numerous individual journalists.
Kojo Nnamdi, a talk show host on
Howard University's WHUT, remembers that when he invited some
Muslims on a program, "Emerson started making threats. He wanted
to link academics to terrorists. He succeeded in delaying the program,
I'm sorry to say."
After Emerson in 1996 attacked the
Council on Foreign Relations for including Muslim points of views in
its newsletter, the group's president, Leslie Gelb, dubbed Emerson the
"grand inquisitor." (Forward, 5/10/96)
The Miami Herald's highly
regarded senior writer, Martin Merzer--who has experience as a bureau
chief in Jerusalem--demolished many of Emerson's and the Tampa
Tribune's claims in a March 1998 article (3/22/98). Prior to
publication, Emerson sent a letter to the Herald's top editor,
Doug Clifton, with copies to Jewish leaders, in an attempt to derail
the story. The letter called Merzer, who is Jewish, "nothing
short of racist."
Subsequently, in a publication run
by Emerson allies that has become his bully pulpit, the Journal of
Counterterrorism & Security International (Spring/98), Emerson
published what he claimed was a transcript of his interview by Merzer.
The "transcript" presents Merzer as stammering and admitting
to extraordinary ignorance. Merzer calls the transcript a fabrication.
"It's crap," he says. "A few tiny kernels of truth
surrounded by a mountain of lies."
Ironically, despite Emerson's many
attempts to silence his critics, he spends much of his time nowadays
wailing that he's the victim. Recently, an NPR
producer was moved by protests over Emerson's anti-Muslim prejudice to
stop using him as an expert on the network. That prompted Emerson
fans, such as Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby (8/31/98), to
cry "blacklisting"--never bothering to note that Emerson is
a blacklister with few rivals.
Money trail
As recognition of Emerson's
liabilities has grown, he has handed his bullhorn to less
controversial fellow travelers. Retired federal agents Oliver
"Buck" Revell and Steve Pomerantz, who run a security
business, showed up echoing Emersonisms in an October 31 Washington
Post article warning of conspiracies and front organizations.
In an interview prior to the
article's publication, the co-author of that piece, John Mintz, said
he was aware that Emerson was highly controversial. The Post's
solution: Don't mention Emerson but use his allies. (Mintz had been
provided with material documenting links among Emerson, Pomerantz and
Revell.)
The three "experts" spend
a lot of time congratulating each other on their courage and
expertise. Pomerantz, for example, has written that Emerson "is
actually better informed in some areas than the responsible agencies
of government." (That came as news to Bob Blitzer, the FBI's top
counterterrorism official, who says Emerson "doesn't have access
to any high-level FBI intelligence.")
Revell's credits include quashing
an investigation of the Iran-Contra arms smuggling operation (Leslie
Cockburn, Out of Control, p. 231). Revell also acknowledges another
member of the fraternity is Yigal Carmon, a right-wing Israeli
intelligence commander who endorsed the use of torture (Washington
Post, 5/4/95), and who has stayed at Emerson's Washington
apartment on trips to lobby Congress against Middle East peace
initiatives (The Nation, 5/15/95). An Associated Press
reporter who has dealt with Emerson and Carmon says: "I have no
doubt these guys are working together."
Says Vince Cannistraro, an ABC
consultant and a retired CIA counterterrorism official, of Emerson's
allies, Pomerantz, Revell and Carmon: "They're Israeli-funded.
How do I know that? Because they tried to recruit me." Revell
denies Cannistraro's assertion, but refuses to discuss his group's
finances.
Emerson's own financing is hazy. He
has received funding from Scaife. Some Emerson critics suspect Israeli
backing. The Jerusalem Post (9/17/94) has noted that Emerson
has "close ties to Israeli intelligence."
"He's carrying the ball for
Likud," says investigative journalist Robert Parry, referring to
Israel's right-wing ruling party. Victor Ostrovsky, who defected from
Israel's Mossad intelligence agency and has written books disclosing
its secrets, calls Emerson "the horn"--because he trumpets
Mossad claims.
Presumed credible
Emerson is aided by those who
appear to be ignorant of his record, or who fear reprisal from his
backers. He testified in February before a Senate subcommittee chaired
by Sen. Kyl. The testimony accused most major American Muslim
organization of terrorist connections. "We presumed him to be
credible [because] he is known to have contact with street
agents," said Jim Savage, at the time a Kyl staffer. "He
represented his findings as authentic. We haven't verified them."
After the NPR spat over the
summer, Jacoby's column quickly bludgeoned the network into
capitulation. Jeffrey Dvorkin, NPR's news chief, kowtowed and
stated in a letter to the Boston Globe that Emerson "has
never been banned from NPR and never will be. Emerson is one of
many commentators available to NPR on events involving his area
of expertise (terrorism and counter-terrorism). No doubt there will be
other opportunities for him to appear again."
A warning to us all.
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