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Friday, November 11, 2005

Press poster boy

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By

Former Marine Staff Sgt. Jimmy Massey was the liberal media's dream come true: An anti-war Iraq veteran who came forward to publicly lambaste the Bush administration and accuse American troops of murdering innocent civilians.

Jimmy Massey was Michael Moore, Cindy Sheehan and John Kerry all wrapped up into one tidy, soundbite-friendly package -- a poster boy for peace topped off by a military uniform and tattoos to boot. But like a lot of the agitators who pose as well-meaning, good-faith peace activists, Jimmy Massey was something else: A complete fraud.

Mr. Massey, discharged from the Marines after a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress syndrome, told harrowing, graphic tales of American troops committing "genocide" against Iraqis. In a Sacramento Bee interview last year, Mr. Massey claimed he and his fellow Marines used "M-16s [and] 50-cal. machine guns" to shoot at children and peaceful demonstrators. The Washington Post reported (in the loosest sense of the word) on Mr. Massey's December 2004 sworn testimony at a Canadian asylum hearing for U.S. Army deserter Jeremy Hinzman:

During one 48-hour period, Massey said under oath, his platoon set up roadblocks and killed "30-plus" civilians ... .

"I don't know if the Iraqi people thought we were celebrating their newfound freedom. But I do know we killed innocent civilians," Massey said. In one case, the driver of a car leaped out with his hands up. "But we kept firing. We killed him," Massey said. In another case, he and other Marines shot and killed four protesters near a checkpoint after a single incoming gunshot from an unknown source, he said. None of the protesters was found with arms.

Just last month, the Associated Press published an article on Mr. Massey's new book, "Kill, Kill, Kill," published in France, which recycled these anti-American smears. The sympathetic AP piece included a perfunctory denial of Mr. Massey's charges by the Pentagon and no independent corroboration:

Marines who heard a gunshot fired upon 10 Iraqi demonstrators shouting anti-U.S. slogans and wielding banners saying "Go Home" near the sprawling Al-Rashid military complex southeast of the city center. All but one of the demonstrators were killed, said Massey, who estimated he himself fired about 12 shots. ...

Last spring, skeptical bloggers first questioned Mr. Massey's hyperbolic, Winter Soldieresque tales. Justin Katz, a Rhode Island writer and publisher of Dust in the Light (http://www.dustinthelight.com/), wrote in May 2004 after examining Mr. Massey's incredulous claims of being ordered to massacre children and use "ICBMs" (sic): "This is how the antiwar forces seek to defeat the U.S. military. Seeping from conspiratorial Web sites and foreign anti-American rags into the mainstream consciousness like leech-filled swamp water rising through the floor boards, the level of conceivability for accusations notches up as time goes on. ... [T]hose who enable, promote, and lend credibility to this propaganda assault must be faced and stared down this time around the historical cycle."

Miraculously, a lone member of the mainstream media answered the call. Last weekend, St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter Ron Harris, who was embedded with Mr. Massey's unit in Iraq, published a devastating debunking of the crackpot legends of Jimmy Massey. Mr. Harris detailed how Mr. Massey misled reporters, backtracked from allegations about witnessing a tractor-trailer filled with dead Iraqi civilians he claimed were killed by American artillery, and habitually embellished and altered his uncorroborated accounts of alleged military atrocities in the press and in public speeches.

The response of Mr. Harris' colleagues whom Mr. Massey duped? Mostly, a collective shrug. I e-mailed a reporter from The Washington Post, asking if he would follow up. No response. A USA Today reporter told me he had no plans to do so. And I spoke with David Holwerk, editorial page editor of the Sacramento Bee, which ran a lengthy freelance interview of Mr. Massey by an antiwar activist. "I don't know what we're planning to do," Mr. Holwerk said.

In a televised interview, Mr. Harris noted Mr. Massey continues to sell books and DVDs that smear our troops. [I]t's been profitable for Jimmy Massey to keep telling this lie," he said.

Apparently, despite the newspaper industry's plunging circulation figures and credibility, Mr. Massey's media enablers believe the same thing.

Michelle Malkin is a nationally syndicated columnist and the author of "Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."

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