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Neocon Nuttery
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Title: Gen. Petraeus' Spokesman Denies Sending Angry Email -- Plot Thickens
Source: Editor & Publisher
URL Source: http://www.editorandpublisher.com/e ... .jsp?vnu_content_id=1003664994
Published: Oct 29, 2007
Author: Greg Mitchell
Post Date: 2007-10-30 11:05:23 by aristeides
Keywords: None
Views: 210
Comments: 14

Gen. Petraeus' Spokesman Denies Sending Angry Email -- Plot Thickens

A critical email allegedly sent by a top U.S. military spokesman to a leading blogger this past weekend is starting to draw mainstream attention. But the colonel had sent an equally hot note to E&P in May defending the general -- without reading the report in question.

By Greg Mitchell

NEW YORK (October 29, 2007) -- A disturbing email allegedly sent by a top U.S. military spokesman to a leading blogger at Salon.com this past weekend is just starting to draw mainstream attention. Howard Kurtz at The Washington Post mentioned it today, for example. It requires a good deal of background information to fully appreciate it, so I will provide a link to Glenn Greenwald’s blog page at Salon where he offered extensive postings (and updates) Sunday and today about the email purportedly from Army Col. Steven Boylan. But E&P has its own correspondence from Boylan, and I want to focus on that.

The long and short of the Greenwald postings: For months the popular blogger -- a former attorney and author of the recent bestseller "A Tragic Legacy" -- has criticized the growing “politicization” of the military attached to Iraq, starting earlier this year and peaking around the appearance of Gen. David Petraeus before Congress (and the media) in September. This was even before William Safire declared, this past weekend, that the general ought to be considered as a running mate for a Republican candidate for president next year.

In the past, Greenwald had received, and printed, emails from Boylan, a public affairs officer and chief spokesman for Gen. Petraeus, denying this trend and/or defending the general. So when he received an angry email from Boylan yesterday, he posted much of it on his blog (and linked to the entire message), while asserting that the views and language in it proved his point about “politicization.”

Then it got really interesting. Boylan in another note to Greenwald seemed to deny that he wrote the email, while denouncing Greenwald for publishing it. But he did not state this clearly and refused to respond to Greenwald’s subsequent request for clarity. Meanwhile, various purported computer experts compared past and present emails from Boylan to Greenwald and suggested (to the latter) that they did seem to come from the same military email address. But no one was certain and, at the least, it raised troubling questions about someone "hijacking" the email account of Gen. Petraeus's chief spokesman.

E&P contacted Boylan for a clarification about the email. Late Monday night he (or someone claiming to be him) replied: "I am denying writing and sending it. I know from past experience with Mr. Greenwald that any email exchange with him would be posted to his site as well as there is no need to discuss anything with him. I would only contact him in response to anything he would directly send to me as he did in this case. I have not contacted Mr. Greenwald since this summer" -- until Greenwald asked him to confirm the Sunday email, when "I told him it was not mine and I did not send it."

You can catch the whole thing (surely Greenwald will soon respond to the above) at:

http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/index.html

***

Knowing that I had a brief exchange of emails with Boylan last spring, I went back and found them -- with the Boylan in them sounding an awful lot like the Boylan in the disputed email to Greenwald.

I had drawn Boylan’s attention with a May 9, 2007, column that followed an appearance by Gen. Petraeus, via a video feed from Baghdad, at the Associated Press annual meeting in New York, which I attended. This is what I wrote then: “Reporters should also ask Gen. David Petraeus, who is directing the ‘surge’ effort in Iraq, why he lied in responding to a reporter's question this week concerning widespread abuse by U.S. troops.”

A reporter on stage at the gathering asked about a U.S. Army Surgeon General study of over 1,300 troops in Iraq, released last week, which showed increasing mental stress -- and an alarming spillover into poor treatment of noncombatants. Petraeus, who said he had read the report, asserted that the survey showed that only a "small number" admitted they may have mistreated "detainees" -- a profoundly misleading statement.

Actually, the study found that at least 10% of U.S. forces reported that they had personally, and without cause, mistreated "noncombatants" (not detainees) through physical violence or damage to personal property.

The survey also noted that only 47% of the soldiers and 38% of marines agreed that noncombatants should be treated with dignity and respect. More than 40% said they backed torture in certain circumstances. Even worse, nearly one in five said that all noncombatants "should be treated as insurgents."

About 30% said their officers had not made it clear that they should not mistreat civilians.

Only 40% of American marines and 55% of soldiers in Iraq said they would report a fellow service member for killing or injuring an innocent Iraqi. “Of course, this only guarantees that it will happen again, and again,” I observed.

That sparked an email from Boylan in Baghdad the next day. “I found your latest column to be less than fair and as many editorials, lacking context,” he wrote. “I find it insulting that you would even consider saying that General Petraeus lied to the gathering during the AP hosted event Monday. Simply put, you are in error and as such you even pointed it out in your own column….

”Because you don't agree with his words, detainee vice [sic] civilians, you are saying that he has lied. I am not sure how you come to that conclusion that he has lied? Would you be willing to explain that? I assume you could disagree on what is a small number or it is that you don't like his choice of words by using detainee.

”I am pleased that you can offer such a misinformed opinion based on one-hour event.”

I wrote back to him: “Surely you understand the difference between a ‘detainee’ and a ’noncombatant.’ Presumably Petraeus does as well. He said he'd read the report, where it clearly stated that the actions carried out by the 10% were against civilians or their property and without cause.”

In other words, Petraeus was suggesting to the media – if not directly starting -- that it wasn’t so bad a problem because it was (presumably guilty enemy) prisoners who were mistreated, not run-of-the-mill civilians. I didn’t even raise the issue in my email to Boylan of whether 10% was an acceptable, or appalling, number of bad actors. Petraeus had called this a “small number.”

Anyway, Boylan wrote back right away: “Yes, I clearly know the difference between the two, however, it was clear that he was saying and thinking detainee when he made his statement. I have not read the report, but either way, to state that he lied is at a minimum disingenuous and at worst, flat wrong on your part without even asking the questions, but making unfounded assumptions. I expect better professionalism from someone of your position based on your publication.”

So Boylan, who admitted he had “not read the report,” did not let that stop him from lecturing me and defending the misuse of its contents by Petraeus, who said he did read the report. Petraeus, at least, faced facts a short time later, writing a letter to his troops refreshing their memories about the requirement that they not abuse friendlys.


Greg Mitchell (gmitchell@editorandpublisher.com) is editor. A collection of his columns on Iraq and the media will be published by Union Square Press in March.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

#4. To: aristeides (#0) (Edited)

I just spent about 45 minutes going to the background of all this. What a can of worms Colonel Boylan is sitting on.

His statement, "I did not send him the note" could be an accurate one. He composed it and then he could have had one of his toady underlings hit the send button for him, thus giving him plausible deniability.

Unfortunately, I just googled Steven+Boylan+USMA and it appears that he is a military academy graduate.

www.west- http://point.org/class/usma1987/content/view/25/60/

He deserves all the heat he gets.


UPDATE/EDIT: Upon closer examination, the link here does not indicate that Boylan is an academy graduate. I apologize for my confusion.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2007-10-30   14:48:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Fred Mertz (#4)

E&P contacted Boylan for a clarification about the email. Late Monday night he (or someone claiming to be him) replied: "I am denying writing and sending it.

Boylan (or someone claiming to be him) also denies writing the e-mail.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-30   14:54:24 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: aristeides (#5) (Edited)

On a different note, although Col. Boylan has not answered the last e-mail I sent him (asking him for clarity as to whether he is, in fact, denying that he sent the first email), one reader who e-mailed Boylan to indicate she comes from a military family and was disappointed in his conduct forwarded me (what appears from all indications to be) his response:

Boylan: Thank you for your note and thoughts. However, as I have stated to Mr. Greenwald, I did not send him the note and only responded to his initial email to me to ask for authentication. I am sorry you feel this way and I thank you and your family for their service to our nation.

www.s http://alon.com/opinion/gre...7/10/29/boylan/index.html

This is the one I was referring to.

Well, I suppose Centcom is going to have one heckuva Information Technology shakedown going on right now with folks hacking into the computer of the spokesman for the highest ranking US general in Iraq. /sarcasm

Fred Mertz  posted on  2007-10-30   15:02:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Fred Mertz (#7)

I remember once one morning I was horrified to read a posting under my screen name on Free Republic that was much more outspoken than I normally am, and that I did not remember sending. Only after JimRob confirmed to me that the posting came from my IP did I decide that I must have sent it, and that my failure to remember it and my outspokenness in it were the consequence of having drunk too many glasses of wine while posting that previous evening.

I decided I had better cut down on my drinking.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-30   15:11:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: aristeides (#8)

Somewhere else I saw someone mention that Boylan might've been drunk - purely speculating.

With the strict banning of alcohol consumption over there, other than NA beer, I seriously doubt that he was inebriated although it is possible.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2007-10-30   15:19:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Fred Mertz (#10)

I doubt that acquiring a few bottles of good scotch is a problem for senior officers. Actually, I think there are several bars that serve alcohol in the Green Zone. And I know the hotels have bars. It's the enlisted men who don't have access to booze, I think.

It was really silly of him to deny he sent the email. Did someone else just by coincidence decide to hack his computer, then email a fairly obscure blogger about something that would mainly concern Boylan and his boss? I guess it's possible. So is the tooth fairy.

Mekons4  posted on  2007-10-30   15:48:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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