The Wall Street Journal story that the administration sent $400
million in cash to Iran will be a test of whether the US media are fair
in dealing with similar scandals involving dealings with Iran.
Most people alive at the time recall the enormous press reaction to
the news that President Reagan allegedly traded arms for hostages in
dealings with Iran. Reagan believed, and there was significant
documentary evidence (ignored by the media), that the principal purpose
of the exchange was to open an avenue of discourse with Iran — which at
that point was governed by the same hostile regime that governs it
today. Nevertheless, the exchange was covered uniformly in the media as
an “arms-for-hostages” scandal. I was White House Counsel at the time
the story broke, just after the 1986 elections, and was largely in
charge of handling the fallout.
As an indication of the media reaction, between the time that
exchange became known, in early November 1986, and the end of January
1987 (when I stopped counting), there were 555 separate stories in the
Washington Post and 509 in the New York Times. Even Watergate cannot
match this outpouring of media interest. The overwhelming number of
these stories discussed the exchange as a mistaken policy in which the
US had opened itself to paying ransom for hostages.
To be sure, there was more to the Reagan exchange with Iran than
simply this policy question. There was also a question, ultimately shown
to be groundless, of whether President Reagan was aware that the cash
proceeds from the arms sales were sent to the Contras, a force opposing
the Communist government in Nicaragua. Since there was never any
significant evidence to support this suspicion, relatively few of the
articles focused on this question. Instead, they covered various aspects
of the arms-for-hostages allegation, particularly the fact that the US
had endangered Americans everywhere by paying ransom.
The Wall Street Journal has had the
story as the lead on its front pages for two days. On Thursday, the New
York Times has the story on page 7.
Now we have a similar story involving the Obama administration. The
Wall Street Journal has had the story as the lead on its front pages for
two days. On Thursday, the New York Times has the story on page 7 and
pays a lot of attention to the administration’s argument that the
payment and the release of four American hostages in Iran was purely a
coincidence.
Whether there was actually a payment of ransom by the Obama
administration is not the interesting issue at this point. Even if it
was a good faith exchange, it was an obvious “optics” problem,
recognized by the Justice Department, which was overruled by the State
Department. There’s a lot more to know before a conclusion can be drawn
whether it was a ransom payment or a public relations blunder.
Congressional hearings will probably throw some light on this.
But the interesting question is whether and how the US media will
follow up. Given the similarity between the two events, will there be
the same outpouring of interest that we saw in what came to be known as
the Iran-Contra scandal, or will the story die in a few days because of a
lack of media interest? Thus far, the media outrage and sanctimony that
greeted the story about President Reagan’s dealings with Iran are not
apparent.
Peter J. Wallison is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute. His book, Ronald Reagan: The Power of Conviction and the
Success of His Presidency (Westview 2003) recounts how the Iran-Contra
scandal was handled in the White House and the media.
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