Why Was the FBI Investigating Michael Hastings’ Reporting on Bowe Bergdahl?
www.news.vice.com
Three years into the disappearance of Bowe
Bergdahl in Afghanistan, Michael Hastings — the journalist whose
reporting cost General Stanley McChrystal his job — wrote a Rolling Stone story on the missing soldier, a piece which the magazine called “the definitive first account of Bowe Bergdahl.”
Hastings, who died in a car accident in Los Angeles in June 2013, had unparalleled access for that story.
He spoke to Bergdahl’s parents, who had by
that time stopped talking to the press, following “subtle pressure” from
the army, and he quoted from emails the young soldier had sent to them,
documenting his growing disillusion with the war and the US military.
Hastings also spoke to several unnamed men in
Bergdahl’s unit — soldiers who, we now know, had to sign a strict
nondisclosure agreement forbidding them from discussing the soldier’s
disappearance and search with anyone — let alone one of the top
investigative journalists in the country.
‘Michael and Matt both worked really, really hard on that story, and I know for a fact that they did it in a way that completely angered the US military and the US government.’
But most controversially, Hastings’ piece
revealed what has been the subject of much debate and vitriol over the
last few days: That a disillusioned Bergdahl had actually abandoned his
post and “walked away.”
At the time of the story’s publication, the
media had all but forgotten about Bergdahl — who was released on
Saturday after five years in the hands of the Taliban, in exchange for
five Guantanamo prisoners. And, with the exception of some initial
chatter, Hastings’ piece, which paints a deeply unflattering picture of
Bergdahl’s unit and its leadership, hardly had the impact of some of his
other investigations.
But someone did pay attention to it: the FBI.
That, at least, is what was revealed in a heavily redacted document released
by the agency following a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request —
filed on the day of Hastings’ death — by investigative journalist Jason
Leopold and Ryan Shapiro, an MIT doctoral student whom the Justice
Department once called the “most prolific” requester of FOIA documents.
The document, partially un-redacted after
Leopold and Shapiro engaged in a lengthy legal battle with the FBI for
failing to fulfill its FOIA obligations, singles out Hastings’ Rolling Stonepiece
— “America’s Last Prisoner of War” — as “controversial reporting.” It
names Hastings and Matthew Farwell, a former soldier in Afghanistan and a
contributing reporter to Hastings’ piece.
‘If this deployment is lame, I’m just going to walk off into the mountains of Pakistan.’
The document also included an Associated Press report based on the Rolling Stone piece,
and what it identifies as a “blog entry” penned by Gary Farwell,
Matthew’s father — which actually appears to be a comment entry on the Idaho Statesman’s website.
“The article reveals private email excerpts,
from [redacted] to his parents. The excerpts include quotes about being
‘ashamed to even be American,’ and threats that, ‘If this deployment is
lame, I’m just going to walk off into the mountains of Pakistan,’” the
FBI file reads. “The Rolling Stone article ignited a media
frenzy, speculating about the circumstances of [redacted] capture, and
whether US resources and effort should continue to be expended for his
recovery.”
‘I’m happy the FBI is reading Rolling Stone on the job.’
The FBI file — as well as a Department of Justice document released
in response to Leopold and Shapiro’s lawsuit — suggests that Hastings
and Farwell’s reporting got swept up into an “international terrorist
investigation” into Bergdahl’s disappearance.
A spokesperson for the FBI told VICE News that
the agency does not normally comment on pending investigations and that
it lets FOIA documents “speak for themselves.” The investigation was
still pending as of last month, Leopold said.
According to the files — and a rare public statement by
the FBI following Hastings’ death — Hastings was never directly under
investigation by the agency, despite having pissed off a lot of people
in very high places.
But it is not exactly clear why Hastings and
Farwell’s “controversial” reporting made it into a criminal
investigation that was already active before they even wrote the Rolling Stone story.
‘The FBI says Hastings was not a target of their investigation but his reporting was. How do you investigate someone’s reporting without investigating them?’
“Michael and Matt both worked really, really
hard on that story, and I know for a fact that they did it in a way that
completely angered the US military and the US government, and while
other reporters were steering away from it, they were totally on it,”
Leopold told VICE News. “The FBI was investigating this, whether they
were investigating Michael or investigating the story, and there was a
lot of fear around it, because they characterized the story as
‘controversial’ — whatever that means.”
“Then the question became, why was the FBI
looking at this, what were they looking at?” Leopold added. “The FBI
says Hastings was not a target of their investigation but his reporting
was. How do you investigate someone’s reporting without investigating
them?”
Farwell declined to discuss the details of the file, but told VICE News, “I’m happy the FBI is reading Rolling Stone on the job.”
He had not known that his name, and his
father’s, showed up in the FBI’s files until Leopold pointed it out to
him. Leopold told VICE News: “When I showed Matt these files he was
like, oh my god, this is basically outlining my conversations.”
Entire paragraphs in the FBI documents remain
redacted — leaving many questions about the scope of the investigation
into the journalists’ work. But the un-redacted sections about Farwell
characterize him as a 10th Mountain infantryman, who helped broker a
meeting between Hastings and — presumably — some of the sources for the Rolling Stone story.
Now that Bergdahl is free, the lid on Pandora’s box has been lifted.
In his comment on the Idaho Statesman‘s site, also picked up in the FBI file, Farwell Senior comes to Bergdahl’s defense after the Rolling Stone article sparked backlash against the soldier, of a similar sort that we are seeing today. He also credits his son for brokering Hastings’ meeting with the Bergdahls.
“I’m going to excuse that young kid for his
choice of words, but I’m not going to excuse the leadership of his
outfit, nor the misguided policies of our government in Afghanistan and
elsewhere which have put our young people in harms way without a clear
vision of what they are doing,” Farwell, himself a retired Air Force
officer, wrote then. “It’s my hope this Rolling Stone article
helps the Bergdahl’s get their son back and helps expose some misguided
policies and conduct far above the pay grade of this young disillusioned
soldier.”
Now that Bergdahl is free, the lid on Pandora’s box has been lifted.
“For five years, soldiers have been forced to
stay silent about the disappearance and search for Bergdahl. Now we can
talk about what really happened,” Nathan Bradley Bethea, who served in
Bergdahl’s battalion, wrote in the Daily Beast on
Monday. “I served in the same battalion in Afghanistan and participated
in the attempts to retrieve him throughout the summer of 2009. After we
redeployed, every member of my brigade combat team received an order
that we were not allowed to discuss what happened to Bergdahl for fear
of endangering him. He is safe, and now it is time to speak the truth.”
“Bergdahl was a deserter, and soldiers from his own unit died trying to track him down,”Bethea stated.
Soldiers forced to silence for years have now taken their accounts — and anger — about the missing soldier’s ordeal to social media and
the press. Republican strategists eager to turn Bergdahl into the next
Benghazi have also jumped on the opportunity to offer critics of the
young “deserter” up for interviews, as the New York Times noted today.
‘As for the circumstances of his capture, when he is able to provide them, we’ll learn the facts.’
In the last few days, Bergdahl has been blamed
with the deaths of “every American soldier killed in Paktika Province
in the four-month period that followed his disappearance,” according to
the Times — charges that the Pentagon dismissed as unsubstantiated. Today it was reported that the army will launch an inquiry into the circumstances of Bergdahl’s disappearance and his personal conduct.
“The questions about this particular soldier’s
conduct are separate from our effort to recover ANY U.S. service member
in enemy captivity,” General Martin E. Dempsey said in a Facebookpost today.
“As for the circumstances of his capture, when he is able to provide
them, we’ll learn the facts. Like any American, he is innocent until
proven guilty. Our Army’s leaders will not look away from misconduct if
it occurred.”
A US Army investigation into Bergdahl’s own
conduct might appease or inflame his critics. But even before Bergdahl’s
release, some soldiers were eager to talk.
And while there is no suggestion — in the
un-redacted bits of the FBI file on Hastings — that the agency was after
any soldier who had taken his frustrations to the press, the fact that
the FBI was looking into the reporters’ sources and methods raises at
least the question.
Now, everyone wants to talk about it. But Hastings’ ever “controversial” reporting got to it first.
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