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13 February 2019

The False Exposé (Part 3/Final)


In some cases, these books could almost be described as court histories, official narratives that reveal some juicy tidbits and offer some internal criticisms but largely they are revealed to be sanctions and apologias for the subjects and institutions they address. The approach they take is more a case of constructive criticism as opposed to a genuine adversarial exposé. They are not exposing the deeper truth, revealing true guilt, unleashing a story that's been suppressed and hidden.  
This is why they need to be identified as false exposé.


Here are some things to look for but even this list must be qualified. The principles listed below are not always erroneous and even good historians have to balance these things. Rather, when someone is presenting their work as an exposé, but they still exhibit a strong adherence to these principles, then there's a good chance that what you're dealing with is not an exposé but a false exposé which may be simply 'safe' history or in other cases a blatant whitewash. The most extreme examples stray into corrupt forms of propaganda and some authors are not historians at all but agents and actors within a bureaucratic hierarchy, facilitating and aiding the covering up of dark deeds.
First of all does the author exhibit a great deal of genuine respect or even reverence for the institution they're writing about? They may levy criticisms but are they overall supportive of the institution and what it stands for? Again, not every historian needs to be an overt antagonist but someone who's doing investigative journalism and 'uncovering' scandal can't really have a horse in the race or a finger in the pie. Access is important and many authors sellout in order to get it. The adversarial types will be cut off or will struggle to get the materials. It is at this point that the official histories and false exposés still play an important role. They reveal much that other more intrepid investigators can utilise to flesh out the larger story. There are other occasions when an author reveals more than intended or does far more damage to the institution than they initially realise. That's why even these less than stellar examples of investigative journalism can still have some value.
Will such an institution-friendly author be willing to follow through on the evidence, even if it means effectively 'taking down' the institution? If not, then there's little chance of a real exposé.
Secondly, does the author foster or embrace credulity with regard to official proclamation?
It's kind of like when being seated on a jury and you're asked if you would 'be more likely to believe the testimony of a police office because of their position or office?'
Those who have spent even a small amount of time looking into police scandals and investigations of corruption will quickly answer in the negative. I would not trust a police officer above anyone else and in fact in many cases I would trust them even less.
Those who embrace the mainstream, who believe police officers, Pentagon spokesmen and the testimonies of CIA officials, FBI agents and mouthpieces for the White House and State Department are not going to write exposés. They're not capable of it. This is especially true if they put the opinions of these people over and above the statements made by other investigative journalists, contrarian academics, dissident mid- and low level officials and ex-officials, not to mention the eyewitness testimony of regular people.
Official statements have their place, but must be taken with a grain of salt and any writer who takes them prima facie is not going to write an exposé.
Third, be wary of authors who are quick to identify corruption as systematic only when outside the nation or institutions they seem to revere. These things happen 'in other countries but not in the United States' is a common viewpoint expressed in many false exposés. And at the same time any hint of such corruption and scandal within the United States if unable to be dispensed with is categorised as rogue and anomalous.
Fourth, the false exposé author will frequently demonstrate a willingness and support for the idea of protecting operational secrets as defined by the institution. In other words even though they're exposing elements of corruption and mismanagement, they are still 'on board' with the institution along with its assumptions and goals and as such are willing to collaborate. Bob Woodward post-Watergate certainly comes to mind.
They are then given access to archives and data that others would not be privy to. While this may not seem like an official imprimatur, it often is. Again, the CIA is openly critical of Weiner's Legacy of Ashes and yet at the same time, he doesn't seem to have burned his bridges and for all the attention the work has received, it might be viewed as having an unofficial quiet imprimatur. They don't like everything he says but it's already been said anyway and the information is already out there. They're never going to acquiesce to a real soul-searching overhaul and yet many in the organisation know that many of his criticisms are true.
However I would go further and say his criticisms are not only lacking in quantity but in quality and depth.
These authors (and there are a multitude) reveal themselves as incapable of writing a genuine exposé. Corrupt and often broadcasting their corruptibility they cannot be trusted. They're telling you as much. They're admitting that there might be file cabinets full of material which they will not only ignore but deliberately avoid talking about.
Fifth, these authors exhibit a severe failure to grasp that bureaucratic corruption is almost always systemic and often foundational. For those who have worked and functioned within bureaucracies (unless they are willfully blind) they will come to understand that there's a great deal of systemic corruption. It permeates the budget, the power structures within the hierarchy and plays out in how decisions are made, money is spent and how tasks are assigned. And the deeper one goes, the more they will find, which also indicates that for the average person, the corruption they're seeing is only the tip of the iceberg. There are of course layers of corruption and it's not always overtly illegal. Corruption doesn't always involve breaking the law.
The corruption is also foundational because when one studies bureaucracies one quickly learns about how institutional mandates are quickly lost and give way to other interests. Primarily the unspoken role of any bureaucracy is self-perpetuation... a task which involves spending the budget in a way in which more money can be requested, justifying existence and expenditure and seeking new avenues in which to expand. Most bureaucracies must grow or die. Though dynamism isn't something we usually think of when looking at bureaucracies there's an element of it at work. You might see this more in a backwater military unit trying to keep from being shuttered than you will in the local transportation or social benefits office and yet even these 'necessary' bureaucracies can be streamlined or so marginalised as to become virtually dysfunctional.
But when we're talking about executive level agencies, law enforcement, intelligence, diplomacy and the like, there's a real cutting edge energy present in which the survivors must sink or swim. And also the stakes are much higher as real and genuine power is at stake and the higher echelons of power are within view. These people are considerably more motivated than then dead end social workers at your local assistance office.
This type of environment demands innovation and while we don't usually associate bureaucracies with promoting and recognising incentive, those rules begin to change when one attains a certain level.
All these things considered such people are not to be trusted just because they hold mid- to high level positions in 'reputable' agencies.
Finally, beware of pro-institution authors who present their exposés as little more than criticism of a particular period or of certain leaders. Kessler clearly has an axe to grind with Louis Freeh. Posner clearly doesn't like certain popes. This does not mean they're serious about taking on the whole organisation and questioning its assumptions.
In every cited case, there seems to be a problem with acknowledging the Deep State and how it operates. Jacobsen hints at it with regard to Operation Paperclip. In her telling there are officials within the State Department and even the FBI and Pentagon apparatus who are effectively locked in a secret struggle with unseen forces within US intelligence. Their moves are being subverted and circumvented as forces within the government are determined to aid, assist and utilise certain figures from Third Reich. But are they rogues? Is it just a rogue programme? Or is this something happening on a massive scale, something systemic? Additionally is this revelation regarding one programme at one time in reality the tip of the iceberg? Imagine if this struggle is 100 times or even 1000 times as big and complex as what she presents regarding Operation Paperclip?
I maintain it is and these authors play their part in revealing it... even if it's not really their intention to do so.
These books have some value to be sure. They contain lots of information but must be read with a grain of salt. They're hiding a great deal, leaving much unsaid, assuming much and yet at the same time they (at times) reveal far more than the authors ever intended.
Link to the Shenon NPR interview:
See also: