Brent Bozell
Jun 21, 2006
With Katie Couric lounging in the wings, Dan Rather is now expendable,
and the suits at CBS News are squeezing him out of his last remaining
gig on "60 Minutes." This has caused great distress for those who like
their news to look like a long commercial for MoveOn.org, which is to
say, the Dan Rather fan club.
CBS smiled politely as they pushed him away, but the Philadelphia
Inquirer quoted an anonymous former CBS executive, who denounced the
shove-off as "disgraceful. He's a legend. He gave his life to that
company. Even though he made a big mistake, he did 43 years and 11
months' great work."
If Rather's that great, why didn't the executive have the courage
to go on the record?
Rather had a Nixonian ending, resigning from the anchor chair in
disgrace after being in complete denial about his own political
corruption. It's not surprising that some will now try to rehabilitate
his reputation, but they won't have much more luck than Nixon did.
Rather does not have a sterling record of journalism. He is a grand
example of the anchorman as a powerful and partisan national politician
who never had to be elected, yet had a lot more visibility and wielded
a lot more influence than most elected officials.
There is a rich irony here. It was that very zest for power -- in
this case, a story that would have destroyed the re-election hopes of
President George W. Bush -- that backfired and cost Rather his career.
The shameful "scoop" charged Bush with the surprisingly puny
offense of missing some of his National Guard duty (yes, puny, compared
to young Bill Clinton completely skipping out on the University of
Arkansas ROTC.) Rather breathlessly delivered his "umimpeachable
source," Bill Burkett, who turned out to be a Bush-hating fruitcake. He
sent documents by fax, and the document examiners CBS hired warned they
were inadequate at best, yet Rather went full steam ahead. It was not
thorough or thoughtful journalism. It was not defensible. It was
flat-out embarrassing, akin to Janet Cooke's non-existent 8-year-old
heroin addict.
This was not the first time Rather tried to savage a member of
the Bush family on national television. Rather's 1988 interview with
then-Vice President George H.W. Bush was another low point. After a
hatchet-job taped piece on Iran-Contra leading into the interview,
Rather bullied Bush, constantly interrupting him, suggesting that many
Americans didn't believe his account of what he knew about the
arms-for-hostages deal. Bush's haymaker punch of a response -- "If you
want to rehash Iran-Contra as the only part of my career, how would you
like your career defined by your pouty performance, walking off the set
when tennis delayed your newscast?" -- was absolutely the most
satisfying TV moment President Bush ever handed to conservatives.
If Rather was this tough on every president or potentate, we
could accept that. But he wasn't. Rather secured two interviews with
Saddam Hussein, both on the verge of his wars with the United States,
one in 1990, one in 2003. In both of these interviews, Rather treated
Saddam with extreme deference, like a world statesman. He asked in 1990
if Saddam thought Kuwait was "Vietnam in the sand for the United
States." He sounded in 2003 like he and Saddam were on an airstrip in
Casablanca: "Given the sober moment and the danger at hand, what are
the chances this is the last time you and I will see each other?"
Rather gained the access, and wasted it on his own vanity.
When it came to the Clintons, Rather was even more of a manicured
poodle. In his first interview with President Clinton, on March 25,
1993, Rather began by asking if Clinton had a cold, then added: "I
don't know anybody who knows you well who isn't worried about your lack
of sleep. Even Mrs. Clinton recently mentioned it. How much do you
sleep?" He did the same favor for Hillary that year, saying, "I don't
know of anybody, friend or foe, who isn't impressed by your grasp of
the details of this (health care) plan."
Rather secured the first post-impeachment interview with
President Clinton in 1999, and it was peaches and cream again. There
was no time for rough questions, for Juanita Broaddrick, or fundraising
from Chinese nationals. Rather began by asking if Clinton knew the
duties of the husband of a U.S. senator. When he arrived at the
impeachment questions, Rather asked: "We're here in a room with
pictures of Lincoln, Washington, Continental Congress. When you look
back over this year plus, what's the moral of it? Does it have a moral?"
There is a tragic component in thinking about this. After 43 years and
11 months in the national spotlight, Rather is leaving, and won't be
missed.