James Risen Prepared to "Pay Any Price" to Report on War on Terror Amid Crackdown on Whistleblowers
We spend the hour with veteran New York Times investigative reporter
James Risen, the journalist at the center of one of the most significant
press freedom cases in decades. In 2006, Risen won a Pulitzer Prize for
his reporting about warrantless wiretapping of Americans by the
National Security Agency. He has since been pursued by both the Bush and
Obama administrations in a six-year leak investigation into that book,
"State of War: The Secret History of the
CIA and the Bush Administration." Risen now faces years in prison if he refuses to testify at the trial of a former
CIA
officer, Jeffrey Sterling, who is accused of giving him classified
information about the agency’s role in disrupting Iran’s nuclear
program, which he argues effectively gave Iran a blueprint for designing
a bomb. The Obama administration must now decide if it will try to
force Risen’s testimony, despite new guidelines issued earlier this year
that make it harder to subpoena journalists for their records. Risen’s
answer to this saga has been to write another book, released today,
titled "Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War." "You cannot have
aggressive investigative reporting in America without confidential
sources — and without aggressive investigative reporting, we can’t
really have a democracy," Risen says. "I think that is what the
government really fears more than anything else." Risen also details
revelations he makes in his new book about what he calls the "homeland
security-industrial complex."
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