greg miller,
MA ’93, is a national security correspondent for
the Los Angeles Times. Assigned to cover U.S.
intelligence operations shortly after 9/11, Miller went
to Afghanistan in early spring of 2002, where he persuaded
the Army to allow him access to U.S. interrogators questioning
captured Al Qaeda and Taliban prisoners—the only
reporter given such access. Although never allowed to
observe interrogations—he was always accompanied
by a military chaperone, Miller says—he found
the interrogators eager to share their stories and had
a rare glimpse into intelligence-gathering methods and
culture.
Miller wrote a story that became part of an L.A.
Times series titled “The Untold War,”
which won an Overseas Press Club award for 2002. He
later collaborated with senior interrogator Chris Mackey
(“Mackey” is a pseudonym he used for security
reasons) to write a book, The Interrogators, published
last summer by Little, Brown.
Although he was out of the military, Mackey had to get
Army authorization for the material he provided for
the book. Army officials spent months reviewing the
manuscript, and requested a number of changes, mostly
to protect the identities of soldiers, prisoners and
military units. “They also asked that we refer
to the CIA and other intelligence agencies by the generic
moniker ‘other government agency,’"
Miller recalls. Still, “for all the changes it
sought, the Army did not censor the story.”
The Abu Ghraib scandal has given prisoner treatment
new relevance. Miller says the Army has recently allowed
some reporters in Iraq to watch interrogations at Abu
Ghraib—via video feed, with no audio— as
part of an effort to prove that abuses no longer occur.
|