Saturday, December 06, 2025

Seymour Hersh Atrocity Exposer: "COVER UP." . .Taking Notes on The Media / The Character of Invesigative Reporting

Hersh’s language crackles with a mordant Yiddish brevity such that even when describing US war crimes and torture, he never loses his powers of speech. 
Aged 88, his brain has lost none of its sharpness as he recalls the damning details of the atrocity that made his name
  • On 16 March 1968, in the Vietnamese village of My Lai, hundreds of unarmed men, women, children and babies were rounded up and shot dead, but when the Army reported the incident later they said they killed 128 members of the Viet Cong. kIt took another year for a skeptical young reporter to respond to a tip and begin unravelling the institutional lie, travelling up and down the country to record first-person testimonies from US Army soldiers who executed the massacre.

Cover-Up review – a film worthy of Seymour Hersh

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRJw_Z40EXxSxmYH90n3bi_KXS3aYWNtNj6Pg&s
Published 05 Dec 2025 
Words by Sophie Monks Kaufman
Directed by Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus
Runtime 118m 
Released 05 Dec 2025
 
". . . Hersh tracked down Paul Meadlo, a former farmboy so unhinged by what he had been a part of that he was willing to speak on camera to CBS about shooting at babies, and the gang rapes perpetrated by US soldiers. It was Meadlo’s mother who gave Hersh the infamous line about the Army: I sent them a good boy and they made him a murderer.”

Poitras and Obenhaus illustrate Hersh’s recollections with media coverage that blew up in the public domain to become part of our collective understanding of US atrocities during Vietnam, but also – grippingly – Hersh has granted them access to his own source materials, while ferociously protecting the sources themselves. We see a vertical print sourced from the army; it’s a black and white map of My Lai annotated with blue felt pen. Over one arrow it says, 3040 bodies found in ditch,“; over another, Had lunch“. 

I don’t psychoanalyse those that talk to me, just like I don’t psychoanalyse myself, thank god,” says Hersh early doors, possibly regretting saying yes to this documentary 20 years after Poitras first approached him. Still, because he likes people and has spent his career listening to them (without necessarily believing them), he has a standard of careful insight into why things happen the way that they do. 
  • As he reflects on why no one involved in the My Lai massacre reported it earlier, he gives two possible theories: one, that it felt so terrible as to be unspeakable; the other, more likely in his view, Well, that’s just another day in Vietnam.”

These comments invoke a shiver because you could as easily say, That’s another day in Abu Ghraib,” or, That’s another day in Gaza”. The use of war crimes and their attendant cover-ups is presented as a matter of rionsense-repeat in US foreign policy as made irrefutable by Hersh’s diligent reporting. 

YARN | Well, it's led you here. | Groundhog Day (1993) | Video gifs by  quotes | ff35866f | η΄— 

For the film is a sprint through the stories he went on to cover, from Watergate to Iraq to Gaza today, amounting to an ironclad reason to mistrust the official US version of events.

 
2022 Nordstream Pipeline 
Abu Ghraib 
 

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