You could always rely on NBC anchor Brian Williams for the smooth handling of a tricky issue on the NBC Nightly News, or a slicing punch line in any of his many appearances on the late night humor shows.
Yet now his dependability — the trust built up over years with millions of viewers — has been cast in doubt because of a self-inflicted journalistic war wound over a story nearly a dozen years old.
On Wednesday night, Williams retracted and apologized for saying he had been in a helicopter forced down by enemy fire during the invasion of Iraq in early 2003 — an account he had given several times in recent years. The reaction has been severe. Many people on social media, including some professional journalists, have called him an outright liar.
On the newscast last week that led to the apology, Williams hailed the soldiers who he said helped save his life in the Iraqi desert when, as the anchor put it, "the helicopter we were traveling in was forced down after being hit by an RPG" — that is, a rocket-propelled grenade. The story focused on U.S. Army Command Sgt. Major Tim Terpak, who Williams said took the lead in protecting him and his colleagues in the Iraqi desert.
As part of a segment that lasted two minutes, on a newscast that features approximately 19 to 20 minutes of actual news, Williams showed footage from that day in 2003 — and from the professional hockey game that Williams took Terpak to last week. In the video shown to millions on the Nightly News, Williams was repeatedly in the frame too, wrapped literally and figuratively in an embrace by a man cheered by thousands at Madison Square Garden as a military hero.
It is an embrace that Williams has welcomed and cultivated as part of his persona. His stint in Iraq was his final spur to earn as a correspondent before inheriting the NBC anchor's desk from Tom Brokaw in what was one of the smoothest transitions ever engineered in the network news business. Indeed, Williams is currently a member of the board of the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation, the group involved in promoting the nation's highest honor for valor on the battlefield. It is not an accident that the continuing celebration of Williams' decade mark as NBC's chief anchor plays up his time covering combat with images of him in flak jackets.
It can be hard to separate Williams' clearly deep-seated appreciation of the troops from the network's need to promote him as a star amid a bruising ratings competition with ABC. NBC's Today show, the news division's chief moneymaker, has been pushed into second place; Williams is battling to maintain ratings supremacy for his show. Internal intrigue has once again become fodder for New York tabloids.
Yet this was an unforced error. What he said last Friday was no slip of the tongue: Williams had told the same story, with a dramatic flair, on David Letterman's Late Show two years ago. Williams made similar remarks when he spoke to the Council on Foreign Relations in 2005, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Following last week's story, outraged soldiers posted comments on NBC Nightly News' Facebook page contradicting his tale; several told the military newspaper Stars and Stripes that he had arrived an hour after the Chinook helicopter and two others were forced down.
As the Poynter Institute's Al Tompkins wrote, in 2003 Williams reported on Dateline NBC that "the incident was so fresh when the helicopters landed that the crew from the helicopter that was hit by the RPG was too shaken to talk on camera." In 2008, Williams wrote that a helicopter in front of his was knocked down. The precise gap between when the Chinook was hit by fire and when Williams' helicopter arrived remains unclear.
What is clear is that over time, his accounts became more ambiguous in characterizing which helicopter was struck — and then his retellings became quite explicit and quite wrong.
NBC News has not yet responded to requests for comment beyond Williams' apologies.
The first episode of the hit public radio series Serial hinged on the unreliability of memory, even about something so important as the details of a day a friend was murdered. Scholars at Harvard University and elsewhere have argued that memory is fundamentally undependable.
The incident has echoes of several incidents about wartime heroics by nonsoldiers. Then-Sen. Hillary Clinton admitted "a mistake" in saying that she had come under sniper fire while arriving at an airport in Bosnia in 1996 as first lady. Richard Blumenthal, when running for Senate in Connecticut, had to apologize for remarks on several occasions in which he said he had served in the U.S. military in Vietnam. He served during that era, but not overseas in Vietnam. In 2001, I revealed that Fox News' Geraldo Rivera, then its chief war correspondent, had been 300 miles from the site of dead American soldiers that he claimed, on camera, to have prayed over.
Unlike Fox and Rivera, Williams apologized for the story on his network's air. His tone was abject and contrite. But it fails to explain or satisfy.
As he wrote in his apology posted on Facebook, Williams kept notes of his experiences on that trip and was not alone that day in March 2003 — he was with colleagues. He is not only the star and anchor of the NBC Nightly News but its managing editor. For many, it is hard to square the dependable newsman with the narrator of a war story that became so embellished it turned into fiction.
Transcript
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
There was a pretty stunning apology last night. Brian Williams, the chief anchor of NBC News, admitted to viewers that he misled them in the past. Williams had told the story of being in Iraq in 2003. He'd said he was aboard a Chinook helicopter that was hit by enemy fire and forced to land. Now the military newspaper "Stars And Stripes" has revealed that Williams was actually on a helicopter an hour behind the one that was struck. Williams apologized to the troops and to viewers during his newscast last night.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "NBC NIGHTLY NEWS")
BRIAN WILLIAMS: This was a bungled attempt by me to thank one special veteran, and by extension, our brave military men and women, veterans everywhere - those who have served while I did not. I hope they know they have my greatest respect and also now my apology.
GREENE: Let's bring NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik, who's in our studios in New York. Good morning, David.
DAVID FOLKENFLIK, BYLINE: Good morning, David.
GREENE: So this happened or didn't happen, like, a dozen years ago. Why this apology now?
FOLKENFLIK: Well, Williams told the story anew on his broadcast on Friday late last week to honor a soldier who he said had helped save his life when his helicopter had been downed. And he posted a version of this on Facebook. He hailed him at a professional hockey game - an NHL game. And an interesting thing happened. On that "NBC Nightly News" Facebook page, a number of soldiers in the comments angrily denounced Williams' account of the tale. A reporter for the military newspaper Stars and Stripes started poking around, began to confirm the sequence of how things actually had played out. And Williams was compelled to apologize on the page and then to the troops but also to his viewers last night on the air. As you say, quite stunning.
GREENE: OK. So he brings up the story again, recently. And that leads to all of this. Had he told this story a lot over the years?
FOLKENFLIK: Well, he had told the anecdote a number of times, including basically a few days after it happened. He was indeed trapped in a sandstorm in the Iraqi desert in his copter and out of touch for a bit in 2003 during the invasion of Iraq. But initially, he didn't say that his copter had been struck to be forced down. It feels as though the story had grown in force in the retelling. You know, he had told the story as recently as 2013 on David Letterman's show on CBS. We have a clip from that - gives you a feel for how he recounted it.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "LATE SHOW WITH DAVID LETTERMAN")
WILLIAMS: Two of our four helicopters were hit by ground fire, including the one I was in.
DAVID LETTERMAN: No kidding?
WILLIAMS: RPG and AK-47.
LETTERMAN: What happens the minute everybody realizes you've been hit?
WILLIAMS: We figure out how to land safely. And we did. We landed very quickly and hard. And we put down, and we were stuck - four birds in the middle of the desert.
FOLKENFLIK: It's a very similar version to what he gave late last week and at the NHL game. And at the same time, it's a much stronger version, placing himself at the center of the action than actually he had given initially or in the first years after the events.
GREENE: So David, what has been the reaction? Are people giving him the benefit of the doubt and thinking that it's been time and sort of memories can become less clear? Do people think that he, you know, lied when telling the story?
FOLKENFLIK: Well, you've seen that word used by a couple of media critics - Howard Kurtz of Fox News, David Zurawik, my former colleague at the Baltimore Sun. The response has been somewhat scathing on social media, both from conservative critics of NBC and from professional journalists. Although I'd remind people that the initial response on social media tends to go to those with the most heat.
GREENE: I mean, the news anchor desk, through American history, is supposed to be this sacred place where you get the truth. What should all of us make of this?
FOLKENFLIK: Well, I think we take a couple of things from this. I think that it's important for news organizations to be accurate. It's important for them to be right and be transparent about when they get things wrong. I think this apology was quite heartfelt. I once exposed Geraldo Rivera - a war story when he was the chief war correspondent for Fox News. And he didn't really ever apologize for it or make peace with viewers. That said, I think it's a terrible, crushing blow for credibility of an anchor to be not only wrong on a story, but to be wrong on a story involving his own actions and activities.
GREENE: All right. NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik joining us from New York. David, thanks.
FOLKENFLIK: You bet. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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