A careful reader of The Times, David Smollar of San Diego, makes some astute observations about an unusual article in Fridayâs paper. The article caught many peopleâs eyes because it lacked a byline. It also quoted Jill Abramson, the executive editor, and it used an unnamed source to confirm an NBC News report that a retired Marine officer, Gen. James E. Cartwright, is a target of a leak investigation about American cyberattacks on Iranâs nuclear program.
As Mr. Smollar noted, the article required some âmental gymnasticsâ on the part of the reader.
He wrote:
It quotes a âperson familiar with the investigationâ confirming an investigation of Cartwright as (the/a) leaker for NY Tims stories that used unidentified sources about cyberattacks against Iran by the U.S.
It quotes Jill Abramson as declining comment on matters that involve âconfidential sources.â
So here we have an NY Times story, with no byline, that uses a confidential source to confirm an investigation about someone suspected of being a confidential source for a series of NY Times stories. And the NY Times itself refusing to comment on a story written by the NY Times about the NY Times.
He added: âConfusing? You bet! My head was spinning after reading the article.â
I asked the managing editor Dean Baquet to explain the background. He told me that there was a rush Thursday night to confirm the NBC news report. The lack of a byline was ânot a political decisionâ in any way but simply reflected the number of reporters working on what turned ou! t to be a brief article, he said.
In an e-mail, Mr. Baquet wrote: âIt was a short story that numerous people scrambled to confirm when the networks broke it. It seemed odd to have more than one byline, and no one felt any real ownership of it.â
As for the confidentiality of the source, Mr. Baquet couldnât comment on that any more than Ms. Abramson was able to in the article itself.
The use of unnamed sources is never ideal. Sometimes itâs necessary to get important information on the record. While I canât disagree entirely with Mr. Smollarâs criticism, there probably was no alternative, given the deadline situation.
3:35 p.m. | Updated Friday afternoon, Foreign Policy magazine published a piece online that analyzes and helps make sense of the development.