Victor Navasky, the former Editor-in-chief and publisher of The Nation, is having a good year. Nearing his 85th birthday this coming July, and still very active in journalism, the awards are starting to flow in. This year, Harvard University鈥檚 , a journalism institution whose mission is 鈥渢o promote and elevate the standards of journalism,鈥� has given Navasky its appropriately 鈥淚.F. Stone Medal for Journalistic Independence.鈥�
The award, as I explained in some time ago, should more accurately be called an award for overtly biased and often incorrect articles written by prominent left-wing journalists. I.F. Stone was for many years a columnist for small New York City left-wing fellow-traveling newspapers, P.M. and later The Daily Compass. When the latter folded in 1953, Stone started his own newsletter, which he called I.F.Stone鈥檚 Weekly (later renamed the Bi-Weekly). Starting with a very small number of subscribers, when he finally closed it down, he had 70,000 subscribers and was writing for mainstream papers and magazines, especially The New York Review of Books. Their editors bought his sub list and made him a Contributing Editor.
But his much-heralded independence and integrity had big holes in it. His most famous story (which started out as articles in the Compass, and then was expanded into a book, ) was one in which he unsuccessfully tried to prove that the U.S. started the Korean War; not North Korea, with Stalin鈥檚 blessing. His most well-known story turned out to be nothing but conspiracy theory, or as we might call it today, 鈥渇ake news.鈥� During the Vietnam War, in March of 1965, a famous State Department 鈥淲hite Paper鈥� to try and prove that the South Vietnam Communist NLF was independent of North Vietnamese control. Once again, Stone was wrong.
Stone's sycophancy is now known to have been so blatant that even a reviewer, film critic John Powers, wrote in The Nation (Oct.23,1965) that "Stone's true failing was his tardiness in grasping the full monstrosity of actually existing Communism, especially Stalinism." Stone's "tiger eyes," Powers wrote, "that could spot the threat to liberty in the footnotes of a Congressional report couldn't clearly see the meaning of show trials, slave labor, and class-based mass murder." Powers correctly concluded that Stone, "faced with one of the most tyrannical political regimes of his lifetime, got things so badly wrong that another man might have died questioning his own judgment." And from 1936 to 1939, Stone signed up with Soviet intelligence, in the name of anti-fascism. (You can find the details in Max Holland鈥檚 鈥淚.F. Stone: Encounters with Soviet Intelligence.鈥� You can also find a complete lengthy evaluation of Stone by me .)
So, one might say that the Nieman award fits Victor Navasky. 鈥淭o paraphrase Orwell,鈥� Holland wrote, 鈥淪tone鈥檚 sin was being anti-fascist without being, for too long, anti-totalitarian.鈥�
One could use these very words to describe Victor Navasky鈥檚 set of beliefs. His most well-known book, , was perhaps the best example of anti anti-Communism. In it, the blacklisted Hollywood writers were portrayed as heroic victims, rather than as dedicated Stalinists who refused publicly to acknowledge their own beliefs, and pretended instead to simply be 鈥減rogressives.鈥�
In giving Navasky the award, the Nieman Foundation stated its reasons:
Navasky鈥檚 career spans several political eras during which he perfected his own brand of entrepreneurial, independent, nontraditional and courageous truth-telling. Some of his important work, published decades ago, including his coverage of McCarthyism, resonates today with all who have the courage to hold the powerful accountable. At this time, when fact-based journalism is often under attack by powerful political ideologues who label investigative reporting as fake news, honoring Victor Navasky serves as an important reminder that independent journalism that holds powerful institutions accountable is part of a long and necessary tradition in our democracy.
One of the things Navasky is most known for is his continuing insistence that Alger Hiss was falsely convicted and was never a Soviet spy. All the available evidence, which is accepted by virtually everyone who knows anything about this major spy case of the 1950s, accepts Hiss鈥� guilt. Navasky stands alone with perhaps a dwindling few others, revealing an inability to accept solid evidence when it denigrates a long-standing political narrative he won鈥檛 ditch.
To this day, as a long of Navasky in the British Guardian suggests, I have been a major critic of his. Over the years, I have debated him at least on three different occasions. The author quotes me at length challenging Navasky鈥檚 views of communism and the blacklist, but seeks to undermine it by referring to me- of course- as 鈥渢he right-wing historian.鈥� Any liberal or leftist reading it knows immediately that he has alerted readers to disregard whatever I have to say. Navasky, as usual, revealed himself to be disingenuous. He tells the interviewer that he was against HUAC鈥檚 investigations because he thought 鈥渢here were [other]ways of exposing the communist apparatus,鈥� as if we are to believe Navasky ever wanted to, or even acknowledged that such a thing as a 鈥渃ommunist apparatus鈥� existed.
The past few decades have revealed Navasky to be obsessed not only with Hiss鈥檚 would-be innocence, but with resurrecting the old Communists of the 30s through the 50s as heroic martyrs fighting the good fight. Apparently unable to find a publisher, he put out his most recent as a Kindle single. It鈥檚 an attempt to restore the reputation of a relatively unknown African-American Communist, Jack O鈥橠ell, of whom he writes was a man with a 鈥済reat organizing capacity鈥� and a 鈥渂rilliant mind鈥hile lamenting what American society, obsessed by the so-called Communist menace, lost by disqualifying him from being an open and visible contributor to the Civil Rights movement.鈥� (my emphasis)
Navasky鈥檚 most to the continuing attempt to honor old Reds appeared in The Nation on April 6th. His article follows the example of Stephen Cohen, who has made the rounds in print and on TV most recently defending Putin鈥檚 regime in Russia and attacking Putin鈥檚 critics. The charge of 鈥淢cCarthyism鈥� is one of the favorite ones used by the left, whose members invoke it regularly to attack anyone who tells the truth about the role played in our past by American Communists. Now, however, Cohen, Navasky and vanden Heuvel are using it as a term for those journalists who criticize Vladimir Putin.
Real McCarthyism, Navasky writes, 鈥渋nvolved irresponsible and careless charges of communist affiliation鈥hat to be a Red was to be a subversive鈥ll of which helped create and escalate the anticommunist hysteria.鈥� Hence Navasky condemns the American press and 鈥渆stablishment鈥� of assuming 鈥渢hat the worst charges against Russia (including collaboration with and by Trump) are true,鈥� which he sees as a 鈥渓egacy of Cold War attitudes towards the Soviet Union.鈥� He alleges that a 鈥渃loud of suspicion鈥� hangs over Russia today and Putin because Putin was connected with the former Soviet Union. In other words, Putin is criticized by many in the U.S. not because of what he does as Russia鈥檚 leader, but because he is seen as a Soviet communist! Thus Navasky moves into the camp of Trump鈥檚 and Putin鈥檚 defenders, writing that the media 鈥渢oo easily assume that 鈥淭rumpites鈥� who talked to the Russians (even those who then falsely denied it) 鈥渁re guilty of colluding or collaborating with them,鈥� and he sees them as 鈥渧ictims of the same sort of irrational forces that tainted too many Cold War liberals.鈥�
So foolish is his argument that a few days ago, Nation columnist Katha Pollitt in the magazine鈥檚 own pages. Pollitt, who grew up in a leftist family in the 1950s, is no friend to Joe McCarthy鈥檚 cause. But she gets the difference between what she sees as state repression then and opposition to Putin today. As Pollitt argues, calling a regular citizen a Communist without evidence could have led to one鈥檚 losing a job in the 50s; today a call to investigate Russian hacking and its effects on our electoral process and whether anyone in the Trump campaign had ties to Russia is something else. And the 鈥渧ictims鈥� today are those in power. Trump, after all, 鈥渋s president of the United States.鈥�
The late Christopher Hitchens, when he quit being a columnist for The Nation in 2002, wrote that the magazine 鈥渨as an apologist for the failed so-called Soviet experiment, and amazingly still is. When there鈥檚 a democratic revolution in Ukraine, [editor] Katrina vanden Heuvel will still say it鈥檚 an America-backed attempt to encircle Russia. There鈥檚 this instinct to support Moscow鈥hen it comes down to it鈥Navasky] will always take a version of that side鈥e鈥檚 quite a hard leftist.鈥� I would add that Navasky's friendly demeanor and affable nature works to mask his very harsh politics.
Were Hitchens still among us, he would be the last to be surprised at the news that Victor Navasky received the Nieman award, or that to learn that Navasky saw attacks on Putin as Red-baiting and attacks on Putin鈥檚 regime in Russia the same as an attack on Gorbachev鈥檚 regime in the Soviet Union. Or as Pollitt eloquently says it in the ending of her critique:
It鈥檚 as if the fact that Russia occupies some of the same geography as the Soviet Union has trapped The Nation in the defensive attitudes of an earlier era. But Russia is not a communist country; it is a capitalist kleptocracy run by an autocrat and an enemy of human rights. If there鈥檚 a lingering legacy of McCarthyism around this issue, it doesn鈥檛 emanate from liberals but from the left, where some kind of subconscious sympathy with the state formerly known as the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic curiously persists even though the place now embodies everything they oppose.
How refreshing to find one rare sane leftist voice giving it to Victor Navasky in his own magazine.