On protecting sources

Published December 17, 2016
The writer is principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. For 20 years he was editor in chief of The Guardian.
The writer is principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. For 20 years he was editor in chief of The Guardian.

MUCH of the best journalism is unauthorised. The most valuable sources any reporter has are not supposed to speak. The best understanding of how a society works often comes from people who should really keep quiet, but don’t.

That, at least, is how I feel as a former editor and as a citizen. I would not expect governments to agree. Those in power — when they are not leaking themselves — like to control information and disapprove of other people who leak. They will frequently go to great lengths to try to discover the source of information. If an editor has any kind of sacred duty it is to protect his or her sources from discovery.

One of my own first stand-offs with authority as an editor came in 2002 when a brewing company tried to discover who had sent documents about a potential takeover bid to The Guardian along with four other national news operations.


If an editor has any kind of sacred duty it is to protect his or her sources from discovery.


Five editors unanimously decided we would not hand over any information that could identify the source. We knew that if we betrayed this source then future whistleblowers would believe they could not trust a newspaper when the going got tough. The free flow of information would dry up.

The case turned nasty for The Guardian when the company, Interbrew, tried to seize its assets in order to force our hand. That particular battle lasted eight years and went all the way to the European Court of Human Rights. We won — but only because the five newspapers risked hundreds of thousands of pounds to resist and because independent courts do, actually, recognise the chilling effects of trying to force editors to betray their sources.

A very famous English judge, Lord Denning, put the case for protection well when he ruled in 1981: “If [newspapers] were compelled to disclose their sources, they would soon be bereft of information which they ought to have. Their sources would dry up. Wrongdoing would not be disclosed. Charlatans could not be exposed. Unfairness would go unremedied. Misdeeds in the corridors of power, in companies or in government departments would never be known.”

British journalists have been able to seek comfort from other rulings. In 1990, a trainee journalist with The Engineer magazine, William Goodwin, also had to fight all the way to the European Court of Human Rights to protect the source of information he’d published about the financial status of a computer software company.

The court eventually ruled in 1996 that the protection of journalistic sources “is one of the basic conditions for press freedom”. According to the court: “Without such protection, sources may be deterred from assisting the press in informing the public on matters of public interest. As a result, the vital public watchdog roles of the press may be undermined, and the ability of the press to provide accurate and reliable information be adversely affected.”

Sometimes governments will argue about the dubious motives of sources, or claim that national security is endangered by leaks.

Generally, I don’t think it’s helpful to think about a source’s motives. As I said at the time of Interbrew: “There’s never a perfect source … Archbishops don’t leak you documents, generally, so you’re usually dealing with people who have differing characteristics or differing motivations and are often less than spotlessly pure people.” An editor should make a judgement on the basis of the information and whether its publication is in the national interest.

In cases of national security there will never be an agreement between editors and governments over how to define the public interest — or who gets to define what the public interest is. Politicians usually don’t trust editors to make decisions about the public interest. But there are great dangers in allowing the government of the day to be the arbiter.

Watergate is probably the best example of this. The Nixon administration did not consider it in the national interest that the Washington Post should so doggedly pursue its story about corruption at the highest levels of government. For 30 years, no one knew who ‘Deep Throat’ was: it was eventually revealed to be former FBI associate director Mark Felt. Most people today would regard him as a patriot.

They would think the same about Daniel Ellsberg, now 85, who was charged under the Espionage Act for releasing the Pentagon Papers, which revealed that the public narrative about decision-making in the Vietnam War was not the whole truth. National security adviser Al Haig said it was “a devastating … security breach of the greatest magnitude of anything I’ve ever seen.” The Nixon administration accused The New York Times of treason, damaging national security and violating the Espionage Act. The state tried to injunct The NYT from further publication.

The case went to the Supreme Court, where the state argued that the paper had imperilled national security by revealing signal intelligence, the significance of which could not be understood except by intelligence experts.

But The NYT won. Two judges considered the First Amendment to be an absolute affirmation of free speech. Another considered that the state could only intervene in circumstances of “direct, immediate, and irreparable damage to our nation or its people”. Justice Black believed that “in revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam War, the newspapers did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do.”

The Pentagon Papers case was an important restatement of the First Amendment. It prevented future governments from seeking to prevent newspapers from publishing secrets — except in truly exceptional circumstances. 

That judgement was crucial when, in 2013, The Guardian led the reporting of the documents leaked by Edward Snowden, a former National Security Agency contractor. We knew we could publish safely in America because of the protection the courts would give us.

The source of the material in that case was, of course, known. But even so, I well remember debating the issue with a former general counsel of the NSA, Stewart Baker. He distinguished between what Snowden did (of which he obviously disapproved) with what journalists do. He unequivocally said that, once information was in the hands of journalists, it was protected material.

To repeat: editors have a solemn duty not to do anything that could reveal the confidential source of material they publish. And editors who defy the attempts of states to force them to betray their sources should be applauded and defended.

The writer is principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. For 20 years he was editor in chief of The Guardian.

Published in Dawn, December 17th, 2016

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