AUDIO: CIA LEAK...
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I060407165455-matthews-leakgate2.MP3
White House Tries to Quell Anger Over Leak Claim
By David Stout
The New York Times
Friday 07 April 2006
Washington - The White House tried today to quell the furor
over the leaking of sensitive pre-war intelligence on Iraq,
as President Bush's spokesman insisted that the president
had the authority to declassify and release information "in
the public interest" and had never done so for political
reasons.
The spokesman, Scott McClellan, said a decision was made to
declassify and release some information to rebut
"irresponsible and unfounded accusations" that the
administration had manipulated or misused pre-war
intelligence to buttress its case for war.
"That was flat-out false," Mr. McClellan said.
Mr. McClellan was barraged at a news briefing by questions
over assertions by I. Lewis Libby Jr., the former chief of
staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, that President Bush
authorized him, through Mr. Cheney, in July 2003 to disclose
key parts of what was until then a classified pre-war
evaluation, or National Intelligence Estimate, on Iraq.
At the time, the Pentagon had hardly finished basking in the
easy military victory when it was caught up in questions
over the failure to find deadly unconventional weapons in
Iraq - the main rationale for going to war.
One of the findings in the pre-war intelligence data was
that Saddam Hussein was probably seeking fuel for nuclear
reactors.
Mr. McClellan said the Democrats who pounced on Mr. Libby's
assertions that Mr. Bush had given him, through the vice
president, the authority to talk to a reporter about some
material in the intelligence estimate were "engaging in
crass politics" in refusing to recognize the distinction
between legitimate disclosure of sensitive information in
the public interest and the irresponsible leaking of
intelligence for political reasons.
Mr. Libby told a grand jury he discussed the intelligence
estimate with Judith Miller, then with The New York Times,
on July 8, 2003. Ten days later, the intelligence estimate
was formally declassified, a move that Mr. McClellan said
again and again was in the public interest and not
politically motivated. Mr. McClellan deflected questions on
what role, if any, Mr. Bush had in setting the parameters of
Mr. Libby's discussion with Ms. Miller.
Meanwhile, Democrats continued to assail the administration.
"This is a serious allegation with national security
consequences," Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority
leader, said today on the Senate floor. "It directly
contradicts previous statements made by President Bush, it
continues a pattern of misleading by this Bush White House,
and it raises somber and troubling questions about the Bush
administration's candor with the Congress and the public."
Mr. Reid said it was time for the president to say whether,
in fact, he authorized the disclosure of the pre-war
intelligence, as Mr. Libby said he had. "He must tell the
American people whether the Bush Oval Office is the place
where the buck stops, or the leaks start," Mr. Reid said.
Mr. McClellan was in the somewhat odd position of not
disputing that President Bush was involved in the disclosure
of hitherto classified information, while describing any
such disclosure as being in the public good.
Mr. McClellan, who noted that a president has the authority
to declassify intelligence, said today that he was "not
getting into confirming or denying things, because I'm not
commenting at all on matters relating to an ongoing legal
proceeding."
He was alluding to the trial of Mr. Libby, the vice
president's former chief of staff, on charges that Mr. Libby
committed perjury and engaged in obstruction of justice in
connection with an inquiry over who unmasked Valerie Wilson,
an undercover officer for the Central Intelligence Agency,
in the summer of 2003.
The unmasking occurred shortly after Ms. Wilson's husband,
the former diplomat Joseph Wilson, wrote in The New York
Times that he doubted reports that Iraq was trying to obtain
uranium from Niger.
Some Democrats accused the White House at the time of
destroying Ms. Wilson's cover to retaliate against her
husband, but the White House repeatedly denied the
accusations.
Mr. McClellan was asked today whether the president's own
words at the time ("If there's a leak out of this
administration, I want to know who it is") and Mr. Libby's
recent assertion, contained in a court filing, demonstrated
inconsistency, at best.
Not at all, Mr. McClellan said. "Declassifying information
and providing it to the public when it is in the public
interest is one thing," he said. "But leaking classified
information that could compromise our national security is
something that is very serious. And there is a distinction"
- a distinction Democrats refuse to see, he said repeatedly.
-------
=======================
Operation Mockingbird
"You could get a journalist cheaper than a good call girl,
for a couple hundred dollars a month."
CIA operative discussing with Philip Graham, editor
Washington Post, on the availability and
prices of journalists willing to peddle CIA propaganda and
cover stories. "Katherine The Great,"
by Deborah Davis (New York: Sheridan Square Press, 1991)
http://911review.org/Wiki/OperationMockingbird.shtml
Media & Mind Control in America
by Steven Jacobson
#1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L001I060312110344-mind-control1.MP3
(5.24MB) 22Min 52 Sec
#2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I060312112719-mind-control2.MP3
(4.75MB) 20Min 45 Sec
BOOKMARK:
"RADIO YOUR WAY"
http://www.apfn.net/POGO.HTM
AUDIO: CIA LEAK...
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I060407165455-matthews-leakgate2.MP3