Mary Quite Contrary
By Torie Bosch
Posted Monday, April 24, 2006, at 4:59 PM ET
SOURCE W/LINKS:
Scoot over, yellowcake—a different leak scandal is
flooding the blogosphere. Pundits are also trying to
sort out the racial politics of New Orleans'
post-Katrina primaries and decoding the newest Osama Bin
Laden tape.
Mary quite contrary: On Friday, the CIA dismissed Mary
McCarthy, a 61-year-old analyst who leaked information
about secret CIA prisons to Washington Post reporter
Dana Priest, who recently won a Pulitzer for her
coverage of the CIA and the war on terror. McCarthy, who
worked for both the Clinton and George W. Bush
administrations, has become a cause célèbre for the left
and a whipping girl for the right.
Sweetness & Light, a conservative blog run by a
self-described citizen-journalist, compares McCarthy's
case with the Plame scandal. He notes that McCarthy's
defenders include Ray McGovern and Larry Johnson, two
former CIA workers who protested the leaking of Valerie
Plame's identity. "You see, you can only leak to help
our enemies," he mocks. Johnson himself checks in at TPM
Café, where he declares that though he "could not stand
working" for McCarthy, his former manager, "she is not a
traitor."
Liberal bloggers believe that McCarthy's firing
indicates that there is a double standard in terms of
disciplining leakers. "Leaks committed by Bush allies or
with the intent to promote the President's political
agenda prompt nothing but silence from him, and
sometimes even a defense of the leakers," writes Glen
Greenwald in an extensive post on Unclaimed Territory.
On the Wayne Madsen Report, the progressive journalist
posts that McCarthy was the victim of "a White
House-launched political vendetta designed to ferret out
pro-Democrats in the CIA." As several conservatives,
including Tom Maguire of Just One Minute, have pointed
out, McCarthy donated money to both the John Kerry
campaign and the Democratic Party of Ohio in 2004.
But at Captain's Quarters, conservative Captain Ed isn't
buying the martyr defense. "A principled dissenter would
have gone through available channels, such as to the
FBI, to Congress, or to the White House, to express her
discontent on an issue. Failing that, she would have
resigned and spoken openly about what she knew," he
opines.
Read more about Mary McCarthy. In Slate, Christopher
Hitchens calls her "more than a mere partisan."
New Orleans runoff: On Saturday, New Orleans voters went
to the polls for the first time since Katrina, voting in
a mayoral primary. Current officeholder Ray Nagin and
Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu face a runoff in May to decide
who will lead the city's next phase of recovery. The
changing composition of the electorate means that New
Orleans could elect its first white mayor in decades.
On the progressive blog Facing South, Chris Kromm shakes
his head, calls the election "just more of the status
quo," and bemoans "the absence of any true reform or
'people's' candidate." Metroblogging New Orleans' Craig
Giesecke, a journalist who has been following his
hometown election, agrees. He is unenthusiastic about
both the candidates and beseeches, "Gimme something to
vote FOR, you guys, instead of simply voting against
something. I dare ya."
Ernie the Attorney, a New Orleans-based lawyer, worries
that race will trump all other issues during the runoff.
"We have one chance to get it right, and our margin for
error is zero. We don't have time for racism, favoritism
or fear-mongering," he reasons.
Many outside of New Orleans are aghast that Ray Nagin is
still in the running. "For those who placed a vote for
this inept buffoon—what were you thinking? Nagin, along
with a host of other idiot government officials, failed
you. Why are you rewarding them?" scolds Astrazoic's
Phil Smith.
Read more about the New Orleans elections. Slate's Josh
Levin reported from New Orleans before the elections.
Bin Laden been talkin': In the latest tape attributed to
Osama Bin Laden, the al-Qaida honcho expressed more
displeasure with the West. Counterterrorism Blog, a
group effort by various security experts, has extensive
coverage, including Walid Phares' coverage of the main
points of Bin Laden's address. In a later post, Phares,
a professor at Florida Atlantic University, calls the
tape a "state of Jihad address" and compares it to "the
February 1998 declaration of war against America, the
Crusaders and their allies."
On The Liberal Wrong Wing, Kevin, a conservative
Republican from Massachusetts, calls the tape the "usual
nonsense" and suspects that the release of the tape and
Monday's bombing in Egypt may be related. "Intelligence
patterns suggest that with the release of such tapes,
terrorist attacks often occur in the near future," he
posits.
On group blog The Blue Voice, "Jacksonian Democrat"
Bruce Miller notes that Bin Laden did not discuss the
current controversy surrounding Iran. "Iran is Shi'a,
and Al Qaida is radical Sunni Salafist. They hate Shi'a
Muslims," he writes. He supposes that because Iran is
Shiite, Bin Laden would "probably have no great
objection" if "the US now tries to weaken Iran."
Read more about the new Bin Laden tape.
Torie Bosch is a former Slate intern.
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