Journalistic Bomb
Washington Post - 1 hour ago
By Howard Kurtz. And you wonder: Could this possibly be true ?
Or is it plain old media sensationalism? That's how I felt about
this British tabloid report that President Bush considered
bombing al-Jazeera. ...
Britain gags report that Bush targeted Arab TV CBC Saskatchewan
Al-Jazeera seeks answers over 'bombing' memo Guardian Unlimited
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"If the report is correct then this would be both shocking and
worrisome not only to Aljazeera but to media organisations
across the world"
Aljazeera statement
Press warned over Jazeera bombing report
Wed Nov 23, 2005 4:47 PM GMT
LONDON (Reuters) - The government has warned media organisations
they are breaking the law if they publish details of a leaked
document said to show U.S. President George W. Bush wanted to
bomb Arabic television station Al Jazeera.
The government's top lawyer warned editors in a note after the
Daily Mirror newspaper reported on Monday that a secret
government memo said Prime Minister Tony Blair had talked Bush
out of bombing the broadcaster in April last year.
Several British newspapers reported the attorney general's note
on Tuesday and repeated the Mirror's allegations, which the
White House said were "so outlandish" they did not merit a
response. Blair's office declined to comment.
Al Jazeera, which has repeatedly denied U.S. accusations it
sides with insurgents in Iraq, called on Britain and the United
States to state quickly whether the report was accurate.
"If the report is correct then this would be both shocking and
worrisome not only to Al Jazeera but to media organisations
across the world," the Qatar-based station said in a statement.
The story would also be a shock for Qatar, a small Gulf state
which cultivates good relations with Washington.
The Mirror said the memo came from Blair's Downing Street office
and turned up in May last year at the local office of Tony
Clarke, then a member of parliament for Northampton. Clarke
handed the document back to the government.
Leo O'Connor, who used to work for Clarke, and civil servant
David Keogh were charged last Thursday under the Official
Secrets Act with making a "damaging disclosure of a document
relating to international relations".
WHITE HOUSE SUMMIT
The Mirror said Bush told Blair at a White House summit on April
16 last year that he wanted to target Al Jazeera. The summit
took place as U.S. forces in Iraq were launching a major assault
on the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah.
The paper quoted an unnamed government official suggesting
Bush's threat was a joke but added another unidentified source
saying the U.S. president was serious.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said: "We are not
interested in dignifying something so outlandish and
inconceivable with a response."
The attorney general told media that publishing the contents of
a document which is known to have been unlawfully disclosed by a
civil servant was a breach of the Official Secrets Act.
Kevin Maguire, the Mirror's associate editor, said government
officials had given no indication of any legal problems with the
story when contacted before publication.
"We were astonished, 24 hours later, to be threatened with the
Official Secrets Act and to be requested to give various
undertakings to avoid being injuncted," he told BBC radio.
Al Jazeera said that, if true, the story would raise serious
doubts about the U.S. administration's version of previous
incidents involving the station's journalists and offices.
In 2001, the station's Kabul office was hit by U.S. bombs and in
2003 Al Jazeera reporter Tareq Ayyoub was killed in a U.S.
strike on its Baghdad office. The United States has denied
deliberately targeting the station.
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