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In reply to the discussion: Make No Mistake, Risen Case Is a Direct Attack on the Press [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)21. That's why we need freedom of the press and transparent government.
Here's a start:
The Spies Who Pushed for War
Julian Borger reports on the shadow rightwing intelligence network set up in Washington to second-guess the CIA and deliver a justification for toppling Saddam Hussein by force
Julian Borger
The Guardian, 17 July 2003
As the CIA director, George Tenet, arrived at the Senate yesterday to give secret testimony on the Niger uranium affair, it was becoming increasingly clear in Washington that the scandal was only a small, well-documented symptom of a complete breakdown in US intelligence that helped steer America into war.
It represents the Bush administration's second catastrophic intelligence failure. But the CIA and FBI's inability to prevent the September 11 attacks was largely due to internal institutional weaknesses.
This time the implications are far more damaging for the White House, which stands accused of politicising and contaminating its own source of intelligence.
According to former Bush officials, all defence and intelligence sources, senior administration figures created a shadow agency of Pentagon analysts staffed mainly by ideological amateurs to compete with the CIA and its military counterpart, the Defence Intelligence Agency.
The agency, called the Office of Special Plans (OSP), was set up by the defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, to second-guess CIA information and operated under the patronage of hardline conservatives in the top rungs of the administration, the Pentagon and at the White House, including Vice-President Dick Cheney.
CONTINUED...
http://m.guardiannews.com/world/2003/jul/17/iraq.usa
The Spies Who Pushed for War
Julian Borger reports on the shadow rightwing intelligence network set up in Washington to second-guess the CIA and deliver a justification for toppling Saddam Hussein by force
Julian Borger
The Guardian, 17 July 2003
As the CIA director, George Tenet, arrived at the Senate yesterday to give secret testimony on the Niger uranium affair, it was becoming increasingly clear in Washington that the scandal was only a small, well-documented symptom of a complete breakdown in US intelligence that helped steer America into war.
It represents the Bush administration's second catastrophic intelligence failure. But the CIA and FBI's inability to prevent the September 11 attacks was largely due to internal institutional weaknesses.
This time the implications are far more damaging for the White House, which stands accused of politicising and contaminating its own source of intelligence.
According to former Bush officials, all defence and intelligence sources, senior administration figures created a shadow agency of Pentagon analysts staffed mainly by ideological amateurs to compete with the CIA and its military counterpart, the Defence Intelligence Agency.
The agency, called the Office of Special Plans (OSP), was set up by the defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, to second-guess CIA information and operated under the patronage of hardline conservatives in the top rungs of the administration, the Pentagon and at the White House, including Vice-President Dick Cheney.
CONTINUED...
http://m.guardiannews.com/world/2003/jul/17/iraq.usa
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When Judith Miller went to jail, it was Fitzmas. Now Risen faces the same charges,
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#1
More importantly: Why, after Bush dropped the matter, did Obama go after Risen?
Octafish
Jun 2014
#2
Bush dropped the matter? Kindly post the indictment of Sterling that predates the Obama
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#3
No--what it means is that the Bush DOJ already had one leak investigation going on, and
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#7
It originates in the ODS section of the federal code, where the President is completely to blame
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#13
As one of the site's identified paid shills (tm) I get paid piecework, not hourly.
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#16
The Plame affair was nonsense, in the sense the prosecutions did not go far enough. The Espionage
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#12
Borger's point seems not to be about secrecy, but about the idea that the CIA and FBI should
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#25
Sure--but Novak's dead, and Fitzgerald never could find evidence that Armitage knew of Plame's
msanthrope
Jun 2014
#38
Already done. On 6 March 2007 Libby was found guilty on four of the five counts against him.
ieoeja
Jun 2014
#39
How very old-fashioned of you Octafish! Didn't you know? That Bill of Rights, it's so 'quaint'
sabrina 1
Jun 2014
#45
It's almost like there was some profound revelation made to him after inauguration
hootinholler
Jun 2014
#26
People say this but their is nothing possible much less plausible that changes anything
TheKentuckian
Jun 2014
#48
In a nation under law, there'd be no secret government, stay behind networks, Secret Teams...
Octafish
Jun 2014
#27
Ironically, according to Sibel Edmonds, the CIA is part of the nuclear black market
Oilwellian
Jun 2014
#34
Just shameful! And from the admin we worked so hard for to try to end these abuses.
sabrina 1
Jun 2014
#44