2/3/2006 3:21:34 PM
striking.
2/3/2006 3:46:50 PM
at least it isn't prisonplanet.
2/3/2006 4:37:11 PM
It might be Raw Story, but they're just reporting what Fitzgerald said in his letter.
2/3/2006 4:50:35 PM
more importantly......who the heck cares
2/3/2006 4:52:05 PM
You mean you don't care that Libby's argument may be that he was ordered to break the law from above?[Edited on February 3, 2006 at 4:54 PM. Reason : Fuck yo nation of laws, nigga.]
2/3/2006 4:54:15 PM
not really...no
2/3/2006 4:55:01 PM
Fair enough.
2/3/2006 4:56:41 PM
http://www.slate.com/id/2135554/
2/8/2006 4:04:37 PM
here's my story, for whatever it's worth:In July 2003, I was a White House correspondent for Time magazine, traveling with the president in Africa. Bush was trying to promote his $15 billion AIDS assistance package but he kept getting interrupted. He would visit a clinic and give a speech, but all reporters wanted to ask about was faulty prewar intelligence. Joe Wilson had published his infamous op-ed in the New York Times just before the trip. That, along with other disclosures, led White House spokesman Ari Fleischer to make a rare public admission: The 16 words mentioning Saddam's efforts to buy uranium from Africa were "incorrect" and should not have been in the 2003 State of the Union address.That didn't stop the questions. It multiplied them. At every stop, we reporters clamored for an explanation of how that bad information about "yellowcake" had gotten into the speech. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of State Colin Powell, who were traveling with Bush, held press conferences, but they raised more questions than they answered. The papers seemed to have a damaging new disclosure about weak prewar intelligence every day. Administration officials assumed the leaks were coming from the CIA, where analysts didn't want to be blamed for the failure to uncover weapons stockpiles in Iraq.The White House-CIA spat had been growing over the previous months. It was the second billing on the fight card below the Powell-Cheney cage match. When an administration official would say something that hinted the intelligence services might have made mistakes about Saddam's weapons, leaks would soon follow suggesting that White House officials had spun carefully nuanced information from the CIA into a case for war. "Remind me to take something more than a knife to a gun fight," one senior administration official on the trip said to me, referring to the spat.Four days into the trip, on an early morning flight to Uganda, Condi Rice visited the small press cabin in the back of Air Force One, where I was in the pool of reporters that flies on the president's plane. We expected more of the same fancy footwork from earlier in the week about who was to blame for the 16 words. We didn't get it. Condi blamed the CIA. This was new. The Bush administration didn't usually point fingers that openly. (We later learned that Dr. Rice had called Tenet that morning to let him know she was going to ruin his day.)Moments later, we landed in Entebbe, Uganda. We drove past the abandoned Air France jet still marooned at the airport more than 30 years after the famous 1976 Israeli raid. We thought that would be the biggest drama of our short four-hour visit. Though the travel pool was going to be allowed in to see the start of President Bush's meeting with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, we were told Bush wouldn't take a question, as he sometimes does in such situations. But moments before the meeting, we were told that Bush had changed his mind and would take a question. He knew that he would be asked about the faulty info and had a line prepared. "I gave a speech to the nation that was cleared by the intelligence services," Bush said.This was news. The president was known for his loyalty to subordinates, but here he was throwing his CIA director, George Tenet, under a bus. This wasn't just a personal departure by the president. It was the ultimate blow in the bureaucratic battle between the CIA and his White House.We pool reporters were hustled away from the dignitaries into a cramped holding room where they kept us until the larger press contingent arrived for the president's public remarks. They'd set up phone lines and I tried to dial out the news. Given the local technology, it took a while. When I finally made it through, I realized it was 8 a.m. in the States*. I left a rambling message on my bureau chief's voicemail, which he would pick up several hours later and relay in an e-mail to my colleagues working on the story: "John reports that they've dimed out Tenet."
2/8/2006 4:08:21 PM
part 2 http://www.slate.com/id/2135565/
2/8/2006 4:20:06 PM
So, that's how you make sausage. Interesting.
2/8/2006 4:41:58 PM
COOTER!
2/8/2006 4:42:47 PM
http://nationaljournal.com/about/njweekly/stories/2006/0209nj1.htm
2/9/2006 3:43:20 PM
^ That story states that Libby tesified that not only did Cheney leak Plame's name, but encouraged Libby to release other classified information that would support the case for war.
2/9/2006 10:37:43 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060210/ap_on_go_pr_wh/cia_leak
2/10/2006 1:27:14 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060212/ap_on_go_co/cia_leak
2/13/2006 1:52:01 PM
Ahttp://www...I was expecting TGD to explain how this was all part of George Allen's victory in '08 strategy by now.
2/13/2006 9:59:05 PM
I'd actually have to take the time to read the thread first, the TSB hyperventilation from teh L3ft has kind of degenerated into background static although personally I'm much more fascinated with this Cheney assassination attempt on the billionaire. it's like the Clintons and Vince Foster, just more straightforward
2/14/2006 12:17:37 AM
2/14/2006 12:34:26 AM
^oh no, I read the story and George Allen's position. reading news is pretty much what I do for half the day.it's this particular thread that I never clicked on until yesterday
2/14/2006 11:05:53 AM
So...how is this supposed to win George Allen votes in '08? Or against Webb?
2/14/2006 11:30:23 AM
>.<
4/6/2006 12:12:39 PM
4/6/2006 12:20:26 PM
4/6/2006 12:31:13 PM