Archive for February, 2007

Glenn Beck, bigot

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

This guy is poison


Jonathan Schwarz at A Tiny Revolution describes Beck’s propaganda technique, “Locate the most extreme statements by anyone on the other ’side,’ and hype it as much as you possibly can to your ’side’ as embodying the true spirit and goals of your ‘enemies.’

I’ve become quite a fan of MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann in recent months. My appreciation is very strong for his fighting spirit in taking on bigoted right-wing media figures like O’Reilly and the utterly bombastic Glenn Beck, wingnut purveyors of war, and fascistic violence against whole groups and classes, perceived as their “enemies.”

So I was glad today to read about Olbermann’s recent remarks about Beck at Think Progress,

Olbermann, on Beck: A wolf in sheep’s clothing. The very dangerously bigoted guy who is selling himself as a pragmatic philosopher. I don’t think he sees his own bigotry. There’s something about him that suggests that, one night, he’ll say something that will cost him his career in television.

Oh, that’s good, perfect. “He doesn’t see his own bigotry.” That probably describes 90% of the Little Green Footballs crowd that hangs on Beck’s every word.

This provoked a response from Beck. He tried to turn the tables on Olbermann, saying that if he were to be shut down, it would be because of an “intolerant ideologue like Keith Olbermann” and that would “smack of the same McCarthyism [Edward R.] Murrow fought so valiantly against.” Beck added, “Hey, Keith, you’re not saving the world’s democracy; you’re killing it, my friend, by trying to limit the marketplace of ideas to only those that reflect your own.”

Okay, Glenn, here’s a peek at the contents of your store in that marketplace of ideas. Readers are free to judge whether or not these ideas have a damn thing to do with democracy, freedom, or any other positive values.

BECK (August 10, 2006): The world is on the brink of World War III… All you Muslims who have sat on your frickin’ hands the whole time and have not been marching in the streets and have not been saying, ‘Hey, you know what? There are good Muslims and bad Muslims. We need to be the first ones in the recruitment office lining up to shoot the bad Muslims in the head.’ I’m telling you, with God as my witness… human beings are not strong enough, unfortunately, to restrain themselves from putting up razor wire and putting you on one side of it. When things—when people become hungry, when people see that their way of life is on the edge of being over, they will put razor wire up and just based on the way you look or just based on your religion, they will round you up. Is that wrong? Oh my gosh, it is Nazi, World War II wrong, but society has proved it time and time again: It will happen.

It’s typical Beck technique. He blurts out a statement reflecting a “final solution” mentality from the deepest recesses of fascism while clumsily trying to distance himself from it, but not really.

Media Matters has 183 items (today) on examples of misinformation and bigotry broadcast by the insufferable Glenn Beck.

Update: And he’s a lascivious creep too, on the air no less. Check this from Crooks & Liars.

Hersh blows open story on US covert aid reaching al-Qaida groups

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

Iran-contra redux, this time with radical Sunni enemies of Iran & Hezbollah; trouble is, these radicals are of the same strain as those responsible for the 9/11 plot

Seymour Hersh CNN 2-25-07
Click image for mp4 video of entire Hersh interview on CNN Late Edition for February 25 (quicktime plugin recommended, 50 MB download, about 3-5 minute delay with minimum 2 Mbit connection, not recommended for dial-up. Think Progress has a Flash excerpt that will play faster.)

Seymour Hersh has a new article in The New Yorker magazine. This one is a real blockbuster. In it Hersh writes that he has learned from confidential sources that off-the-books aid to anti-Iran, anti-Hezbollah factions in the Lebanon’s Siniora government—possibly diverted from swampy Iraq slush funds—is making its way to “the hands of emerging Sunni radical groups in northern Lebanon, the Bekaa Valley, and around Palestinian refugee camps in the south.”

Hersh writes that these groups “are seen as a buffer to Hezbollah; at the same time, their ideological ties are with Al Qaeda.”

Furthermore, concerning former National Intelligence Director John Negroponte,

I was subsequently told by the two government consultants and the former senior intelligence official that the echoes of Iran-Contra were a factor in Negroponte’s decision to resign from the National Intelligence directorship and accept a sub-Cabinet position of Deputy Secretary of State. (Negroponte declined to comment.)

The former senior intelligence official also told me that Negroponte did not want a repeat of his experience in the Reagan Administration, when he served as Ambassador to Honduras. “Negroponte said, ‘No way. I’m not going down that road again, with the N.S.C. running operations off the books, with no finding.

Wow. Negoponte–a guy who had little compunction about running death squads out of the US Embassy in Tegucigalpa during the 1980s, or helping implement the “Salvador option” for Iraq–is the moralist who can’t sanction the activities emanating from the Veep’s office. Cheney seems to have thrown down the covert gauntlet, daring someone to stop him. I think that spate of articles a few months ago suggesting Vice President Crooked Scowl’s diminished power were premature.

In a wide-ranging interview today with Wolf Blitzer on CNN’s Late Edition, Hersh discussed plans long underway for an attack on Iran. I found this item to be quite interesting:

Well, I don’t think there’s any question but much of the senior military leadership do not think it’s the wise thing to do. Of course, if the president orders it, it will happen. But they are very skeptical.

For example, I was told — I hinted at it in the article — that we could have a carrier in trouble in the Straits of Hormuz. There’s very little room to maneuver, and a carrier, when it’s recovering planes that are, you know, landing after attacking and trying to recover the planes, their motions, their movements are predictable. They have to have the wind in a certain direction. They could be vulnerable to attack.

Iran has hundreds of PT boats they can load up and make them more or less suicide boats. So the Navy is extremely worried about that possibility. We could have some serious damage to our fleet. And also, what’s Iran going to do in response?

I will tell you also that there’s a lot of evidence — I didn’t get into this that much into the piece — that the Iranians are digging more holes, moving their leadership into underground bunkers in other places besides Tehran in case of a bombing. They are anticipating the worst.

Big questions now are: Will any other media pick this up? Will Congress take any interest in the Pentagon’s evidently extremely deep, extremely murky covert operations?

New site design

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

The new WordPress 2.1 version of Deep Blade Journal finally is coming together. It’s been installed for a couple of weeks, but just now it is settling into its permanent look & feel. I’d sure appeciate any comments readers would like to post concerning how you like this new site design.

Iraq oil law

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Blogger translates leaked copy, scoops the New York Times

This should be a major story. Iraq-born blogger Raed Jarrar has obtained a leaked copy of Iraq’s new oil law. You also can get a look at this document here. Today on Democracy Now!, Amy Goodman interviewed Raed Jarrar along with the important Iraq oil policy researcher, Antonia Juhasz.

New Iraq Oil Law To Open Iraq’s Oil Reserves to Western Companies

RAED JARRAR: The document was leaked by Professor Fouad Al-Ameer and published on a website called al-ghad.org. And then it was leaked to other important websites like niqash.org and other places. There are different ways of — different copies of it. Some of it are scanned, and others of the original document, but it just hit the internet last week.

AMY GOODMAN: And explain what it says, now that you’ve finished translating it.

RAED JARRAR: It said so many things. I don’t think we can summarize it this short, because it’s a very long document, around thirty pages. But majorly, there are three major points that I think we should talk about. Financially, it legalizes very unfair types of contracts that will put Iraq in very long-term contracts that can go up to thirty-five years and cause the loss of hundreds of billions of dollars from Iraqis for no cause.

And the second point is concerning Iraq’s sovereignty. Iraq will not be capable of controlling the levels — the limits of production, which means that Iraq cannot be a part of OPEC anymore. And Iraq will have this very complicated institution called the Federal Oil and Gas Council, that will have representatives from the foreign oil companies on the board of it, so representatives from, let’s say, ExxonMobil and Shell and British Petroleum will be on the federal board of Iraq approving their own contracts.

And the third point is the point about keeping Iraq’s unity. The law is seen by many Iraqi analysts as a separation for Iraq fund. The law will authorize all of the regional and small provinces’ authorities. It will give them the final say to deal with the oil, instead of giving this final say to central federal government, so it will open the doors for splitting Iraq into three regions or even maybe three states in the very near future.

To me, it is very clear that what the Iraq oil law seeks to preserve is the ability of hyrocarbon-connected elites in Washington to make fundamental decisions about development and distribution of profits from Iraq’s oil. It will keep the Iraqi public in the dark and at bay while very, very costly decisions about oil are made below the table. The basic effect of the law will be to ensure that, according to Antonia Juhasz,

ultimate decision making on contracts rests with a new council to be set up in Iraq, and sitting on that council will be representatives — executives, in fact — of oil companies, both foreign and domestic. In addition, it does maintain the Iraq National Oil Company, but gives the Iraq National Oil Company almost no preference.

Whatever oversight the Iraqi people may have, foreign oil executives will be responsible for all decisions and all accounting concerning Iraq’s oil.

Blogger scooped the New York Times
It is difficult to recognize and interpret the complex, clandestine methods Bush administration officials and their collaborators in the Iraqi government are using to insure Iraq will pay a heavy price for development of its key resource with the boot of Washington on its neck. To misdirect public scrutiny officials give lip service to the claim that the new law will be a great thing for Iraq. According to yesterday’s story by regular New York Times Iraq oil correspondent James Glanz, “the law is considered an essential element of creating a stable and functioning government.”

The way Glanz sources his knowledge of the draft law seems to me to be pathetic, “Earlier drafts of the law” were “described to The New York Times”. With all the resources of the Times no actual text of the law could be published. But a mere blogger has been able to issue the whole thing.

There is some disconnect between the Times interpretation and Raed’s. Raed notes that the law empowers regions the “final say to deal with the oil”, while Glanz reports that under the law, “Iraq’s central government in Baghdad would retain substantial control over oil revenues and the right to review the contracts that regional governments sign with Iraqi and international companies to develop the fields and to pump oil.”

And that,

Negotiations had snagged because of the insistence by the Kurds that they maintain a degree of autonomy in managing their northern fields. But two members of the negotiating committee confirmed that a draft had been sent to the cabinet, indicating that a compromise might be in sight.Neither of those negotiators — Hussain al-Shahristani, the current oil minister, and Thamir Ghadban, a former oil minister — provided details of the compromise. But a senior official in the Kurdish regional government also said that a deal was near and hinted that the Kurds had received concessions on how the law would affect existing contracts with oil companies that agreed to work in the north.

My question to Raed would be, at what stage of this “compromise” does the available version of the document reflect? I guess it will be important to follow Raed’s blog.

Iraqi opposition to the oil law
In a speech two weeks ago, Hasan Jum`ah `Awwad al-Asadi, head of the Federation of Oil Unions gave called on the international community to, “Open the way to Iraqis to manage their own oil affairs.”

He disputes the notion that there should be a rush to invite foreign companies into the country while giving them such dominant, long-term control.

They [Iraqis] are able to do that [manage their own oil affairs]; they have the experience in the field and the technical training, have overcome hardships and proven to the world that they can provide the best service to Iraqis in the oil industry. The best proof of that is how after the entry of the occupying forces and the destruction of the infrastructure of the oil sector the engineers, technical staff and workers were able to raise production from zero to 2,100,000 barrels per day without any foreign expertise or foreign capital. Iraqis are capable of further increasing production with their present skills. The Iraqi state needs to consult with those who have overcome the difficulties and to ask their opinion before sinking Iraq into an ocean of dark injustice. Those who spread the word that the oil sector will not improve except with foreign capital and production-sharing are dreaming. They must think again since we know for certain that these plans do not serve the sons and daughters of Iraq.

The crux of the matter behind the US occupation of Iraq is denial by the US of what al-Asadi clearly states Iraqis want—control of their own affairs. A permanent military occupation is the only way the US will be able to hold this new oil law in force. Otherwise, Iraqis would be able to develop their oil in their own best interests.

Rape of Iraq

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Not much is heard these dark days from Riverbend, a long-time Iraqi blogger. But today she has a most disturbing post.

Riverbend: … She might have been one of those subtitles you read on CNN or BBC or Arabiya, “13 insurgents captured by Iraqi security forces.” The men who raped her are those same security forces Bush and Condi are so proud of- you know- the ones the Americans trained… I translated what she said below,

“I told him, ‘I don’t have anything [I did not do anything].’ He said, ‘You don’t have anything?’ One of them threw me on the ground and my head hit the tiles. He did what he did- I mean he raped me. The second one came and raped me. The third one also raped me. [Pause- sobbing] I begged them and cried, and one of them covered my mouth. [Unclear, crying] Another one of them came and said, ‘Are you finished? We also want our turn.’ So they answered, ‘No, an American committee came.’ They took me to the judge.

Riverbend concludes,

Let me clear it up for any moron with lingering doubts: It’s worse. It’s over. You lost. You lost the day your tanks rolled into Baghdad to the cheers of your imported, American-trained monkeys. You lost every single family whose home your soldiers violated. You lost every sane, red-blooded Iraqi when the Abu Ghraib pictures came out and verified your atrocities behind prison walls as well as the ones we see in our streets. You lost when you brought murderers, looters, gangsters and militia heads to power and hailed them as Iraq’s first democratic government. You lost when a gruesome execution was dubbed your biggest accomplishment. You lost the respect and reputation you once had. You lost more than 3000 troops. That is what you lost America. I hope the oil, at least, made it worthwhile.

Maine anti-war history

Sunday, February 18th, 2007

We will soon be in the fifth year of the US war of aggression to take and occupy Iraq. By all accounts now (except perhaps in those of the unreconstructed running dog Richard Bruce Cheney), the adventure is a complete disaster and utter failure for the people of Iraq. It is an indelible stain on America. For the entire period beginning in the second half of 2002 to the present, the anti-war movement has been 100% correct in warning of this disaster. These pages attest to that fact. Most of the photos in the collections below were taken and posted contemporaneously by your host at Deep Blade Journal. The 1982 New York City disarmament rally page was created for the 20th anniversary of the event (photos also by your host).

Friday garden blogging

Friday, February 16th, 2007

Fairly big snowstorm

snow 2-16-2007

About 20 cm fell Wednesday

It’s been a fairly dry, cold period since mid-January. The snow was nice to get, nothing like the scary amounts that visited New York state and other places.

I f@#$%d up my back. By shoveling snow? No. I was bending over to put something in a waste basket.

Things break down. This old car is not road worthy right now. The alternator is seized, the control arm bushings are shot, and the radiator is bad. Just like my back.

Prepping public for attack on Iran

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

You know it’s bad when…

Pre-Iraq war propagandist Judith Miller’s co-author writes today in the New York Times:

Deadliest Bomb in Iraq Is Made by Iran, U.S. Says
By MICHAEL R. GORDON

WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 — The most lethal weapon directed against American troops in Iraq is an explosive-packed cylinder that United States intelligence asserts is being supplied by Iran.

The assertion of an Iranian role in supplying the device to Shiite militias reflects broad agreement among American intelligence agencies, although officials acknowledge that the picture is not entirely complete.

In interviews, civilian and military officials from a broad range of government agencies provided specific details to support what until now has been a more generally worded claim, in a new National Intelligence Estimate, that Iran is providing “lethal support” to Shiite militants in Iraq.

For analysis, Alexander Cockburn quotes Col. Sam Gardiner:

we know there is a National Security Council staff-led_group whose mission is to create outrage in the world against Iran. Just like before Gulf II, this media group will begin to release stories to sell a strike against Iran. Watch for the outrage stuff…

The entire Cockburn column is essential reading.

Also see Jonathan Schwarz. He has Gordon’s sourcing in a nutshell.

Yellow narrative: uranium, Wilson, and wingnuts

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

Ann Coulter off the rails and scientifically illiterate

Coulter is an idiot. Her piece on Ambassador Joseph Wilson and cable news media, “Yellowcake and Yellow Journalism”, is terribly confused and amounts to blithe assertions, exactly what she accuses others of using.

She doesn’t even know the difference between “yellowcake” and “enriched uranium.” In reference to the 2002 trip to Niger by Wilson, she makes it sound like yellowcake = bomb-ready uranium:

Wilson’s unwritten “report” to a few CIA agents supported the suspicion that Saddam was seeking enriched uranium from Niger because, according to Wilson, the former prime minister of Niger told him that in 1999 Saddam had sent a delegation to discuss “expanding commercial relations” with Niger. The only thing Niger has to trade is yellowcake. If Saddam was seeking to expand commercial relations with Niger, we can be fairly certain he wasn’t trying to buy designer jeans, ready-to-assemble furniture or commemorative plates. He was seeking enriched uranium.

Wrong. We’ve always known that Coulter is scientifically illiterate, as here she again demonstrates.

Yellowcake is slightly processed ore, containing uranium that still has natural isotope concentrations. Enriched uranium for fission reactors (low enrichment) or bombs (high enrichment) has enhanced U-235 concentration. Enriching uranium is a technically difficult process. Niger does not produce enriched uranium. Coulter’s whole piece is written using this incorrect terminology. But it sounds good enough to make wingnut media and blogs run with gleeful diarrhea.

Rightist bloggers commenting on the Coulter piece crow, “Coulter = money again” because her unimpeachable telling of true history “smacks the revisionist historians of the left square across the nose with a rolled up newspaper, eliciting the chorus of now familiar yelps of collective pain from the angry, exposed left.” Coulter’s brilliance has once and for all, as she puts it, slapped down the “nut-cable stations…’reportage’” consisting of “endless repetition of arbitrary assertions, half-truths and thoroughly debunked canards” where “the passionate left is allowed to invent a liberal fable without correction.”

Meanwhile, Brit Hume and Jim Angle of Fox Noise are beating on the long-standing “Wilson is a liar” drum. Now that the forged Niger documents and Joseph Wilson’s role in exposing the deceits of the president is the underlayment of the Libby trial, they have to trot that out again. See http://mediamatters.org/items/200702090007 for a good analysis.

Let’s briefly go back over what all the fuss is about. The whole Libby matter arose because Vice President Cheney felt that Ambassador Wilson had been disloyal in publishing a New York Times commentary entitled “What I Didn’t Find in Africa.” Evidently from Cheney’s point of view, Wilson had revealed too much truth about the propaganda thrust behind the war. Therefore, Wilson had to be punished and made an example of—through his wife. Cheney’s brand of discipline led to Valerie Plame Wilson’s status as a covert CIA operative being publicized, a career ender.

Coulter and the wingnuts either entirely miss or willfully ignore the most important truths revealed by Wilson. Coulter should actually read the July 2003 Times piece. Wilson points out what has never been disputed in any media, wingnut or otherwise: “It would be exceedingly difficult for Niger to transfer uranium to Iraq” and “there’s simply too much oversight over too small an industry for a sale to have transpired.”

But the president had gone ahead and highlighted “uranium from Africa” as an element of the threat from Iraq in his January 2003 State of the Union address. The claim turned out to be based exactly on what was initially an October 2001 intelligence report—absolutely false as it turned out—concerning an actual “transaction” between Iraq and Niger. Forged documents later appeared to support the transaction, but as Wilson clearly stated in his 2003 piece, they never were shown to him. The crux of the matter, never disputed by anyone, was Wilson’s correct report in 2002 and public statement in 2003 that such a transaction would have been next to impossible. This public revelation by a former diplomat, supposedly loyal to the empire, that was totally at odds with the president’s speech is what so angered the vice president.

It is obvious why the “uranium from Africa” canard was used, even though it was known to be false. The administration had decided it was going to take Iraq by force and it was willing to use the thinnest tissue of over-amplified lies and half-truths to build and maintain public consent for the conquest. To generate noise now, the likes of Coulter can point back to real information, also reported by Wilson, concerning past diplomatic and commercial contacts between Iraq and Niger—speculatively involving Iraq “seeking” uranium in 1999—to cover for Bush’s rhetoric.

The image of a truthful president sincerely believing his own faulty narrative about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq is irresistible for Coulter and the wingnuts. However, Bush’s falsehood was in insistent elevation of a non-existent threat, obviously known by responsible people in US intelligence to be non-existent, partly due to Wilson’s trip. Minute parsing of the word “sought” does not change that.

So, let’s go on to Coulter’s use of what she calls the “massive investigations” embodied by the 2004 “bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee” report. No report has been more misused by media wingnuts than this one. I wrote a highly illustrative post on this in November 2005. In that, I quoted media mouthpiece Tony Snow on HBO’s Real Time (before he spun through the revolving door from Fox Noise to the Whitehouse), speaking to the 2004 SSI report:

SNOW: Yeah, that’s right. … The wife is the one who arranged for Joe Wilson to go over to Niger. What’s interesting is that the people that really smeared Joe Wilson were the people who looked into his charges, the Senate Intelligence Committee, who said, “You know what, Joe? All that stuff you said in the New York Times, was lies. You’re wrong!” … [to audience] Read the Senate Intelligence Committee Report. I know it’s uncomfortable, because it’s a view you don’t want to hear. But if you’re going to call “bullshit,” at least read it, and then get back to me. Sorry, go ahead.

What Snow, and Coulter, forget to tell you is that what really provides the wingnut narrative on Wilson’s credibility in the 2004 SSI report was a hack job appended by Pat Roberts, Kit Bond and other Republicans then interested in carrying water for the Whitehouse. The Democrats refused to endorse that section of the report.

If you do want to click through stuff on that November 3, 2005 post of mine (and you should), here is the correct link to that very instructive Larry Johnson item:

http://www.tpmcafe.com/story/2005/10/19/142419/59

Coulter also forgets to tell you that the bottom line in the real part of the 2004 SSI report on “Former Ambassador”, as stated above, says that Wilson’s report upon return from Niger in 2002 was in fact exactly what he wrote in his July 2003 NYT piece:

Niger’s former Minister for Energy and Mines (REDACTED), Mai Manga, stated that there were no sales outside of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) channels since the mid-1980s. He knew of no contracts signed between Niger and any rogue states for the sale of uranium. He said that an Iranian delegation was interested in purchasing 400 tons of yellowcake from Niger in1998, but said that no contract was ever signed with Iran. Mai Manga also described how the French mining consortium controls Nigerien uranium mining and keeps the uranium very tightly controlled from the time it is mined until the time it is loaded onto ships in Benin for transport overseas. Mai Manga believed it would be difficult, if not impossible, to arrange a special shipment of uranium to a pariah state given these controls.

(U) In an interview with Committee staff, the former ambassador was able to provide more information about the meeting between former Prime Minister Mayaki and the Iraqi delegation. The former ambassador said that Mayaki did meet with the Iraqi delegation but never discussed what was meant by “expanding commercial relations.” The former ambassador said that because Mayaki was wary of discussing any trade issues with a country under United Nations (UN) sanctions, he made a successful effort to steer the conversation away from a discussion of trade with the Iraqi delegation.”

Then, Republican staffers make a big deal about a supposed discrepancy about when Wilson actually saw or heard about the details of the forged documents. Sure, there is a point of confusion about what Wilson told them, possibly on their part (but not about what he wrote). This has endlessly been beaten to death by the right. And herein lies the danger of relying too much on the Republican-dominated 2004 report. Granted, it is an essential document with volumes of significant pieces of the story of the weapons of mass destruction ruse. But it also is ladled with Republican talking points that “snow” under an uninformed audience.

Taking up Tony Snow’s challenge to actually read the 2004 SSI report, it becomes clear that Coulter seems to have missed the whole section dealing with Niger in general outside the part about the “Former Ambassador”. She writes, “Indeed, the United States didn’t even receive the ‘obviously forged’ documents until eight months after Wilson’s trip to Niger!”

So what? The “eight months” may be true, but as Wilson accurately wrote, the trip was based on an “intelligence report” about the existence of an actual uranium transaction between Iraq and Niger.

The 2004 SSI report says, “Reporting on a possible uranium yellowcakes sales agreement between Niger and Iraq first came to the attention of the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) on October 15, 2001.” It goes on to describe that this “possible sales agreement” was “very limited and lacking needed detail”, but that suddenly in February 2002, “the CIA’s DO issued a second intelligence report [DELETED] which again cited the source as a ‘[foreign] government service.’ Although not identified in the report, this source was also from the foreign service. The second report provided more details about the previously reported Iraq-Niger uranium agreement and provided what was said to be ‘verbatim text’ of the accord.”

Much later it turns out, these were the “forged documents” that led to Wilson’s trip, exactly as Wilson wrote in 2003, “While I never saw the report, I was told that it referred to a memorandum of agreement that documented the sale of uranium yellowcake — a form of lightly processed ore — by Niger to Iraq in the late 1990’s. The agency officials asked if I would travel to Niger to check out the story so they could provide a response to the vice president’s office.”

Could he be clearer that he did not in fact “see” the forged documents? Coulter wrote her piece without even reading Wilson’s.

Of course, in March 2003, the documents were exposed as fraudulent by Mohamed ElBaradei,

Based on thorough analysis, the IAEA has concluded, with the concurrence of outside experts, that these documents — which formed the basis for the reports of these uranium transactions between Iraq and Niger — are, in fact, not authentic.

As early as March 22, 2003, Dana Priest and Karen DeYoung noted in a Washington Post story that even the CIA had its doubts “about the evidence backing up charges that Iraq tried to purchase uranium from Africa.” This busts up the wingnut version, which has all intelligence prior to the war in a solid front, where “everyone agreed” that Saddam had WMD at his disposal. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The whole story of how those fraudulent Niger documents came into being in the first place is very interesting. It’s too long to go into here, but it has been investigated by Seymour Hersh in “The Stovepipe”) and Josh Marshall (hard to get his whole story in one neat piece, but
you can refer to [this search result].

And now with the Libby trial, hard evidence that the concocted “uranium from Africa” threat was a rouge job based in Cheney’s office has come to light. Larry Johnson had a critical post on this just last weekend, where he explains “we now know that Dick Cheney received a preliminary brief from the CIA and the the Senate Intelligence Committee, in its 2004 report, covered up this fact.”

This documentary evidence, totally supportive of Ambassador Wilson, ought to be at the top of Coulter’s sources for her apology note to Wilson. It’ll never happen. An unethical writer like Coulter, whose work barely is good enough to provide wingnuts with entertainment, likely will continue to peddle bullshit while indicting real reporters for doing in fact what she herself is doing.

Judge blocks Maine phone record contempt hearing

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

US District Judge John Woodcock in Bangor says Maine Public Utilities Commission cannot force Verizon to tell truth about record searches on grounds that “sensitive information pertaining to national security” would be at risk

This story in the Boston Globe describes the case.

An extended talk on this matter and others by Shenna Bellows, Executive Director of the Maine Civil Liberties Union, given at the University of Maine on October 26 was recorded by yours truly. Some audio excerpts of the talk can be downloaded here from WERU Community Radio, under Weekend Voices for 11/11.

More on this story later today. I will try to get the entire Shenna Bellows presentation up on peacecast.us shortly.