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From Common Courage Press
Recent
Stories
July
17, 2003
Ron
Jacobs
Sometimes Even the President of the
United States Has to Stand Naked
Lisa
Walsh Thomas
Bush Country: the Venom and Adulation of Ignorance
Martin
Schwarz
Bush Pre-emptive Strike Doctrine is the Bane of Non-Proliferation
Watchdogs
Heidi
Lypps
Better Justice Through Chemistry? Forced
Drugging and the Supreme Court
Norman
Madarasz
Third Ways and Third Worlds: Lula at the Progressive Governance
Conference
Pankaj
Mehta
Criminalizing the Palestinian Solidarity Movement
Marjorie
Cohn
Bush, War Lies & Impeachment: the
Boy Who Cried Wolf
Hammond
Guthrie
(Dis) Intelligence Revisited
Website
of the Day
No Force, No Fraud: the Soul of Libertarianism
July
16, 2003
Jason
Leopold
Wolfowitz Told White House to Hype
Dubious Uranium Claims
William
Cook
Defining Terrorism from the Top Down
Elaine
Cassel
Judge Brinkema v. Ashcroft: She Whom
Must Not Be Obeyed
Jason
Leopold
How Can They Justify the War If WMDs Are Never Found?
Linda Heard
Bondage or Freedom?
Raymond
Barrett
From Detroit to Basra
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Back to the Future in Guatemala:
The Return of Gen. Ríos Montt
July
15, 2003
Kathleen
and Bill Christison
Why We Resigned from VIPS
Elaine
Cassel
Ashcroft's War on Legal Whistleblowers:
the Ordeal of Jesselyn Radack
Chris
Floyd
Barge Poles: Oil Wars and New Europe's Mercenaries
Jason
Leopold
CIA Warned White House Last October that Niger Docs were Forgeries
Gaius Publius
Considering the Obvious: Fool Us Once, Fool Us Twise...Please
John
Troyer
The Niger Syndrome
Becky Gillette
No Conspiracy at Coffeen Nature Preserve: a Response to David
Orrr
Uri
Avnery
The Bi-National State: The Wolf Shall
Dwell with the Lamb
Website
of the Day
Cost of Iraq War
July
14, 2003
Lisa
Taraki
Hot Days in Ramallah
Walter
Brasch
Bush: the Pretend Captain
SOA
Watch
Training Colombia's Killers in the US
Dan Bacher
Yurok Tribe Denounces Klamath River Salmon Killers
Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Intelligence Unglued
Website
of the Day
Coalition for Democratic Rights and Civil Liberties
July 12 / 13, 2003
Arthur
Mitzman
The Double Wall Before the Future
Standard
Schaefer
The Coming Financial Reality: an
Interview with Michael Hudson
John Feffer
A Fearful Symmetry: Washington and Pyongyang
Ron
Jacobs
Shades of Gray in Iran
Elaine
Cassel
Judicial Terrorism Against the Bill of Rights
Tom
Stephens
Civil Liberties After 9/11
David Lindorff
New White House Slogan: "Case Closed. Just Move On"
Jason
Leopold
The Mini-War Against Iraq Prior to 9/11
Lee Sustar
What's Behind the Crisis in Liberia?
Mickey
Z.
AIDS Dissent and Africa
Sam Hamod
Semitic is a Language Group, Not a Race or Ethnic Group
Ramzy
Baroud
Awaiting Justice on an Old Blanket
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Savage Incongruities: the Photographic Life of Lee Miller
Adam
Engel
Parable of the Lobbyist
Robert
Sanders
A Review of Ralph Lopez's American Dream
Poets'
Basement
Albert, Witherup, Guthrie
July
11, 2003
Conn
Hallinan
The Coin of Empire
Tim
Wise
God Responds to Bush
Mokhiber
/ Weissman
The Two Faces of Bush in Africa
Edward
S. Herman
Whitewashing Sandra Day O'Connor
David Orr
Coffeen-gate: What's Going on at the Sierra Club Foundation?
David
Lindorff
An Iraq War & Occupation Glossary
Website
of the Day
Dead Malls
July
10, 2003
Ron
Jacobs
Dealing with the Devil: the Bloody
Profits of General Dynamics
Sean
Donahue
Bush and the Paramillitaries: Coddling Terrorists in Colombia
Yemi
Toure
Who Outted Bush in Afrika?
Robert
Jensen
Politics and Sustainability: an Interview
with Wes Jackson
Ali
Abunimah
US Leaves Injured Iraqis Untreated
Joanne
Mariner
Federal Courts, Not Military Commissions
Website
of the Day
Electronic Iraq
July
9, 2003
David
Lindorff
Is the Media Finally Turning on
Bush?
David
Krieger and Angela McCracken
10 Myths About Nuclear Weapons
Mickey
Z.
Why Speak Out?
Lee Sustar
The Great Medicare Fraud
John
Chuckman
The Worst Kind of Lie
Gary Leupp
"Pacifist" Japan and the Occupation of Iraq
Website
of the Day
Hail to the Thief:
Songs for the Bush Years
July
8, 2003
Elaine
Cassel
Bully on the Bench: the Pathological
Dissents of Scalia
Alan
Maass
Nights of Fire and Rage in Benton Harbor
Chris
Floyd
Troubled Sleep: Getting Used to the American Gulag
Linda
S. Heard
America's Kangaroo Justice
Brian
Cloughley
They Tell Lies to Nodders
Charles
Sullivan
Bush the Christian?
Saul
Landau
The Intelligence Culture in the National Security Age
Website
of the Day
Occupation Watch
July
7, 2003
William
Blum
The Anti-Empire Report
Harvey
Wasserman
The Nuke with a Hole in Its Head
Ramzy
Baroud
Peace for All the Wrong Reasons
Simon
Jones
What Progressives Should Think About
Iran
Lesley
McCulloch
Fear, Pain and Shame in Aceh
Uri
Avnery
The Draw
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/3
July
4 / 6, 2003
Patrick
Cockburn
Dead on the Fourth of July
Frederick
Douglass
What is Freedom to a Slave?
Martha
Honey
Bush and Africa: Racism, Exploitation
and Neglect
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Rat in the Grain: Amstutz and
the Looting of Iraqi Agriculture
Standard
Schaefer
Rule by Fed: Anyone But Greenspan in 2004
Lenni Brenner
Jefferson is for Today
Elaine
Cassel
Fucking Furious on the Fourth
Ben Tripp
How Free Are We?
Wayne
Madsen
A Sad Independence Day
John Stanton
Happy Birthday, America! 227 Years of War
Jim
Lobe
Bush's Surreal AIDS Appointment
John Blair
Return to Marble Hill: Indiana's Rusting Nuke
Lisa
Walsh Thomas
Heavy Reckoning at Qaim
David Vest
Wake Up and Smell the Dynamite
Adam
Engel
Queer as Grass
Poets'
Basement
Christian, Witherup, Albert & St. Clair
Website
of the Weekend
The Lipstick Librarian
July
3, 2003
Patrick
W. Gavin
The Meaning of Gettysburg
Thomas
W. Croft
There Was a Reason They Called It the Casino Economy
David
Lindorff
Outlawing Subversives: Hong Kong
and the US
John
Chuckman
Lessons from the American Revolution
Jackson
Thoreau
New Far-Right Scheme: Impeach Supreme Court Justices
Stan
Goff
"Bring 'Em On?": a Former
Special Forces Soldier Responds to Bush's Invitation for Iraqis
to Attack US Troops
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/3
July 2, 2003
Diane
Christian
Good Killing and Bad Killing
Richard
Falk
After Iraq, Does UN War Prevention Have a Future?
Mokhiber
/ Weissman
Bush Administration: Causing Repetitive Stress
Justin
Podur
Uribe's Onslaught Across Colombia
Reuven
Kaviner
Prosecuting Ben-Artzi, the Refusenik
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/2
July
1, 2003
Sasan
Fayamanesh
Weapon of Choice: Nukes, Israel and
Iran
Elaine
Cassel
Sex and the Supreme Moralizer: Scalia
and the Sodomy Cops
Susan
Block
A Love Supreme: Our Assholes Belong
to Ourselves
Bill
Glahn
RIAA Watch: No, No Bono
David Lindorff
Weapons in Search of a Name
Gary
Leupp
Occupation, Resistance and the Plight of the GIs
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/1
June
30, 2003
Karyn
Strickler
The Do-Nothings: an Exposé
of Progressive Politics in America
Col. Dan
Smith
The Occupation of Iraq: Descending into the Quagmire
Tim
Wise
Race and Destruction in Black and White
Neve Gordon
The Roadmap and the Wall
Chris
Floyd
The Revelation of St. George: "God Told Me to Strike Saddam"
Elaine
Cassel
Kentucky Woman
Uri
Avnery
Hope in Dark Times
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/30
Website
of the Day
Bush El Hombre
June
28 / 29, 2003
M.
Shahid Alam
Bernard Lewis: Scholarship or Sophistry?
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Meet Steven Griles: Big Oil's Inside
Man
Laura
Carlsen
Democracy's Future: From the Polls or the Populace?
Alan Maass
You Call These Democrats an Alternative?
C.Y.
Gopinath
Bush and Kindergarten
Noah Leavitt
Bush, the Death Penalty and International Law
Joanne
Mariner
Rehnquist Family Values
Ignacio
Chapela
Tenure, Censorship and Biotech at Berkeley
Bob
Scowcroft
Bush's Squeeze on Organic Farmers
Jon Brown
Tom Delay: "I am the Government"
Kam
Zarrabi
Keep Your Hands Off Iran, Please!
Ron Jacobs
Big Bill Broonzy's Conversation with the Blues
Julie
Hilden
Fear Factor: Art, Terror and the First Amendment
Adrien
Rain Burke
The Anarchists' Wedding Guide
Adam
Engel
US Troops Outta Times Square
Poets'
Basement
Witherup, Guthrie, Albert, Hamod
June
27, 2003
Jason
Leopold
CIA: Seven Months Prior to 9/11 Iraq
Posed No Threat to US
David
Vest
Supreme Silence: Bush's Bunker-Hunker
David
Lindorff
The Catch and Release of "Comical
Ali"
Ray McGovern
Cheney, Forgery and the CIA
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/26
Website
of the Day
John Kerry, Teresa Heinz & Ken Lay: The Politics of Hypocrisy
June
26, 2003
Sen.
Robert Byrd
The Road of Cover-Up is a Road to Ruin
Jason
Leopold
Wolfowitz Instructed the CIA to Investigate
Hans Blix
Paul
de Rooij
Ambient Death in Palestine
Chris Floyd
Mass Graves and Burned Meat in Bush's New Iraq
Elaine
Cassel
Wolfowitz as Lord High Executioner
CounterPunch
Wire
Musicians Unite Against Sweatshops
Sheldon
Hull
Squatting in Mansions
Ben Tripp
A Guide to Hating Almost Anyone
Uri
Avnery
The Best Show in Town
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/25
Website
of the Day
Ordinary Vistas:
The Photographs of Kurt Nimmo
June
25, 2003
Bruce
Jackson
Buffalo Cops Wage War on Pedal Pushers
Mickey
Z.
The New Dark Ages
David Lindorff
Indonesia's War on Journalists
Dan
Bacher
Butterflies and Farmworkers Confront USDA and Riot Cops
Adam Federman
"Success is Not the Issue Here"
Elaine
Cassel
"Ain't No Justice": Fed Judge Quits, Assails Sentencing
Guidelines
Bill Kauffman
My America vs. the Empire
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/25
Website
of the Day
You Are Being Watched:
Elevator Moods
June
24, 2003
Elaine
Cassel
Supreme Indemnity
Holocaust Denial at the High Court
Roya
Monajem
A Message from Tehran: Is It Worth
It to Risk One's Life?
John
Chuckman
The Real Clash of Civilizations
David Lindorff
WMD Damage Control at the Times
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/24
June
23, 2003
Marc
Pritzke
Washington Lied: an Interview with
Ray McGovern
Conn
Hallinan
The Consistency of Sharon
Wayne Madsen
Commercials, Disney & Amistad
Edward
Said
The Meaning of Rachel Corrie
Steve Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 6/23
June
21 / 22, 2003
Alexander
Cockburn
My Life as a Rabbi
William
A. Cook
The Scourge of Hopelessness
Standard
Schaefer
The Wages of Terror: an Interview with R.T. Naylor
Ron Jacobs
US Prisons as Strategic Hamlets
Harry
Browne
The Pitstop Ploughshares
Lawrence
Magnuson
WMD: The Most Dangerous Game
Harold
Gould
Saddam and the WMD Mystery
David Krieger
10 Reasons to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
Avia
Pasternak
The Unholy Alliance in the Occupied Territories
CounterPunch
Summer Reading:
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Todd Chretien
Return to Sender: Todd Gitlin, the Duke of Condescension
Maria
Tomchick
Danny Goldberg's Imaginary Kids
Adam Engel
The Fat Man in Little Boy
Poets'
Basement
Guthrie, Albert & Hamod
June 20, 2003
Walter
Brasch
Down on Our Knees
Robert
Meeropol
The Son of the Rosenbergs on His Parents Death and Bush's America
Russell
Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Grannies and Baby Bells
Norman
Madarasz
Pierre Bourgault: the Life of a
Quebec Radical
Gary
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Bush on "Revisionist Historians"
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July
19, 2003
Tenet: Wolfowitz Did
It
The
Yellowcake Blame Game
By JASON LEOPOLD
When George Tenet, the director of the CIA, testified
before the Senate Intelligence Committee last week about dubious
intelligence data on the Iraqi threat that made it into President
Bush's State of the Union address in January, he said an ad-hoc
committee called the Office of Special Plans, set up Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Policy Douglas Feith and other high-profile hawks rewrote the
intelligence information on Iraq that the CIA gathered and gave
it to White House officials to help Bush build a case for war,
according to three Senators on the intelligence committee.
Tenet told the Intelligence Committee
that his own spies at the CIA determined that much of the intelligence
information they collected on Iraq could not prove that the country
was an imminent threat nor could they find any concrete evidence
that Iraq was stockpiling a cache of chemical and biological
weapons. But the Office of Special Plans, using Iraqi defectors
from the Iraqi National Congress as their main source, rewrote
some of the CIA's intelligence to say, undeniably, that Iraq
was hiding some of the world's most lethal weapons. Once the
intelligence was rewritten, it was delivered to the office of
National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice, where it found its
way into various public speeches given by Vice President Dick
Cheney, Deputy Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Bush, the
Senators said.
Moreover, these Senators allege that
the office of the Vice President and the National Security Council
were fully aware that the intelligence Wolfowitz's committee
collected may not have been reliable. The Senators said they
are discussing privately whether to ask Wolfowitz to testify
before a Senate hearing in the near future to determine how large
of a role his Special Plans committee played in providing the
President with intelligence data on Iraq and whether that information
was reliable or beefed up to help build a case for war.
A week ago, Tenet claimed responsibilty
for allowing the White House to use the now disputed claim that
Iraq was trying to purchase uranium from Niger to build an atomic
bomb in Bush's State of the Union address. Last week, these Senators
and a CIA intelligence official said the Office of Special Plans
urged the White House to use the uranium claim in Bush's speech.
But Democrats in the Senate are now asking
what role the secret committee set up by Wolfowitz played in
hyping the intelligence on Iraq's weapons programs.
Secretary of State Colin Powell appears
to be the only White House official who questioned the accuracy
of the intelligence information coming out of the Office of Special
Plans. A day before he was set to appear before the United Nations
Feb. 5 to argue about the Iraqi threat and to urge the Council
to support military action against the country, Powell omitted
numerous claims provided to him by the Office of Special Plans
about Iraq's weapons program because the information was unreliable,
according to an early February report in U.S. News and World
Report.
Powell was so disturbed about the questionable
intelligence on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction that
he put together a team of experts to review the information he
was given before his speech to the U.N.
Much of the information Powell's speech
was provided by Wolfowitz's Office of Special Plans, the magazine
reported, to counter the uncertainty of the CIA's intelligence
on Iraq.
Powell's team removed dozens of pages
of alleged evidence about Iraq's banned weapons and ties to terrorists
from a draft of his speech, the magazine said. At one point,
he became so infuriated at the lack of adequate sourcing by the
Office of Special Plans to intelligence claims he said, "I'm
not reading this. This is bullshit," according to the magazine.
Spokespeople for Wolfowitz, Rice and
the Vice President all denied the accusations, saying it was
the CIA who provided the White House with the bulk of intelligence
on Iraq and that there is no reason to believe the information
isn't accurate. Tenet's spokespeople would not return several
calls for comment.
Separately, the CIA, earlier this year,
brought back four retired officials, led by former CIA deputy
director Richard Kerr, to examine the agency's pre-war intelligence
and reporting on the Iraqi threat. Brent Scowcroft, chairman
of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board is also
probing the issue, but whether any of the investigations include
the Office of Special Plans is still undecided.
Seymour Hersh, the investigative reporter
for the New Yorker, wrote an expose on the Office of Special
Plans in May. In his story, he claims a Pentagon adviser told
him that the committee "was created in order to find evidence
of what Wolfowitz and his boss, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
believed to be true_that Saddam Hussein had close ties to Al
Qaeda, and that Iraq had an enormous arsenal of chemical, biological,
and possibly even nuclear weapons that threatened the region
and, potentially, the United States."
Feith, in a rare Pentagon briefing in
May, denied that the Office of Special Plans was cherry-picking
intelligence information to build a case for war in Iraq.
The Office of Special Plans "was
not involved in intelligence collection," Feith said. "Rather,
it relied on reporting from the CIA and other parts of the intelligence
community. Its job was to review this intelligence to help digest
it for me and other policymakers, to help us develop Defense
Department strategy for the war on terrorism... in the course
of its work, this team, in reviewing the intelligence that was
provided to us by the CIA and the intelligence community, came
up with some interesting observations about the linkages between
Iraq and al Qaeda."
To date, however, the Pentagon has failed
to provide any proof of a link between Iraq and al-Qaeda.
Still, the OSP or "The Cabal,"
as the group calls itself, according to the New Yorker story,
played a significant role in convincing the White House that
Iraq was a threat to its neighbors in the Middle East and to
the United States. But the intelligence information and the Iraqi
defectors the group relied heavily upon to prove its case were
widely off the mark. For example, according to one CIA intelligence
official in charge of weapons of mass destruction for the agency,
the OSP is responsible for providing thee White House with the
information that thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes sought
by Iraq were intended for a secret nuclear weapons program.
Bush said last September in a speech
that attempts by Iraq to acquire the tubes point to a clandestine
program to make enriched uranium for nuclear bombs. But experts
contradicted Bush, saying that the evidence is ambiguous at best.
It was later determined by the International Atomic Energy Agency
that the tubes were designed to was to build rockets rather than
for centrifuges to enrich uranium.
Furthermore, the Iraqi defectors feeding
the OSP with information about the locations of Iraq's alleged
weapons of mass destruction were said to be unreliable and responsible
for sending U.S. military forces on a "wild goose chase,"
according to another CIA intelligence official.
Case in point: In 2001, an Iraqi defector,
Adnan Ihsan Saeed al-Haideri, told the OSP he had visited twenty
secret facilities for chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Saeed, a civil engineer, supported his claims with stacks of
Iraqi government contracts, complete with technical specifications.
Saeed said Iraq used companies to purchase equipment with the
blessing of the United Nations - and then secretly used the equipment
for their weapons programs. He claimed that chemical and biological
weapons labs could be found in hospitals and presidential palaces,
which turned out to be completely untrue, when the locations
were searched.
The OSP provided the National Security
Council with Saeed's findings last year and the information found
its way into a White House report in December called, "Iraq:
A Decade of Deception and Defiance" <http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/iraq/decade/sect3.html>
But the information never held up and
turned out to be another big intelligence failure for the Bush
administration. Judith Miller first brought the existence of
Saeed to light in a New York Times story in December 2001 and
again in January. The White House, in September 2002, cited the
information provided by Saeed in a fact sheet.
Whether a bipartisan probe into the OSP
is convened remain to be seen, but one thing is certain, the
committee of pseudo spies wields an enormous amount of power.
Larry C. Johnson, a former counter-terrorism
expert at the CIA and the State Department, says he's spoken
to his colleagues working for both agencies and its clear that
the OSP has politicized the intelligence process.
"What they're experiencing now is
the worst political pressure. Anyone who attempted to challenge
or rebut OSP was accused of rocking the boat. OSP came in with
an agenda that they were predisposed to believe," he said.
Vincent Cannistrano, who worked for the
CIA for 27 years, told the National Journal last month that the
OSP "incorporated a lot of debatable intelligence, and it
was not coordinated with the intelligence community."
Jason Leopold
can be reached at: jasonleopold@hotmail.com
Weekend Edition Features for July 12/13, 2003
Arthur
Mitzman
The Double Wall Before the Future
Standard
Schaefer
The Coming Financial Reality: an
Interview with Michael Hudson
John Feffer
A Fearful Symmetry: Washington and Pyongyang
Ron
Jacobs
Shades of Gray in Iran
Elaine
Cassel
Judicial Terrorism Against the Bill of Rights
Tom
Stephens
Civil Liberties After 9/11
David Lindorff
New White House Slogan: "Case Closed. Just Move On"
Jason
Leopold
The Mini-War Against Iraq Prior to 9/11
Lee Sustar
What's Behind the Crisis in Liberia?
Mickey
Z.
AIDS Dissent and Africa
Sam Hamod
Semitic is a Language Group, Not a Race or Ethnic Group
Ramzy
Baroud
Awaiting Justice on an Old Blanket
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Savage Incongruities: the Photographic Life of Lee Miller
Adam
Engel
Parable of the Lobbyist
Robert
Sanders
A Review of Ralph Lopez's American Dream
Poets'
Basement
Albert, Witherup, Guthrie
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