British memo reopens war claim
Leaked briefing says U.S. intelligence facts `fixed' around policy
by Stephen J. Hedges and Mark Silva
Washington Bureau
Published May 17, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A British official's report that the Bush administration appeared intent on invading Iraq long before it acknowledged as much or sought Congress' approval--and that it "fixed" intelligence to fit its intention--has caused a stir in Britain.
But the potentially explosive revelation has proven to be something of a dud in the United States. The White House has denied the premise of the memo, the American media have reacted slowly to it and the public generally seems indifferent to the issue or unwilling to rehash the bitter prewar debate over the reasons for the war.
All of this has contributed to something less than a robust discussion of a memo that would seem to bolster the strongest assertions of the war's critics. [...] Read the rest at the Chicago Tribune web site: http://tinyurl.com/8jds4
© Virginia Metze
by Stephen J. Hedges and Mark Silva
Washington Bureau
Published May 17, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A British official's report that the Bush administration appeared intent on invading Iraq long before it acknowledged as much or sought Congress' approval--and that it "fixed" intelligence to fit its intention--has caused a stir in Britain.
But the potentially explosive revelation has proven to be something of a dud in the United States. The White House has denied the premise of the memo, the American media have reacted slowly to it and the public generally seems indifferent to the issue or unwilling to rehash the bitter prewar debate over the reasons for the war.
All of this has contributed to something less than a robust discussion of a memo that would seem to bolster the strongest assertions of the war's critics. [...] Read the rest at the Chicago Tribune web site: http://tinyurl.com/8jds4
© Virginia Metze
Starmail - 19. Mai, 16:33