Another name in the AIPAC scandal.
This is from the NYTimes, who spends the first two thirds of this article explaining how this guy may not be guilty, and then after my ellipses, basically tells us that he is.
And I know that it's simple minded of me, and that it may not reflect the "realities" of the middle east, but with the indisputible fact that an intel operation was run on the American people to get us into Iraq, and some of the same people involved in those "distortions" also tied to the mishandling of classified information, I say, prosecute them for treason.
And before you get all up in arms, let me say, imagine if this had been another government, say Iran, who had a cadre of people working inside the defense dept. channeling classified info out to them.... Oh, that's right, somebody did transfer the highly classified intercept codes, as well as other info, to Iran through Chalabi.
Hang them all!!!!
UPDATE: Juan Cole's take on this.
[The second highest ranking US diplomat in Iraq, David Satterfield, has been implicated in the AIPAC spy case. Satterfield is not known for being lock step with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. But I minded two things about this article in the NYT. First, the two persons it quotes on Satterfield, Indyk and Ross, both have a long association with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which was set up by AIPAC as a think tank to promote Israeli interests in Washington. No critic of AIPAC is quoted in the article; none. Second, the article does not stop and consider how Iraqis are going to feel about this news. I mean, he is the deputy chief of mission, as I understand the description given by the NYT. If he did leak classified information to an Israeli lobby from the US Government, wouldn't Iraqis be worried he was leaking to the Israelis from Baghdad? I mean, the US is always complaining that they are afraid anything they share with the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government goes straight to Iraq. I don't know if Satterfield is guilty of anything, but an article about this issue should at least have involved one interview with an independent Iraqi politician about the meaning of it for the latter's country.]
And I know that it's simple minded of me, and that it may not reflect the "realities" of the middle east, but with the indisputible fact that an intel operation was run on the American people to get us into Iraq, and some of the same people involved in those "distortions" also tied to the mishandling of classified information, I say, prosecute them for treason.
And before you get all up in arms, let me say, imagine if this had been another government, say Iran, who had a cadre of people working inside the defense dept. channeling classified info out to them.... Oh, that's right, somebody did transfer the highly classified intercept codes, as well as other info, to Iran through Chalabi.
Hang them all!!!!
UPDATE: Juan Cole's take on this.
[The second highest ranking US diplomat in Iraq, David Satterfield, has been implicated in the AIPAC spy case. Satterfield is not known for being lock step with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. But I minded two things about this article in the NYT. First, the two persons it quotes on Satterfield, Indyk and Ross, both have a long association with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which was set up by AIPAC as a think tank to promote Israeli interests in Washington. No critic of AIPAC is quoted in the article; none. Second, the article does not stop and consider how Iraqis are going to feel about this news. I mean, he is the deputy chief of mission, as I understand the description given by the NYT. If he did leak classified information to an Israeli lobby from the US Government, wouldn't Iraqis be worried he was leaking to the Israelis from Baghdad? I mean, the US is always complaining that they are afraid anything they share with the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government goes straight to Iraq. I don't know if Satterfield is guilty of anything, but an article about this issue should at least have involved one interview with an independent Iraqi politician about the meaning of it for the latter's country.]
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