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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (171870)7/12/2003 2:29:15 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1579334
 
Tenet approves error in approving Bush's speech

Stay tuned....he is blaming his agency..someone who knows the truth won't like it...


Rather embarrassing........blaming Tenet is just another lie on top of more lies. They dig the hole deeper.

ted

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Washington and London governments embroiled in lies over Iraq

WASHINGTON, July 11.— The CIA and the U.S. and British governments are embroiled in contradictions over lies concerning the aggression against Iraq and are now publicly disputing the issue.

They never feel at ease when there’s an Iraqi in sight.

According to the CIA today, it had serious doubts over a British report affirming that Iraq was attempting to obtain uranium in Niger for a nuclear program.

The famed secret British report was taken from a student thesis written 10 years previously, and the British government similarly adopted it to justify the aggression.

Bush also assured that Baghdad was attempting to manufacture nuclear weapons, but prior to that, the intelligence agency revealed that it had warned Washington that there was no nuclear program.

According to the DPA agency, Condoleezza Rice, U.S. security advisor, today assured that if the chief of the CIA had expressly asked the White House to eliminate the passage in Bush’s speech referring to Baghdad purchasing uranium from Niger, they would have followed its advice.

Friday’s edition of The Washington Post quotes a secret service expert in the Bush administration who claims that it was recommended not to use that material.

London insisted on the veracity of its report and Bush did likewise.

For its part, ANSA reported that Howard Dean, the former governor of Vermont and one of the Democrat candidates for the 2004 presidential elections, has called for the resignation of all U.S. government members who contributed to concealing the falsity of claims concerning the purchase of uranium attributed to Iraq.