Contributors
Cliff Kincaid- Contributor
Cliff Kincaid, serves as editor of the Accuracy
in Media (AIM)
Report. A veteran journalist and media critic, Cliff has
appeared on the Fox News programs Hannity & Colmes and
The O'Reilly Factor, where he debated O'Reilly on global
warming, the death penalty,
and the homosexual agenda. He was a guest co-host on CNN's Crossfire
(filling in for Pat Buchanan) in the 1980s, where he confronted
the then-Libyan Ambassador to the U.N. with evidence of Libyan
involvement in international terrorism. Through his America's
Survival, Inc., organization (www.usasurvival.org), he has been
an advocate on behalf of the families of victims of terrorism
and has published reports and held conferences critical of the
United Nations. His articles have appeared in the Washington
Post, Washington Times, Chronicles, Human Events, Insight, and
other publications. He served on the staff of Human Events for
several years and was an editorial writer and newsletter editor
for former National Security Council staffer Oliver North at
his Freedom Alliance educational foundation. He has written or
co-authored nine books on media and cultural affairs and foreign
policy issues. Cliff is married and has three sons.[go to
Kincaid index]
CBS
Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit
Oops… bias showing…
[Cliff Kincaid] 9/24/04
The CBS scandal
gets worse every day. Now, in an amazing twist, Michael Isikoff
of Newsweek was on Chris Matthews’ MSNBC “Hardball” show
on Wednesday night claiming that CBS had been planning to air
a story about the White House using forged documents to make
the case for war against Iraq. CBS postponed the story so it
could go on the air attacking President Bush on the National
Guard issue. It backfired when 60 Minutes itself got caught using
forged documents. Still, Isikoff indicates that 60 Minutes is
planning to air the anti-Bush piece, perhaps as early as Sunday
night, September 26.
There is only one
big problem—the anti-Bush story, as
described by Isikoff and eagerly embraced by Democrat partisan
Matthews, is completely false. It’s as phony as those National
Guard documents.
The Iraq-uranium link,
the subject of much media misinformation, has been documented
and confirmed by authoritative reports from
Britain’s Lord Butler, who had been a cabinet secretary
under five different Prime Ministers, and the Senate Intelligence
Committee.
In an article on the
Newsweek website, Isikoff claims that 60 Minutes had originally
planed to run a story about “how
the U.S. government was snookered by forged documents purporting
to show Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium from Niger.” Isikoff
says the story, narrated by CBS correspondent Ed Bradley, “asked
tough questions about how the White House came to embrace the
fraudulent documents and why administration officials chose to
include a 16-word reference to the questionable uranium purchase
in President Bush’s 2003 State of the Union.” Isikoff
says 60 Minutes has been working on the story for more than six
months.
It is amazing that,
18 months after Bush uttered those 16 words, Isikoff, 60 Minutes,
and Chris Matthews still can’t or
won’t get the story straight.
Bush’s famous 16 words were: “The British Government
has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities
of uranium from Africa.” Bush never said that Saddam “purchased” uranium.
While the Bush administration
mishandled the controversy under a media assault and even backed
away from what the President
said, subsequent investigations confirm that Saddam Hussein was
seeking uranium from Africa. Lord Butler’s July 14, 2004,
report called Bush’s words “well-founded.” It
reported that,
a) It is accepted
by all parties that Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999.
b) The British Government had intelligence from several
different sources indicating that this visit was for the purpose
of acquiring uranium. Since uranium constitutes almost three-quarters
of Niger’s exports, the intelligence was credible.
c) The evidence
was not conclusive that Iraq purchased, as opposed to having
sought, uranium and the British Government
did not claim this.
d) The forged
documents were not available to the British Government at the
time its assessment was made, and so the fact
of the forgery does not undermine it.”
FactCheck.org, a group
headed by former CNN and Wall Street Journal reporter Brooks
Jackson, examined the controversy and
declared, “Both the Butler report and the Senate Intelligence
Committee report make clear that Bush’s 16 words weren’t
based on the fake documents. The British didn’t even see
them until after issuing the reports—based on other sources—that
Bush quoted in his 16 words.”
Ironically, one of
the pieces of evidence used by the CIA in making the case that
Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa was
a confidential report brought back from Africa by former Ambassador
Joseph Wilson. But Wilson changed his story publicly and became
a media darling when he made the claim that Bush was lying about
the matter. Wilson, who also became an adviser to John Kerry,
got away with his dangerous deception for over a year until the
Senate Intelligence Committee report issued a report confirming
that Wilson’s report to the CIA actually provided evidence
of Iraqi interest in uranium. This report is what led reporters
for the Washington Post and other media to write stories finally
setting the record straight about Wilson.
If CBS News at this late date is going to broadcast a demonstrably
false story about forgeries supposedly playing a role in the
Bush speech, then it should face more charges of pursuing a partisan
political agenda at the expense of the truth.
In a final irony,
Isikoff says the 60 Minutes story will examine why the FBI
apparently has not been able to determine the ultimate
source of the Iraq document forgeries. But CBS itself has not
been able to produce the ultimate source of the fake National
Guard memos it used on the air. That’s one reason why a
panel, including former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, has
been named to investigate.
It may occur to some
viewers, however, that the current Attorney General—or at least the FBI—might
have an interest here. After all, forging government documents
is a violation
of federal and state law. If the FBI is investigating the fake
Iraq documents, why not the CBS memos? CRO
copyright
2004 Accuracy in Media
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