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"I mean some of the specific blames have to do with documents that may or may not have been passed to the FBI. I'm not sure that full story has come out."
@SpyTalker: Pentagon IG 'sitting on' report fingering #Panetta for leak to Hollywood of 'Top Secret' info Bin Laden raid. #zd30 http://www.pogo.org/our-work/articles/2 ... -info.html …
@emptywheel: So why is DOD IG investigating the Zero Dark Thirty leaks instead of DOJ, anyway?
@SpyTalker: SpyTalk: Pentagon Suppressing Report on Panetta Leak http://spytalkblog.blogspot.com/2013/06 ... l?spref=tw …
thatsmystory » Mon May 27, 2013 1:49 pm wrote:Director Greg Barker in an interview with The Story:"I mean some of the specific blames have to do with documents that may or may not have been passed to the FBI. I'm not sure that full story has come out."
A real interviewer would respond by saying "Why didn't you address that aspect in your two hour documentary?" A real interviewer would have read The Black Banners or The Looming Tower and thus have known that something very strange happened in regard to al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar.
The AP spying story doesn't resonate as much as it could because people know the media is too subservient to power. The media coverage of Manhunt has been like a CIA PR tour.
8bitagent » Wed Jun 05, 2013 4:48 am wrote:thatsmystory » Mon May 27, 2013 1:49 pm wrote:Director Greg Barker in an interview with The Story:"I mean some of the specific blames have to do with documents that may or may not have been passed to the FBI. I'm not sure that full story has come out."
A real interviewer would respond by saying "Why didn't you address that aspect in your two hour documentary?" A real interviewer would have read The Black Banners or The Looming Tower and thus have known that something very strange happened in regard to al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar.
The AP spying story doesn't resonate as much as it could because people know the media is too subservient to power. The media coverage of Manhunt has been like a CIA PR tour.
al Hazmi and al Midhar, for what it's worth; are the two absolute smoking gun rosetta stones of the entire Big Wedding 9/11 enterprise. It's all about them. The Bosnian conflict, the Saudi intelligence handling.
They are at once ciphers and keys. All this talk of controlled demolushun, drone planes, bin Laden on ice or whatever the fuck doesn't come close to the fact that Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi were thoroughly controlled and financed like rats in a damn maze. Credit cards, housing, rental cars, direction, flight schools. All directed by an august hand.
al Hazmi and al Midhar, for what it's worth; are the two absolute smoking gun rosetta stones of the entire Big Wedding 9/11 enterprise. It's all about them. The Bosnian conflict, the Saudi intelligence handling. They are at once ciphers and keys. All this talk of controlled demolushun, drone planes, bin Laden on ice or whatever the fuck doesn't come close to the fact that Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi were thoroughly controlled and financed like rats in a damn maze. Credit cards, housing, rental cars, direction, flight schools. All directed by an august hand.
Bearden, who retired in 1994, puts it more personally: “Here I am, at age 54.… Am I going to put up with this shit—from some bozo like John Deutch—for one more fucking minute?”
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2004/11/path-to-9-11-200411
“The Wolf”
One of the most intriguing cameos in Zero Dark Thirty is that of Fredric Lehne, who plays the CIA’s counterterrorism chief, referred to only as “The Wolf”. Despite being a key figure in the fight against Islamist militants, when we meet him in his office he is practising Muslim prayer. As surprising as it sounds, this is true, at least according to a report by the Washington Post in March last year: the director of the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center (CTC), and the leader of the hunt for bin Laden, really has converted to Islam. Named only as “Roger” by the newspaper, he is in his late fifties and has worked for two presidents, four CIA directors and four directors of national intelligence. His conversion to Islam came after he married a Muslim woman, but, according to the Washington Post, there is no prayer rug in his office. He is, however, known to clutch a strand of prayer beads.
In 1993, Summers, along with Gus Russo and Dale Myers, served as consultants on the late Mike Sullivan's weird PBS Frontline show, "Who Was Lee Harvey Oswald?" To his credit, Summers eventually asked that his name to be taken off the program. But he certainly stayed involved for a long time. Way after it became obvious as to what Russo and Myers had become. And in fact, on July 25th of this year Dale Myers revealed something at his "Secrets of a Homicide" blog that makes the mystery of why Summers stuck it out so long even more puzzling. Myers and Russo had always intimated that this program was done in a completely open ended manner. That is, there was no slant to it upon the inception of the production. Well, when Sullivan died Myers could not resist saluting him for letting him appear on television. Along the way, in an interview with Gus Russo, Myers blew open the cover story about that program. Russo said that far from being an honest and open-ended program that proceeded inductively, this was not Sullivan's plan at all. Russo said "Sullivan suggested we start with finding out who pulled the trigger in Dallas first and work backward from there to find out if anyone else was involved." In other words, the show started with a deduction and proceeded from there. That deduction was that Oswald shot Kennedy, and there may have been a second shooter. In light of that very late revelation, we should not admire Summers for eventually having his name taken off the show. Instead, we should ask: Why did he stick around at all? We shall see why...
http://www.ctka.net/2013/summers.html
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