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	<title>Comments on: Feith Based Intelligence</title>
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		<item>
		<title>By: Klonopin lethal dose.</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-417560</link>
		<dc:creator>Klonopin lethal dose.</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Oct 2007 07:36:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-417560</guid>
		<description>&lt;strong&gt;Klonopin....&lt;/strong&gt;

Inject klonopin....</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Klonopin&#8230;.</strong></p>
<p>Inject klonopin&#8230;.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Mr J. Beaudry</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-30023</link>
		<dc:creator>Mr J. Beaudry</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2007 20:07:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-30023</guid>
		<description>Trust is very much at the heart of this fiasco called the &quot;Iraq War&quot;.  

Lack of trust in Intel sources leads one to create their own Intel.  

A (White) house divided cannot stand.  It will fall and the sooner the better.

Who is at fault?  &#039;The military industrial complex of gangsters who have hijacked the Nation.  

God bless America and her Empire of coersed friends.

/jlb</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Trust is very much at the heart of this fiasco called the &#8220;Iraq War&#8221;.  </p>
<p>Lack of trust in Intel sources leads one to create their own Intel.  </p>
<p>A (White) house divided cannot stand.  It will fall and the sooner the better.</p>
<p>Who is at fault?  &#8216;The military industrial complex of gangsters who have hijacked the Nation.  </p>
<p>God bless America and her Empire of coersed friends.</p>
<p>/jlb</p>
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		<title>By: Joel</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-29758</link>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Feb 2007 21:05:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-29758</guid>
		<description>The more Douglas Feith lawyers up his rhetoric about the faults of the CIA, and continues to rectify his approach in cherry picking (critiquing) intelligence, the guiltier Wolfowitz &amp; Co. look. 
The New York Times is now putting out the word, George Tenent is the guy with the false intelligence, he’s the one to blame for Iraq. For the NYTimes this might be the best strategy, it’s better than not reporting about Feith &amp; Co. at all, which is what they’re doing. 
But what is in a defense that puts Tenent at the helm?   
He’s CIA.   
Feith has been on a lecture/education tour explaining how the CIA was getting it wrong and that Bush needed a go between, a B-team, to get it right.  Its what Feith calls good government,  groups that critique it all!  Sounds good, coming from a guy within a group, that was never critiqued!  Untill now. 
Feith blames Tenent for the bad intelligence that Bush sold to the public, which in turn forced congress’s hand in going after Saddam. How can Feith blame the CIA?  It was his Iraq think tank, with the power to critique information, by using power-point presentations that make the ultimate decision maker (Bush), get it wrong!  
Or did they? 
Wolfowitz &amp; Co. were this countries last defense against faulty intelligence, at least this is how they sold it. This cast of well-known Zionists got it right for Israel and wrong for America.  And now they (Eric Edelman &amp; Co) expect the us, the Americans, to thank these traitors for their service?  Lets leave that to Israel and the Bush team.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The more Douglas Feith lawyers up his rhetoric about the faults of the CIA, and continues to rectify his approach in cherry picking (critiquing) intelligence, the guiltier Wolfowitz &amp; Co. look.<br />
The New York Times is now putting out the word, George Tenent is the guy with the false intelligence, he’s the one to blame for Iraq. For the NYTimes this might be the best strategy, it’s better than not reporting about Feith &amp; Co. at all, which is what they’re doing.<br />
But what is in a defense that puts Tenent at the helm?<br />
He’s CIA.<br />
Feith has been on a lecture/education tour explaining how the CIA was getting it wrong and that Bush needed a go between, a B-team, to get it right.  Its what Feith calls good government,  groups that critique it all!  Sounds good, coming from a guy within a group, that was never critiqued!  Untill now.<br />
Feith blames Tenent for the bad intelligence that Bush sold to the public, which in turn forced congress’s hand in going after Saddam. How can Feith blame the CIA?  It was his Iraq think tank, with the power to critique information, by using power-point presentations that make the ultimate decision maker (Bush), get it wrong!<br />
Or did they?<br />
Wolfowitz &amp; Co. were this countries last defense against faulty intelligence, at least this is how they sold it. This cast of well-known Zionists got it right for Israel and wrong for America.  And now they (Eric Edelman &amp; Co) expect the us, the Americans, to thank these traitors for their service?  Lets leave that to Israel and the Bush team.</p>
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		<title>By: David Isenberg</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-29716</link>
		<dc:creator>David Isenberg</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Feb 2007 19:37:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-29716</guid>
		<description>Call me self-serving if you wish, but I think the below letters, published in today&#039;s New York TImes are relevant to this post.

David

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/13/opinion/l13iraq.html?pagewanted=print

February 13, 2007
Iraq Then, Iran Now: A Rising Chorus of Skeptics (10 Letters) 
To the Editor: 

Re “Deadliest Bomb in Iraq Is Made by Iran, U.S. Says” (front page, Feb. 10):

Are we to believe an administration that cried wolf when there was no wolf in Iraq? We’ve been lied to so much by the Bush crowd that it is difficult to imagine that any of them are telling the truth when they assert that Iran is supplying Iraqi Shiite factions with deadly bombs. 

Perhaps it is true, but the American public — and Congress — have been set up before by false and misleading “intelligence.” 

Paul R. LaRocque 
Arlington, Tex., Feb. 10, 2007

•

To the Editor:

Why is The New York Times once again passing on the claims of anonymous sources as credible information? Why should we believe it when unnamed sources discount the possibility of black-market sources for weapons with Iranian components?

How do we know that some of the alleged information was not elicited by torture? 

And even if the Iranian government is supplying weapons directly to Shiite militias, the “deadliest bombs” in Iraq are still American, not Iranian. 

Eric Stenshoel 
New York, Feb. 10, 2007

•

To the Editor:

It is not surprising that Iran is working to achieve its own ends in Iraq, potentially by supplying Shiite militias with weapons. If a Middle Eastern country invaded Mexico or Canada, does anyone believe that the United States would sit by passively and watch events unfold? 

Every country, including the United States, acts to protect its perceived interests, so we should not be shocked to discover that Iran could be trying to shape the outcome of the turmoil in neighboring Iraq. 

What we should be shocked by is the Bush administration’s attempts to create yet another pretext for an unnecessary war, this time possibly with Iran. 

Amanda Johnson 
Madison, Wis., Feb. 10, 2007

•

To the Editor:

It is laughable to accuse Iran of making the deadliest bomb in Iraq when the United States is still willing to drop 500-pound bombs on populated areas that it says are hiding insurgents.

It seems that we truly never learned the lesson from the loud, resounding drumbeat in the media that led to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Scare the public, close our eyes and let the bombs rip. 

Christopher Voss 
Ravenna, Tex., Feb. 10, 2007

•

To the Editor:

Recognizing that roadside bombs are responsible for a majority of American combat fatalities, one must wonder why our troops are still relegated to patrolling in vehicles. Their use violates a fundamental principle of infantry combat: never bunch up.

This is one reason why Gen. Eric K. Shinseki and others with military experience, following the Powell doctrine, recommended deploying overwhelming numbers of troops in Iraq. If their advice had been heeded, our troops would always have been able to patrol effectively on foot — spread out — not bunched up in easily targeted vehicles.

Even if the vehicles our troops are using are now suitably armored, it is not surprising that someone has developed a more effective roadside bomb. It is an extremely economical way to attack our troops.

Evidence that this administration is beginning to look out for our troops in this carelessly planned and executed war would be most welcome.

William H. Douglass 
New York, Feb. 10, 2007
The writer was a rifle platoon commander with the Marines in Vietnam, 1967-68.

•

To the Editor:

Re “Scary Movie 2” (column, Feb. 12):

Paul Krugman states what is obvious to the rest of the world: that our country is preparing to attack Iran.

Congress must act now with a resolution stating that such conduct by the executive branch would be considered an act of war requiring Congressional approval. And it should make clear that it would deny financing in the absence of such approval. 

William D. LeMoult 
Warren, R.I., Feb. 12, 2007

•

To the Editor:

It’s déjà vu all over again. On the same day that “The Build-a-War Workshop” (editorial, Feb. 10) rightly criticizes Douglas J. Feith, a former under secretary of defense for policy, and his superiors for cooked Iraq intelligence, the front page shows that no lessons seem to have been learned from our last run-up to war.

The news article describes interviews with “American officials, including some whose agencies have previously been skeptical about the significance of Iran’s role in Iraq.” But the administration’s pre-Iraq war subterfuge and the politically suspect timing leave me and millions of others wanting more proof than classified reports we can’t see and too-convenient discoveries of Iranian markings on explosives.

An unwillingness to challenge the administration’s assertions led us to war four years ago. I fear that we are being led there again. 

Dan Lavoie 
Brooklyn, Feb. 10, 2007

•

To the Editor:

The Democratic leadership in Congress seems poised to make accountable those who were responsible for the misinformation used to justify the Iraq war.

It is my hope that the Congressional Democrats will use every legal means available to deliver the full truth to the American people. Accepting anything less than the full truth would be to ignore what the voters asked for last November. 

To obtain the truth, it will be necessary to use subpoena power for records and to require those people involved in the planning and conduct of the Iraq war to testify under oath before Congress. The administration’s successful attempt to start an unnecessary war is surely one of the lowest points in America’s history. 

John Murphy 
Madison, Wis., Feb. 11, 2007

•

To the Editor:

You make an important point about accountability for the decision to attack Iraq. As a former senior intelligence analyst, I strongly support the conclusions of the report by the Pentagon inspector general about the actions of Douglas J. Feith. 

Mr. Feith, while an under secretary of defense for policy, circumvented a process designed to prevent analytical errors from unreliable sources. He was entitled to his opinions on American policy toward Iraq, but he compromised that policy by picking reports that supported his preconceptions while ignoring caveats about unreliable sources. 

That was an egregious overreach of his competence and responsibilities. Such advocacy-distorted policy interventions in the guise of “alternative analysis” deserve not just the inspector general’s criticism, but also public censure for the dangerous precedent they set for “true believers.” 

Leonard B. Zuza 
Lusby, Md., Feb. 10, 2007
The writer is a former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst.

•

To the Editor:

The Pentagon inspector general’s report about the intelligence cooked up before the Iraq war is a gut-wrenching account of the betrayal of public trust. Equally stunning were the recommendations that neither criminal charges nor corrective actions within the Defense Department were warranted. 

When President Bush recently outlined his war surge strategy for Iraq, he repeatedly mentioned the threat posed by Iran. He continued that theme in his State of the Union speech. He has ordered another aircraft carrier and supporting ships to the Persian Gulf to send a signal to Iran. 

Now Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates is citing serial numbers and markings on bomb fragments as “pretty good” evidence that Iran is providing weapons or technology to Iraqi insurgents. 

Senator Carl Levin, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, has been criticized by some for dredging up a past that no one can change. But accumulating signs suggest we are being shepherded toward a military conflict with Iran. 

Although the painful revelations about past errors may be too late to influence an election, they may help us avoid another tragedy. 

Tyler Kokjohn 
Glendale, Ariz., Feb. 10, 2007</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Call me self-serving if you wish, but I think the below letters, published in today&#8217;s New York TImes are relevant to this post.</p>
<p>David</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/13/opinion/l13iraq.html?pagewanted=print" rel="nofollow">http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/13/opinion/l13iraq.html?pagewanted=print</a></p>
<p>February 13, 2007<br />
Iraq Then, Iran Now: A Rising Chorus of Skeptics (10 Letters)<br />
To the Editor: </p>
<p>Re “Deadliest Bomb in Iraq Is Made by Iran, U.S. Says” (front page, Feb. 10):</p>
<p>Are we to believe an administration that cried wolf when there was no wolf in Iraq? We’ve been lied to so much by the Bush crowd that it is difficult to imagine that any of them are telling the truth when they assert that Iran is supplying Iraqi Shiite factions with deadly bombs. </p>
<p>Perhaps it is true, but the American public — and Congress — have been set up before by false and misleading “intelligence.” </p>
<p>Paul R. LaRocque<br />
Arlington, Tex., Feb. 10, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>Why is The New York Times once again passing on the claims of anonymous sources as credible information? Why should we believe it when unnamed sources discount the possibility of black-market sources for weapons with Iranian components?</p>
<p>How do we know that some of the alleged information was not elicited by torture? </p>
<p>And even if the Iranian government is supplying weapons directly to Shiite militias, the “deadliest bombs” in Iraq are still American, not Iranian. </p>
<p>Eric Stenshoel<br />
New York, Feb. 10, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>It is not surprising that Iran is working to achieve its own ends in Iraq, potentially by supplying Shiite militias with weapons. If a Middle Eastern country invaded Mexico or Canada, does anyone believe that the United States would sit by passively and watch events unfold? </p>
<p>Every country, including the United States, acts to protect its perceived interests, so we should not be shocked to discover that Iran could be trying to shape the outcome of the turmoil in neighboring Iraq. </p>
<p>What we should be shocked by is the Bush administration’s attempts to create yet another pretext for an unnecessary war, this time possibly with Iran. </p>
<p>Amanda Johnson<br />
Madison, Wis., Feb. 10, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>It is laughable to accuse Iran of making the deadliest bomb in Iraq when the United States is still willing to drop 500-pound bombs on populated areas that it says are hiding insurgents.</p>
<p>It seems that we truly never learned the lesson from the loud, resounding drumbeat in the media that led to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Scare the public, close our eyes and let the bombs rip. </p>
<p>Christopher Voss<br />
Ravenna, Tex., Feb. 10, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>Recognizing that roadside bombs are responsible for a majority of American combat fatalities, one must wonder why our troops are still relegated to patrolling in vehicles. Their use violates a fundamental principle of infantry combat: never bunch up.</p>
<p>This is one reason why Gen. Eric K. Shinseki and others with military experience, following the Powell doctrine, recommended deploying overwhelming numbers of troops in Iraq. If their advice had been heeded, our troops would always have been able to patrol effectively on foot — spread out — not bunched up in easily targeted vehicles.</p>
<p>Even if the vehicles our troops are using are now suitably armored, it is not surprising that someone has developed a more effective roadside bomb. It is an extremely economical way to attack our troops.</p>
<p>Evidence that this administration is beginning to look out for our troops in this carelessly planned and executed war would be most welcome.</p>
<p>William H. Douglass<br />
New York, Feb. 10, 2007<br />
The writer was a rifle platoon commander with the Marines in Vietnam, 1967-68.</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>Re “Scary Movie 2” (column, Feb. 12):</p>
<p>Paul Krugman states what is obvious to the rest of the world: that our country is preparing to attack Iran.</p>
<p>Congress must act now with a resolution stating that such conduct by the executive branch would be considered an act of war requiring Congressional approval. And it should make clear that it would deny financing in the absence of such approval. </p>
<p>William D. LeMoult<br />
Warren, R.I., Feb. 12, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>It’s déjà vu all over again. On the same day that “The Build-a-War Workshop” (editorial, Feb. 10) rightly criticizes Douglas J. Feith, a former under secretary of defense for policy, and his superiors for cooked Iraq intelligence, the front page shows that no lessons seem to have been learned from our last run-up to war.</p>
<p>The news article describes interviews with “American officials, including some whose agencies have previously been skeptical about the significance of Iran’s role in Iraq.” But the administration’s pre-Iraq war subterfuge and the politically suspect timing leave me and millions of others wanting more proof than classified reports we can’t see and too-convenient discoveries of Iranian markings on explosives.</p>
<p>An unwillingness to challenge the administration’s assertions led us to war four years ago. I fear that we are being led there again. </p>
<p>Dan Lavoie<br />
Brooklyn, Feb. 10, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>The Democratic leadership in Congress seems poised to make accountable those who were responsible for the misinformation used to justify the Iraq war.</p>
<p>It is my hope that the Congressional Democrats will use every legal means available to deliver the full truth to the American people. Accepting anything less than the full truth would be to ignore what the voters asked for last November. </p>
<p>To obtain the truth, it will be necessary to use subpoena power for records and to require those people involved in the planning and conduct of the Iraq war to testify under oath before Congress. The administration’s successful attempt to start an unnecessary war is surely one of the lowest points in America’s history. </p>
<p>John Murphy<br />
Madison, Wis., Feb. 11, 2007</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>You make an important point about accountability for the decision to attack Iraq. As a former senior intelligence analyst, I strongly support the conclusions of the report by the Pentagon inspector general about the actions of Douglas J. Feith. </p>
<p>Mr. Feith, while an under secretary of defense for policy, circumvented a process designed to prevent analytical errors from unreliable sources. He was entitled to his opinions on American policy toward Iraq, but he compromised that policy by picking reports that supported his preconceptions while ignoring caveats about unreliable sources. </p>
<p>That was an egregious overreach of his competence and responsibilities. Such advocacy-distorted policy interventions in the guise of “alternative analysis” deserve not just the inspector general’s criticism, but also public censure for the dangerous precedent they set for “true believers.” </p>
<p>Leonard B. Zuza<br />
Lusby, Md., Feb. 10, 2007<br />
The writer is a former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst.</p>
<p>•</p>
<p>To the Editor:</p>
<p>The Pentagon inspector general’s report about the intelligence cooked up before the Iraq war is a gut-wrenching account of the betrayal of public trust. Equally stunning were the recommendations that neither criminal charges nor corrective actions within the Defense Department were warranted. </p>
<p>When President Bush recently outlined his war surge strategy for Iraq, he repeatedly mentioned the threat posed by Iran. He continued that theme in his State of the Union speech. He has ordered another aircraft carrier and supporting ships to the Persian Gulf to send a signal to Iran. </p>
<p>Now Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates is citing serial numbers and markings on bomb fragments as “pretty good” evidence that Iran is providing weapons or technology to Iraqi insurgents. </p>
<p>Senator Carl Levin, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, has been criticized by some for dredging up a past that no one can change. But accumulating signs suggest we are being shepherded toward a military conflict with Iran. </p>
<p>Although the painful revelations about past errors may be too late to influence an election, they may help us avoid another tragedy. </p>
<p>Tyler Kokjohn<br />
Glendale, Ariz., Feb. 10, 2007</p>
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		<title>By: David Isenberg</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-29449</link>
		<dc:creator>David Isenberg</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Feb 2007 21:15:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-29449</guid>
		<description>From a senior DoD employee who prefers to remain anonmyous

It has not exactly been a secret, either inside the Pentagon or (at
least for those following the issue) that Douglas Feith, as Under
Secretary for Policy, was one of those continually trying to make a case
for an invasion of Iraq.  The &quot;Office of Special Plans,&quot; headed by Abe
Shulsky, had that as its primary mandate.  And the &quot;intelligence&quot; work
done by Michael Maloof and David Wurmser had the same objective.  But
even if it is argued that those offices were simply to sift through and
analyze large amounts of information, including raw intelligence
reports, it didn&#039;t take a reading of tea leaves for anyone to figure out
that the result that Feith and a number of others wanted was as
compelling a case as possible for war with Iraq. There was, clearly, at
Defense -- as elsewhere -- what might be called a suborning of resources
and personnel for an already-decided policy outcome.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From a senior DoD employee who prefers to remain anonmyous</p>
<p>It has not exactly been a secret, either inside the Pentagon or (at<br />
least for those following the issue) that Douglas Feith, as Under<br />
Secretary for Policy, was one of those continually trying to make a case<br />
for an invasion of Iraq.  The &#8220;Office of Special Plans,&#8221; headed by Abe<br />
Shulsky, had that as its primary mandate.  And the &#8220;intelligence&#8221; work<br />
done by Michael Maloof and David Wurmser had the same objective.  But<br />
even if it is argued that those offices were simply to sift through and<br />
analyze large amounts of information, including raw intelligence<br />
reports, it didn&#8217;t take a reading of tea leaves for anyone to figure out<br />
that the result that Feith and a number of others wanted was as<br />
compelling a case as possible for war with Iraq. There was, clearly, at<br />
Defense &#8212; as elsewhere &#8212; what might be called a suborning of resources<br />
and personnel for an already-decided policy outcome.</p>
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		<title>By: don weadon</title>
		<link>http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/comment-page-1/#comment-29442</link>
		<dc:creator>don weadon</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Feb 2007 20:58:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.psaonline.org/2007/02/12/feith-based-intelligence/#comment-29442</guid>
		<description>Devils in the  Details

To the Editor

It is outrageous that the Department of  Defense Inspector General stated that the actual Office of Special Plans and  its activities would NOT be reviewed or discussed in his report.   

Were it not for its cadre of compromised security operatives,  wild-eyed ideologues and a legion of senior Hill lobbyists (not Middle East  experts) hired through DOD “body shop” contractors to hide their relationship  with the OSP perfidy, this den of trolls would not have been able to package  falsehoods and half truths and serve them up directly to a drooling Vice  President, hungry for a causus belli, rather than properly vetting this  garbage through the Intelligence Community, who would have deemed it all  hogwash.  Well, what with Rumsfeld ordering the trashing of all records  of the OSP and its band of merry fabricators and “consultants” (their  identities are amazing, although still shrouded by the press), it’s no wonder  the IG failed to do his job and kept the most important information hidden.   Have to protect the Mother Ship from those prying folks in  Congress!

And for Douglas Feith to mount a “big lie” counteroffensive  this weekend to avoid liability as the body count escalates, I would not call  the work of his shop and his OSP “inappropriate” -- I would call it  obscene.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Devils in the  Details</p>
<p>To the Editor</p>
<p>It is outrageous that the Department of  Defense Inspector General stated that the actual Office of Special Plans and  its activities would NOT be reviewed or discussed in his report.   </p>
<p>Were it not for its cadre of compromised security operatives,  wild-eyed ideologues and a legion of senior Hill lobbyists (not Middle East  experts) hired through DOD “body shop” contractors to hide their relationship  with the OSP perfidy, this den of trolls would not have been able to package  falsehoods and half truths and serve them up directly to a drooling Vice  President, hungry for a causus belli, rather than properly vetting this  garbage through the Intelligence Community, who would have deemed it all  hogwash.  Well, what with Rumsfeld ordering the trashing of all records  of the OSP and its band of merry fabricators and “consultants” (their  identities are amazing, although still shrouded by the press), it’s no wonder  the IG failed to do his job and kept the most important information hidden.   Have to protect the Mother Ship from those prying folks in  Congress!</p>
<p>And for Douglas Feith to mount a “big lie” counteroffensive  this weekend to avoid liability as the body count escalates, I would not call  the work of his shop and his OSP “inappropriate” &#8212; I would call it  obscene.</p>
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