The White House on Wednesday made a rare public demand for a formal correction from the New York Times for implying that it had misled the US public over the destruction of CIA interrogation videos. The US Justice Department, the White House, and US lawmakers have all launched probes after CIA chief Michael Hayden revealed earlier this month that the agency in 2005 destroyed tapes of interrogations of two Al-Qaeda suspects. Late Tuesday, the Times reported that four top White House lawyers were more involved than previously acknowledged in the decision. Citing current and former administration and intelligence officials, which it did not name, the Times said that the four took part in discussions with the Central Intelligence Agency in 2003 and 2005 on the question of whether to keep recordings of the sessions with two Al-Qaeda operatives. Those who took part, the officials said, included Alberto R Gonzales, who served as White House counsel until early 2005; David S Addington, who was the counsel to Vice-President Dick Cheney and is now his chief of staff; John B Bellinger III, who until January 2005 was the senior lawyer at the National Security Council; and Harriet E Miers, who succeeded Gonzales as White House counsel.“The accounts indicate that the involvement of White House officials in the discussions before the destruction of the tapes in November 2005 was more extensive than Bush administration officials have acknowledged,” it said. Other officials told the Times that no-one at the White House called for destroying the tapes - but that no White House lawyer ordered that they be preserved or warned that destroying them might be illegal. White House spokeswoman Dana Perino angrily denounced the Times’ sub-headline - “White House Role Was Wider Than It Said” - in a highly unusual written statement that demanded a formal correction. “The New York Times’ inference that there is an effort to mislead in this matter is pernicious and troubling, and we are formally requesting that NYT correct the sub-headline of this story,” she said. Perino said that the White House has simply refused to comment on the matter beyond saying that US President George W Bush did not recall being aware of the videos or the decision to destroy them prior to being briefed recently.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Bush lawyers discussed fate of CIA tapes:
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Hafiz Imran
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12/19/2007 07:33:00 PM
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