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Attorney General Gonzales: Indict the New York Times
The American Thinker ^ | June 24, 2006 | William Lalor

Posted on 06/24/2006 3:50:38 PM PDT by oldtimer2

Attorney General Gonzales: Indict the New York Times

June 24th, 2006

Within days of the September 11th attacks, the head of Reuters’ worldwide news division, explaining the agency’s refusal to use the word “terrorist,” made the famous fatuous remark that “one man’s freedom terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.”

Reuters, it seemed, wouldn’t be taking sides in America’s war on Islamic jihad, because as journalists, Reuters didn’t believe the American people and our allies are any “better” than our putrid enemies. Such is the repulsive state of the “moral equivalence” mongers in what passes for news journalism, even among those in the profession who are privileged to be United States citizens (among journalists, the Reuters quotation wasn’t condemned – it was repeated).

As repulsive as Reuters’ rhetoric was, those words alone didn’t hurt anyone. Since then, though, as the war on terrorism has been waged, journalists have increasingly moved from rhetoric to deliberate and outward anti-American action, with real consequences to the well-being of the American people. The so-called “paper of record,” the New York Times, is leading journalism’s descent, and has repeatedly placed its disgust for the Bush administration and, purportedly, its journalistic “objectivity,” above the security prerogatives of the American people.

Last December, the Times spurned a request by the Bush administration to keep the federal wiretapping program confidential, opting instead to expose it for jihadists to peruse. Why? Because Times editors hoped the program would “get legs” as a scandal for the Bush administration, the kind the Times and its “drive-by media” cohorts have been anxious to pin on the President since he—in their warped view—“stole the election.”

Any concern the Times might have had about compromising a crucial anti-terror program placed a distant second to its bash-Bush lust.

Soon after the wiretapping story broke, it became clear that the Times’ strategy had backfired. A majority of Americans recognized the program for what it is—an important tool in tracking down jihadists in our midst, and a legitimate use of power during a perilous time in America’s history. Despite the President’s bad poll numbers, the public wasn’t as feverishly anti-Bush as the Times had banked on, and like so many other stories aimed to take down our President, the wiretapping scoop died with a pathetic whimper.

Evidently, though, the Times remains not only blind to its own detachment from reality but hell-bent on subverting America’s self-defense against Islamic jihadism. On Friday, it dealt another blow to American intelligence-gathering and gift-wrapped another windfall for jihadists, this time running a story that details the federal government’s classified “SWIFT” program, which monitors international banking activities of suspected Al Qaeda associates. Like the wiretapping program, which even the Times acknowledged was once the government’s “most closely guarded secret,” SWIFT is considered “extremely valuable” to the feds because of its “awesome” ability to sift through mind-numbing financial data to track down jihadists and those who bankroll them – it is a “mother lode” of intelligence data, and it’s been a success. But none of this matters to the Times, which chirped that familiar and self-serving “potential for abuse” sing-song.

In other words, Friday’s story is the same, tired old non-story of executive “abuse of power.” We don’t need a federal law to know that what the Times has done is wrong, and the Times will again be disappointed when it discovers the majority of Americans recognize the need to remain on war footing, even if this means occasionally offending civil libertarians. In another era, the New York Times’ marginalization (and falling circulation) might be punishment enough for having become an anti-Americans shill.

But if we’re truly fighting a “war” on Islamic jihad, and if President Bush expects the American people to remain steadfast in fighting it, then his Administration must not let the Times continue to disregard the law. Congress passed the Espionage Act of 1917 specifically to punish the kind of subversive acts in which the Times engaged by exposing the wiretapping and SWIFT programs.

Among other things, the Act makes it a crime, essentially, to aid the success of America’s enemies. It is a law forged in wartime that recognizes wartime imperatives, and it’s an exceptionally sensible precaution for a free-speaking country on a long-term defense footing. Last month, after the wiretap story had wilted and died, Attorney General Gonzales suggested on a Sunday talk show that the 1917 Act can, in the interest of national security, be used to prosecute journalists who disclose classified information.

The very next day, the Times story that reported the Gonzales interview claimed journalists are not subject to the Act. Incredibly, the paper seems to believe journalists can ignore the Act, precisely because they are journalists. (On what grounds? Because the Times says so.)

Especially after yesterday’s disclosure, it is almost as though the Times is taunting Gonzales – based, I suppose, on a hunch the Bush administration doesn’t have the political will to indict the paper. Like many Americans, I am simply nauseated that the New York Times claims immunity from the law in order to splash morning headlines with a memo to jihadists explaining how to evade detection by America’s secret defense programs. It’s not my place here to interpret the Espionage Act. I realize, too, that it’s not yet been used to prosecute journalists.

But laws are advocated, and interpreted, in light of the exigencies of the day, and especially where national defense is at issue, they must be aggressively enforced and tested at critical times. With the cancer of Islamic jihad metastasizing around the U.S., this is very much such a time, and I believe the Justice Department should aggressively seek to protect America’s interests, like any lawyer is bound to do for a client, and pursue an indictment of the New York Times and those responsible for violating the law.

Bill Lalor is an attorney in New York City and publisher of Citizen Journal

William Lalor


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: bushhatred; classified; doj; espionage; espionageact; information; leak; msmjihad; new; nyslimes; nyt; nytimes; swift; times; wot; york
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We need to get angry and send a call to Congress , The Justice Dept, and the White House just as we did with Harriet Myers and amnesty for illegal immigrants.

We can pressure politicians in an election year and get heard.

1 posted on 06/24/2006 3:50:40 PM PDT by oldtimer2
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To: oldtimer2

thank you


2 posted on 06/24/2006 3:55:04 PM PDT by YaYa123
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To: oldtimer2

The Sulzbergs are the owners. Frog march the bunch!


3 posted on 06/24/2006 3:56:10 PM PDT by outofsalt ("If History teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything")
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To: oldtimer2

I don't think anything is going to happen. The NYT will just be considered even more a Bat Boy Newspaper


4 posted on 06/24/2006 3:56:39 PM PDT by Dallas59
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To: oldtimer2

Now we're talking... thanks OT.


5 posted on 06/24/2006 3:57:02 PM PDT by AliVeritas ("One for all , all for kicking *ss and taking names" ...Scratch taking names.)
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To: outofsalt

I am more interested in who told the NYT about the program.


6 posted on 06/24/2006 3:57:29 PM PDT by Texasforever (I have neither been there nor done that.)
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To: oldtimer2

There is this, and just today the NY Times printed a "classified" briefing from Gen. Casey on the reduction of troops from Iraq by 2007 beginning this September. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/25/world/middleeast/25military.html?ex=1308888000&en=f51dc3bd1a5ff247&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

They need to set up a sting.


7 posted on 06/24/2006 4:01:06 PM PDT by Humal
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To: oldtimer2

Who's telling the NYT all this stuff?


8 posted on 06/24/2006 4:02:15 PM PDT by Dallas59
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To: oldtimer2

The Republican Party and the Bush Administration will never have the guts to stand up to the LSM.


9 posted on 06/24/2006 4:05:14 PM PDT by D-Chivas
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To: Texasforever

Yes we need the leakers also, but the Sulzbergs edit, own, & publish so they are fully culpable accomplices.


10 posted on 06/24/2006 4:07:53 PM PDT by outofsalt ("If History teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything")
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To: oldtimer2

The FBI needs to investigate this matter and obtain an indictment from a federal grand jury. If warranted, the NY Times and the individual(s) who leaked the classified information to the NY Times, need to be prosecuted.


11 posted on 06/24/2006 4:10:22 PM PDT by Signalman
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To: Humal

No one needs the NYT to be aware of what is going on, coming down. One could see this coming a few months back. Accessing FR, watching the cable news talking heads (occasionally they know what they are talking about)one could see this coming.


12 posted on 06/24/2006 4:11:21 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: Humal

Its according to what the meaning of classified is?


13 posted on 06/24/2006 4:12:49 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: Bobkk47

Contacts for US Dept. of Justice

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14 posted on 06/24/2006 4:13:16 PM PDT by Signalman
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To: oldtimer2; billhilly; All

"We need to get angry and send a call to Congress, The Justice Dept, and the White House just as we did with Harriet Myers and amnesty for illegal immigrants.
We can pressure politicians in an election year and get heard."

That's the ticket. Let's pressure our elected officials to find and punish the leaker.


15 posted on 06/24/2006 4:13:22 PM PDT by girlangler (I'd rather be fishing)
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To: oldtimer2; billhilly; All

"We need to get angry and send a call to Congress, The Justice Dept, and the White House just as we did with Harriet Myers and amnesty for illegal immigrants.
We can pressure politicians in an election year and get heard."

That's the ticket. Let's pressure our elected officials to find and punish the leaker.


16 posted on 06/24/2006 4:13:54 PM PDT by girlangler (I'd rather be fishing)
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To: Texasforever
I am more interested in who told the NYT about the program
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''

The writers of the article hold the key to the leakers identity. Prosecute the leaker through the writer and force the source to be revealed or impose jail time for contempt of court. If the reporter talks, you have the leaker. If the reporter doesn't, you have the reporter. Let him rot in a jail cell until he gives up the name.
Either way you make someone pay and set a precedent for the next time someone tries to aid the enemy.
17 posted on 06/24/2006 4:15:34 PM PDT by photodawg
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To: Texasforever
Leaks like a


18 posted on 06/24/2006 4:20:11 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: outofsalt
Yes we need the leakers also, but the Sulzbergs edit, own, & publish so they are fully culpable accomplices
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''

The paper and the publishers will never go down. The reporter is the key to the source of the information. The leaker is the one criminally responsible. both of these individuals can and should be forced to pay a huge price for their treasonous, seditious behavior. It would end much of this behavior and send the right message that we will not compromise national security for some esoteric interpretation of the first amendment allowing the press to commit treason in the name of free speech.
19 posted on 06/24/2006 4:21:59 PM PDT by photodawg
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To: girlangler
That's the ticket. Let's pressure our elected officials to find and punish the leaker.

One of our elected officials could very well be the leaker as I think was the case with the phone intercept program revealed a few months ago.

Don't forget, certain members of Congress were briefed on both programs.

20 posted on 06/24/2006 4:24:36 PM PDT by NEPA (Repeal the 17th)
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