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Levin: Declassify The Other Gorelick Memo
NewsMax.com ^ | 4/16/04 | Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff

Posted on 04/16/2004 9:17:43 AM PDT by kattracks

The next shoe to drop in the Gorelick-gate scandal may be a still-classified report on the Millennium bomb plot that faults Gorelick's "wall" of separation between prosecutors and intelligence gatherers for nearly blowing the Millennium Bomb Plot probe.

Writing in National Review Online, Landmark Legal Foundation President Mark Levin notes that the Commission is sitting on a damaging post-Millennium-Plot report that chronicles the impact of Gorelick's terrorist-friendly directive, which Attorney General John Ashcroft alluded to on during his Wednesday testimony.

Dubbed the Millennium After Action Review by the Clinton National Security Council, Ashcroft said the report chronicles how al Qaeda's role in the Millennium plot was nearly missed because Gorelick's guidelines blinded U.S. prosecutors to critical intelligence in the case.

Though a hunch by an alert Washington-state Custom's agent led to the capture of would-be Millennium bomber Ahmed Ressam, when he was turned over to the Justice Department for interrogation, they "didn't have a clue who he was," Ashcroft told the Commission.

It took a French magistrate with full access to his own country's counterterrorism intelligence files to tip U.S. probers to the fact that they had nabbed one of al Qaeda's most dangerous operatives.

Ultimately, because of Gorelick's directive, the French magistrate had to travel to the U.S. and testify for seven hours to lay out Ressam's al Qaeda connection.

Said Levin:

The NSC's Millennium After Action Review — which, based on Attorney General Ashcroft's testimony, must be devastating in its analysis of not only this event but of the Gorelick policy — remains classified. . . .

"Given all the past intelligence information that has been made public by the 9/11 Commission — including the August 6, 2001, President's Daily Brief, which had never before been released — there appears to be no legitimate basis for the 9/11 Commission keeping the Review under lock and key. It's time to release it."



TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 911; 911commission; afteractionreport; afteractionreview; alqaeda; ashcroft; clintonfailure; clintonfailures; coverup; gorelick; gorelickmemo; landmarklegal; lax; marklevin; millennium; millenniumbomb; nsc; ressam; sept11; whitewash
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To: Libloather; Alamo-Girl; PhilDragoo; Ragtime Cowgirl; conservogirl; Mia T; Carl/NewsMax
.

How about this 6-4-2002 Thread:


'..MONSOOR IJAZ.. most feared by Demo's about Sept 11th = Judicial Watch Radio Show'

http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/694455/posts



"By the Mid-1990's I knew the CLINTON White House was never going to do anything about the Terrorist activities of Muslim Extremists" =

...MONSOOR IJAZ






.
121 posted on 04/16/2004 4:43:39 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE (Vet-Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.LZXRAY.com)
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To: Miss Marple; Howlin; PhiKapMom; Mo1; My2Cents; Dog; Fracas
PING TO #120
122 posted on 04/16/2004 4:45:08 PM PDT by onyx (Kerry' s a Veteran, but so were Lee Harvey Oswald, Timothy McVeigh and Benedict Arnold)
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To: Libloather
I don't think they will carry it. After all Donald Trump might have taken a sh...
123 posted on 04/16/2004 4:46:45 PM PDT by justshutupandtakeit (America's Enemies foreign and domestic RATmedia agree: Bush must be destroyed.)
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To: kattracks
I should have figured it was a different Levin. Comrade Carl Lenin would never go for this.
124 posted on 04/16/2004 4:48:54 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan ("...and tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take...OUR FREEDOM")
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To: Fracas; Liz; onyx
Nice find!

Consider this. The memo Gorelick wrote that is currently under discussion was written in 1995. Build up the walls between the CIA and FBI so they couldn't talk.

In late 1995/1996 Clinton/Gore and the DNC were receiving boatloads of money from China/Chinese intelligence operatives.

I didn't just fall off the turnip truck! The timing is too perfect. This memo was written for a specific reason. I believe they knew the money was available and had to find a way to do whatever possible to make sure the CIA never told the FBI what they knew about this money. A higher wall around the DNC money aparatus.

Fracas, this article you linked references the investigation that was concluding in 1997. That too confirms the timing of this entire operation.
125 posted on 04/16/2004 4:58:05 PM PDT by terilyn
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To: kattracks
So the Clinton administration crippled our intelligence apparatus so much we had to be notified by the French that we had accidently apprehended a top Al qaeda operative?
126 posted on 04/16/2004 5:05:59 PM PDT by gitmo (Thanks, Mel. I needed that.)
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To: onyx
So, it appears that Mz. Gore-Lick's role at the Clinton Injustice Department was to help obstruct investigations into Clinton scandals. In other words, to be the official "butt coverer" for the Administration. Do I have this correct?
127 posted on 04/16/2004 5:07:42 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: My2Cents
Do I have this correct?




Bull's Eye
128 posted on 04/16/2004 5:22:00 PM PDT by onyx (Kerry' s a Veteran, but so were Lee Harvey Oswald, Timothy McVeigh and Benedict Arnold)
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To: onyx
Bull's Eye

She looks like a "butt-coverer."

129 posted on 04/16/2004 5:25:55 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: kcvl
He says that he THINKS President Bush is calling around town and trashing him. Does that sound like something President Bush would do?!

Your comment reminds me of the conversation W had with Chris Matthews in 2000, when Bush said he enjoyed reading the writings of Winston Churchill, and Matthews asked him if he were just saying that because Churchill is one of his (Matthews') favorites as well. Bush (reportedly) said, "Don't think that I have time to do research on or care what it is YOU like." They're so self-centered, it's disgusting.

These Imperial Media types lead such a sheltered life. I'd really like to get them in a room with about a thousand regular Americans (with a generous sprinkling of Freepers), and let these SOBs know what we really think of them. Line them up -- David Gregory, al-Qaetie Couric, Chris Matthews, The I-Man...line them all up, and give them a turn in the barrel.

130 posted on 04/16/2004 5:32:34 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: Ken H
I think the Creep, David Gregory, is still with NBC.
131 posted on 04/16/2004 5:33:20 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: onyx
BTW, onyx, I love the pics you have on your "About" page, especially the one of W straightening his tie. :-)
132 posted on 04/16/2004 5:38:40 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: mewzilla
I used to get ribbed about needing a tinfoil chapeau. Not any more

I'm trying to get some of that stuff with the gold coating on one side. The Reynold's variety seems to have quite working.

133 posted on 04/16/2004 5:51:37 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: My2Cents
So, it appears that Mz. Gore-Lick's role at the Clinton Injustice Department was to help obstruct investigations into Clinton scandals. In other words, to be the official "butt coverer" for the Administration. Do I have this correct?

Bingo!

134 posted on 04/16/2004 5:52:46 PM PDT by Mo1 (Make Michael Moore cry.... DONATE MONTHLY!!!)
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To: kattracks
As I posted on another thread:

If you've managed to read through all of these threads about the 911 Commission, Gorelick, all of the covering up, etc., can you begin to understand WHY Hillary Clinton will be elected president in 2008, if not before? No, no, a thousand times no! I do not want her to run this country!! But once you start seeing how much has been covered up, how the news media is positively glorifying both Clintons (Hillary being interviewed this evening by Katie Couric), and how many people in government apparently OWE the Clintons, you can understand the power these people have.

Maybe I'll just get old and die in the next few years.

135 posted on 04/16/2004 6:12:21 PM PDT by Maria S ("I'll rule this country by executive order if Congress won't adopt my agenda.'' Bill Clinton, 7/4/98)
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To: CDHart
"Yeah, they'd love to shut it down!
Carolyn"


I think you'd better take a deep breath before you read this:

First lady just doesn't get it

REBECCA EISENBERG

Sunday, February 22, 1998

©2000 San Francisco Examiner
originally printed by the Hearst Examiner

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/examiner/archive/1998/02/22/BUSINESS904.dtl&type=printable

The Net needs "gatekeeping," said Hillary Rodham Clinton to a select group of important people and special reporters last week, demonstrating yet again the government's tendency to be wrong.

The subject came up at a press conference held to hype the White House Millennium Program, a multifaceted "initiative" to mark the momentous occasion. Hillary had been describing the activities, which range from space expeditions to TV variety shows, planned over the next few years to celebrate 2000.

The myriad plans include everything from national television spots highlighting "1,000 years of important events, people and achievements" to robotic missions to Mars, and even a solution to the nefarious "Year 2000 Problem," which could cause many computer systems to crash. The program also includes a number of Net-related projects, including the creation of a "national digital library," consisting of materials from the Library of Congress, and my favorite, a promise to connect every classroom and library in America to the Internet by 2000.

In particular, Hillary ballyhooed the "Millennium Evenings," a continuing series of educational lectures that launched Feb. 11. Themed "Honor the Past, Imagine the Future," the full series will be broadcast on public television - and cybercast over the Internet - from the White House. The next lecture will be held on March 6, according to the White House Web site (www.whitehouse.gov). Because the very same Internet that is broadcasting the White House Millennium Evenings was also responsible for breaking the White House sex scandal, the reporters asked the First Lady if she had rethought the critical remarks she made about the Net's ability to spread "lies."

"We are all going to have to rethink how we deal with this," she answered, "because there are always competing values. There's no free decision that I'm aware of anywhere in life, and certainly with technology that's the case."

Although technology's new developments are "exciting," Hillary continued, "There are a number of serious issues without any kind of editing function or gatekeeping function. What does it mean to have the right to defend your reputation, or to respond to what someone says?"
Hillary doesn't get it. The greatest value of the Internet is the way it provides an easy means of defending your reputation and responding to what someone says.

If someone sends an e-mail accusing you of being a vegan, you can distribute photos of yourself eating Spam. If someone builds a Web site favoring animal testing for cosmetics, you can post a Web site advocating the release of animal slaves.

Similarly, while Hillary condemned the Net for distributing lies "twice around the world before the truth gets out of bed to find its boots," she failed to mention that the Net allows the truth to travel just as fast.

What interferes with truth, in fact, is not the power of the Net to disseminate information, as Hillary suggests. Rather, it is the fact that we are not yet all connected.
It is the "gatekeeping" and "editing" function she hopes for that makes the "right to respond" lack meaning. Instead of worrying about restricting access, she should be worrying about providing it.

Even the promise to connect every classroom and library in America to the Internet by 2000 has been tarnished by the government's desire to filter information.

Two days before the White House cybercast, the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee considered a new bill that would put a content-driven price tag on the promised "universal access."

Dubbed the "Internet School Filtering Act" by its sponsor, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the proposed law would deny federal Internet access subsidies to schools and libraries unless they installed software filters to restrict access to "inappropriate" information.

These are the same software filters about which I complained last December, which almost always refuse to disclose complete lists of sites they block, and often restrict access to any reference to homosexuality, feminism, drug use, criminal activity and - of course - negative product reviews.

Not only do some of these products block access to Web sites that provide information that can be found in school textbooks, the filters often block access to Web conference boards, Usenet newsgroups and even e-mail, if a letter is deemed to contain an offending word.

For those of us - including minors - who have grown accustomed to using the Net as one of our primary means of communication, the mandated use of filters does more harm than good.

"Restricting mass media is one thing," explained a programmer friend on-line. "But restricting personal correspondence - which so much of the Web is - is a step worse." Especially when the decisions of what to restrict are made by the government or, just as heinously, by profit-motivated, private companies.

"The Web makes media transparent," claims Justin Hall on his personal Web site (www.links.net). A teenager himself when he created his home page in January 1994, Justin uses the Net to share his personal experiences with thousands of readers daily.

"As best I see it, this is the least alienating incarnation of this medium," he writes. "No distance, no bullshit objectivity; I'm telling stories about my life, you can either take it or leave it. I'm not going to tell you you have to read it to be hip. I'm not saying I'm the authority on anything but what I been through."

Like most Web diarists, Justin encourages others to do likewise: "Individuals and community groups should post their perspectives; people without pecuniary purpose lend the Net its humanistic edge."

The Web serves yet another purpose: the archiving of information. As stated eloquently by Patrick Farley on his Web diary (www.abattoir.com / prime8) in 1995:
"If enough people load their lives onto the Web, in about 50 years, any person anywhere can peruse the personal histories of thousands, possibly millions of people. Individual lives will be stored electronically, layer upon layer depositing one atop the other like shells of crustaceans deposited on the ocean floor to form fossil records."

These ideas sound a lot like the purported goals of the Millennium project. According to the White House Web site, "White House Millennium Program is for the entire nation. To ensure that this is truly a national, grass-roots effort, the President and the First Lady are inviting all Americans - especially children - to participate, and to make their own gifts to the future."

If the White House meant what it said, it would favor providing computers and unrestricted Net access to all Americans. We cannot leave our marks on history if our words are being edited or blocked.

Declan McCullagh, Internet expert and journalist, explains this apparent contradiction:
"It's hardly surprising that our elected officials don't like the ability of the Internet to provide everyone with a platform," he writes. "Even Thomas Jefferson kvetched about the excesses of the press of his day and endorsed laws that permitted government prosecutions of the press for printing "false facts.' "

We don't need government regulation or censorware in schools to help us find the truth, he argues. We have a gatekeeping function already - our ability to decide for ourselves. We also have an "editor" - a chance to disagree.

It's not the Internet that needs rethinking - the Internet works fine. What needs rethinking is the drive toward closing gates, when what we need is to open them.




136 posted on 04/16/2004 6:24:46 PM PDT by Maria S ("I'll rule this country by executive order if Congress won't adopt my agenda.'' Bill Clinton, 7/4/98)
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To: MizSterious
Glenn Beck is having Jayna Davis on his show on Monday. He would love to see these threads. email him links at me@glennbeck.com
137 posted on 04/16/2004 6:29:22 PM PDT by ovrtaxt (I think the mistake a lot of us make is thinking the state-appointed shrink is our friend.Jack Handy)
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To: ScaniaBoy
"[The combination of 911 Commission and the Internet is lethal. . . . .How long would we've had to wait before all this info would have leaked out if not for the Commission?

Where would we have found and collated this info if not for the Internet? . . .And now? Hopefully we and others will be able to play it all back to the mainstream media - with all the possible fall out. "]

True; hard to imagine how long it would take to disseminate the info we now have at our instant disposal. The power of 'information'/knowledge is real. And the challenge is making it work for the good.

138 posted on 04/16/2004 9:43:22 PM PDT by cricket (The Democrats and the terrorists have a common enemy. . .)
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To: Maria S
I needed more than a deep breath -- it's amazing how power-hungry this woman is. If she ever becomes president, we're in a whole lot of trouble.

Carolyn

139 posted on 04/17/2004 4:14:47 AM PDT by CDHart
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To: risk
Bump!
140 posted on 04/17/2004 8:50:50 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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