Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 --- Center for American Progress > Thu, 15 Jul 2004 08:55:37 -0700 > Progress Report: More Proof They Knew > " Center for American Progress " > <progress > Center for American Progress - Progress Report by David Sirota, Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin July 15, 2004 INTELLIGENCEMore Proof They KnewMEDIAFox Distorts, Fox ConnivesLABORUnderhanded Overtime UNDER THE RADAR INTELLIGENCE More Proof They Knew This morning's Los Angeles Times uncovers an explosive document buried at the end of the recent Senate Intelligence report. It shows that before Colin Powell's now-discredited U.N. speech justifying war in Iraq, State Department analysts told Powell and top administration officials about " dozens of factual problems " in the address (which was written by Vice President Cheney's staff). According to the Jan. 31, 2003 memo, there were problems with 38 of the claims made in the speech draft, which was crafted at the behest of the White House. (It was " intended to be the Bush administration's most compelling case " for war in Iraq.) In response, 28 were either " removed from the draft or altered " #8211; but the others were left in. Powell was reportedly irate when first given the speech: According to the 9/3/03 U.S. News & World Report, Powell threw the speech in the air, yelling, " I'm not reading this. This is bulls--t. " This past May, he reiterated his displeasure with the speech, saying, " It turned out that the sourcing was inaccurate and wrong, and in some cases deliberately misleading. " ADMINISTRATION WAS WARNED: Analysts advised Powell that many of the claims were " weak " and " warned Powell against making an array of allegations they deemed implausible. " They also warned Powell that he " was being put in the position of drawing the most sinister conclusions from satellite images, communications intercepts and human intelligence reports that had alternative, less-incriminating explanations. " DISCREDITED INFORMATION MADE IT IN, PART I: In the speech to the U.N., Powell " showed aerial images of a supposed decontamination vehicle circling a suspected chemical weapons site. " The State Department explicitly warned against using this claim. " We caution that Iraq has given #8230; what may be a plausible account for this activity #8212; that this was an exercise involving the movement of conventional explosives. " They concluded that the presence of a water truck " is common in such an event. " DISCREDITED INFORMATION MADE IT IN, PART II: The State Department disagreed that the aluminum tubes imported by Iraq could be used in a nuclear weapons program, a claim also made by President Bush in his State of the Union speech. The State Department memo said, " it is taken out of context and is highly misleading. Meantime, we will work with our IC colleagues to fix some more egregious errors in the tubes discussion. " MEDIA Fox Distorts, Fox Connives Just days after its release, " Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, " a film co-sponsored by the Center for American Progress, is selling like hotcakes, bouncing between the #1 and #2 most popular DVDs on Amazon.com. (Watch a preview of the film, and read major news coverage of it.) Not surprisingly, that has brought on a blaze of attacks from Fox News, whose credibility as a news organization has been severely damaged. In a diatribe that only reinforces Fox's unethical mix of conservative commentary and " news, " Fox anchor/commentator John Gibson called one of the movie's sponsors, MoveOn.org, a " liberal hatchet organization " and claimed " America's major media are dominated by the left - 80-some percent of reporters are self-described liberals. " That, of course, is untrue: As Media Matters notes, a report released on May 23 by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found that only 34% of national journalists identified themselves as liberal, and 61% identified themselves as moderate or conservative. Despite this onslaught, however, more evidence emerged yesterday of Fox's true bias. Georgetown law professor David Cole recounts first-hand in The Nation how Fox's Bill O'Reilly deliberately misled his viewers about Iraq. And now, thirty-three separate memos from Fox News director John Moody have been published for the first time, showing just how far the network's executives have gone to skew news coverage. MEMOS URGE DOWNPLAYING OF U.S. CASUALTIES & VIOLENCE: Amid White House calls for more positive news coverage of Iraq, Moody's memos were instructing Fox correspondents to downplay U.S. casualties and violence plaguing Iraq. In a 3/24/04 memo, Moody complained, " the real news in Iraq is being obscured by temporary tragedy. " A few weeks later, he instructs reporters to " not fall into the easy trap of mourning the loss of U.S. lives. " MEMOS TRANSLATE INTO RIGHT-WING SPIN: Moody's memo on 6/2/03 highlighted FCC Chairman Michael Powell's interview on Fox after the FCC's decision to follow Rupert Murdoch's demand to loosen ownership rules. Moody said, " let's do a few hits on the commission's vote. " That translated into Murdoch-style propaganda, with a Fox News anchor that day disparaging the previous rules preventing media consolidation as " written back when we had black and white TV, rabbit-ear antennas and three channels to choose from - obviously, the media world is very different today. " While Powell's decision was the most radical rollback of media law in a generation, the Fox News anchor claimed, " In fact, this wasn't really a major overhaul. You simply loosened the rules a bit. " MEMOS DEFEND JOURNALISTICALLY UNETHICAL BEHAVIOR: As " Outfoxed " shows, Fox News viciously attacked former Bush counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke after he delivered a devastating account of how the White House botched the response to 9/11. And Moody's 3/24/04 memo shows just how dismissive of journalistic ethics the network became in its quest to destroy Clarke. In that memo, Moody justifies Fox's airing of an anonymous briefing Clarke gave on background during his tenure at the White House. When Clarke gave the briefing, journalists agreed not to use his name, as he was speaking generally for the White House, not giving his own opinion. But instead of respecting that agreement, Fox decided to follow the White House's smear campaign and became the first network to air the briefing, breaking a long-standing journalistic tradition of not exposing sources correspondents agreed to leave unattributed. The network then claimed Clarke's two-year-old statements called into question his new criticisms, even though he was no longer working for the White House and now free to air his opinions. As Moody bragged, " Neither [Fox correspondent Jim Angle] nor Fox did anything wrong, except accomplish some good reporting. " FOX INSIDER ADMITS CHALLENGING GOP 'NOT THE FOX WAY': Cablenewser, a respected cable industry trade publication, published an anonymous e-mail from a senior Fox News official in which the official admits that challenging Republicans and conservatives " is not the Fox way. " Instead, the official says, the mantra is " Let the GOP off easy, and pound the Democrat du jour. " The official, who according to the trade publication " has been with the network since it premiered, " says that " to suggest that the on-air talent and producers are free to report the news as they see fit is disingenuous at best " #8211; a point corroborated by former Fox employees interviewed in " Outfoxed. " Of course, that did not stop Fox from disparaging those former employees in a statement this week. But as the Fox official says, the decision to attack Fox critics " can be laid right at [Fox News executive/former GOP operative] Roger Ailes' doorstep... nothing short of scorched-earth will do as far as slamming these [ex-employees]. " FOX'S FRIENDS ADMIT PREMISE OF 'OUTFOXED': While Fox News desperately tries to defend its credibility, some of its own right-wing allies are corroborating the premise of " Outfoxed. " Insight Magazine, the far-right publication of the Washington Times, admitted Fox's news bias, noting themselves that the network is a " conservative news network that claims to be fair and balanced. " Review a long history of Fox's biased reporting. LABOR Underhanded Overtime According to two new studies published yesterday, thousands of workers are going to lose overtime compensation under the Bush administration's new labor regulations. One study, by the Economic Policy Institute, shows under the new rules published by the Department of Labor, 6 million American workers will be stripped of their overtime pay. At the same time, a report by three former top-ranking Labor Department officials found " implementation of these new regulations will harm rather than promote and protect the interests of U.S. workers and their families. " The Fair Labor Standards Act established overtime rules to ensure employers paid workers " time and a half " if they worked over 40 hours a week. But the Bush administration has sided with corporate interests, creating rules which protect corporate profits by denying workers their right to overtime pay. The new rules go into effect August 23. (Read a summary of the issue by American Progress's Scott Lilly.) THE EPI STUDY: The new overtime rules published by the Department of Labor will strip overtime pay from 6 million American workers. One way to do that is to play with the language to redefine workers' roles. Who's at risk? The Washington Post reports, " nearly 2 million administrative workers who can be classified as team leaders would lose overtime protection. An additional 920,000 workers who can be reclassified as learned professionals, even though they do not have college degrees, would be similarly affected. It also said 1.4 million workers could lose overtime protection by being reclassified as executives, as could an estimated 130,000 chefs and cooks, 160,000 financial service workers and 117,000 teachers and computer programmers. " THE LABOR REPORT: Former Department of Labor officials John Fraser, Monica Gallagher and Gail Coleman released an independent review of the overtime regulation this past Thursday. The three, who worked under both Democratic and Republican administrations, found the change was especially significant as " more classes of workers and a greater proportion of the work force overall will be exempt than we believe the Congress could have originally intended. " The report also found that, with these rules, the Labor Department " fails to protect and promote the interests of working people in the United States consistent with its core organizational mission. " ADMINISTRATION TIPS ON STIFFING WORKERS: Last January, AP reported the Department of Labor was providing employers tips on how to " avoid paying overtime to some of the 1.3 million low-income workers who would become eligible this year. " Among the handy hints: " cut the wages of the 1.3 million low-wage workers newly eligible for overtime, then add the overtime to equal the original salary; or raise salaries to the new#8230;annual threshold so they would be ineligible. " See more on all of the anti-worker policies the Bush administration is pursuing. SETTING THE BAR TOO LOW: The Bush administration claims their new rules guarantee overtime pay for workers who earn as much as $23,660 per year, up from the current ceiling of $8,060. But the new figure is still extraordinarily low, only $5,000 above the poverty level for a family of four. Christine Owens, AFL-CIO director of public policy, notes that " families with that income [$23,660] qualify for food stamps. " And, as EPI points out, since the salary figure is set and doesn't take inflation into consideration, " it will protect fewer and fewer workers over time. " GIVING THE FOX A HENHOUSE: The Department of Labor is an agency which is supposed to exist protect the interests of average workers. That makes Ed Frank, the Labor Department's top spokesman in the effort to gut overtime laws, a strange choice for protector. Frank previously acted as the top spokesman for the National Federation of Independent Business #8211; the main special interest representing businesses who pushed for the overtime changes. BANKING #8211; RIGGING THE SYSTEM: Senate investigators have concluded Riggs Bank, which employs President Bush's uncle Jonathan as a top executive, " courted business from former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and helped him hide millions of dollars in assets from international prosecutors. " Meanwhile, the top federal bank examiner on the case, Ashley Lee, " kept details about Riggs's relationship with Pinochet out of the Riggs case file. " She also recommended that Riggs " not be punished for failing to take steps designed to prevent money laundering. " Subsequently, Lee retired from the government and became a senior executive at Riggs. The revelations come just weeks after " the bank agreed to pay $25 million in civil penalties for what federal regulators called 'willful, systemic' violation of anti-money-laundering laws in its dealings with the embassies of Saudi Arabia and Equatorial Guinea. " CIVIL LIBERTIES #8211; RIGGING THE VOTE: Last week the House rejected #8211; by a single vote #8211; an amendment that would have scaled back controversial provisions of the Patriot Act. Now, some of those who voted against the provision are having second thoughts. Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) says, " it is quite possible that I looked at [the bill] incorrectly. " His Chief of Staff told reporters that Smith now " believes he should have voted the other way. " Nevertheless, it is not clear that Smith's vote would have changed the outcome because Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-TX) " extended the scheduled 15 minutes allowed for the vote until they had convinced enough Republicans to switch sides. " DETAINEES #8211; RED CROSS SUSPECTS MORE GHOSTS: The International Committee of the Red Cross said Tuesday " that it suspected the United States of hiding detainees in lockups around the globe. Some suspected terrorists reported by the FBI as captured have never turned up in detention centers, and the United States has failed to reply to demands for a list of detainees, said Antonella Notari, a spokeswoman for the Red Cross, which has been granted access to thousands of prisoners in Iraq and elsewhere. " The report comes after Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld admitted to ordering prison authorities to hold at least one suspected terrorist at a high-level detention center in Iraq without listing him on the prison's rolls. Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba, the Army officer who investigated abuses at the Abu Ghraib prison, criticized the practice of allowing ghost detainees as " deceptive, contrary to Army doctrine, and in violation of international law. " MEDICARE #8211; REIMPORTATION SAVES SPRINGFIELD: The Washington Post reports 3,200 city workers in the " deficit-plagued " town of Springfield, MA have saved the city $2.5 million by opting " to order their prescription drugs from a licensed Canadian pharmacy. " Springfield, which has called its experiment with drug reimportation a " rousing success, " is one of a dozen cities which have ignored the " admonitions of Bush administration officials and drug companies who say purchasing medications outside the United States is dangerous and illegal. " The administration has sided with drug companies against reimportation, even though it " can't name a single American who has been injured or killed by drugs bought from licensed Canadian pharmacies. " A poll released Wednesday by the advocacy group AARP found that 79 percent of people older than 50 think reimportation should be legalized. GAY MARRIAGE #8211; CONGRESS CUTS OFF DEBATE ON AMENDMENT: Rebuffing conservative attempts to advance the only constitutional amendment in American history that would explicitly deny a group of Americans equal rights and privileges, the Senate voted yesterday to " block a White House-backed constitutional amendment to bar same-sex marriages. " The vote " amounted to an embarrassing defeat for President Bush and conservative leaders who had pushed hard for approval#8230;The proposed amendment, which defines marriage as existing only between a man and a woman, also includes language that some have interpreted to cast legal doubt on civil unions. " The bill " got the support of only 48 senators -- 12 short of the 60 needed and 19 short of the two-thirds majority that it would take to amend the Constitution. " Check out American Progress Talking Points on the proposed amendment. #160;Don't Miss DAILY TALKING POINTS: The Failed Politics of Marriage ALTERMAN: Fox Outfoxes Itself AIDS: United States spurns Annan's plea to adequately finance global AIDS fund MEDIA: The American Prospect sponsors a panel on Fox News and how to fix the media INTELLIGENCE: Josh Marshall says there's more to be learned about White House's fraudulent claims regarding uranium sales between Niger and Iraq PRISONER ABUSE: Lawmakers continue to probe the extent of wrongdoing and who should be held accountable INTIMIGATE: Sen. Harkin marks one-year anniversary of White House leak of CIA operative name; today plans to call for VP Cheney to be put under oath. Contact The Progress Report: pr. #160;Daily Grill " 80-some percent of reporters are self-described liberals. " - John Gibson, Fox News Host, 7/13/04 VERSUS " About a third of national journalists (34%) and somewhat fewer local journalists (23%) describe themselves as liberals. " - The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, 5/23/04 #160;Daily Outrage Under the new rules published by the Department of Labor, 6 million American workers will be stripped of their overtime pay. #160;Archives Progress Report Columns Cartoons Sign up for e-mail delivery of The Progress Report Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.