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Notice!
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new security system prevents email messages coming through the AOL
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Announcing
TBR Ebooks!
Starting
with a new publication concerning the background behind the 9/11
attacks, TBR News will be presenting a series of interesting,
informative and definitive works for our readers. Future titles will
include the complete Voice of the White House with much more added
material that was considered too controversial to post, the
heavily-censored Armenian Holocaust of 1916, the Bush-Lay private
correspondence, the Assassination of JFK,Pearl Harbor intrigues and
rare documents, Malaparte’s inside study of the making of
revolution, sensational selected articles from the German Rudolf
historical revision files, unpublished before Rudolf’s arrest and
forced deportation to Germany, World War II studies of holocaust
history, taken from secret German files and much more. Please see
the title page for more information.
The
Editors
Descending
Into Darkness: The Harring Report
A
well-researched study into the background of the 9/11 attack: Who
knew what and when did they know it. Russian and German intelligence
material, not published before show that the U.S. had ample
warning...and did nothing about it.
THE
VOICE OF THE WHITE HOUSE
The
full collection of the twice-weekly commentary of what is really
going on inside the corrupt Bush White House. The spectrum includes
the Gannon scandal, the planned invasion of Iran, many stories of
stupidity and corruption coupled with biting sarcasm. Interesting to
note that many, if not most, of the predictions have come true.
REGICIDE
The Official Assassination of John F. Kennedy
A
landmark book that sold very well in hardback, this work contains
actual intelligence documents concerning the inside U.S. plans to
kill Kennedy; the reasons, the methods and the results.
The
Final Reckoning: An Analysis of Demographics in Holocaust Literature
By
Harold Kreig, Lt.Col, AUS ret.
This
is the first rational, heavily documented work on the subject of the
Holocaust. Colonel Krieg has taken thousands of documents, including
the official SS concentration camp records from 1935 through 1945
and official U.S. government postwar analysis of the system and the
casualties and causes of death and produced a book that is highly
informative and readable. Heavily footnoted and annotated,
‘The Final Reckoning’ is logical and compelling and is an
historical work that should be read through by any student of the
period and subject.
Coup
D’Etat: The Technique Of Revolution
By
Curzio Malaparte
First
published in Italy by Curzio Malaparte in 1928, this is a seminal
work on historical seizures of power from Napoleon through Hitler.
Gestapo-Chief:
The CIA & Heinrich Müller by Gregory Douglas
In 1948, the former head of Hitelr’s Gestapo was
interviewed by senior officials of the CIA in Switzerland where Müller
had been in hiding since the end of the Second World War. His
interview, for Colonel James Critchfield of the CIA’s Gehlen
Organization, runs to nearly a thousand pages and for years was
hidden in the CIA’s files.
This is a translation of a part of the interview, which was
initially conducted in German and then translated into English for
CIA use.
It is a fascinating series of historical episodes covering
both the Axis and Allied sides with comments on Hitler, Stalin,
Roosevelt, Henry Wallace, Winston Churchill, the 20th of
July bomb plot against Hitler, Bishop von Galen’s heroic, and
successful, attacks on the Nazis and their euthanasia program, the
concentration camps, the Duke of Windsor, the Roger Casement diaries
and many more fascinating and insightful views of a man who ran the
most effective counter-intelligence agency in modern times.
There is also extensive information on the attempts on the
part of the CIA to silence or discredit the fact that the Gestapo
Chief worked for the United States and eventually came to live in
Washington, D.C. as part of the notorious “Operation Paperclip.”
Fascinating inside views of many top
Nazis and CIA officials.
The
CIA COvenant: Nazis in Washington
by Gregory Douglas
* From the end of
World War II, the American CIA imported thousands of Nazis into the
United States to work for them, many on the list of wanted war
criminals
*One of the most
important of these was Heinrich Mueller, once head of Hitler's
Gestapo. Mueller was recruited by Colonel James Critchfield who ran
the CIA's "Gehnel Organization' in Munich.
* Mueller kept
journals and this book is a translation of three years (1948-1951)
of notes and observations made of top CIA officials, President
Truman, top U.S. government officials, plans for murder, thefts,
kidnappings, wholesale thefts of public money and a terrifying
pattern of uncontrolled ambition, unchecked by any person or agency.
* Also included are
CIA and other agency's activities that have never been revealed.
*Mueller's deals in
stolen Nazi art for the CIA are covered in detail.
*Also to be found are
the steps the frightened CIA have taken to prevent the publication,
sales or distribution of this work.
An
Essay on the Principle of Population
by
Thomas Malthus
The
1798 classic study of how supplies of food do not keep up with an
expanding population
Malthus'
theory is that population growth is geometric while the food supply
increase is arithmetic.
A
very literate and current study that clearly highlights present and
current population problems
With
the world's population higher than ever before, this is a work of
great and current interest
The Voice of the White
House
February 19, 2006: “I have been informed recently by three
different Beltway people in positions of knowledge, that important
Republican backers are afraid that the perceived gross incompetence
of the Bush Administration cannot be reversed and will only
increase.
Therefore, they have
decided that Vice President Dick Cheney must be made the focus of
growing public anger directed at the endless and senseless war in
Iraq, the rising prices of gasoline, the slumping eonomy, the very
valid perception of the Bush Administration as corrupt and
inefficient and must go
and that for the next three years, Bush needs to have a moderate
and saleable Republican vice president that can effectively run
in '08.
Also, with the Mid-Terms
coming up in November, they feel that if Cheney isn't booted out, now,
that the Republicans may well lose one, or both, houses as a result
of these elections.
Fear and loss of power is a
wonderful motivator.
Cheney is an arrogant shit
who pushes the weaker Bush around, pays no attention whatsoever to
his staff and does exactly what he pleases, when he pleases.
He was the man behind the
disastrous Iraqi war, the torture of prisoners, the subversion of
both Georgia and the Ukraine, a strong voice for the invasion and
neutralizing of Venezuela, the destruction of Hamas in Palestine,
total support for Israel, has pushed frantically for a universal
draft and in general has done terrible damage to the image of not
only the White House but the country.
He will never abandon his
power position voluntarily and will only grow more truculent and
domineering as challenges to his person increase so the
question now going around the upper circles of Washington and the
top Republican leadership in Congress is how to oust this dangerous
boor without Cheney fighting back, using inside knowledge that
would not only wreck Bush but his administration and the prospects
of the Republican party as well
The growing press attacks
on Cheney are being orchestrated by Those On High and in actuality,
no one cares if he had a few drinks and then shot his friend at
point blank range during a quail hunt. His actions, and those of his
staff, immediately after the incident, would lend credence to the
strong rumors that Cheney has too much to drink and overreacted to
someone running towards him with a weapon. His utter arrogance in
not bothering to inform the President or even top White House staff
after the incident and his obvious determination to ignore the
unfortunate accident is typical of the man. His behavior has
reflected negatively, not only on his own character but has made the
White House look like it was run by liars, obfuscators and fools.”
The
Shot Heard Round the World
He peppered a man in the face,
but didn't tell his boss. Inside Dick Cheney's dark, secretive
mind-set—and the forces that made it that way.
By Evan Thomas
Newsweek
Feb. 27, 2006 issue –
Dick
Cheney has never been your normal politician. He has never seemed as
eager to please, as needy for votes and approval and headlines as,
say, Bill Clinton. Cheney can seem taciturn, self-contained, a
little gloomy; in recent years, his manner has been not just
unwelcoming but stand-offish. This is not to say, however, that he
is entirely modest and self-effacing, or that he does not crave
power as much as or more than any office-seeker. This, after all, is
a man who, in conducting a search for George W. Bush's vice
president, picked himself. Indeed, since 9/11, Cheney has struck a
pose more familiar to readers of Greek tragedies than the daily
Hotline. At times, he appears to be the lonely leader, brooding in
his tent, knowing that doom may be inevitable, but that the battle
must be fought, and that glory can be eternal.
If,
as he ponders the Threat Matrix at his daily intelligence briefing,
Cheney really sees himself as a modern Achilles or Hector on the
plains at Troy, he is not just being grandiose. A few weeks after
9/11, NEWSWEEK has learned, Cheney worried that he and his family
and his staff might have been exposed in an anthrax attack.
According to knowledgeable former officials, a mysterious letter
turned up at the vice president's mansion. (A former senior
law-enforcement official recalled that sensors went off.) The alarm
turned out to be false. Still, to be safe, Cheney and his entourage
began taking Cipro, the powerful antibiotic. The story was hushed
up. (Cheney's office referred NEWSWEEK to the Secret Service, which
declined to comment.) Cheney prefers to be a quiet warrior, severe
perhaps, but not bleak—just resolute.
Stoicism
can be a great attribute in a leader. "I have no
feelings," the statesman Gen. George C. Marshall once said,
"except for those I reserve for Mrs. Marshall." And there
can be no doubt that, privately, Cheney was badly upset by shooting
another man, 78-year-old Texas lawyer Harry Whittington, in a
hunting accident. That night Cheney sat alone on the porch of his
guesthouse, saying very little as others came and went. "He was
shaken, crushed, miserable," his host, Katharine Armstrong,
told NEWSWEEK. "I could have gotten up and wrapped my arms
around the vice president." But she didn't; no one did. (Lynne
Cheney had not accompanied her husband on the trip.)
In
human terms, it is perfectly understandable why Cheney was in no
mood to talk to reporters then or for several days thereafter. It is
a little odd, however, that he did not speak to President George W.
Bush until Monday morning, 36 hours after the shooting, and just as
peculiar that Bush did not call him. The talking heads immediately
speculated that Bush had somehow cooled on the vice president for
his handling of the shooting incident, for pushing the invasion of
Iraq, for becoming a lightning rod for administration critics.
Cheney
is often lauded as that rare No. 2 who, having no political ambition
for himself, can give his all to the president. But Cheney's
aloofness from the ebb and flow of politics and public opinion has
apparently dulled his senses in a way that is not helpful to his
boss, who has been busy lately defending his administration from
criticism that it was badly out of touch during Hurricane Katrina.
Sounding
less than convinced himself, Bush tried to calm down the
hunting-accident press flap. Cheney, said Bush, had done "just
fine" with Fox News anchorman Brit Hume, who was granted an
exclusive interview with the veep four days after the shooting.
Cheney's
words and manner in that 20-minute session were indeed affecting:
"Ultimately, I'm the guy who pulled the trigger that fired the
round that hit Harry," he said, speaking in a monotone but
looking grave and sad. "That is something I'll never forget ...
It was ... one of the worst days of my life." Cheney's backers
lashed out at the pundits and comics for taking ghoulish delight in
the accident. "The vice president has so pissed off the
establishment media that they've been waiting for anything to get
him," says former senator Alan Simpson, Cheney's old Wyoming
friend of 40 years.
But
the shooting incident once again drew attention to the unusual
nature of Cheney's power. He remains by far the most powerful vice
president in history, and one of the most secretive and mysterious
public officials to ever hold such high office in America. He is
caricatured as a Darth Vader, spooky, above the law; nefarious.
What
happened to the genial, gently amusing Dick Cheney of the 2000 vice
presidential debate? After he and Al Gore's running mate, Sen. Joe
Lieberman, exchanged good-humored quips, more than a few voters
wondered why the tickets couldn't be flipped—allowing a couple of
affable, common-sensical Washington hands to run for president
instead of Bush and Gore, who at times seemed like the wounded sons
of great political dynasties, groaning under the burden of
expectation. Cheney, the conservative that moderates once seemed to
like, has strangely iced over in recent years. Even his old friends
sometimes wonder if he has not grown angrier, more suspicious, even
paranoid. Last fall, Brent Scowcroft, national-security adviser in
the George H.W. Bush administration, caused a stir by telling The
New Yorker magazine, "I consider Cheney a good friend—I've
known him for thirty years. But Dick Cheney I don't know
anymore."
Has
Cheney changed? Has he been transformed, warped, perhaps
corrupted—by stress, wealth, aging, illness, the real terrors of
the world or possibly some inner goblins? The few who know him (and
few really do) aren't saying much, except to argue that he takes a
longer view than the mean politics of the moment. But there is no
doubt that Cheney has become less amiable, less open, less willing
to conciliate and seek common ground than he was as a younger
politician. A man who was shepherded by the Secret Service to his
bunker during 9/11 has stayed there—even when that has not been
helpful to the president.
Guessing
at the causes of his darkening persona is a favorite Washington
pastime. A widely held theory is that Cheney, 65, was affected by
heart surgery (he has had four heart attacks, angioplasty, a
quadruple bypass and a pacemaker). It is true that heart patients
sometimes undergo mood or even personality changes, but there is no
solid evidence in Cheney's case.
A
surer bet may be that he changed with his circumstances. As
President Gerald Ford's young (age 34) chief of staff, as a six-term
congressman and then as secretary of Defense in the Bush 41
administration, Cheney was surrounded by, and required to work with,
moderate Republicans. Though his own politics were very
conservative, there was always someone around like former Reagan
chief of staff and Bush secretary of State James A. Baker to rein
him in.
Then,
in 1995, Cheney became CEO of Halliburton Co., the giant military
contractor. He entered the exclusive preserve of very rich men who
could, by and large, get their way. The new role suited Cheney. He
began going on frequent hunting trips, partaking of a sport he had
enjoyed since youth. (His partners in recent years have included
various tycoons and sports heroes including oilman T. Boone Pickens
and Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach.) He flew around on
corporate jets; aides and retainers attended to his whims. His
political ties were to True Believer conservatives—especially his
wife, Lynne, a feisty ideologue and, by most reports, a bit of a
diva, though an engaging one.
The
VIP world inhabited by Cheney is perfectly symbolized by the
Armstrong Ranch, where the hunting accident occurred. More than
50,000 acres of rolling country, the ranch is "Gosford
Park" with a twang—not quite as gilded or as pampered as an
English country house on a shooting weekend between the wars, but
just as private and entitled in an understated, elegant way. Quail
hunting is an elaborate ritual on the great Texas ranches, performed
with outriding guides to find the birds and trained dogs to flush
and point and fetch. There are servants and cocktails and barbecues
and not a reporter for miles around. The ranch is as insular, in its
own way, as the vice president's official bubble.
Cheney's
shooting party was a cozy group of rich Republicans and Texas "squirearchy."
The owner of the ranch is Anne Armstrong, a grande dame of the GOP,
onetime ambassador to the Court of St. James and a former member of
the Halliburton board that picked Cheney to be CEO. (She was also
mentioned as a possible vice president for Gerald Ford.) Armstrong's
daughter Katharine, strong-willed and lively (Laura Bush chose her
to sit beside Prince Charles at a recent White House dinner),
accompanied Cheney on the shoot and described the scene to NEWSWEEK:
It
was late afternoon, and the hunters were ready to call it a day.
Harry Whittington, a prominent Austin lawyer and big-time GOP donor,
had bagged two birds with two shots. "Great shot, Harry, you
got a double!" called out Katharine. While Whittington went off
with his dog and his guides to find the dead birds, Cheney and Pam
Willeford, the U.S. ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein and
another major GOP donor, went ahead to look for another covey of
birds. Cheney spotted a bird flying behind him, swung around with
his Italian-made 28-gauge shotgun toward the setting sun and pulled
the trigger. Whittington, wearing a regulation orange vest, was
approaching out of a slight gully, some 30 yards away.
Armstrong,
watching from an off-road vehicle about a hundred yards away, saw
Whittington fall. A team of Secret Service agents bolted out of the
car and ran past her, one of them shouting an expletive. Gun in
hand, Cheney rushed over to the fallen Whittington. Later, the vice
president rode back with Armstrong. "You'd have to be an idiot
not to see what the poor man was going through," recalled
Armstrong. "It was very quiet. I remember leaning forward and
squeezing him on the shoulder." At one point Cheney said,
"I never saw him."
Back
at Cheney's lodgings at the ranch—guest quarters called Uncle
Tom's House—there was no discussion of a public statement. The
White House was at first informed in surprisingly cryptic and
cursory fashion—the Situation Room was told of an unspecified
shooting accident in the vice president's hunting party. It took a
phone call from presidential counselor Karl Rove to Katharine
Armstrong ("Karl's one of my closest friends in life," she
told NEWSWEEK) to sort out what had happened and report back to
President Bush—that the vice president was the shooter and that
Whittington had been wounded, though apparently not fatally. That
night, according to a senior White House official who refused to be
identified discussing a sensitive matter, Cheney did not speak to
either Bush or the White House staff or his own press people. He did
speak with David Addington, his chief of staff and former lawyer who
is a strong proponent of executive power and secrecy.
Cheney's
aides would later say that he wanted to be absolutely sure of the
facts before going public, and Whittington's condition remained a
little uncertain. At first, the wounds were deemed to be minor, but
on Sunday morning the hospital was reporting that some of the tiny
birdshot had penetrated his body in potentially dangerous ways. In
Washington, White House staffers were quietly urging Cheney's staff
to somehow go public with the shooting. But Bush never picked up the
phone to call Cheney, either to console or to offer counsel.
Shortly
after 8 a.m., a local deputy sheriff arrived at the ranch to take a
statement from Cheney. By then, it was clear the story could not be
contained. Cheney and Katharine Armstrong talked about how to get
the story out. "What do you want me to do?" Armstrong
asked. "What do you feel comfortable doing?" Cheney
replied. Armstrong knew a reporter at the local paper, Jaime Powell
of the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. Powell understood hunting and
had written a sensitive and favorable obituary of her father the
year before. Frantically leaving messages ("Jaime, I need you
immediately"), Armstrong couldn't find Powell on her cell
phone, and it was nearly 2 p.m., after much back and forth between
Armstrong and the paper, that the Corpus Christi Caller-Times
finally put up a short story on its Web site.
VICE
PRESIDENT SHOOTS MAN, as some news services announced the story
Sunday afternoon, was a headline guaranteed to create a press
frenzy. Armstrong proved to be a less-than-ideal spokesperson for
Cheney. She appeared to blame Whittington for the accident, noting
that he had failed to announce himself as he approached Cheney from
behind. (Most hunters squarely put the responsibility on the man
with the gun.) She said there had been "no, zero, zippo"
drinking at lunch, whereas, as Cheney later acknowledged, he had
drunk a beer.
Cheney
has long had a chilly relationship with the press. Some of his
advisers say he is merely indifferent to reporters, while his wife
and daughters are more aggressively hostile. But in any case,
journalists are usually left guessing at his whereabouts and
activities, and the vice president seems to take a certain pleasure
in keeping it that way. NEWSWEEK once accompanied Cheney on a trip
to upstate New York, where he met with several Marines just
returning from Iraq. After about 30 seconds, Cheney asked his
handlers to "kick the press out." Eying the departing
reporters, he offered his slightly lopsided grin and announced,
"It always makes my day."
Cheney's
chief press adviser through a series of press secretaries and
communications directors has been Mary Matalin, longtime GOP
politico, wife of fellow media celebrity James Carville, and now a
private consultant. If anything, Matalin reinforces the Cheney
family's disdain for the Fourth Estate (Matalin did not return
several phone calls from NEWSWEEK).
Matalin
is about the only one who could even try to persuade Cheney to talk.
His official staff is a little afraid of him. NEWSWEEK once asked
his press secretary (there have been seven of them since he became
vice president) if Cheney went to church on Sundays. The
spokesperson confessed she really couldn't ask the veep; the
question was just "too personal."
By
Monday, Matalin was toying with some kind of public statement by
Cheney, but then on Tuesday Whittington's condition took a slight
turn for the worse—a birdshot pellet was inflaming some tissue
near his heart. On Tuesday the vice president remained silent. White
House aides were becoming increasingly restive, anxiously joking
that if Cheney were more of an ambitious veep, like Al Gore, he
would be crying on "Oprah."
The
president had met with Cheney privately on Monday morning at the
White House before the daily intelligence briefing. According to a
White House aide speaking, as usual, anonymously, Bush listened
closely and watched Cheney's body language to see how emotional the
accident had been for someone not given to public displays of
feeling. "The president wanted to give him some room to handle
this," the senior aide said. "The president could visibly
tell this was weighing heavily on him and he felt, in his judgment,
that he should not push him too hard."
Finally,
on Wednesday, as the press continued to fulminate and the late-night
comics had their fun, Cheney decided—apparently on his own
initiative—to go public. A press conference was out of the
question; it would have turned into a circus, Matalin told radio
host Don Imus. Fox News's Brit Hume was chosen as a friendly but
also serious and credible interrogator, which he was.
Cheney
told Hume that hunting has "brought me great pleasure over the
years," but that "the season is ending, and I'm going to
let some time pass over it and think about the future."
Cheney's hunting friends, who describe him as a crack shot (the veep
has downed as many as 70 pheasants in a single day) as well as a
by-the-book and safety-conscious hunter, don't believe he will
permanently lay his gun down. "You have to learn from these
things, and that's the kind of hunter he is," says Sen. Saxby
Chambliss of Georgia, a close friend. "He'll be back. He'll be
out there as soon as he can. It's in his blood."
Cheney
is accustomed to being feared and even loathed; still, to be an
object of ridicule cannot be easy. Last week Sen. Trent Lott of
Mississippi, the former majority leader who was pushed out by the
White House in 2002, told The Washington Post that he had greeted
the vice president, who had gone to Capitol Hill to meet with some
lawmakers, as the "Shooter-in-Chief." Cheney, Lott
reported, did not seem amused.
Cheney
may simply accept that his lot is to be vilified—and that history
can be his only redeemer. In the late fall of 2002, as the Bush
administration was readying for the invasion of Iraq, Victor Davis
Hanson, an agrarian classicist whose writings about the 9/11
attacks, primarily in the National Review online, had attracted
Cheney's attention, was invited to dine at the vice president's
mansion. Hanson found Cheney to be intellectually curious, well
read, and not at all zealous. "He had no illusions about going
to war with Iraq," Hanson said. "It was to him a least bad
choice." Over dinner, Hanson recalled, "we talked about
Lincoln, about leaders who had gone through hell. I had a vague
feeling of tragedy," Hanson said, then corrected himself:
"Tragedy is the wrong word. There was a sort of resignation. I
think he understands that the vilification of the moment is not the
final word."
Others
close to Cheney had suggested that he was profoundly affected by
9/11. It is hard for anyone who was not in Cheney's shoes that day,
and in the weeks and months that followed, to appreciate the stress
and uncertainty of that time. Around 9:35 on the morning of 9/11,
Cheney was lifted off his feet by the Secret Service and hustled
into the White House bunker. Cheney testified to the 9/11 Commission
that he spoke with President Bush before giving an order to shoot
down a hijacked civilian airliner that appeared headed toward
Washington. (The plane was United Flight 93, which crashed in a
Pennsylvania field after a brave revolt by the passengers.) But a
source close to the commission, who declined to be identified
revealing sensitive information, says that none of the staffers who
worked on this aspect of the investigation believed Cheney's version
of events.
A
draft of the report conveyed their skepticism. But when top White
House officials, including chief of staff Andy Card and the then
White House counsel Alberto Gonzales, reviewed the draft, they
became extremely agitated. After a prolonged battle, the report was
toned down. The factual narrative, closely read, offers no evidence
that Cheney sought initial authorization from the president. The
point is not a small one. Legally, Cheney was required to get
permission from his commander in chief, who was traveling (but
reachable) at the time. If the public ever found out that Cheney
gave the order on his own, it would have strongly fed the view that
he was the real power behind the throne.
Cheney
spent much of his time after 9/11 in his "undisclosed
location." The threat seemed terribly real. Cheney spent a
great deal of time working on a "decapitation
plan"—i.e., shaping a fill-in government in a horrific event
in which he and the president and other top leaders were taken out
by a terrorist chem-bio or nuclear attack. After the suspected
anthrax attack, a gallows humor permeated the veep's office.
Watching Cheney load his hunting guns into his car as he prepared to
leave the mansion on a trip that fall, an aide cracked, "I hope
it's not that bad." Actually, Cheney was getting in plenty of
hunting—in upstate New York, South Dakota, southern Georgia and
Maryland's Eastern Shore.
Cheney
unquestionably exerted enormous influence on Bush in those early
days. But Bush's aides say that the president has become less
dependent on Cheney for advice, particularly in foreign affairs. The
two men still have private lunches, but no longer every week. There
are signs now that Bush listens to more-moderate voices on national
security. On a range of foreign-policy crises, from Iran to North
Korea, Cheney's forward-leaning posture has given way to the
mainstream, multilateralist approach advocated now by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice.
It
was possible to dimly discern Cheney's shakier footing last week in
the ongoing dispute with Capitol Hill over warrant-less
eavesdropping. Uneasy about the administration's disregard for the
1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires court
warrants to eavesdrop on communications into the United States,
three Republicans on the Senate intelligence committee were
agitating for greater oversight. Cheney, who has been the most
aggressive defender of the administration's power to wage war
(including spying) without congressional approval, went up to the
Hill to quell the rebellion. For several hours on Tuesday, he met
behind closed doors in the intelligence committee's secret hearing
room with the senators.
Two
days later intelligence committee chairman Pat Roberts, a staunch
Bush ally, was able to put off a vote on whether to open an
investigation.
It
appeared that Cheney, though pale and obviously distressed by his
hunting accident, was still capable of quietly exerting influence.
But then Roberts began showing some restlessness. He began
suggesting that perhaps the wiretapping program should be brought
under FISA after all. His remarks came after the White House seemed
to soften a little and suggest that it would be willing to disclose
more information about the program and talk to senators about
changing the law. Suddenly, Cheney no longer seemed so all-powerful,
so sure of getting his way.
With
Michael Isikoff, Daniel Klaidman, Richard Wolffe, Holly Bailey, Mark
Hosenball and Eleanor Clift in Washington and Carol Rust in Texas
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