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1. CBS Highlights CIA Chief's Rebuke of Harmful Leaks; Not ABC & NBC ABC and NBC, on Thursday night, didn't find CIA Director Peter Goss' lambasting of leakers and the news media, for publicizing secret information, very newsworthy. CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer, however, noted that at a Senate hearing the intelligence officials who testified "seemed at one point as concerned about leaks to the news media as the nuclear threat" from Iran and CBS reporter David Martin pointed out how "the leak that dominated the hearing was the New York Times story about the National Security Agency's warrantless eavesdropping on suspected al-Qaeda operatives inside the U.S." Roberts also highlighted how "CIA Director Goss delivered a tirade against news leaks." But ABC's World News Tonight ignored the topic completely, while NBC's Andrea Mitchell allocated a mere eleven seconds to how the intelligence officials "claim the leaks about domestic eavesdropping have already disrupted valuable operations against terrorists," compared to nearly three times more time -- 29 seconds -- to how "Democrats were outraged that the administration still won't provide more details about its domestic spying" as well as how the administration won't "say how many people are being wiretapped." 2. CBS Promotes Byron Pitts Who Delivered Sycophantic Kerry Coverage CBS News has promoted Byron Pitts to "National Correspondent, covering the biggest domestic stories and reporting on a new beat focusing on faith, family and the culture." Pitts won the "John Kerry Suck-Up Award" at the MRC's 2005 "DisHonors Awards" for his sycophantic post-Kerry 2004 convention speech wonderment over how Kerry had supposedly reminded his sister that on her deathbed their mother told him, "integrity, that's what matters," and "tonight," Pitts truckled, "John Kerry tried to show that integrity." In a runner-up, on that morning's Early Show, Pitts had narrated a Kerry profile that could easily have passed for a Democratic campaign commercial. The more than three-minute story included quotes only from Kerry, his wife, laudatory soundbites from liberal Boston Globe columnist Tom Oliphant, and Pitts' fawning narration: "Tonight's acceptance of the Democratic nomination is more than merely a day, it's his destiny." Pitts also earned a runner-up spot for the "Blue State Brigade Award," in the MRC's "Best Notable Quotables of 2004," for, on the day Kerry announced John Edwards as his running mate, gushing: "It was the all important and perfectly choreographed first glimpse of the Democratic Party's new dream team." CBS Highlights CIA Chief's Rebuke of Harmful Leaks; Not ABC & NBC ABC and NBC, on Thursday night, didn't find CIA Director Peter Goss' lambasting of leakers and the news media, for publicizing secret information, very newsworthy. CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer, however, noted that at a Senate hearing the intelligence officials who testified "seemed at one point as concerned about leaks to the news media as the nuclear threat" from Iran and CBS reporter David Martin pointed out how "the leak that dominated the hearing was the New York Times story about the National Security Agency's warrantless eavesdropping on suspected al-Qaeda operatives inside the U.S." Roberts also highlighted how "CIA Director Goss delivered a tirade against news leaks." But ABC's World News Tonight ignored the topic completely, confining itself to an anchor-brief about testimony on the continuing threat from al-Qaeda, while NBC's Andrea Mitchell allocated a mere eleven seconds to how the intelligence officials "claim the leaks about domestic eavesdropping have already disrupted valuable operations against terrorists," compared to nearly three times more time -- 29 seconds -- to how "Democrats were outraged that the administration still won't provide more details about its domestic spying" as well as how the administration won't "say how many people are being wiretapped." [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] An excerpt from a Thursday AP dispatch about the hearing of the Senate's Select Committee on Intelligence, "CIA Says Disclosures Damage Work," by Katherine Shrader of the wire service's Washington, DC bureau: U.S. intelligence officials told Congress on Thursday that disclosure of once-classified projects like President Bush's no-warrant eavesdropping program have undermined their work. "The damage has been very severe to our capabilities to carry out our mission," CIA Director Porter Goss told the Senate Intelligence Committee, citing disclosures about a variety of CIA programs that he suggested may have been compromised.... Goss complained that leaks to the news media about classified CIA programs -- such as reported CIA secret prisons abroad -- had damaged his own agency's work. "I use the words ‘very severe' intentionally. And I think the evidence will show that," he said. Goss cited a "disruption to our plans, things that we have under way." Some CIA sources and "assets" had been rendered "no longer viable or usable, or less effective by a large degree," he said. The revelations have also made intelligence agencies in other countries mistrustful of their U.S. counterparts, Goss said. "I'm stunned to the quick when I get questions from my professional counterparts saying, ‘Mr. Goss, can't you Americans keep a secret?" Goss, when pressed, said he was speaking of programs run by the CIA, and would let NSA officials speak for themselves. Gen. Michael Hayden, the principal deputy director of national intelligence and a former NSA director, said it was hard to characterize any damage done to his agency in an open session. But, he said, "Some people claim that somehow or another our capabilities are immune to this kind of information going out into the public domain." "And, I can tell you, in a broad sense, that is certainly not true."... END of Excerpt
For the AP dispatch in full: news.yahoo.com # CBS Evening News: In introducing David Martin's story on the hearing in which the intelligence officials clarified the threat posed by Iran and al-Qaeda, anchor Bob Schieffer noted that in the "wide-ranging hearing, the officials seemed at one point as concerned about leaks to the news media as the nuclear threat."
Martin, after summarizing Iran's nuclear threat, moved on to the damage caused by leaks:
Elizabeth Vargas: "On Capitol Hill today, the nation's new Director of Intelligence warned that al-Qaeda is still planning high-impact attacks against the U.S. John Negroponte said al-Qaeda continues to pursue chemical, biological and atomic weapons."
CBS Promotes Byron Pitts Who Delivered Sycophantic Kerry Coverage CBS News has promoted Byron Pitts to "National Correspondent, covering the biggest domestic stories and reporting on a new beat focusing on faith, family and the culture." Pitts won the "John Kerry Suck-Up Award" at the MRC's 2005 "DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporters of 2004," for his sycophantic post-Kerry convention speech wonderment over how Kerry had supposedly reminded his sister that on her deathbed their mother told him, "integrity, that's what matters," and "tonight," Pitts truckled, "John Kerry tried to show that integrity." In a runner-up, on that morning's Early Show, Pitts had narrated a Kerry profile that could easily have passed for a Democratic campaign commercial. The more than three-minute story included quotes only from Kerry, his wife, laudatory soundbites from liberal Boston Globe columnist Tom Oliphant, and Pitts' fawning narration: "Tonight's acceptance of the Democratic nomination is more than merely a day, it's his destiny." Pitts also earned a runner-up spot for the "Blue State Brigade Award," in the MRC's "Best Notable Quotables of 2004: The Seventeenth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting," for, on the day Kerry announced John Edwards as his running mate, gushing: "It was the all important and perfectly choreographed first glimpse of the Democratic Party's new dream team."
The elevation of Pitts came in the wake of the departure from CBS News of John Roberts to CNN. In addition to the promotion of Pitts, CBS News President Sean McManus on Thursday named David Axelrod to assume Roberts' Chief White House Correspondent slot and picked Lara Logan as Chief Foreign Correspondent. For the CBS News announcement: www.cbsnews.com
# At the MRC's 2005 "DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporters of 2004," the "John Kerry Suck-Up Award" went to Pitts for this during live coverage of John Kerry's July 29, 2004 speech to the Democratic convention:
For the DisHonors Awards page: www.mediaresearch.org
For video: newsbusters.org
For the Best of NQ awards section: www.mediaresearch.org
-- Brent Baker
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