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1. NBC Picks Up WMD in Iraq, Olbermann Likens Santorum to McCarthy Of the three broadcast network evening shows Thursday night, only the NBC Nightly News reported the late Wednesday afternoon revelation by Senator Rick Santorum and Congressman Peter Hoekstra, Chair of the House intelligence committee, that an unclassified portion of a National Ground Intelligence Center report had revealed that 500 munition shells of mustard and sarin gas -- weapons of mass destruction -- had been found in Iraq. MSNBC's Keith Olbermann ridiculed the finding of "WMD: weapons of minor discomfort," snidely suggesting "you might get a burn if you rub these weapons directly onto your skin." Olbermann condescendingly marveled: "Independent experts and the level-headed staggering in amazement tonight that deteriorated mustard gas cannisters, at least 15 years old and as much as 18 years old, could be pawned off by desperate politicians as some kind of rationale for the deaths of 2,500 American servicemen and women in Iraq." Soon enough, Olbermann raised Joe McCarthy, asking Newsweek's Jonathan Alter: "Have Senator Santorum and Congressman Hoekstra moved directly into the league of Joe McCarthy waving the blank page that's supposed to contain the list of communists in the '50s?" 2. Rooney: Dan Rather's 'Liberal Democrat' Views 'Obvious' On Air Dan Rather's liberal bias was "obvious," his CBS News colleague Andy Rooney remarkably maintained on Thursday's Imus in the Morning radio show simulcast on MSNBC. Appearing by phone, Rooney asserted: "My problem with Dan was always that you knew where he stood politically. And the fact that he stood on my side didn't have anything to do with it. I thought he was a bad representative of the liberal side because he was so obvious with his opinions. There were just little words he used when he was on the air that made it apparent to everyone that he was a liberal Democrat." Rooney, however, insisted that while Walter Cronkite "had just the same liberal Democratic opinions as Dan," that is something "you would never know" since he kept it off the air. We certainly know now. 3. CBS Airing Spots for Couric Promising 'She's a Straight-Shooter' The CBS Evening News has begun to run promos for Katie Couric's impending takeover of the anchor chair. The spots feature quick cuts, from different angles, of Bob Schieffer on the Evening News set as he assures viewers of Couric's qualifications. In the spot aired at the end of Wednesday's newscast, Schieffer promised that "she's tough, she's fair, she's a straight-shooter" and "she'll be terrific." In Thursday's promo, Schieffer insisted: "The anchor chair will be in good hands because my friend Katie Couric will be here. Just watch." Each spot, which may also be airing across the CBS schedule, ends with a screen showing a smiling Couric on the left with "COMING IN SEPTEMBER" on the right over a stylized "CBS Evening News with Katie Couric" graphic. So, now we know she won't be reverting to "Katherine." NBC Picks Up WMD in Iraq, Olbermann Likens Santorum to McCarthy Of the three broadcast network evening shows Thursday night, only the NBC Nightly News reported the late Wednesday afternoon revelation by Senator Rick Santorum and Congressman Peter Hoekstra, Chair of the House intelligence committee, that an unclassified portion of a National Ground Intelligence Center report had revealed that 500 munition shells of mustard and sarin gas -- weapons of mass destruction -- had been found in Iraq. NBC anchor Brian Williams teased: "One Senator's new claim that weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq." Chip Reid relayed Santorum's disclosure before downplaying the significance: "The claim quickly becomes a hot topic on cable TV and the Internet, but just as quickly Pentagon officials pour cold water on the story, telling reporters the shells are old and inactive, dating from the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, and that the shells are 'not the weapons of mass destruction we were looking for' when U.S. forces went into Iraq." MSNBC's Keith Olbermann ridiculed the finding of "WMD: weapons of minor discomfort," snidely suggesting "you might get a burn if you rub these weapons directly onto your skin." Olbermann condescendingly marveled: "Independent experts and the level-headed staggering in amazement tonight that deteriorated mustard gas cannisters, at least 15 years old and as much as 18 years old, could be pawned off by desperate politicians as some kind of rationale for the deaths of 2,500 American servicemen and women in Iraq." Soon enough, Olbermann raised Joe McCarthy, asking Newsweek's Jonathan Alter: "Have Senator Santorum and Congressman Hoekstra moved directly into the league of Joe McCarthy waving the blank page that's supposed to contain the list of communists in the '50s?" [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Though these are not the weapons the Bush administration used to justify going to war, since they date from before the 1991 Gulf War, they do undermine the claims of those on the left -- too often repeated by members of the media -- that "no" WMD existed in Iraq. Instead of the WMD revelation, ABC's World News Tonight made room for one of the media's favorite supposed Bush scandals, deciding the old NSA surveillance topic was more compelling as they ran 90 seconds of Senator Arlen Specter grilling AT&T's chief. Charles Gibson set it up: "The President's controversial domestic surveillance program was back in the spotlight on Capitol Hill today." Bob Schieffer teased the lead CBS Evening News story: "The Earth's temperature is going up. In fact, the last time it was this hot Rome was the world's only super-power and that's not good." Both shows made time for other Iraq news, with ABC's George Stephanopoulos providing a summary of the Senate debate on pulling out of Iraq followed by soundbites from NPR of comments about the war from three soldiers in Iraq. CBS aired a piece about evidence Iran is planting bombs inside Iraq. As Tim Graham noted in a NewsBusters posting, CNN's American Morning gave the development a few seconds Thursday as John Roberts related: "As the Senate opened debate on U.S. troops in Iraq, two Republican lawmakers claim that weapons of mass destruction still pose a threat. They said troops have found aging stockpiles of chemical shells." After a clip of Santorum ("It is important for the American public to understand that these weapons did in fact exist, were present in the country, and were, in fact, and continue to be, a threat to us."), Roberts cautioned: "That claim is being refuted, by the way, by the man who surveyed Iraq's weapons program for the CIA in 2004. Charles Duelfer says the chemical shells are no longer effective." (The morning shows Thursday on ABC, CBS and NBC didn't utter a syllable about Santorum's revelation. On NBC's Today, co-host Campbell Brown began a session with Tim Russert by fretting: "So walk us through, Tim, how in two weeks time the Democrats could go from having all the momentum leading into the midterm elections to allowing the, the, the divisions over when to bring the troops home from Iraq, create this disunity within the party. What happened and are they giving Republicans the upper-hand?") As quoted in the transcript below of the NBC Nightly News story, Don Imus raised the topic with Santorum (and also with NBC News reporter Jim Miklaszewski). On Thursday's Hardball, fill-in host Norah O'Donnell brought up the matter with Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson and columnist Pat Buchanan, both of whom predicted the story will have no legs. FNC has given the story more time, with a panel segment on Wednesday's Special Report with Brit Hume after Hume discussed it with reporter Jim Angle, on Wednesday and Thursday night Hannity & Colmes ran segments (with Santorum as a guest Wednesday night) and the 5pm EDT Big Story brought aboard Congressman Hoekstra on Thursday. The FoxNews.com posting: www.foxnews.com
Thursday's Washington Post carried a five paragraph article, "Lawmakers Cite Weapons Found in Iraq," on page A10: www.washingtonpost.com
CNSNews.com's Thursday story, "Document Details WMD Recovered In Iraq, Santorum Says," with links to earlier CNSNews.com articles about evidence of WMD in Iraq: www.cnsnews.com Sen. Santorum's points are well made but much too late to make a difference. Surely this is not entirely new information. The Blix Report noted regarding Iraqi chemical weapons, "The [Iraqi weapons report] document indicates that 13,000 chemical bombs were dropped by the Iraqi air force between 1983 and 1998, while Iraq has declared that 19,500 bombs were consumed during this period. Thus, there is a discrepancy of 6,500 bombs. The amount of chemical agent in these bombs would be in the order of about 1,000 tons. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we must assume that these quantities are now unaccounted for." Perhaps this stockpile of 500 munitions was part of that group. If so it is surely worthy of note. But if Sen. Santorum is using an unclassified study, which appears to be the case, one might ask why wasn't this released by the White House in the first place at a time when it could have made a difference? This is another example of the failure to publish the discoveries we have made since the fall of Saddam's regime in a systematic fashion and originating at high levels. We know a lot more now about the WMDs that existed, and about the definite links to terrorists, not to mention all the human rights offenses committed by Saddam's regime. Yet, the administration has never put together a comprehensive account of all this. That document is something that should have been written two years ago. It is mind boggling that this has not been done. This failure to communicate is one of the major reasons why public support for the war effort has been sagging. END of Reprint
Direct link to above posting: corner.nationalreview.com
# NBC Nightly News. Brian Williams teased: "America at War: The Political war over bringing the troops home from Iraq. And one Senator's new claim that weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq."
After a look at the Senate debate, Williams turned to Chip Reid on Capitol Hill "And Chip, there was another story on Capitol Hill there today that was bubbling up all day long. It started almost exactly 24 hours ago."
Olbermann soon opened his rant-fest:
Olbermann ran through soundbites or quotes on screen from Santorum, Hoekstra and Rumsfeld before reading from a statement from David Kay, who ridiculed Santorum's claims:
Following a session with Joseph Cirincone of the liberal Center for National Progress, Olbermann turned to Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, but went too far even for Alter:
Rooney: Dan Rather's 'Liberal Democrat' Views 'Obvious' On Air Dan Rather's liberal bias was "obvious," his CBS News colleague Andy Rooney remarkably maintained on Thursday's Imus in the Morning radio show simulcast on MSNBC. Appearing by phone, Rooney asserted: "My problem with Dan was always that you knew where he stood politically. And the fact that he stood on my side didn't have anything to do with it. I thought he was a bad representative of the liberal side because he was so obvious with his opinions. There were just little words he used when he was on the air that made it apparent to everyone that he was a liberal Democrat." Rooney, however, insisted that while Walter Cronkite "had just the same liberal Democratic opinions as Dan," that is something "you would never know" since he kept it off the air. We certainly know now. Back in 2002, Rooney had described Rather as "transparently liberal." The June 7, 2002 CyberAlert recounted: 60 Minutes commentator Andy Rooney conceded that Bernard Goldberg is on target about liberal media bias. "I thought he made some very good points," Rooney told CNN's Larry King on Wednesday night [June 5]. Rooney admitted he has "a liberal bias" since "I'm consistently liberal in my opinions," adding that he considers Dan Rather to be "transparently liberal." For a complete transcript: www.mrc.org The MRC's Brian Boyd caught this exchange from about 7:35am EDT during the June 22 Imus in the Morning:
Don Imus: "So what do you make of the Dan Rather thing? Do you have any thoughts about that?"
CBS Airing Spots for Couric Promising 'She's a Straight-Shooter' The CBS Evening News has begun to run promos for Katie Couric's impending takeover of the anchor chair. The spots feature quick cuts, from different angles, of Bob Schieffer on the Evening News set as he assures viewers of Couric's qualifications. In the spot aired at the end of Wednesday's newscast, Schieffer promised that "she's tough, she's fair, she's a straight-shooter" and "she'll be terrific." In Thursday's promo, Schieffer insisted: "The anchor chair will be in good hands because my friend Katie Couric will be here. Just watch." Each spot, which may also be airing across the CBS schedule, ends with a screen showing a smiling Couric on the left with "COMING IN SEPTEMBER" on the right over a stylized "CBS Evening News with Katie Couric" graphic. So, now we know she won't be reverting to "Katherine." [This item was posted late Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The promo aired at the end of the Wednesday, June 21 CBS Evening News: "Journalism is a team sport and I've known Katie Couric since she broke into journalism and she's going to be a great addition to the CBS News team. She's tough, she's fair, she's a straight-shooter. I'm heading back to Washington this fall and I want to welcome Katie to our team. She'll be terrific. Just watch." The spot aired at the end of the Thursday, June 22 CBS Evening News: "I've been reporting the news for a long time, so I think I know a little about journalism. Come September, I'll be back in Washington on my regular beat. But the anchor chair will be in good hands because my friend Katie Couric will be here. Just watch."
-- Brent Baker
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