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1. Others Pursue Rove, But ABC Raises Clinton and Lack of Illegality ABC's World News separated itself from the media pack Thursday night. Though ABC's coverage was keyed to how e-mails supposedly show that Karl Rove was at "the center" of early 2005 discussions about replacing all 93 U.S. attorneys, anchor Charles Gibson pointed out how "these U.S. attorneys do serve at the pleasure of the President. He can fire them at any time. So did anything really get done that was wrong?" Jan Crawford Greenburg answered, in a broadcast network evening newscast first, by informing viewers of how "President Clinton, in fact, fired all the U.S. attorneys when he came into office from the previous Republican administration." Meanwhile, NBC and CBS continued the obsession on the story for the third night in a row. NBC Nightly News anchor Campbell Brown breathlessly teased her lead, "The prosecutor purge: Did the idea of firing all U.S. Attorneys start with inner circle adviser Karl Rove? If so, what now?" CBS led with two stories on the subject, starting with Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher's call for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign. Next, Bob Orr looked at how Gonzales "was tangled in controversy" before becoming AG. "As the President's chief lawyer, Gonzales sanctioned the widespread use of warrant-less wiretaps, allowing the government to snoop on Americans without court orders." 2. Plante Claims None Thought Clinton's Firings Were Political CBS on Thursday morning finally picked up the Clinton administration's record of firing 93 federal prosecutors, but Bill Plante still rushed to Clinton's defense under a false premise. On the March 15 edition of The Early Show, Plante sought to make a distinction between the Bush and Clinton firings: "Mr. Bush isn't the first President to fire U.S. attorneys and replace them with his own appointments. At the beginning of his first term, President Clinton cleaned house, ousting all 93 U.S. attorneys. Not unusual, they serve at the pleasure of the President. The difference this time, the charge that politics played a role in their dismissal." Not true. As the Washington Post reported on March 26, 1993, Republicans did charge politics in President Clinton's mass firing. The real difference is that the networks didn't care then about such concerns. 3. Vieira Cues Up Obama: Did Gonzales 'Knowingly Subvert Justice'? NBC Today co-host Meredith Vieira tossed softballs to Barack Obama, in an "exclusive" interview Thursday morning, as she asked him if Alberto Gonzales should resign over firing of U.S. Attorneys and also allowed him to spout off on the President's Iraq policy. In the 7am half-hour Vieira lobbed this pitch to the Democratic presidential candidate: "Senator, let's switch gears now and talk about the firing of those eight U.S. Attorneys. The Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales has admitted that mistakes were made. He wants to right them. He says he wants to stay on the job as well. You opposed his nomination two years ago and this is what you said about the Attorney General on Tuesday, you said, 'He had shown in his role as White House counsel a penchant for subverting justice to serve the President's goals, and I feared that in an Attorney General.' Do you believe, sir, that Mr. Gonzales knowingly subverted justice in this case and do you want him to resign?" 4. Sympathetic GMA Highlights KSM's Regrets, Focus on Water Boarding On Thursday's Good Morning America, anchor Chris Cuomo and reporter Brian Ross discussed the overnight report that terrorist mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad admitted to planning 9/11 and other major attacks. However, Cuomo and Ross spent much of the segment fretting over the interrogation techniques used by the U.S. And Ross chose to recount an oddly sympathetic quote by the terrorist, noting that Mr. Mohammad said, "he was sorry that 3000 people were killed in the 9/11 attacks, but, quote, 'I don't like to kill children and the kids.'" Ross repeated the quote in his Thursday World News story. 5. KSM Confesses, But Rosie O'Donnell Worries He Was 'Tortured' On Thursday's The View, Rosie O'Donnell brought up the news of Khalid Sheik Mohammed's many confessions, but she was more outraged at unproven allegations of torture than the horrific atrocities to which Mohammed had confessed. In her latest rant she also demonstrated her lack of knowledge on the extensive al Qaeda network: "I think the man has been in custody of the American government, in secret CIA torture prisons in Guantanamo Bay, where torture is accepted and allowed, and he finally is the guy who admits to doing everything. They finally found the guy. It's not that guy bin Laden. It's this guy they've had since '93. And look, this is the picture they released of him. Doesn't, he look healthy?" Others Pursue Rove, But ABC Raises Clinton and Lack of Illegality ABC's World News separated itself from the media pack Thursday night. Though ABC's coverage was keyed to how e-mails supposedly show that Karl Rove was at "the center" of early 2005 discussions about replacing all 93 U.S. attorneys, anchor Charles Gibson pointed out how "these U.S. attorneys do serve at the pleasure of the President. He can fire them at any time. So did anything really get done that was wrong?" Jan Crawford Greenburg answered, in a broadcast network evening newscast first, by informing viewers of how "President Clinton, in fact, fired all the U.S. attorneys when he came into office from the previous Republican administration." Meanwhile, NBC and CBS continued the obsession on the story for the third night in a row. NBC Nightly News anchor Campbell Brown breathlessly teased her lead, "The prosecutor purge: Did the idea of firing all U.S. Attorneys start with inner circle adviser Karl Rove? If so, what now?" The CBS Evening News led with two stories on the subject, starting with Jim Axelrod on Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher's call for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign. Next, Bob Orr looked at how Gonzales "was tangled in controversy" before becoming AG. "As the President's chief lawyer, Gonzales sanctioned the widespread use of warrant-less wiretaps,"Orr thundered, thus "allowing the government to snoop on Americans without court orders." Plus, "he also approved the so-called 'torture memo'" and "under Bush-Gonzales policies, prisoners were allowed to be held indefinitely at Guantanamo Bay with no access to U.S. courts," policies reflecting an "attitude," Georgetown law professor David Cole charged, in Orr's words, which "led directly to the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib." [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] (My transcription of the CBS Evening News was impeded by college basketball which aired instead of the CBS Evening News on the CBS affiliate in Washington, DC, so I had to transcribe from the Web-cast.)
The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for the March 15 coverage on ABC's World News. Anchor Charles Gibson announced:
Plante Claims None Thought Clinton's Firings Were Political CBS on Thursday morning finally picked up the Clinton administration's record of firing 93 federal prosecutors, but Bill Plante still rushed to Clinton's defense under a false premise. On the March 15 edition of The Early Show, Plante sought to make a distinction between the Bush and Clinton firings: "Mr. Bush isn't the first President to fire U.S. attorneys and replace them with his own appointments. At the beginning of his first term, President Clinton cleaned house, ousting all 93 U.S. attorneys. Not unusual, they serve at the pleasure of the President. The difference this time, the charge that politics played a role in their dismissal." Not true. As the Washington Post reported on March 26, 1993, Republicans did charge politics in President Clinton's mass firing. The real difference is that the networks didn't care then about such concerns. As the April 1993 edition of the MRC's MediaWatch newsletter reported: "Attorney General Janet Reno fired all 93 U.S. attorneys, a very unusual practice. Republicans charged the Clintonites made the move to take U.S. Attorney Jay Stephens off the House Post Office investigation of Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski. The network response: ABC and CBS never mentioned it." See: www.mediaresearch.org [This item is adapted from a posting, by Justin McCarthy, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog: newsbusters.org ] An excerpt from the 1993 Washington Post story, "Clinton Defends Ousting U.S. Attorneys; GOP Steps Up Criticism of Attorney General's 'March Massacre,'" by Dan Balz: President Clinton yesterday attempted to rebut Republican criticism of the administration's decision to seek resignations from all U.S. attorneys, saying what he was asking was routine and less political than piecemeal replacements. "All those people are routinely replaced and I have not done anything differently," Clinton told reporters during a photo opportunity in the Oval Office. He called the decision more politically appropriate "than picking people out one by one." But Republicans in Congress pressed their criticism of the decision, announced Tuesday by Attorney General Janet Reno, with Senate Minority Leader Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.) describing the decision as "Reno's March Massacre." Rep. Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.) urged the administration to allow Jay B. Stephens, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, to stay on the job until he completes his investigation of the House Post Office scandal and the role House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski (D-Ill.) may have played in it. Stephens said Tuesday he was about a month away from "a critical decision with regard to resolution" of the probe.... END of Excerpt
Vieira Cues Up Obama: Did Gonzales 'Knowingly Subvert Justice'? NBC Today co-host Meredith Vieira tossed softballs to Barack Obama, in an "exclusive" interview Thursday morning, as she asked him if Alberto Gonzales should resign over firing of U.S. Attorneys and also allowed him to spout off on the President's Iraq policy. In the 7am half-hour Vieira lobbed this pitch to the Democratic presidential candidate: "Senator, let's switch gears now and talk about the firing of those eight U.S. Attorneys. The Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales has admitted that mistakes were made. He wants to right them. He says he wants to stay on the job as well. You opposed his nomination two years ago and this is what you said about the Attorney General on Tuesday, you said, 'He had shown in his role as White House counsel a penchant for subverting justice to serve the President's goals, and I feared that in an Attorney General.' Do you believe, sir, that Mr. Gonzales knowingly subverted justice in this case and do you want him to resign?" [This item, by Geoff Dickens, was posted Thursday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The following is the full interview as it occurred on the March 15th Today show:
Meredith Vieira: "Democratic Senator Barack Obama serves on the Homeland Security committee and he's also running for President. Senator Obama good morning to you sir."
Sympathetic GMA Highlights KSM's Regrets, Focus on Water Boarding On Thursday's Good Morning America, anchor Chris Cuomo and reporter Brian Ross discussed the overnight report that terrorist mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad admitted to planning 9/11 and other major attacks. However, Cuomo and Ross spent much of the segment fretting over the interrogation techniques used by the U.S. And Ross chose to recount an oddly sympathetic quote by the terrorist, noting that Mr. Mohammad said, "he was sorry that 3000 people were killed in the 9/11 attacks, but, quote, 'I don't like to kill children and the kids.'" Ross repeated the quote in his Thursday World News story. One would think that such an absurd comment would at least warrant an eye roll, but the GMA hosts simply continued with the report. Cuomo wondered if the techniques used to extract information from the 9/11 planner could lead "to torture": Everybody's going to want to parse what happened here and why. You mentioned in the piece water boarding. Remind us what that is and if it leads to torture." Ross: "It's a technique used by the CIA with the President's approval in which the person is put upside down, water is poured on their head. They have a sense they're drowning. It creates a gag-like reflex. He lasted the longest under water boarding, we're told, before he broke, between two and two and a half minutes, and then he caved and told all." [This item is adapted from a posting, by Scott Whitlock, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Cuomo and Ross began the segment, which aired at 7:02am on March 15, by agreeing that the admission had "come out of nowhere." Apparently the idea that the interrogation techniques worked wasn't considered:
Cuomo: "But first, let's get to the latest on that stunning admission by Khalid Sheikh Mohammad. The man long considered to be the mastermind behind the September 11th attacks has confessed to that and much more. Chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross is here with the details. This comes out of nowhere."
KSM Confesses, But Rosie O'Donnell Worries He Was 'Tortured' On Thursday's The View, Rosie O'Donnell brought up the news of Khalid Sheik Mohammed's many confessions, but she was more outraged at unproven allegations of torture than the horrific atrocities to which Mohammed had confessed. In her latest rant she also demonstrated her lack of knowledge on the extensive al Qaeda network: "I think the man has been in custody of the American government, in secret CIA torture prisons in Guantanamo Bay, where torture is accepted and allowed, and he finally is the guy who admits to doing everything. They finally found the guy. It's not that guy bin Laden. It's this guy they've had since '93. And look, this is the picture they released of him. Doesn't, he look healthy?" [This item was adapted from a Thursday posting by Justin McCarthy, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog: newsbusters.org ] Token non-liberal Elisabeth Hasselbeck was unusually assertive throughout the course of the discussion, and even exposed the shallowness of O'Donnell's opinions. Just as O'Donnell did not answer whether or not she wanted the United States to win in Iraq, she did not answer what she would do with the detained terrorists.
Hasselbeck: "What do think should happen? What do you think should happen?" O'Donnell was concerned about robbing the "humanity" of terrorists. "Because you don't think terrorists, you don't think terrorists, you think that robs them of their humanity. That name 'terrorist' makes them not human any more? They don't-"
While giving the full benefit of the doubt to a known terror leader, Rosie asserted without doubt that the United States tortured this information out of the al Qaeda leader: "But I think this man, for whatever he did or didn't do, he is not the be-all and end-all of terrorism in America and our government has not found the answer and this one thing-" -- Brent Baker
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