Gość: A.D.
IP: *.mco.bellsouth.net
19.07.03, 13:49
>>'Dokumenty' o przypuszczalnych usilowaniach zakupu uranu z Nigerii przez
Saddama, byly przekazane Ambasadzie USA w Rzymie przez wloska
dziennikarke 'Panoramy', tygodniowego przegladu wydarzen, Elisabette
Burba. 'Dokumenty' te byle przekazane z zapytaniem czy mmoga byc uznane za
prawdziwe, poniewaz Burba miala powazne watpliwosci co do ich rzetelnosci i
nawet nie zamiescila ich tekstu w swoim reportazu.
>> Tak wiec wyjasnilo sie wiele jak pracuja wywiady ametrykanski i
brytyjski, ktore w tych przypadkach nawet nie dorownaly swoim poziomem
ogolnie znanemu wywiadowi, ktory sie nazywa ...'jedna baba drugiej babie...'
>> Pomyslec ze Swiatem rzadza zydzi przy pomocy podobnych idiotow. Jakze
latwa robote ma pan bog, Rothschild'em sie zwacy...
Italy Journalist Says Gave U.S. Iraq-Niger Papers
ROME (Reuters) - An Italian journalist said in an interview published
Saturday she gave documents on Iraq seeking uranium from Niger to the U.S.
embassy in Rome in 2002 to try to find out if the information was credible.
The documents have become central to a charged debate over whether President
Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, knowingly or not, made
exaggerated claims over Iraq's nuclear weapons program to justify going to
war.
A senior State Department official said Thursday the United States had
acquired the documents from "a private source, non-governmental," in Rome.
Elisabetta Burba, a journalist with Italian current affairs weekly Panorama,
said it was she who handed over the papers to the U.S. embassy in October
2002 after acquiring them from a source she could not name but who was not
linked to Italian secret services.
"I knew the documents could represent a huge world scoop...but there were
many details that I found unconvincing," Burba said in an interview with
daily Corriere della Sera.
She said after checks in Niger failed to satisfy her that the documents were
reliable, Panorama decided not to publish the story.
Burba, meanwhile, had given the documents to U.S. embassy officials in Rome
to try to find out if they were credible.
Media reports had suggested Italy's military intelligence agency, Sismi, had
passed on the false documents to U.S. or British secret services