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1 posted on 05/24/2006 8:31:33 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: Quilla

Johnson's career has been propped up by the mainstream media and the left (but I repeat myself). Actually, any critic of President Bush is guaranteed a career boost with an "analyst" position on the alphabet networks.


2 posted on 05/24/2006 8:37:06 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: Quilla

Johnson's up there with the guy who suggested closing the patent office in the 1800's because "everything's been invented".


4 posted on 05/24/2006 8:43:27 AM PDT by Darkwolf377 (An immigration-thread-free FReeper as of...now!)
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To: Quilla

I remember seeing Larry Johnson's face on the news constantly after 9/11. He sounded authoritative and strong and presented a different viewpoint than he does now. These days, he sounds like Cindy Sheehan's boyfriend. The article is right on.


5 posted on 05/24/2006 8:48:08 AM PDT by virginiaspook
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To: Quilla
"And Larry Johnson became known, at least in the eyes of some of his former colleagues, as the author of perhaps the most embarrassing op-ed ever published. “The worst,” says one such colleague. “On an issue of national interest, has there ever been a worse prognostication in the history of man?”

It was just about the worst op-ed in the history of man, but the MSM persists in treating this schmuck like some great intel guru -- and his fingerprints are EVERYWHERE in the dishonest MSM coverage of the Wilson-Pflame fiasco. You can see Larry Johnson quoted in just about any story on that b.s. affair, always flogging the most dishonest account of why Valerie Pflame is not a treasonous whore but an invaluable, heroic patriot.
7 posted on 05/24/2006 11:31:18 AM PDT by Enchante (General Hayden: I've Never Taken a Domestic Flight That Landed in Waziristan!)
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To: Quilla; Fedora; Howlin; ravingnutter; piasa; Peach; Grampa Dave; pinz-n-needlez; canadianally; ...

Byron York gives it a good start, but the blogger "SEIXON" has just done a far more thorough examination of how Larry Johnson and his pals have been flogging their b.s. with various reporters. Here is a much more detailed overview of the sordid relations between Larry Johnson, Joe & Valerie, media frauds such as Jason Leopold et al, and the other VIPS frauds:


Truth on Sale

http://www.seixon.com/blog/archives/2006/05/truth_on_sale.html

After doing some research on Jason Leopold’s previous work, I came away with a (well-founded) suspicion that the Wilsons and Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) were sourcing a good deal of his work and using him as a mouthpiece. I discovered that this flock of people, the Wilsonistas, suddenly started writing less about the Plame investigation after Libby’s indictment. However, Jason Leopold started writing almost exclusively about the Plame investigation at about the same time, in October.

Instead of VIPS writing articles in Truthout and elsewhere about the imminent indictment of Rove, Cheney, Hadley and that Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald was going to get his hands into the Niger forgeries, they now had Jason Leopold to do their work for them. This way they could claim all sorts of things and wouldn’t have to stand accountable for them, while hanging Leopold out to dry.

Truthout has been a stenographer for the Wilsonistas for quite some time. Ray McGovern and Larry Johnson are contributors, McGovern since 2003 and Johnson apparently since late 2005. William Rivers Pitt and other Truthout reporters have used them as named sources quite often, while other reporting done by Leopold indicates they have also been unnamed sources. However, there is another guest to the party which may have escaped the radar while writing for UPI as an intelligence correspondent: Richard Sale.

Sale is an interesting journalist, a bit obscure, but has written some heavy-hitting pieces that have made waves. Three years ago he wrote a detailed article about all the supposed ties between Saddam Hussein and the CIA from before he became a dictator. Needless to say, this story became a staple in many an anti-war diet, leading to dense statements such as, “The United States created Saddam Hussein!” This isn’t Sale’s fault, of course, his article is fairly nuanced and detailed, but you have to wonder how many of the details are actually accurate – most coming from anonymous intelligence sources. He was also involved in covering the AIPAC spy scandal back in 2004 for UPI, although it was CBS who broke the story.

The earliest work Sale did on the Plame investigation was back on February 5, 2004, a piece titled “Cheney’s Staff Focus of Probe”. The article is heavily pro-Wilson and recycles some of the most common false claims about the whole ordeal, including Wilson being sent by the administration. It seems he was spot on when it came to Libby, but we haven’t heard anything about Hannah, who I cannot recall has even been named in any court documents at all. We also see him recycling a false rumor that two administration officials called up six reporters to plant a story; the rumor is widely attributed to Marc Grossman, a long-time friend/acquaintance of Wilson. Finally, he claims that the exposure of Plame violated the IIPA, although Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald has long since said he will not be pursuing any charges along those lines.

The most revealing article done by Mr. Sale came two days before Libby was indicted, October 26. Here the nexus between Sale, VIPS, and Truthout comes together in all its glory. In an article titled “Aides to Be Indicted, Probe to Continue”, Larry Johnson introduces Sale to the Truthout readers, commenting that he’s “found Richard to always be on target”. Ironically, this may very well have been the most inaccurate article Sale has done for quite some time. Let’s just start out with the lead paragraph:

Two top White House aides are expected to be indicted today on various charges related to the probe of CIA operative Valerie Plame, whose classified identity was publicly breached in retaliation after her husband, Joe Wilson, challenged the administration's claim that Saddam Hussein had sought to buy enriched uranium from Niger, according to federal law enforcement and senior US intelligence officials.

I can hear the echoes of Leopold’s disingenuous defense, “I always said… EXPECTED.” Notice how it is stated as fact, according to his sources, that the naming of Plame was done in retaliation. The two officials being talked about are Libby and Rove of course:

I. Scooter Libby, the chief of staff of Vice President Richard Cheney, and chief presidential advisor Karl Rove are expected to be named in indictments this morning by Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald.

It was “expected”, so I guess Sale is off the hook, right Leopold? In fact, you could just keep writing that it is “expected” that a huge earthquake is going to rock California, and then when it does, you can just say you were there to report it first. Uh huh. This article contains inaccurate or false information in almost every paragraph, continuing:

Others are to be named as well, these sources said. According to US officials close to the case, a bill of indictment that named five people has been in existence since before October 17. Various names have surfaced, such as National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, yet only one source would confirm that Hadley was on the list. Hadley could not be reached for comment.

Keep in mind that Larry Johnson had written just 8 days earlier on October 18 on his blog that he had received a tip from what he would later reveal to have been a friend of Hadley’s that Hadley expected to be indicted. In the same breath, Johnson also personally confirmed a rumor that there were 22 indictments going to be handed down, and that Hadley, Rove, Cheney, and others were among them. Anyone want to bet that Johnson was one of Sale’s sources, perhaps the single source that would confirm that Hadley was on the list of indictments? More cannon fodder:

But letters from Fitzgerald notifying various White House officials that they are targets of the investigation,went out late last week, a former senior US intelligence official said.

100% bogus, as there’s only been one White House official who has received a target letter. I wonder which former senior intelligence official in VIPS sourced that claim. Johnson? McGovern? Colonel Patrick Lang? We’ll get back to Lang later. The string of complete cock-and-bull continues:

But federal law enforcement officials told this reporter that Fitzgerald was likely to charge the people indicted with violating Joe Wilson's civil rights, smearing his name in an attempt to destroy his ability to earn a living in Washington as a consultant. The civil rights charge is said to include that "the conspiracy was committed using US government offices, buildings, personnel and funds," one federal law enforcement official said.

Violating Wilson’s civil rights? You’re joking right? Did Sale note down a joke as fact? This is just bizarre, and completely wrong.

Other charges could include possible violations of US espionage laws, including the mishandling of US classified information, these sources said.

What didn’t these sources say? Wrong, wrong, wrong.

That Vice President Cheney is at the center of the controversy comes as no surprise. Last Friday, Fitzgerald investigators were talking to Cheney's attorneys, and detailed questionnaires, designed to pin down in meticulous sequence what Cheney knew, when he knew it, and what he told his aides, were delivered to the White House on Monday, according to these sources.

You don’t say, Cheney at the center of the controversy? That almost sounds like what Ray McGovern wrote a week earlier, in “Chickens Come Home to Roost on Cheney”, where he also speculated that Bush would fire Fitzgerald for getting too close to home. I’m sure that is just a strange coincidence though, right guys? How deep does the rabbit-hole go? Watch and learn:

Thanks to a letter of February, 2004, in which Fitzgerald asked for and obtained expanded authority, the Special Prosecutor is now in possession of an Italian parliament investigation into the forged Niger documents, alleging Iraq's interest in purchasing Niger uranium, sources said.

They said that Fitzgerald is looking into such individuals as former CIA agent Duane Claridge, military consultant to the Iraqi National Congress Gen. Wayne Downing, another military consultant for INC, and Francis Brooke, head of INC's Washington office in an effort to determine if they played any role in the forgeries or their dissemination. Also included in this group is long-time neoconservative Michael Ledeen, these federal sources said.

This has only been reported by UPI, which reported the following 2 days earlier (October 24) in a piece called “Bush at Bay: Fitzgerald Looks at Niger Forgeries” by Martin Walker, UPI’s Editor in Chief:

The second is that NATO sources have confirmed to United Press International that Fitzgerald's team of investigators has sought and obtained documentation on the forgeries from the Italian government. Fitzgerald's team has been given the full, and as yet unpublished report of the Italian parliamentary inquiry into the affair, which started when an Italian journalist obtained documents that appeared to show officials of the government of Niger helping to supply the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein with Yellowcake uranium.

Have we seen anything of this? Nope. So where was this coming from? October 19, Justin Raimondo of Antiwar.com reported:

According to a source in the Italian embassy, Patrick J. "Bulldog" Fitzgerald asked for and "has finally been given a full copy of the Italian parliamentary oversight report on the forged Niger uranium document," the former CIA officer tells me: "Previous versions of the report were redacted and had all the names removed, though it was possible to guess who was involved. This version names Michael Ledeen as the conduit for the report and indicates that former CIA officers Duane Clarridge and Alan Wolf were the principal forgers. All three had business interests with Chalabi."

Do any of these names look familiar? They are some of the same ones Richard Sale reported about a week later. Raimondo isn’t shy; he tells us quite bluntly what’s up:

I am hardly the first to implicate Ledeen in connection with the Niger uranium forgeries. Former CIA counterterrorism officials Vince Cannistraro and Larry Johnson have pointed the finger in Ledeen's direction.

Larry Johnson and Vince Cannistraro, of VIPS fame, were the ones who started the rumor that Ledeen made the Niger forgeries? Well isn’t that special. I wonder who sourced the articles for UPI claiming that Ledeen & Co forged the documents, and that Fitzgerald expanded his probe to look into them. Never mind that Fitzgerald hasn’t said one peep about the forgeries, and hasn’t mentioned anything even remotely having to do with them. It seems that most of the things Johnson, McGovern, Leopold, and Sale have reported haven’t remotely resembled reality. Is this a grand coincidence?

(As far as a so-called report implicating Ledeen & Co, that’s 100% false. An Italian parliamentary report was released in February which named Rocco Martino, “La Signora”, and Colonel Antonio Nucera as being the ones involved with the forgery. At least the VIPS crew got one detail correct, there were three names – they just made up which three names were in it to sell a story that would appease their anti-Bush base.)

VIPS member Patrick Lang has a blog. A category on his blog: Richard Sale. On October 26, the same date as his aloof article on all things Plame, Sale wrote a blog post for Lang detailing everything about the Niger forgeries. Here he repeats the entire conspiracy theory about Ledeen, Larry Franklin, Doug Feith, and the Niger forgeries, sourcing just about everything he needs to “former intelligence officials”.

Richard Sale, UPI reporter, writing on the blog of a VIPS member about a conspiracy theory concocted by VIPS members, while citing anonymous “former intelligence officials”. I’ve got to give it to them; they’ve got some balls trying to pull that off. In fact, they did pull it off, most of the lefty blogosphere chugs this stuff down by the gallon and doesn’t think twice about where it is coming from.

Just to ensure that the story got through, wink, wink, it was repeated by several other journalists eager to make use of the story that Johnson and Cannistraro concocted. Philip Giraldi, a former CIA official and a partner in Cannistraro Associates (ding!) repeated the tale in Truthout in late November, just in case everyone had forgotten. Does everyone remember Jason Leopold? On January 23rd, Leopold reports the same story about Fitzgerald looking into the Niger forgeries:

Over the past few months, Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald has been questioning witnesses in the CIA leak case about the origins of the disputed Niger documents referenced in President Bush's January 2003 State of the Union address, according to several current and former State Department officials who have testified in the case.

What would you say if I told you that this was coming from Marc Grossman:

"To me it showed a total disregard for the truth, plain and simple," said one former State Department official who had worked closely with former Secretary of State Colin Powell, referring to the administration's use of the flawed intelligence.

Did I mention that my suspicions are well-founded?

Truthout is whoring itself for VIPS and Wilson, with Leopold acting as a mouthpiece, William Rivers Pitt backing him up, and Richard Sale chiming in with his UPI-credibility. They’ve all been running numerous rumors and outright falsehoods fabricated by VIPS to influence public opinion and perhaps even Fitzgerald’s investigation. The Fitzgerald Niger forgeries story was invented by Vincent Cannistraro and Larry Johnson of VIPS; it was peddled to Justin Raimondo then Richard Sale and Martin Walker of UPI. Leopold carries the gig by repeating all of these stories in Truthout, while Larry Johnson conducts damage control when things get out of hand.

There can no longer be any doubt that most of these explosive and uncorroborated “news” stories are being manufactured by the tight-knit group of former intelligence officials in tandem with Joe Wilson, Valerie Plame, and most likely backers in the Democratic Party. It is also probably no coincidence that David Shuster and Chris Matthews of MSNBC have carried many of the same rumors and false stories, such as the one claiming that outing Plame damaged efforts on Iran. Shuster has been hyping a Rove indictment as imminent for over a month, something only one other source has been doing: Jason Leopold.

VIPS was started to compel intelligence officials to illegally leak classified information to damage the Bush administration, and is apparently now in the business of manufacturing false news and rumor-mongering to do the same. It should come as no surprise that a group of veteran intelligence officials would have the clout to pull off such an enterprise, and that they would cut any corner necessary to fulfill their agenda.

Unlike outing covert intelligence officials, outing VIPS as the shadow group behind months and months worth of bogus news and rumors is neither illegal nor immoral. This needs to stop now, VIPS needs to be held accountable. The only way this can happen is if Jason Leopold, Marc Ash, William Rivers Pitt, Richard Sale, Martin Walker, and Justin Raimondo come forward and reveal who has been pulling their strings all this time.

There’s just one problem: the only reason any of those are (liberal) household names is precisely because they are mouthpieces for a dishonest, fake news enterprise. Truthout and UPI would have none of these “scoops” if they didn’t print as fact a bunch of nonsense coming from the quarters of VIPS.

In that sense, these journalists would be speaking truth to power by revealing their sources, the power that VIPS wields over them by handing out the precious “truth” that they have for sale.


8 posted on 05/24/2006 11:51:16 AM PDT by Enchante (General Hayden: I've Never Taken a Domestic Flight That Landed in Waziristan!)
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To: Quilla
If I recall correctly, a drunken William Rivers Pitt cited Larry Johnson as one of the people who "confirmed" that Karl Rove was indicted last week.

His other "confirmation" allegedly came from Joe Wilson.

With a couple of "experts" like that on board, you can understand why the DU Diehards are still standing by their absurd story.

10 posted on 05/24/2006 11:56:28 AM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: Quilla

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/520764/posts

The Declining Terrorist Threat
New York Times | July 10, 2001 | Larry C. Johnson


Posted on 09/11/2001 6:05:46 PM PDT by Nick Danger



The Declining Terrorist Threat
By Larry C. Johnson
July 10, 2001
WASHINGTON - Judging from news reports and the portrayal of villains in our popular entertainment, Americans are bedeviled by fantasies about terrorism. They seem to believe that terrorism is the greatest threat to the United States and that it is becoming more widespread and lethal. They are likely to think that the United States is the most popular target of terrorists. And they almost certainly have the impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism.

None of these beliefs are based in fact. While many crimes are committed against Americans abroad (as at home), politically inspired terrorism, as opposed to more ordinary criminality motivated by simple greed, is not as common as most people may think. At first glance, things do seem to be getting worse. International terrorist incidents, as reported by the State Department, increased to 423 in 2000 from 392 in 1999. Recently, Americans were shaken by Filipino rebels' kidnapping of Americans and the possible beheading of one hostage. But the overall terrorist trend is down. According to the Central Intelligence Agency, deaths from international terrorism fell to 2,527 in the decade of the 1990's, from 4,833 in the 80's.

Nor are the United States and its policies the primary target. Terrorist activity in 2000 was heavily concentrated in just two countries -- Colombia, which had 186 incidents, and India, with 63. The cause was these countries' own political conflicts.

While 82 percent of the attacks in Colombia were on oil pipelines managed by American and British companies, these attacks were less about terrorism than about guerrillas' goal of disrupting oil production to undermine the Colombian economy. Generally, the guerrillas shy away from causing casualties in these attacks. No American oil workers in Colombia were killed or injured last year.

Other terrorism against American interests is rare. There were three attacks on American diplomatic buildings in 2000, compared with 42 in 1988. No Americans were killed in these incidents, nor have there been any deaths in this sort of attack this year.

Of the 423 international terrorist incidents documented in the State Department's report "Patterns of Global Terrorism 2000," released in April, only 153 were judged by the department and the C.I.A. to be "significant." And only 17 of these involved American citizens or businesses.

Eleven incidents involved kidnappings of one or more American citizens, all of whom were eventually released. Seven of those kidnapped worked for American companies in the energy business or providing services to it -- Halliburton, Shell, Chevron, Mobil, Noble Drilling and Erickson Air-Crane.

Five bombings were on the list. The best known killed 17 American sailors on the destroyer Cole, as it was anchored in a Yemeni port, and wounded 39. A bomb at a McDonald's in France killed a local citizen there. The other explosions -- outside the United States embassy in the Philippines, at a Citibank office in Greece, and in the offices of Newmont Mining in Indonesia -- caused mostly property damage and no loss of life. In the 17th incident, vandals trashed a McDonald's in South Africa.

The greatest risk is clear: if you are drilling for oil in Colombia -- or in nations like Ecuador, Nigeria or Indonesia -- you should take appropriate precautions; otherwise Americans have little to fear.

Although high-profile incidents have fostered the perception that terrorism is becoming more lethal, the numbers say otherwise, and early signs suggest that the decade beginning in 2000 will continue the downward trend. A major reason for the decline is the current reluctance of countries like Iraq, Syria and Libya, which once eagerly backed terrorist groups, to provide safe havens, funding and training.

The most violent and least reported source of international terrorism is the undeclared war between Islamists and Hindus over the disputed Kashmir region of India, bordering Pakistan. Although India came in second in terms of the number of terrorist incidents in 2000, with 63, it accounted for almost 50 percent of all resulting deaths, with 187 killed, and injuries, with 337 hurt. Most of the blame lies with radical groups trained in Afghanistan and operating from Pakistan.

I am not soft on terrorism; I believe strongly in remaining prepared to confront it. However, when the threat of terrorism is used to justify everything from building a missile defense to violating constitutional rights (as in the case of some Arab-Americans imprisoned without charge), it is time to take a deep breath and reflect on why we are so fearful.

Part of the blame can be assigned to 24-hour broadcast news operations too eager to find a dramatic story line in the events of the day and to pundits who repeat myths while ignoring clear empirical data. Politicians of both parties are also guilty. They warn constituents of dire threats and then appropriate money for redundant military installations and new government investigators and agents.

Finally, there are bureaucracies in the military and in intelligence agencies that are desperate to find an enemy to justify budget growth. In the 1980's, when international terrorism was at its zenith, NATO and the United States European Command pooh-poohed the notion of preparing to fight terrorists. They were too busy preparing to fight the Soviets. With the evil empire gone, they "discovered" terrorism as an important priority.

I hope for a world where facts, not fiction, determine our policy. While terrorism is not vanquished, in a world where thousands of nuclear warheads are still aimed across the continents, terrorism is not the biggest security challenge confronting the United States, and it should not be portrayed that way.


Larry C. Johnson is a former State Department counterterrorism specialist.


11 posted on 05/24/2006 12:12:09 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (There's a dwindling market for Marxist homosexual lunatic wet dreams posing as journalism)
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To: Quilla
Larry is a lightweight and a punk. Thoroughly discredited as an "authority" in counterterrorism, intelligence, aviation security, and is without a scintilla of integrity or honesty.

Pound sand, Larry. You're a punk.

18 posted on 05/24/2006 2:55:51 PM PDT by paddles
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To: Quilla; Velveeta; Rushmore Rocks; MamaDearest; LucyT; KylaStarr; JustPiper; Arizona Carolyn; ...
"Johnson wrote, “Americans are bedeviled by fantasies about terrorism.” And then:

They seem to believe that terrorism is the greatest threat to the United States and that it is becoming more widespread and lethal. They are likely to think that the United States is the most popular target of terrorists. And they almost certainly have the impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism. None of these beliefs are based in fact.

Surveying the security situation around the world, Johnson sought to reassure readers. “The greatest risk is clear: if you are drilling for oil in Colombia — or in nations like Ecuador, Nigeria or Indonesia — you should take appropriate precautions,” he wrote. “Otherwise Americans have little to fear.”

Two months later, the planes of September 11 crashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field in Pennsylvania. And Larry Johnson became known, at least in the eyes of some of his former colleagues, as the author of perhaps the most embarrassing op-ed ever published. “The worst,” says one such colleague.

There are STILL a lot of Larry C. Johnsons around today everywhere, even here.

Right girls?/Ping

19 posted on 05/24/2006 3:01:51 PM PDT by WestCoastGal (Some FReepers have become popinjays and coxcombs...others just plain hateful. Take the high road!)
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