NY Times: The White House has a lot of explaining to do.

So either Cheney knew and he and the Shrub communicate so poorly that this information was never conveyed from dick to shrub — or — the Shrub did know that the Nigerian Uranium information was incorrect. Either way, it stinks.

The Uranium Fiction

A NY Times Editorial.

We’re glad that someone in Washington has finally taken responsibility for letting President Bush make a false accusation about Saddam Hussein’s nuclear weapons program in the State of the Union address last January, but the matter will not end there. George Tenet, the director of central intelligence, stepped up to the issue yesterday when he said the C.I.A. had approved Mr. Bush’s speech and failed to advise him to drop the mistaken charge that Iraq had recently tried to import significant quantities of uranium from an African nation, later identified as Niger. Now the American people need to know how the accusation got into the speech in the first place, and whether it was put there with an intent to deceive the nation. The White House has a lot of explaining to do…
We’re glad that someone in Washington has finally taken responsibility for letting President Bush make a false accusation about Saddam Hussein’s nuclear weapons program in the State of the Union address last January, but the matter will not end there. George Tenet, the director of central intelligence, stepped up to the issue yesterday when he said the C.I.A. had approved Mr. Bush’s speech and failed to advise him to drop the mistaken charge that Iraq had recently tried to import significant quantities of uranium from an African nation, later identified as Niger. Now the American people need to know how the accusation got into the speech in the first place, and whether it was put there with an intent to deceive the nation. The White House has a lot of explaining to do.


Here is the full text of the article in case the link goes bad:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/12/opinion/12SAT1.html
The Uranium Fiction
We’re glad that someone in Washington has finally taken responsibility for letting President Bush make a false accusation about Saddam Hussein’s nuclear weapons program in the State of the Union address last January, but the matter will not end there. George Tenet, the director of central intelligence, stepped up to the issue yesterday when he said the C.I.A. had approved Mr. Bush’s speech and failed to advise him to drop the mistaken charge that Iraq had recently tried to import significant quantities of uranium from an African nation, later identified as Niger. Now the American people need to know how the accusation got into the speech in the first place, and whether it was put there with an intent to deceive the nation. The White House has a lot of explaining to do.
So far, the administration’s handling of this important

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