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International | Indymedia

Did Bush Really Want to Bomb the Arabic TV Network's Headquarters in 2004?
by Democracy Now (reposted)
Tuesday Nov 29th, 2005 12:51 PM
The Arabic satellite network Al Jazeera continues to search for answers over reports President Bush wanted to bomb its headquarters in Doha. We speak with Democracy Now! correspondent Jeremy Scahill about the Bush administration's attacks on Al Jazeera and Dima Tahboub, the widow of Al Jazeera Baghdad reporter, Tareq Ayoub, who was killed April 8th, 2003 when the U.S. military bombed the network's office in Iraq. She is considering suing the US government for her husband's death.
The Arabic satellite network Al Jazeera continues to search for answers over reports President Bush wanted to bomb its headquarters in Doha. Last week the Daily Mirror cited a secret British memo revealing Bush told Tony Blair in April 2004 of his desire to bomb the news outlet.

The Bush administration has described the Daily Mirror's report as "outlandish." After refusing to comment on the story for close to a week, on Saturday Blair called the Mirror report a "conspiracy theory." On Monday, Blair responded to a parliamentary request whether he had any information on the Bush administration's plans to bomb Al Jazeera. Blair's written response was one word: "None."

Al Jazeera's managing director, Wadah Khanfar, arrived in London Friday to petition for a meeting with Blair to discuss the leaked memo. He said, "Al Jazeera is not just a TV station. It has become something people are very attached to. People are angry." He added that the network would consult lawyers to see what further action could be taken.

Meanwhile, the British government has banned the British media from disclosing the memo's contents. It has also pressed charges against two former government officials for leaking classified government information. The Bush administration has long been critical of Al Jazeera. This is Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld speaking in 2001.

* Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense, October 2001 (Excerpted from the documentary "Control Room")

In August of last year, the U.S.-backed Iraqi government banned the network from reporting in Iraq. This after the U.S. bombed Al Jazeera's bureaus in Afghanistan in November 2001 and Baghdad in April 2003. It claimed both bombings were accidental. But this claim was immediately put into question following reports Al Jazeera had given the US military its coordinates so as to avoid any accidental bombing. This is Ibrahim Hilal, senior editor at Al Jazeera when the Kabul office was bombed by the U.S. Hilal was interviewed Democracy Now shortly afterwards.

* Ibrahim Hilal, senior editor for Al Jazeera, interviewed on Democracy Now!, November 2001.

The April 2003 bombing of the Al Jazeera bureau in Baghdad killed Al Jazeera correspondent Tariq Ayoub -- again after Al Jazeera had given the US military its coordinates in Baghdad. This is Al Jazeera Senior Producer Samir Khader, appearing on our program in May of last year.

* Samir Khader, senior producer for al Jazeera, interviewed on Democracy Now!, May 2004.

Today, we are joined by two guests:

* Dima Tahboub, widow of killed al Jazeera reporter Tariq Ayuob. She has announced she is considering suing the US government for her husband's death. She joins us from Amman, where she is a professor at the University of Jordan.
* Jeremy Scahill, Democracy Now! correspondent and independent journalist. He is currently a Puffin Writing Fellow at the Nation Institute. He has written a new article for The Nation website titled "Did Bush Really Want to Bomb Al Jazeera?"

Check out the new blog by Al Jazeera staffers: http://Dontbomb.blogspot.com.

LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/11/29/1458240
Al-Jazeera consults lawyers over Bush memo
by UK Guardian (reposted) Tuesday Nov 29th, 2005 12:56 PM
Owen Gibson, media correspondent
Tuesday November 29, 2005

Arab news channel al-Jazeera is to consult its lawyers in an attempt to pursue George Bush through the courts over the US president's alleged threat to bomb the broadcaster's headquarters.

The satellite broadcaster's managing director, Wadah Khanfar, who is in London to petition No 10 for a meeting with Tony Blair to discuss the leaked memo, said the incident had hardened attitudes against the US among its viewers.

"Al-Jazeera is not just a TV station. It has become something people are very attached to. People are angry," he said, adding that the broadcaster would consult lawyers to see what further action could be taken.

Mr Khanfar said that the Doha-based broadcaster, which derives the majority of its funding from a $100m grant from the emir of Qatar, would not drop its calls for the memo, in which Mr Bush is alleged to have suggested bombing the Arab station's headquarters, to be published.

"We demand to know what's happened. We need to know for the sake of history, for the sake of journalism. It has historical value," he said, adding that the broadcaster had not yet had a response from Downing Street over its request for a meeting.

Mr Bush's alleged comments about bombing al-Jazeera's building in Doha are reported to be contained in a note of a meeting with Mr Blair. The attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, has warned newspapers they could be charged under the Official Secrets Act if they publish further material from the note.

More
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1653287,00.html

also see
http://www.friendsofaljazeera.org/
'Don't bomb Al-Jazeera'
by Al-Ahram Weekly (reposted) Thursday Dec 1st, 2005 3:18 PM
The pan-Arab media has become yet another target of US aggression. Sherine Bahaa investigates
--

"It was not as much surprising news as it was peculiar timing," one Arab observer remarked during an interview on Al-Jazeera this week.

For many, reports that United States President George Bush has considered bombing Al-Jazeera fits only too well with norms of the US administration and its neo-cons. By now, their method of dealing with any irk -- whether person, place or institution -- has become somewhat familiar: just bomb it out of existence.

One has to view this recent incident in the same frame as Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and secret prisons scattered throughout Europe. And US aggression against Al-Jazeera -- whether its offices, reporters, or cameramen -- carries a long history.

Al-Jazeera journalists have been harassed, denigrated, condemned and, when captured, accused of being Al-Qaeda operatives.

Like CNN in the 1991 Gulf War, the Arabic Al-Jazeera news network has became a main part of the story of the present war in Iraq. According to Al-Jazeera, the number of subscribers to the channel in Europe has doubled since the start of the war. The channel has posed a comprehensive alternative to Western-style reporting of the war.

In fact, Al-Jazeera drastically changed the face of Arab broadcasting when it was first launched in 1996 from the ashes of a BBC joint venture with a Saudi broadcaster. The station is expected to inaugurate the opening of its English transmission by March 2006.

The plot thickened last week after the British tabloid the Mirror reported news gleaned from a leaked top-secret British government memo. The five-page transcript contained a note of a meeting which took place on 16 April between Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair. At the time, the US assault against Iraqi insurgents in Falluja was at its height.

The transcript of the pair's talk revealed Bush's suggestion that Al-Jazeera's building in Doha be bombed. According to the report in the Mirror, Al-Jazeera owed it to Blair -- who allegedly feared the consequences of such an act against an ally -- for talking Bush out of launching a military strike on the pan-Arab station.

According to the Mirror, if that strike was to occur it would be "the most spectacular foreign policy disaster since the Iraq war itself". The British daily paper has taken an anti-war stance since the war began.

For its part, Al-Jazeera's perspective on the war have drawn criticism from Washington since the US-led March 2003 invasion.

The station has broadcast messages from heads of Al-Qaeda including Osama Bin Laden and Ayman Al-Zawahri, along with the beheadings of Western hostages by insurgents in Iraq and images of the US army returning to their relatives in their coffins. But these features have remained true to Al-Jazeera's well-known motto: "opinion and the counter-opinion".

Al-Jazeera was also the first Arab station to carry out interviews with Israeli officials. Its presentation of Bin Laden's sermons were balanced by interviews with Western leaders.

Soon after, news of the memo spread, Al-Jazeera set up a blog in its defence. "Don't bomb us" ( http://www.dontbomb.blogspot.com ) spelled things out in facts and figures: while Bush has received about 500 hours of airtime, Bin Laden has received only five. Around 50 million people across the world watch Al-Jazeera.

For his part, Lord Goldsmith, the British attorney-general, warned that anyone who dared to publish the actual contents of the document would be prosecuted under the provisions of the country's long standing Official Secrets Act. But suppressing British journalists is hardly going to be the best way to annul the report. Unwittingly, such an act by the attorney-general is likely to confirm the report rather than undermine it. According to a poll on http://www.cnn.com, out of 138,305 votes, 70 per cent of respondents believe that the memo is true.

With that sort of response, Al-Jazeera's managing director held consultations with the station's lawyers and requested an explanation and a meeting with Blair, which Blair simply shrugged off.

"Al-Jazeera is not just a TV station. It has become something people are very attached to. People are angry," Wadah Khanfar, the station's managing director explained.

Protests by the stations staff all over the world were organised simultaneously, while in front of the head office in Doha pictures of Sami Mohieddin Al-Haj, held in Guantanamo; Tareq Ayoub, an Al-Jazeera journalist killed in Baghdad and Tayseer Allouni were displayed.

The scene raised questions about whether the attacks on the stations' offices in Kabul and Baghdad in 2002 and 2003 respectively were deliberate or simply "unfortunate accidents".

Even the answer to this was obvious.

In an article published earlier this week by top British journalist Robert Fisk, he recalled a conversation with Al-Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad before the Arab Media Centre which housed his offices was bombed: "I remarked how easy a target his Baghdad office would make if the Americans wanted to destroy its coverage -- seen across the Arab world -- of civilian victims of the Anglo-American bombing of Iraq. 'Don't worry, Robert,' Tareq Ayoub replied. 'We've given the Americans the exact location of our bureau so we won't get hit.' Three days later, Tareq was dead."

Meanwhile, Allouni, an Al-Jazeera correspondent in the Afghanistan war, is expecting a verdict by a Spanish Court after being accused of taking part in a terrorist plot. Al-Haj, another Al-Jazeera cameraman, was arrested in Afghanistan in 2001 and detained in Guantanamo.

US interrogators are obsessed with the idea of Al-Qaeda infiltration of the channel.

But why Bush's profound obsession with Al-Jazeera? Why, for that matter, is the most powerful man in the world worried about a 24-hour news organisation?

By now, the answer is obvious. Bush has failed to provide a coherent explanation for his country's mission in Iraq. In short, the outcome of the Iraq war has embarrassed the US administration, and it is this very truth that Bush does not want to be revealed.

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/771/re6.htm
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Britain: Two charged under Secrets Act for leaking Bush threat to bomb Al Jazeerawsws (reposted)Saturday Dec 3rd, 2005 9:16 AM