If you’re looking for pieces on Jack Idema and his team, please click on this link.
Stacy Sullivan’s piece is just as bad as any that’s out there. It appears as though we have a handful of “journalists” (if you want to call them that), and a handful of “experts” *cough*, and they’re in this little bubble with a vacuum in it; the vacuum does not contain any factual information. Since I’ll be quoting from other pieces and journalists, I will be putting Stacy’s piece in bold print.
Her piece is entitled “Operation Desert Fraud How Keith Idema marketed his imaginary Afghan war.”
The title really tells all. But it should read: Stacy Sullivan’s connection with the Smear Jack Cabal.
Oh, but let’s get to the good stuff, shall we?
In January 2002, as U.S. Forces in Afghanistan were hunting down Al Qaeda suspects, the CBS news show 60 minutes II got its hands on some sensational footage; seven hours’ worth of videotape showing Al Qaeda terrorists training in an Afghan camp. The source of the tapes, a former U.S. Special Forces soldier named Jonathan Keith Idema; known familiary as Keith, was more than a little dubious. Idema claimed to be working as adviser to the Northern Alliance, but he was also an ex-con who had served three years in federal prison for wire fraud and had a criminal record in three states. He was, in addition, a serial litigator who had once sued CBS. But the tape’s content featuring a masked man in a bullet-scarred compound training to assassinate and kidnap world leaders proved a TV producer’s dream.
Ok, so we’ve already established what went on…she just demonstrates the usual anti-military bias that elitist “journalists” tend to proliferate (thanks, Jim). Yes, CBS got its hands on the VideoX Al Qaeda tapes. And yes, Jack was the source; but I’m not sure how exactly he was “dubious”. His background is well known in Special Forces; as illustrated in this post and this post from SF Ops coming forward on his behalf. Interestingly, Task Force Saber 7 WAS, in fact, acting in the capacity of “advisors” to the Northern alliance.
And yes, he spent some time in prison. I spent some time in the hospital–doesn’t mean I’m a mental patient. Let’s be clear on this point. He spent some time in prison, but he wasn’t the primary in the case. The “primaries” in the case were let go. Sounds weird, doesn’t it? He was convicted of “aiding and abetting” when the original perpetrators of the crime were let go. Campbell put it very succinctly in his letter to ABC:
I worked closely with several journalists checking out the tapes and Jack’s background and qualifications. One of my colleagues was Elizabeth Neuffer, an experienced and highly regarded correspondent with the Boston Globe. She had impeccable contacts in the US military, and volunteered to check out his credentials to comment on the tapes. Her conclusion was that he was a highly unsavoury character but was “one of the best people in the world to be talking about this.” Elizabeth was later killed in Iraq, but the articles she wrote about the tapes and about Jack attest to her conclusions about him.
Elizabeth Neuffer’s contacts were none other than the Assistant SecDec So/LIC, General John Keane, and another sensitive high-level source, which puts the more accurate reporting about Jack Idema in the hands of some heavy weight experts.
It may have also proved too good to be true; Mary Mapes, who famously vouched for the documents purporting to show that George W. Bush was given preferential treatment by the Texas Air National Guard, was the producer of the segment. CBS News arranged for Dan Rather to fly to Kabul for an interview with Idema. 60 Minutes II touted its footage with the promise that as the most intimate look yet at how the world’s deadliest terrorist organization trains its recruits and what it wants them to do to the West.
Ok, so what? As Elizabeth Neuffer, Eric Campbell and others reported, the Al Qaeda tapes were vetted and authenticated…and from genuine military like General Gary Harrell, senior commander on the ground at Bagram air base.
Special Forces soldiers, other journalists, and Army Intelligence immediately questioned the tapes’ authenticity.
Woah here we take a left turn into…noman’s land…
Tracy-Paul Warrington, formerly a chief warrant officer with U.S. Special Forces who now advises American police forces on counterterrorism, says the tapes are not an intimate look at anything except clumsy military play acting. Eighty-five percent of terrorists attacks in the last decade have been bombings, Warrington says.
Geez. Let’s take a look at this one. Warrington was fired from CUBIX Defense Company for misuse of company email, among other related things, when Warrington accused Jack of conducting mortar attacks on civilians from mosques, and used company email to do it. Right about the same time he said this, al-Qaida and Taliban terrorists in Kabul kidnapped several UN personnel in the middle of Kabul city in an attack that was portrayed in Jack’s 8mm VideoX tapes exactly as it was practiced three years earlier. What’s more is–Warrington has never even seen the seven hours of tape. Only the CIA, the DIA, and several other alphabet agencies have ever been given those highly restricted 7 hours by Jack, although most of it was shown to Dan Rather (CBS) and Eric Campbell (ABC) AFTER Jack got permission from a US Army PAO. Warrington, Stacy’s “expert,” has never even been to Afghanistan.
In this film we see raids. This was a method that went out in the seventies, when Idema was in the Army. I was looking at seven hours of tape of something that Al Qaeda doesn’t do. Another Retired Special Forces soldier, a longtime acquaintance of Keith Idema’s, contacted CIA sources aand learned the agency had similar concerns about the tapes’ authenticity. The CIA ran voice analysis on the tapes and concluded they were staged, he says, adding that the agency didn’t publicize its findings because it didn’t want to waste its time on someone it considered harmless. Contacted about this claim, CBS spokeswoman Kelli Edwards said the network showed the tape to three former British Special Forces offricers, who verified the tatics being practices in the video were consistent with those of Al Qaeda, and to a top US military official in Afghanistan, who told us that, in his opinion, the video was authentic. In the terror-charged atmosphere of early 2002, in any event, there was no public outcry over the piece’s authenticity.
Woah. As is mentioned above, Warrington hasn’t seen any 7 hours of videotapes…the only thing he’s seen is that which CBS aired. Next, I’d love to know who this other “expert” is in this piece. Could it be –oh–uh–JOE CAFASSO? WOW I wouldn’t have published his name, either, brain trust. These tapes were vetted–there was no CIA voice analysis that found them to be fakes. The “top military official” in Afghanistan was General Gary Harrell, senior commander on the ground at Bagram air base, who has served in every major American conflict in the last two decades, including Grenada, Panama, the Gulf War and Somalia, and a former commander in Delta Force (a real one, not a fake like Cafasso). It would seem to me that a REAL military official’s professional opinion should outweigh that of an aging loser who lives with his mother in New Jersey and only served 44 miserable days as a private in the Army many moons ago. A guy who ran off on a girl without marrying her after getting her pregnant, and who’s scammed at least 3 women out of money in similar scenarios. This is a guy who I’m supposed to believe from the Smear Jack Cabal that “cares” about people and has done more things for people than I’ll ever know. Well let’s hope he’s paying his child support. Maybe the kid could come forward and tell us how much good ole’ pop is helping his mom out. I understand it’s somewhere in the neighborhood of $25 a week for 200 years.
The CIA doesn’t have the resources to do what Cafasso is saying there–the CIA has absolutely not run a voice analysis on those tapes.
That could well change soon, as many things concerning the life and career of Keith Idema already have. Among other things, it is now clear that Idema was anything but harmless; On September 15, an Afghan court sentenced Idema to a ten-year prison term on charges of entering the country illegally, running a private prison, and torture. Idema had been accused of operating a detention cum interrogation center in concert with another former U.S. soldier and a TV cameraman, who were sentenced alongside him the same day. When Afghan police arrested the trio on July 5, they said they saw a smaller-scale version of the gruesome prisoner-abuse photos from the Baghdad interrogation cells at Abu Ghraib. Early press reports indicated that three prisoners found in Idema’s custody during the raid were blindfolded and beaten and strapped to the ceiling by their feet; five others were tied to chairs with rope in a small, dark room down a hall that was littered with bloodied clothing. All of the prisoners in Idema’s custody were subsequently reqleased; none was shown to be connected to Al Qaeda.
This S*** keeps getting better and better. They were declared INNOCENT of the charges in the second trial, so kiss my grits.
The terrorists weren’t “innocent Afghans’–they were connected with the TALIBAN and Gulbudin Hekmatyar, you idiot. (Sorry this just pisses me off.) Do your research! You could start with Peter Bergen’s Holy War, Inc. Hekmatyar is best remembered for his bloody siege on Kabul and killing more than 20,000 civilians, women, and children with Russian Katucha rockets and tank shells. According to Peter Bergen, one of the world’s foremost authorities on terrorists, and author of HOLY WAR, INC based on his meeting with Osama bin Laden, Hekmatyar is an “ultra-Islamic Taliban” who once “slaughtered 36 men under the Command of Ahmad Shah Massoud… in July 1989,” and later killed “thousands of civilians in Kabul…” from 1992 onward (quoted from page 76, Holy War, Inc., courtesy of Peter Bergen).
Judge Sidiq is connected to Hekmatyar who is connected to Al Qaeda AND Bin Laden. The fact that the US Government took Hekmatyar and Mullah Omar off the most wanted terrorist list should give you an indication as to what’s happening here–and it’s not because they’ve been killed or caught. Hekmatyar is extremely anti-American, but in March of 2003 (if I’m not mistaken), he extended an olive branch to Karzai-and now Hekmatyar is giving his full support to the Karzai administration.
You have to wonder where these people were when Gulumsaki was found with letter in his pocket from his brother at Gitmo..obviously not interested in the amazing story of Jack’s accurate intelligence gathering–and Jack’s amazing penchant/talent for getting–from Gulumsaki, the terrorist who was nabbed off the bus-other terrorists including Judge Sidiq–and as a result of that, he got- the bomb plans, the explosives and the plans to blow up Bagram AFB. If that’s not impressive, he discovered they were going to drive fuel trucks into the barracks at Bagram aiforce base and kill a couple thousand American soldiers. There were also the bomb plans to kill Qanooni who was the main opponent to Karzai and the leader now since Massoud died to the Northern Alliance. AND the plans to kill Marshal Fahim the minister of defense, and all the other guys that were the top allies with the United States. Isn’t it just too bad that Jack blew the whistle on Karzai’s knowledge of these planned assassinations and the State Department’s complicity and silent approval (doing nothing about it)? Something stinks here…really bad. whew!
Just days before Idema’s arrest, CBS News received a video feed from this same Kabul house of horrors, featuring Idema in U.S. Army fatigues and brandishing an assault rifle as he arrested supposed terror suspects. Idema had been in regular contact with Dan Rather since 2002, says Idema’s lawyer, John Edwards Tiffany, of Bloomfield, New Jersey. Rather was planning to go over to Afghanistan to interview Idema again before his arrest because he hoped to get access to the Al Qaeda suspects my client was capturing.” Tiffany insists you can distinctly hear Rather’s voice over a cell phone in footage of Idema discussing network coverage; for its part, CBS says that one of its technicians in Kabul transmitted the feed to CBS News, but denies that there was any ongoing relationship between Idema and the network.
First, if you haven’t read the accounts of Jack’s living among the Afghans and building his well-trained militia, then the stuff about his brandishing an assault rifle sounds outrageous. If you had a picture, though, of what was going on there, you might think of this a little differently. Campbell wrote about it in Absurdistan:
Jack stopped the convoy, suggesting that everybody relax with a little shooting practice. He and his soldiers took turns firing across the gorge with glee, then offered us the rifles, laughing at our clumsy attempts to shoot. Everyone took happy snaps of each other holding weapons in one of the silly, matey rituals of war zones. Within minutes we heard the crack of gunfire overhead as soldiers further up the mountains joined in. It was not much of a threat as a kind of answering birdcall. After 23 years of conflict, gunfire had become part of the natural order. The new government faced an interesting future.
That isn’t exactly the kind of scenario you’d see playing itself out in any of America’s neighborhoods today, so quit playing on peoples’ sensibilities and get a grip on the real situation.
Naturally C-BS is spreading the lies that there was no ongoing relationship. They were the elephant in the room taking video alongside Caraballo, and got out of there shortly before Jack and his team were arrested. The reason they didn’t report on it or use any of the footage is because it would connect them with another scandal, and they certainly couldn’t afford to do THAT, considering all that which Stacy mentions in that paragraph–RATHERGATE and the fake Bush memos.
But the question still remains; How does a freelance torturer claiming false military credentials turn up in American living rooms as an expert on the war on terror?
Well because he’s not a freelance torturer and doesn’t claim false military credentials, that’s why. He’s a former soldier, and a Green Beret as was established previously here, and here. All the actual JOURNALISTS who’ve done their research know that to be fact, and that includes Dan Rather.
The short answer is that, like other con men, Keith Idema made a very powerful impression. Even in that 2002 broadcast, Rather allows, in his voice-over, that Idema is “controversial” but goes on to claim that his most troubling quality his murky past is what makes him perfectly at home in Afghanistan’s freewheeling Wild West atmosphere. The anchor might also have added that Idema has made himself at home in all sorts of places; on military bases, at the head of a fictional company, in Lithuanian police-training camps, in dealings with U.S. embassies, and as Idema now alleges with American military officialdom. And at every step along the way, Keith Idema increased his mastery of the fine art of press manipulation.
It’s odd to me that you would do a piece like this and wouldn’t even bother to investigate what being a Green Beret entails. I’ve been on a crash course since I took this thing on–read Hunt for Bin Laden-Absurdistan-and have even more reading to do–like Jim Morris’ War Story and others. This is a mindset. This is a culture. And it’s more extreme than Marine Corps or regular Army. When you’re on the outside looking in, it’s easy to dismiss things that scream out to people with actual military knowledge, or special forces operators.
This is where the longer answer comes in. The war on terror has been a Wild West insofar as a loose and growing cohort of freelance military subcontractors is concerned. To this day, many veterans are in Afghanistan in the employ of private companies, as volunteer U.S. forces have been depleted or reassigned to Iraq. Even for uniformed soldiers, it can be difficult to tell who is and is not working for the government.
Whether he was officially working for the government is not the issue. If Jack HAD been working for some company like Blackwater, I’m certain this case would have ended up very differently–like the one recently where the men who were charged and held for 35 days were simply released. From Forbes online….
KABUL, Afghanistan - Dozens of armed police burst into a Kabul guest house in October, arresting the stunned occupants. For an American, two Britons and an Indian, the raid began a trip through the Afghan justice system marked by violence, uncertainty and the possibility of years in prison.
A possibility that was quickly ruled out, because they were part of BUSINESS that has erupted in Afghanistan…Heinrich called himself a “partner” in a company involved in construction projects, including work with the defense contractor Blackwater’s U.S. agreement to train Afghan border police. Eaton also said he was involved in reconstruction, including a project to provide potable water. Shaw said he was a security consultant, and Joshi said he worked in logistics. So there you have it, and you know exactly what happens when the Afghans figure out your entire situation, and that situation is connected with big business…some money is exchanged and you’re free.
There is absolutely no question that Jack wouldn’t be in this predicament if he had been employee of Halliburton or Blackwater.
Keith Idema was in many ways tailor-made to exploit this sort of confusion. His time in the Afghan docket came at the end, not the beginning, of a very long and colorful career as a free agent at the strange intersection of paramilitary enterprise and sensational on-the-scene media. And regardless of whether Idema’s claims of government complicity in his actions prove true, they overlook the crux of this complicated saga; The Keith Idema story is a fable of fame, macho swagger, and opportunism in the age of terror, fueled most of all by the craving for ever more vivid and dramatic kinds of media attention. it’s the kind of tale that Joseph Conrad might concoct if he were reincarnated as a screenwriter for Fear Factor or the Apprentice.
Actually, the military has found itself in dire straits since Clinton cut it back by 40%. What we’ve discovered is–we can’t continue to disarm when we might-oh my goodness–NEED them! And to my way of thinking, commiting as our president has done to beefing up the UN Peacekeeping forces and abandoning our own defenses is absolutely no way to fight this terror war.
As Peter Bergen pointed out in his piece “Shadow Warrior”, civilians carrying out jobs that were formerly military jobs is not unique.
Peter: Yeah. I mean, the larger picture here is there are now more American civilian contractors in Iraq than there are British troops. Kind of an astonishing statement if you think about it. Britain is our biggest ally in Iraq, yet there are more American civilian military contractors. So this is a new phenomenon. We’re increasingly privitizing things that the Armed forces would have done, whether that’s interrogating Al Qaeda members, or guarding senior figures like Karzai the president of Afghanistan, and, you know, Idema operated in this kind of shadow world between the civilian and the military. He was in contact with the Pentagon, he did have senior level contacts in the Afghan government.
This has been confirmed in numerous pieces by some heavy weight journalists including Elizabeth Neuffer, Eric Campbell and Jon Lee Anderson.
One of the entire reasons that Special Forces were called into this mess was because we’re undermanned and underfunded–plus, the bureacratic red tape that my son consistently complains about, prevents people from really DOING anything proactive. This is the reason why many have said that the FBI hasn’t made much progress where Bin Laden and his cohorts are concerned–they’re merely cleanup crews who go out an identify bodies AFTER THE FACT.
It’s interesting that you should bring up that “wild wild west” reference, because in the beginning of the war in Afghanistan, the SF Ops who were building partnerships with the Northern Alliance were an interesting mix of ancient and modern warfare techniques. This was, to be sure, an “unconventional” war; and old techniques from early in our heritage had to be utilized.
For example; when my son was down at the Marine Military Academy, I met an old guy who had taken care of the horses when they were there. We’d missed the horsemanship lessons the young men learned by a few years–the horses had been gone for a few years by the time my son went to school there. The cavalry was an old military tradition that has not, in fact been allowed to die all the way. And that’s one of the reasons SF Ops in Afghanistan were able to so quickly join forces with the Northern Alliance. General Dostum, as a matter of fact, had a love of cavalry charges.
And Jack is a man’s man–he’s no liberal pansy ass terrorist sympathizing nutcase like the elitist halls of academe are pumping out.
Much about Idema’s life and times is disputed. But this much is clear: Well before he became a pariah, he was a military enthusiast and a media hound. When he was 12, he was inspired to become a soldier after seeing John Wayne in the movie version of Robin Moore’s best-selling 1965 novel, The Green Berets—a stirring, heroic account of how Special Forces soldiers in Vietnam were vanquishing the communist enemy. By the time Idema, a Poughkeepsie native and only son of a Marine who served in World War II, was old enough to join the military in 1975, the Vietnam War was nearing its end. Recruits for Special Forces—a.k.a. the Green Berets—were thinning, and despite his diminutive height (five foot nine) and bad eyesight, the young man was accepted. But military records do not indicate that Idema was all that special a soldier. One particularly harsh evaluation, written by Captain John D. Carlson near the end of Idema’s three-year tour, read: “[He] is without a doubt the most unmotivated, unprofessional, immature enlisted man that I have ever known.”
Oh YEAH?
“Keith Idema may be one of the last individuals for whom the phrase ‘I give you my word’ still has meaning. To Keith honor is everything…. Keith will do what he has pledged to do, no matter how difficult…”
“I have relied on him in the past, and never been disappointed.”
(Signed; [The Honorable] Timothy Connolly, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict) on official US DOD stationary (the top Pentagon civilian over all US Special Operations units in the world).
“In fact, I was assigned to teach surveillance operations to a British SAS commando force during which time Idema was their principal instructor in hostage rescue and close quarter battle. He [Jack] was the consummate professional with only two goals in mind; saving lives and combating terrorism for the red, white and blue.”
(Letter written by Peter D. Montfort, former Special Forces operative and Senior Detective with the Dutchess County, New York Sheriff’s Office. The letter is dated May 25, 1994)
“SGT Idema possesses a strong personality and a highly developed individualism…He is sure to abrade an occasional superior. Such occasional abrasion is a scant price to pay for his often demonstrated abilities; and besides, some superiors can use a little scraping now and then…Idema is definitely a person, and I prefer a thoroughbred that on occasion needs the bridle, but never the whip, to a plodding cart horse. SGT Idema is the man I want around when the going is rough and in times of stress and crisis. He is a tough and hard driver when you need him. I think the Army needs him and that he belongs in the Army for as long as we can keep him.”
(Excerpt from a 1978 efficiency report contained in a letter of support for Idema written by his former commanding officer, Special Forces Captain Ray Carney. The letter is dated April 30, 1994)
“Idema is a stand-up kind of person. He is what we call a self starter. He is a leader of men and not a follower. He speaks his mind in a true and honest manner and is not a bureaucrat. Although some may not agree with his tact in which he uses to get his point across he is true to his word and is dependable in the highest caliber. I would stand side by side with Idema in the toughest situations in both military and civilian life.”
(Letter of support for Idema written by Special Forces operative and counter-terrorism expert, Master Sergeant Peter L. Conners (later Command Sergeant Major). The letter is dated May 18, 1994 on Department of the Army stationary from a classified unit)
“I have known few people as loyal and dedicated to their Country as Keith Idema.”
(Letter of support for Idema written by John M. Comparetto, New York City Police Detective and Executive Director of the Rockland County SPCC, and later Chief of State of New Jersey Corrections). The letter is dated June 1, 1994)
“Idema goes in locked and loaded and never quits.” “But he’s not afraid of pain, and he’s not sweating death. It’s never occurred to the guy to yield; never crossed his mind…. No doubt about it, Keith is a hardass, but a true patriot, a man of courage and inviolable honor.”
(statements of Major James Morris, recipient of FOUR PURPLE HEARTS, and FOUR BRONZE STAR Medals for valor in Vietnam. Major Morris served three combat tours in Vietnam and has covered eight wars and conflicts as a combat correspondent. He is the author of the best-selling book WAR STORY.
“Idema’s word can be taken as gospel.. I would want him with me in any battle…”
Command Sergeant Major Alex Schwarcbher, US Army Special Forces, and the Senior enlisted man for the United States Army Special Warfare School at Fort Bragg — the school that trains and qualifies Green Berets. Schwarcbher’s medals include the purple heart, the bronze star, the silver star, the MSM, AM, and Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry.
Jack Idema is
“a man who has walked the moral high ground, and has lived according to the creed ‘Duty, honor, Country’…”
Lt Colonel Rick Lester, Classified Special Operations unit (TF-160).
“Idema is the best Special Forces Weapons Sergeant I have ever known, and one was one the most valued team members in my command.”
And, in a letter of commendation,
“…his ability to train indigenous foreign armies is unsurpassed.”
Written by Colonel Gary Rohen (MACV-SOG Vietnam Team Leader) who is currently the Deputy Director of the FBI’s Counter-Terrorist Watch Command in Washington, DC.
In an official letter dated January 7, 1976, Colonel Charlie A. Beckwith, School Commandant, who became famous as the First Commander of Delta Force, commended Jack on his “perseverance, motivation, and professionalism” in Special Forces:
“During that selection course you excelled by meeting every requirement set upon you, whether it be arriving at your objective on schedule, navigating across hazardous terrain, evading detection or leading an ambush. The initiative you took and the motivation you showed in attaining every objective of a course that was designed to be impossible to complete reflects greatly upon yourself and Special Forces.”
[Signed,] Charlie A. Beckwith
Colonel, Infantry
Director, Special Forces School
For some, the words duty, honor, country still have meaning. Thank God for guys like Keith Idema, and I am so disgusted with all that’s happened as a result of his honorable efforts to fight the Taliban, Bin Laden and Al Qaeda.
uh…you people are messing with the wrong guy, believe me. I understand he has a genius’ iq and could be carrying a mensa card. (That’s for all you elitists out there)
Disputed? Not until the hit pieces came out. It’s too bad that you couldn’t tear yourself away from the mirror long enought to do some research. Check out who the people are who are making those statements of support, because those statements you made about his supposedly “poor” military record are so far off base they just make you look like a complete dufus-and make me want to puke. That’s why it’s so unfortunate-that people like Stacy Sullivan hang a guy out to dry on the basis of statements made by guys like Joe Cafasso and Tracey-Paul Warrington in the face of heavy weight military people who’ve been around for a while who ARE experts, not fake ones.
Jack is a pariah to the smear Jack Cabal–they want to make sure he stays one. He’s a pariah to people who are new to the story, which would include you. The journalists who have been following this story–the ones who have seen him in action, the people he’s affiliated with, the emails he’s received from people in government, can see the level at which he operates. Those of you who are reporting from your desks in nowheresville don’t have a clue. I suppose you might call me one of those folks in nowheresville–except for one thing. I’m interested in telling the truth about Jack Idema–not the lies that the Smear Jack Cabal are so desperate to hang onto. I’ve contacted people at ABC, and other news outlets, and I’m privy to a tremendous amount of information that the media who has reported on this case have left out–ON PURPOSE–to paint a terrible picture of this man. The record must not stand as it is; it must be corrected.
I’m going to stop here, as it should be plain that this piece is a waste of time…like the piece in Columbia Journalism Review called “The Education of Stacy Sullivan”. If you try to read it, make sure you have toothpicks to keep your eyes open and plenty of coffee. It’s completely tedious minutiae. You might wonder what the connection is there…because it’s pretty apparent someone at Columbia is pretty interested in every hair on her pretty little head. Couldn’t be interested in what’s IN it, that’s for sure.
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shredding propaganda: Stacy Sullivan’s “Operation Desert Fraud”
If you’re looking for pieces on Jack Idema and his team, please click on this link.
Stacy Sullivan’s piece is just as bad as any that’s out there. It appears as though we have a handful of “journalists” (if you want to …
Trackback by Cao's Blog — 12/17/2005 @ 1:06 pm