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Sandy Berger Headlines

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Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review)
August 28, 2008, 2:23 am EDT
The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following.
The wrath of women scorned (Warren Advocate)
August 27, 2008, 7:15 pm EDT
TO THE end, they made her their winner. "Hill-ary … the nominee", they chanted in the filled underground Manhattan gymnasium where Hillary Clinton held her final victory celebration. Five months of campaigning ended with a win in South ...
William Klein: Play TV Talking Heads Rope-A-Dope Poker (HuffingtonPost)
August 27, 2008, 3:39 pm EDT
The networks' convention coverage can be so mind-numbingly tedious that viewers are concocting their own strategies for staying awake.
Just Over Half of Democrats Say Bill Clinton Likes Obama and Wants Him to Win (Rasmussen Reports via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 11:12 am EDT
Bill Clinton is expected to talk about himself at the Democratic National Convention tonight and then leave town before Barack Obama's acceptance speech. But just over half of Democrats believe there is no animosity between the two men and that ...
Belles in Hell's Kitchen (Santa Fe Reporter)
August 27, 2008, 6:31 am EDT
My mother, a PhD in Women’s Studies, finds my obsession with food bewildering. “How can anybody care so much about all that?” she groans. As writers Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page say: “Food has become our national ...
Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review)
August 27, 2008, 1:23 am EDT
The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following.
No Nastiness In Springfield? (Brent Bozell III via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 3:00 am EDT
For two years now, we've heard Barack Obama's media allies tell us how he was somehow Not a Politician, that he was the pragmatic soul of civility who was "uniquely qualified to nudge the country toward the color purple." (So said Newsweek.) If ...
Letters (Colorado Springs Independent)
August 7, 2008, 6:40 am EDT
Out with NASCAR Call me anti-American, but isn't NASCAR (and all other manner of gas-guzzling, eardrum-splitting, quasi-sports) among the biggest examples of waste and stupidity?


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National Defense

4.2 CRISIS:AUGUST 1998

On August 7, 1998, National Security Advisor Berger woke President Clinton with a phone call at 5:35 A.M. to tell him of the almost simultaneous bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Suspicion quickly focused on Bin Ladin. Unusually good intelligence, chiefly from the yearlong monitoring of al Qaeda's cell in Nairobi, soon firmly fixed responsibility on him and his associates.37

Debate about what to do settled very soon on one option: Tomahawk cruise missiles. Months earlier, after cancellation of the covert capture operation, Clarke had prodded the Pentagon to explore possibilities for military action. On June 2, General Hugh Shelton, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had directed General Zinni at Central Command to develop a plan, which he had submitted during the first week of July. Zinni's planners surely considered the two previous times the United States had used force to respond to terrorism, the 1986 strike on Libya and the 1993 strike against Iraq. They proposed firing Tomahawks against eight terrorist camps in Afghanistan, including Bin Ladin's compound at Tarnak Farms.38 After the embassy attacks, the Pentagon offered this plan to the White House.

The day after the embassy bombings, Tenet brought to a principals meeting intelligence that terrorist leaders were expected to gather at a camp near Khowst, Afghanistan, to plan future attacks. According to Berger, Tenet said that several hundred would attend, including Bin Ladin. The CIA described the area as effectively a military cantonment, away from civilian population centers and overwhelmingly populated by jihadists. Clarke remembered sitting next to Tenet in a White House meeting, asking Tenet "You thinking what I'm thinking?" and his nodding "yes."39 The principals quickly reached a consensus on attacking the gathering. The strike's purpose was to kill Bin Ladin and his chief lieutenants.40

Berger put in place a tightly compartmented process designed to keep all planning secret. On August 11, General Zinni received orders to prepare detailed plans for strikes against the sites in Afghanistan. The Pentagon briefed President Clinton about these plans on August 12 and 14.Though the principals hoped that the missiles would hit Bin Ladin, NSC staff recommended the strike whether or not there was firm evidence that the commanders were at the facilities.41

Considerable debate went to the question of whether to strike targets outside of Afghanistan, including two facilities in Sudan. One was a tannery believed to belong to Bin Ladin. The other was al Shifa, a Khartoum pharmaceutical plant, which intelligence reports said was manufacturing a precursor ingredient for nerve gas with Bin Ladin's financial support. The argument for hitting the tannery was that it could hurt Bin Ladin financially. The argument for hitting al Shifa was that it would lessen the chance of Bin Ladin's having nerve gas for a later attack.42

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