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Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead!

Scooper | 14.12.2002 01:00

BBC Reports Kissinger Resignation

According to the BBC, Bush has accepted Kissinger’s resignation. Kissinger refused to reveal the names of his clients. He lasted 16 days. Unnamed sources say that Bush will turn to Dr. Laura next.

I wouldn’t normally link anybody to a BBC article, but scoop fever drove me to it.

Scooper
- Homepage: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2574741.stm

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Wow!

14.12.2002 01:20

Brilliat Scooper.Seems like the Bush and Blair team are really headed down the pan.
As was intended

dh


LOL

14.12.2002 06:21

This is gonna keep me laughing til the end of the festive period :)

"He's just...imbecilic"
- Noam Chomsky on Henry Kissinger

Lemming
mail e-mail: lemming@tao.ca


qkjfnjef

14.12.2002 10:44


I was hoping from your title it was gonna be Thatcher!
I guess this is almost as good.

kfnvklq


Two down...

15.12.2002 01:08


The vice-chairman of the commission had also resigned...


Mitchell quits Kissinger's 9/11 inquiry

David Teather in New York
Thursday December 12, 2002
The Guardian

The former US senator George Mitchell resigned yesterday from a commission set up to investigate the September 11 terrorist attacks, just weeks after the controversial appointment of the former secretary of state Henry Kissinger as chairman.

Mr Mitchell, who played a key role in the Good Friday agreement in Northern Ireland, cited a reluctance to quit his law firm as the reason for stepping down. The former senate majority leader, who was to be vice-chairman of the commission, claimed he had not realised it was a full-time job.

But there was speculation that the Democrat was uncomfortable working alongside Mr Kissinger, 79, who has been brought back in from the political cold to run the investigation. Several recent books and a documentary have questioned his honesty and integrity, and his appointment to chair the commission by President Bush was greeted with astonishment among many commentators.

Christopher Hitchens' book, The Trial of Henry Kissinger, accuses him of war crimes for his activities in Vietnam, Cambodia and Chile, while Daniel Ellsberg's new book, Secrets, is severely critical of his behaviour in the Vietnam war era.

The commission will look into intelligence failures and whether the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington could have been avoided. It has 18 months to report.

Mr Mitchell will be replaced by Lee Hamilton, an Indiana Democrat, on the bipartisan committee.

 http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,858521,00.html

Commissioner