Monday, September 25, 2006

Putz: Bush's 16 intelligence agencies have "hidden agendas."

Putz finally got around to addressing the intelligence report that was leaked to the New York Times last week. Of course, he doesn't respond to the substance of the report, he merely accuses Bush's intelligence agencies of harboring "hidden agendas." Seriously.

The report concluded that, surprise!, the war in Iraq has made the terror threat worse.
A new report states that Iraq war has increased the overall terror threat by giving rise to a new wave of extremism, according to a leaked US intelligence report.

The Iraq war has made the threat from terrorism greater, report says. Instead of contributing to eventual victory in the war on terror, the situation in Iraq has worsened the U.S. position, The Washington Post and The New York Times reported, based on government sources.

The 30-page National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) "Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States" is the first formal assessment of global terrorism by U.S. intelligence since the Iraq war began in 2003.

The report represents a consensus view of the 16 different intelligence services.
Bush has been President for almost 6 years. These 16 agencies, which he was obliged to remake after 9/11, report to him, and are led by people chosen by him. But they're secretly doing the bidding of the Democrats and the terror-supporting media.

Anyone buy that one?

I wonder what the Bush Administration's hidden agenda was last year, when they cancelled, for the first time in 19 years, the annual terrorism report?
The State Department decided to stop publishing an annual report on international terrorism after the government's top terrorism center concluded that there were more terrorist attacks in 2004 than in any year since 1985, the first year the publication covered.
Sounds kinda like the new intelligence report, doesn't it? Damn hidden agendas everywhere.

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