Key House Republican says Bush gang ‘screwed up’ on nuclear secrets

Alas, the story late last week about the Bush administration accidentally publishing nuclear secrets in Arabic on the Internet did not cause quite the stir that I had hoped for. Perhaps if John Kerry had told a joke about it, and left out a word, the story could have received wall-to-wall coverage on TV.

That said, there has been some interesting follow-up. For example, one of the people who convinced the Bush gang to publish the materials is now publicly criticizing the administration for its poor judgment.

House Intelligence Chairman Peter Hoekstra criticized the Bush administration on Sunday for its handling of a trove of once-secret documents from Saddam Hussein’s covert nuclear program disclosed on a federal Web site.

Hoekstra, R-Mich., complained the U.S. intelligence community hadn’t properly declassified the documents.

“Well, you know, we have a process in place. It looks like they screwed up,” he said on CNN’s “Late Edition.”

President Bush’s director of national intelligence, John Negroponte, ordered the documents posted on the site last March, at the request of Republicans in Congress who wanted to show Saddam was a real threat.

And who, exactly, led these requests and pushed the administration into making this dangerous error? That would be Peter Hoekstra.

The campaign for the Web site was led by the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Representative Peter Hoekstra of Michigan. Last November, he and his Senate counterpart, Pat Roberts of Kansas, wrote to Mr. Negroponte, asking him to post the Iraqi material. The sheer volume of the documents, they argued, had overwhelmed the intelligence community. […]

On April 18, about a month after the first documents were made public, Mr. Hoekstra issued a news release acknowledging “minimal risks,” but saying the site “will enable us to better understand information such as Saddam’s links to terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and violence against the Iraqi people.” He added: “It will allow us to leverage the Internet to enable a mass examination as opposed to limiting it to a few exclusive elites.”

Wait, it gets better. After the IAEA, intelligence officials, nuclear scientists, and European diplomats expressed alarm that the United States government had posted nuclear secrets online, Hoekstra’s office said the revelations “didn’t sound like a big deal,” and complained that the website with the dangerous information had been pulled down.

And now Hoeksta wants the nation to know that the administration “screwed up.” Far be it for me to defend the Bush gang against the Republican House Intelligence Committee Chairman, but the leak was Hoeksta’s idea.

If you don’t want Hoeksta to be chairman of this critically important committee tomorrow, you can give him a demotion tomorrow.

Post Script: By the way, it’s worth adding that Democratic Sens. Harry Reid of Nevada, Carl Levin of Michigan, Joe Biden of Delaware and Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia all demanded over the weekend that the administration explain how and why this fiasco happened. The media largely ignored this, as will the Bush gang, but if there’s a Democratic majority in the Senate, expect these questions to be asked in a far more formal, hard-to-ignore way.

“You really need to do this, and when you do, it’s your fault.”

Could we formally label this an example of a “Hoekstra-ism?”

  • sadly, though, precisely because the media does ignore this kind of matter in the face of the opportunity to spend days on john kerry, there won’t be a democratic majority in the senate.

  • Hoekstra accused the NYTimes of “blatant and transparent political ploys”… but if not for the NYTimes, Negroponte would not have shut down the site, which he now says was a “screw up”… Also, note: the Times called Negroponte who shut the site down on Thursday; they published the article only on Friday…

    So here’s the question: Is Hackstra ready to apologize to the NYTimes and thank them for saving America ?

  • CB writes: “By the way, it’s worth adding that Democratic Sens. Harry Reid of Nevada, Carl Levin of Michigan, Joe Biden of Delaware and Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia all demanded OVER THE WEEKEND that the administration explain how and why this fiasco happened.”
    Why is it that Dems still don’t know that the weekend is the most useless time to publicize or demand anything? Obviously, the media aren’t going to make a big story about anything critical of this sAdministration anyway–so the demand itself IS the story. Well, at least, they didn’t wait until after the election…

  • Alas, the story late last week about the Bush administration accidentally publishing nuclear secrets in Arabic on the Internet did not cause quite the stir that I had hoped for.

    Quelle surprise.

    As I and others have said repeatedly, this is no accident. The Republicans spent the past 30 years building a media infrastructure to push their stories and suppress ours. The Kerry non-story was hyped by entire Wurlitzer and thus received wall-to-wall coverage. This far more consequential story is dying because we have nothing comparable to help push it.

    Destroying the Wurlitzer (hello Fairness Doctrine) and/or building a liberal analogue is a huge Dem priority that the leadership hasn’t the wit to see needs doing.

  • My local paper carried the original story at the end of last week and had its first opinion piece on it on Sunday (strongly negative, appropriately). It’s too bad that it doesn’t seem likely to affect the election.

    If I recall correctly, the first news of the Watergate break-in appeared shortly before the election, but it took a little time to catch on. Even today the mainstream media doesn’t always move at blog speed, unless there’s a hard push from the White House and the right-wing scream-machine.

    This massive screw-up seems like the sort of thing that should cause people to resign. Absent that (because resigning is not really an American tradition), at the minimum investigations and a huge public outcry seem called for.

  • Uh huh. And how long before Chokestra is summoned to the Oval Office for a little “talk” with the mad mandrill? He’ll come out, bruised, broken and chanting mea culpa.

    Still, it is amusing to watch these bastards shove each other under the Blame Express. If they keep the majority (gag) this sort of thing will become so common C-SPAN will see a ratings boost as people tune in for the daily Rethuglican Death Cage match.

    Yes, I’m desperately trying to find a silver lining for a continued ReThug majority.

  • The Republican’ts, controlling all the branches of government, get so confused about who should be doing what is it any surprise they screw up like this.

    Peter Hoekstra is a total and complete fool, and Pat Roberts is not much better. They have not only endangered the American People but people around the world. And when a terrorist bomb goes off, I propose they be sent on clearup detail…

    … without protective gear.

  • So complete plans for building your own nuclear bomb up on a government website. Feel safer now?

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