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Tuesday, June 29, 2004
By Brit
Hume
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| ARCHIVE |
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SHOW INFO |
| The
latest from the Political Grapevine:
Negotiations With Niger? Democrats have
called President Bush a "liar" for saying last year that,
according to the British government, Saddam
Hussein (search) was seeking to buy uranium from
Africa. But senior European intelligence officers now say that
the African country of Niger did, in fact, negotiate with Iraq
to sell Saddam's former regime refined uranium.
One unnamed official, quoted by the Financial Times, says
potential buyers from Iraq met with officials from Niger in
Europe at least three years before the U.S. invaded Iraq. The
senior European intelligence officials say an intelligence
operation in Europe and Africa indicated that Niger had been
in similar negotiations with Iran, Libya, China and North
Korea. However, it's unclear how far any of the negotiations
ever progressed.
The New York Times' ombudsman, public editor Daniel Okrent,
says his paper's headline a week and a half ago saying "9/11
Panel Finds No Qaeda-Iraq Tie" was a "distortion" and a
"misstep." As we noted at the time, the 9/11 Commission said
there were links, though no evidence of any Iraqi involvement
in Al Qaeda attacks on this country.
And so, Okrent says, "good reporting and careful
presentation are ... needed" at the Times. But, Okrent
insists, the distortion was not intentional.
Worth $1 Billion? An analysis of public
records shows that John Kerry's wife, Teresa Heinz
Kerry (search), is worth an estimated $1 billion
double previous estimates, and enough to make them the richest
first family in history, if Kerry is elected.
According to the L.A. Times, Heinz Kerry's vast fortune
comes from a series of investments in blue-chip corporations,
venture capital funds and municipal bonds. The richest
president so far was Herbert Hoover, who was worth the
equivalent of $88 million today when he took office or less
than one-tenth of what the Kerrys are worth.
Slippery Story The BBC which is
struggling with complaints about the fairness and accuracy of
its work is now reporting that a woman in Iran has given
birth to a frog. The BBC, quoting an Iranian newspaper, says
it is believed the woman picked up frog larva while swimming
in a dirty pool.
And the larva, then, grew into an adult frog inside the
woman's body. The woman has two other children, both
apparently human.
FOX News' Michael Levine contributed to this
report |