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IP: now the Bush admin is even "detaining" National Review writers


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 18:35:15 -0400


------ Forwarded Message
From: Jim Warren <jwarren () well com>
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 09:03:56 -0700
To: nobody () well com
Subject: now the Bush admin is even "detaining" National Review writers

Geee ... I thought National Review was vehemently pro-conservative.
Guess not "conservative" enough.  Perhaps the often tongue-tangled
Bush's administration had confused the concept of "conservative" with
"obedient".  Or "subservient."  Or ... perhaps they knew exactly what
they were doing.  Step by step!  --jim

http://www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.asp?ref=/nr_comment/nr_comment07
1202.asp

July 12, 2002, 6:00 p.m.
Free Joel Mowbray!
A wild afternoon at the State Department.
By National Review Online Staff

Would that the State Department were as tough on the Saudis.
NRO contributor Joel Mowbray was detained this afternoon at the State
Department after an acrimonious exchange with top Foggy Bottom press
flack Richard Boucher.

Mowbray had challenged Boucher on his account of events at State this
week, which had to fire its longest-serving career diplomat in response
to the congressional uproar created by Mowbray's reporting on the "Visa
Express" program (the program gives the Saudis easy access to U.S. visas
- see Mowbray's reporting here
<http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray061402.asp> .

Mowbray read from a classified cable that had been leaked to him and
that contradicted Boucher's spin (both Mowbray
<http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray071002.asp>  and the
Washington Post quoted from the cable earlier this week). State
Department officials were not amused. Very not amused.

When Mowbray was leaving the briefing, a State Department official,
accompanied by four guards, asked him to stay to answer a few questions.
Mowbray said he could come back later. The official said, no, they
wanted him to answer a few questions immediately.

When Mowbray began to get the feeling that he couldn't leave even if he
wanted to, he asked, "Am I being detained?"

When a diplomatic security official - who had showed up on the scene -
told him "no," Mowbray announced that he was leaving.

At which point, the guard stepped in front of Mowbray and said, "Now,
you're being detained."

The guards wouldn't let him leave until Mowbray had called a lawyer from
his cell phone and National Review had called the State Department's
press office to ask what was happening - about a half-an-hour after the
run-in began.

When NRO contacted an official in the State Department's press office
later this afternoon to ask if State had a comment on the incident, she
said, "He wasn't detained!"

Asked to elaborate, the press official continued, "I wasn't there! I
don't know what happened!"

But for at least a few minutes, Mowbray had a harder time leaving the
State Department than many Saudis have had entering the country.



------ End of Forwarded Message

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