|
God I love it when the stink finally comes out. Take a load of these new apples:
| quote: | Details Emerge on Stint by Chalabi Niece at 'NY Times'
By E&P Staff
Published: June 01, 2004
NEW YORK During the five months that Iraqi exile leader Ahmad Chalabi's niece, Sarah Khalil, worked for The New York Times in 2003, the reporter who hired her, Patrick Tyler, published nine pieces that mentioned her now-disgraced uncle, according to an article published today by The New Yorker. During this time, she also personally helped Chalabi get across the border from Kuwait into southern Iraq.
The Times fired Khalil on May 20, 2003, when word of her employment reached New York.
According to the article by Jane Mayer, "two months before the invasion began, the chief correspondent for the Times, Patrick E. Tyler, who was in charge of overseeing the paper's war coverage, hired Chalabi's niece, Sarah Khalil, to be the paper's office manager in Kuwait. Chalabi had long been a source for Tyler. Chalabi's daughter Tamara, who was in Kuwait at the time, told me that Khalil helped her father's efforts while she was working for the Times.
"In early April 2003, Chalabi was stranded in the desert shortly after U.S. forces airlifted him and several hundred followers into southern Iraq, leaving them without adequate water, food, or transportation. Once again, the assistance of the U.S. military had backfired. Chalabi used a satellite phone to call Khalil for help. According to Tamara, Khalil commandeered money from I.N.C. funds and rounded up a convoy of S.U.V.s, which she herself led across the border into Iraq."
Tyler told Mayer he didn't know about Khalil helping her uncle get into southern Iraq. He said that Khalil had a background in journalism, and that Chalabi hadn't been a factor in the war when he hired her -- something of a stretch, given that fellow reporter Judith Miller has identified him as the prime source for her biggest scoops.
"We were covering a war, not Chalabi," Tyler told Mayer. When asked by Mayer about Khalil's rescue of Chalabi, William Schmidt, an associate managing editor of the Times, said, "The Times is not aware of any such story, or whether it happened. If so, it was out of bounds."
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/e...t_id=1000522848 |
Ya just gotta love that "liberal" media, don't cha?
___________________
Whence September dusk grows crisper still,
with leaves all crimson conquered,
I yearn to shout,
and dance about,
and stick pickles in my honker...
|