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Downing Street Minutes: Oregonian Newsroom 503 221-8100

let them know that you want to see coverage of the Downing Street Minutes story (one of the most viewed at Times Online UK) in the Oregonian.

mention that Rep. John Conyers has sent the White House a specific message about this, and is gathering support in Congress for a full investigation.
ask to speak with an Editor about it,

and make sure that the Editor-in-Chief and Newspaper Owners / CEOs also know,

that you want to see more than adequate coverage of this story in the Oregonian.
Britain accused of creating fears 11.Jun.2005 17:10

if not iny media, then who?

Britain accused of creating terror fears
Law lord says UK and US tried to bend international law with Belmarsh and Guantánamo detentions
Clare Dyer, Legal editor
Saturday June 11, 2005
Guardian
One of Britain's most eminent judges yesterday accused the British and US governments of whipping up public fear of terrorism, and of being determined "to bend established international law to their will and to undermine its essential structures".
Lord Steyn, one of the longest-serving law lords in Britain's top court, the House of Lords, made the accusation while delivering his first public comments on the lords' ruling in the Belmarsh case.
He was forced to step down last year from the panel of judges hearing the challenge to the lawfulness of detention without trial for foreign ter rorist suspects after the government took exception to earlier remarks he had made on the subject.
Last December the law lords ruled by 8-1 that the detention without trial of foreign nationals in Belmarsh and Woodhill prisons and the Broadmoor high security hospital breached human rights laws.
Lord Steyn's remarks yesterday came a day after a damning report from the Council of Europe's committee for the prevention of torture, which concluded that the treatment of some detainees "could be considered as amounting to inhuman and degrading treatment".
He was giving the keynote address to an audience of judges and lawyers at the annual meeting in central London of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, whose chairman is Lord Bingham, the senior law lord.
The session was chaired by the appeal court judge Dame Mary Arden. The audience included Lord Brown, another law lord, Judge Luzius Wildhaber, president of the European court of human rights in Strasbourg, Sir Franklin Berman QC, former legal adviser to the Foreign Office, and Elizabeth Wilmshurst, the deputy Foreign Office legal adviser who resigned over the attorney general's advice that the Iraq war was legal.
Lord Steyn hailed the Belmarsh ruling as "a great day for the law", and "a vindication of the rule of law, ranking with historic judgments of our courts".
He added: "Nobody doubts in any way the very real risk of international terrorism. But the Belmarsh decision came against the public fear whipped up by the governments of the United States and the United Kingdom since September 11 2001 and their determination to bend established international law to their will and to undermine its essential structures."
As far as he could ascertain, he said, the Belmarsh case was the first in which a government had sought, and managed, to change the composition of the panel of law lords due to hear a particular case.
The government, repre sented by the attorney general, argued that Lord Steyn should not sit on the case because, in a 2002 lecture, he had said: "In my view the suspension of article 5 of the European convention on human rights - which prevents arbitrary detention - so that people can be locked up without trial when there is no evidence on which they could be prosecuted is not in present circumstances justified."
It was "a matter of speculation", he said in a printed footnote to yesterday's lecture, whether the challenge to his right to sit on the panel for the Belmarsh case had been motivated by his 2003 lecture Guantánamo Bay: The Legal Black Hole. That lecture, in which he attacked the treat ment of prisoners by the US at its base in Cuba as a "monstrous failure of justice", drew headlines around the world.
The attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, argued in the Belmarsh case that the unelected judges had no democratic mandate and should defer in the sphere of national security to politicians who had been elected by the people.
Lord Steyn said Lord Bingham's judgment in the Belmarsh case, pointing out the "wholly democratic mandate" given to judges by parliament in the Human Rights Act, had contained the "most eloquent and magisterial rebuke" to an attorney general since Lord Denning quoted the words of Thomas Fuller: "Be you ever so high, the law is above you."
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005
 http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5213512-111274,00.html

Corroboration 11.Jun.2005 17:58

concerned

These Newpaper people tend to give stock answers that they rely upon the newswire for information on national and international news. Inform them that Senator Bob Graham corroborates the Downing Street Memo in his conversation with General Tommy Franks in his book one year prior to the Iraq invasion. Senator Kennedy has also voiced concern about the Memo. We do not just want corporate media spin but both sides of the story to make up our own minds.

Keep up with the competition. Oregonian! 11.Jun.2005 23:06

reader 2

The Washington Post, (which earlier shamelessly neglected the DSM story), is putting the story about the OTHER SHOE THAT HAS DROPPED on PAGE 1 OF TOMORROW'S SUNDAY WASHINGTON POST!

from washingtonpost.com

"Memo: U.S. Lacked Full Postwar Iraq Plan -- Advisers to Blair Predicted Instability"

By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 12, 2005; A01

A briefing paper prepared for British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his top advisers eight months before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq concluded that the U.S. military was not preparing adequately for what the British memo predicted would be a "protracted and costly" postwar occupation of that country.

The eight-page memo, written in advance of a July 23, 2002, Downing Street meeting on Iraq, provides new insights into how senior British officials saw a Bush administration decision to go to war as inevitable, and realized more clearly than their American counterparts the potential for the post-invasion instability that continues to plague Iraq.

In its introduction, the memo "Iraq: Conditions for Military Action" notes that U.S. "military planning for action against Iraq is proceeding apace," but adds that "little thought" has been given to, among other things, "the aftermath and how to shape it."

The July 21 memo was produced by Blair's staff in preparation for a meeting with his national security team two days later that has become controversial on both sides of the Atlantic since last month's disclosure of official notes summarizing the session.

Can it be anything but Downing St Minutes? 16.Jun.2005 18:18

Richard

This No Media Coverage about all the most importance news is now in a stage of Way Beyond Outrageous!!!!!!!!! Yes we want it covered in all Media, not just The Oregonian!