New York, November 23, 2005U.S. President George
Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair should clarify reports by
a British newspaper that Bush had raised the idea of bombing the headquarters
and other offices of the Qatar-based satellite television network Al-Jazeera
during an April 2004 meeting with Blair in Washington.
The London-based tabloid the Daily Mirror reported that Bush
raised the idea of bombing Al-Jazeera's offices but that Blair advised
against it, saying such action would provoke a global backlash. The
paper's sources disagreed on the nature of Bush's alleged suggestion.
One government source dismissed the remark as "humorous, not serious,"
and an unidentified source claimed the president was "deadly serious."
The Washington Post quoted a senior U.S. diplomat as saying the
report "sounds like one of the president's one-liners that is meant
as a joke."
According to international and British press reports two British civil
servants face prosecution under the Official Secrets Act for leaking
a classified memo of the meeting between the two leaders. The memo turned
up in May last year in the office of a British member of parliament,
the Daily Mirror said.
Blair's office declined comment. Yesterday, White House spokesman Scott
McClellan told the Associated Press in an email statement that the White
House was "not interested in dignifying something so outlandish and
inconceivable with a response."
"This is a very serious charge with grave implications for the safety
of media professionals. President Bush and Prime Minister Blair should
at once set the record straight about what was said or not said during
their April 2004 meeting," said Ann Cooper, Executive Director of the
Committee to Protect Journalists. "Refusing to address these reports
in a substantive way only fuels suspicions."
The Bush administration has been a harsh and frequent critic of Al-Jazeera
for its coverage of Iraq and Afghanistan but has dismissed allegations
that it had ever targeted the network. Officials have labeled Al-Jazeera's
programming inflammatory and anti-American. U.S. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld last year accused the network of "consistently lying" and "working
in concert with the terrorists."
In April 2003, a U.S. missile struck Al-Jazeera's Baghdad bureau, killing
reporter Tareq Ayyoub. The military claimed it was responding to hostile
fire at the time, an assertion vehemently denied by Al-Jazeera. CPJ
has repeatedly demanded that the U.S. military conduct and make public
a thorough investigation into the incident, but is unaware of any military
inquiry that was ever launched. The U.S. military bombed Al-Jazeera's
bureau in Kabul, Afghanistan, in November 2001. The Pentagon asserted,
without providing additional detail, that the office was a "known Al-Qaeda
facility," and that the U.S. military did not know the space was being
used by Al-Jazeera.
