Hersh says Cheney has moles in Obama Administration

Former Vice President Dick Cheney has moles in the Obama government which report back to him from the Pentagon, investigative reporter Seymour Hersh told NPR and MSNBC on Tuesday.

Speaking with NPR's Terri Gross, Hersh revealed that the former Vice President -- who he characterized as "really smart" -- has individuals that report back to him from key positions in government. He called these individuals "stay-behinds," an intelligence term generally applied to insiders left behind in foreign governments after the occupying power is driven out.

"He’s put people back," Hersh said. "They call it a stay-behind. It’s sort of an intelligence term of art. When you leave a country and, you know, you’ve driven out, you know, you’ve lost the war. You leave people behind. It’s a stay-behind that you can continue to contacts with, to do sabotage, whatever you want to do.

"Cheney’s left a stay behind," Hersh continued. "He’s got people in a lot of agencies that still tell him what’s going on. Particularly in defense, obviously. Also in the NSA, there’s still people that talk to him. He still knows what’s going on. Can he still control policy up to a point? Probably up to a point, a minor point. But he’s still there. He’s still a presence."

The audio, captured by ThinkProgress, is available here.









Hersh expanded on his comments in an interview with MSNBC's Keith Olbermann Tuesday night. The former New York Times reporter said that the types of individuals that would be well suited to play the role of a Cheney mole would be military officers that were promoted at Cheney or Rumsfeld's behest.

"There are always a group [of officers] who are political and play kiss-up," Hersh said. "And so inevitably you're going to have a group of officers that got promoted ahead of the curve because they were closer and more friendly to Rumsfeld, to Cheney and their policies. And so you have a group of people that were very loyal to the Rumsfeld/Bush/Cheney policies, who had been promoted in big jobs across the spectrum... They have a loyalty."

"Cheney has enormous influence with a lot of the senior officers in the Pentagon," he added. "So I have been told to put the word -- it was the word that I was told about, what they call "stay-behinds." He has people he can count on to keep him informed of what's going on. That doesn't necessarily mean he has much influence on policy. But he, certainly in the Pentagon. And I think because certainly at the National Security Council for weeks and weeks after the Obama Administration took over, there was a long delay in getting staff turned over. So there were a lot of people around in the first few weeks, in the first months of this administration that had served very closely with the Cheney/Bush operation."

In his NPR interview, Hersh even said that some of his sources who'd told him to call them after Bush left office are still nervous about talking.

"I had a lot of people that had told me in the last year of Bush told me, call me next February," he said. "So far, even people that are out are still chary, because not so much Bush," but because of Cheney.

He said Cheney's intelligence is significantly greater than most people believe.

"Cheney is really underestimated," Hersh said. "It's easy to make a caricature of him, but he's very, very bright. He's also, in person, much more open-sided in a sense -- not politically -- the most disparate people in the world go and have social meetings with him and his wife -- as long as you don't get into politics, and uh, movies and stuff like that. He's easy to make a caricature but he's much more formidable than people think. He's got a rat-trap memory."

The following video is from MSNBC's Countdown, broadcast Mar. 31, 2009.




Download video via RawReplay.com





http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Hersh_Cheney_has_moles_in_Obama_0401.html

04.01.09 -- Fools

Ship of Fools, Hieronymus Bosch
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Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Puzzle by Ed Stein and Paula Gamache, edited by Will Shortz
Twelve factual but deceptive clues ending with question marks and their corresponding entries are the main feature of this April Fools' Day crossword:

Where was the Battle of Bunker Hill fought? -- 18A. BREED’S HILL -- What animal does a bulldogger throw -- 29A. STEER -- In what country are Panama hats made -- 37A. ECUADOR -- What is George Eliot’s given name? -- 41A. MARY ANN -- From what animals do we get catgut? -- 47A. SHEEP --In what country are Chinese gooseberries produced -- 59A. NEW ZEALAND -- What color is the black box in a commercial jet? -- 3D. ORANGE -- What is actor Stewart Granger’s family name? -- 7D. STEWART -- The California gull is the state bird of which state? -- 31D. UTAH -- For what animals are the Canary Islands named? -- 34D. DOGS -- What kind of fruit is an alligator pear? -- 43D. AVOCADO -- How many colleges are in the Big Ten? -- 49D. ELEVEN.

ALL SIZES (40D. Nobody too big or too small, on a sign) and MAHOGANY (10D. Reddish brown) are the other long entries, followed by those of six letters including ANNUALS (20A. Makes invalid); BREADS (1D. Challah and baguettes); CHEAPO (8D. For next to nothing, in slang); EDSELS (50D. Ford failures); EMILIO (46D. Actor Estevez); ERES TU (36D. 1974 Mocedades hit); GAS LOG (42A. It’ll keep the home fires burning); HI DE HI (48D. Cab Calloway phrase); I AM NOT (2D. “You are so!” preceder); LAREDO (231D. Rio Grande port); LEGUME (4D. Pea, for one); PET SIT (51D. Take care of a neighbor’s dog, say); RUDEST (58A. Putting up the greatest affront); TENDER (35A. Money).

Five-letter -- AGATE (25A. Cousin of a cat’s-eye); BOSCH (5A. “Ship of Fools” painter); DOGMA (23A. Seminary teaching); HOOTS (68A. Very funny happenings); IONIC (56A. Column style); LEAST (52A. Smallest); ORTHO (15A. Lawn care brand); SIDE A (65A. Deejay’s interest, typically); TILDE (55A. Part of São Paulo); WASHO (22A. California Indian tribe: Var.).

Short stuff -- ALAS, ALDA and ALMA, ALI, ARIL, ASHE, BIOL, BOBS, CAL, CARE, EARN, EDIT, EGAL and EMAG, ERA, ESL, FREE, HELI, HODS, INST, LABS, MACE and MOC and MSEC, NASH, NET (60D. Site for a site), NFL, ORR, RARE, RDAS, SAP, SEVE, SHA, STIR, TMEN, TOE, USIA, WEB (61D. Site for a site).

Lastly, 30A. Drop TROU (moon)- variously defined as to display one’s buttocks to, in jest -- to drop one’s trousers and/or undershorts; to moon -- well, “trou” in truth is French for “hole!”

What fools these mortals be!

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For today’s cartoons, go to The Crossword Puzzle Illustrated.

Click on image to enlarge.

Puzzle available on the internet at

THE NEW YORK TIMES -- Crossword Puzzles and Games

If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery subscription.

Remaining clues -- Across: 1. Frog-dissecting class: Abbr.; 10. Riot queller; 14. Pink, maybe; 16. “Such a pity”; 17. Slate, e.g.; 24. Drain; 32. Soprano Gluck; 33. Get copy right; 43. Queens’s ___ Stadium; 44. Seed cover; 45. Golfer Ballesteros; 63. Times to call, in some want ads; 64. Unoccupied; 66. Port opener?; 67. Family dogs, for short; 69. The “I” in M.I.T.: Abbr. Down: 6. Short cuts; 6. Bruins’ retired “4”; 9. Brick carriers; 11. Clay, today; 12. “Silent” prez; 13. Adult ed. Class, often; 19. ___ Na Na; 24. Recipe verb; 26. “M*A*S*H” star; 27. Eliot Ness and others; 28. Bring home; 37. Not différent; 38. ___ package; 39. Former Voice of America org.; 41. Fraction of a tick: Abbr.; 53. Piggy; 57. He wrote “If called by a panther, / Don’t anther”); 58. Nutritional amts.; 59. Cowboys’ org.; 60. Cold war ___.