Building off our post from yesterday -- in which we noted the interesting timing of the original 2006 report about the investigation into Jane Harman's AIPAC ties -- Foreign Policy's Laura Rozen has put together, on her personal blog, what amounts to a complete theory of the case. And it's a theory that implicates the Porter Goss camp right from the start.
So we thought we'd follow that road a bit further. It's not news that Harman and Goss haven't exactly been best buds, either while Goss chaired the House intelligence committee and Harman was its ranking Democrat, or later when Goss led the CIA from 2004 to 2006.* One former intel committee staffer explained the relationship to TPMmuckraker this way: "Jane is an assertive person. And Porter struck me as someone who wanted to avoid conflict. I would not say they were good friends."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)We wondered yesterday whether Lanny Davis, who was just hired by Jane Harman as a "media advisor" to deal with the AIPAC flap, was behind her very aggressive effort to show that her sense of humor is intact.
And it looks like we weren't the only people with questions about Lanny's role.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)There seems to be an emerging consensus among smart people covering the Jane-Harman/AIPAC case that the sources for CQ's original report -- which revealed that Rep. Harman had been heard on a wiretap discussing a quid pro quo with a suspected Israeli agent -- were aligned with Porter Goss, the former CIA director.
And here's some more evidence pointing in that direction:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)I think we get the message ...
Following up on yesterday's rib-splitting news that Jane Harman's team for the Capital Challenge Road Race has been named "Tapped Out", Harman's office is now looking to make more headlines on the subject. Earlier this afternoon, it sent a press release reading:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)Jane Harman has hired Lanny Davis as a "media adviser" to help her deal with the fallout from the AIPAC story, reports Laura Rozen at Foreign Policy.
Hiring Davis suggests Harman -- who embarked on a media blitz last week, without perfect success, in response to the affair -- isn't so worried about the perception that she's too close to the Israel lobby. Davis -- who was special counsel to President Clinton during the Lewinsky saga, and an indefatigable spinner for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign -- has long been a supporter of AIPAC, and serves as an adviser and spokesman for the Israel Project, a hawkish, pro-Israel group. He also, for good measure, appears regularly on Fox News.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (9) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)Jon Stewart had a good segment last night on the convoluted Jane-Harman/AIPAC affair, which brought out both the byzantine nature of the saga, and the ultimate fact that nothing much came of any of the scheming: Harman didn't get the intel job, the AIPAC guys didn't get off, and Haim Saban didn't withhold money from Democrats.
As Stewart put it: "Your government, not at work."
Watch:
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | M - Th 11p / 10c | |||
| Your Government Not at Work - Jane Harman Scandal | ||||
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It's all in good fun -- but is an alleged quid pro quo with a suspected Israeli agent really a laughing matter?
CQ reports that Jane Harman's office plans to compete in a road race tomorrow, sponsored by the American Council of Life Insurers. The Harman team's name: "Tapped Out."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)In our last post on the Jane-Harman/AIPAC story, we noted growing evidence that Bush administration officials worked aggressively to prevent Congress from learning about Harman's wiretapped conversation with that suspected Israeli agent. But Ron Kampeas of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency had an (unfortunately titled) post late last week that took things in a very different, but equally interesting, direction.
Kampeas conducts a close reading of a New York Times report on the affair from last week to make a strong case that it was Porter Goss, then the CIA director, who took the initiative in going after Harman after hearing her on the wiretap, by trying to have authorized a separate wiretap of the lawmaker herself.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (18) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (13)The Jane-Harman/AIPAC story is only getting more interesting.
Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert has gone on the record with information that suggests a broader effort than we'd yet been aware of by the Bush administration to keep secret the fact that it had wiretapped a member of Congress.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (6) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)Some recent developments in the fast-moving Harman-AIPAC story to update you on...
- Nancy Pelosi told reporters that she was briefed "a few years ago" by the NSA that they had wiretapped Harman, but wasn't told what was found, and never alerted Harman.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (47) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (26)We didn't get to this yesterday, but as part of her media blitz to beat back CQ's report, Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA) went on CNN to again deny that she intervened with anyone on the AIPAC case.
And Wolf Blitzer actually did a pretty good job of pressing her...
Watch:
CQ's blockbuster story, about a wiretap that picked up Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA) discussing the AIPAC spying case with a "suspected Israeli agent", picks up on a sequence of complex events from several years ago, and involves several moving pieces.
So we thought it would be worthwhile to put together a timeline of events laying out the major reported developments in this sprawling story.
Without further ado:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (32) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (32)
