Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak has asked the US to work towards halting North Korea’’s nuclear weapons program before Iran’’s, as the move would have a big influence on the Islamic republic.
“North Korea is developing long-range missiles in the backyard of China and Russia and nothing happens to them,†The Jerusalem Post quoted Barak, as [...]
Posts Tagged ‘programme’
Rihanna to perform in public first time after assault
Singer Rihanna is set to perform in public for the first time since she was assaulted by Chris Brown.
The ”Umbrella” singer will appear on the ”The Jay Leno Show” on September 14 alongside hip-hop stars Kanye West and Jay-Z.
The trio are expected to perform their new single ”Run This Town”, reports Contactmusic.
It is said that [...]
Optus launches €2b medium term note
Singapore Telecommunications says Optus Finance Pty, its wholly-owned unit, has established a €2 billion Medium Term Note Programme.
Rating agencies Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s have assigned ratings of Aa3 and A+ respectively to the EMTN programme, in line with Optus’ current long term ratings, says SingTel in a statement to the SGX.
{jcomments on}
Kamal Nath unveils massive road development plan
Union Road Transport Minister Kamal Nath on Wednesday said that the Government has geared up to launch one of the biggest highways development programme in the country.
Replying to the discussions on the working of the Road Transport and Highways Ministry in the Rajya Sabha, Nath said that the National Highways Development Programme would be [...]
ECB denies that Pietersen got injured during IPL
The England and Wales Cricket Board has denied reports that their star batsman Kevin Pietersen had aggravated his achilles injury while playing for Bangalore Royal Challengers in the Indian Premier League in South Africa earlier this year.
The ECB also denied that they had prescribed any training programme for Pietersen, as alleged by Bangalore Royal Challengers [...]
Azad, Bill Gates discuss ways to strengthen health scenario in India
Union Health and Family Welfare Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad today met Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to discuss their shared commitment to promote various health activities in India.
Azad appreciated the work being done by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for its continued support to the National Aids Control [...]
Pietersen IPL injury claims rejected
• IPL coach claims Pietersen aggravated problem with beach run
• ECB denies instructing batsman on training regime
The England and Wales Cricket Board has denied that Kevin Pietersen aggravated the achilles injury that ruled him out of the rest of the Ashes series by flouting a prescribed training programme while playing in the Indian Premier League in South Africa in April.
Evan Speechly, Bangalore’s assistant coach and physiotherapist, claimed yesterday that Pietersen had gone on a training run in Durban. He told Cricinfo: “I think he was just feeling so good about it [his injury] that he got a bit carried away and tried to run on it too soon. He woke up one morning and decided to go for a run along the beachfront in Durban. It flared up again after that.”
But suggestions made by Speechly that Pietersen was under instructions not to run were seized on by the ECB. Neither the board nor Pietersen’s advisers denied that the player had gone on the run or even that his achilles may have been damaged during the exercise, but the ECB did deny that Pietersen had flouted instructions not to go running.
An ECB spokesman yesterday described as “blatantly untrue” suggestions Pietersen had been ordered to refrain from running during his stint with Bangalore. “Pietersen reported to Loughborough before he flew out to South Africa and was passed fit to join up with Bangalore,” the spokesman said. “ECB medical staff sent Bangalore a fitness programme and at no stage did Kevin Pietersen do anything to contradict that and at no stage was he told not to go running.
“Kevin Pietersen is the most diligent and responsible of trainers and prides himself on his physical fitness and preparation for playing cricket. The ECB medical staff hold him as one of the best examples of a player who does everything within his power to achieve maximum fitness to play cricket.”
A spokesman for the player said last night: “Kevin had a medical before he went on the trip [to the IPL in South Africa]. He would not have been allowed to get on the plane if there was anything wrong. He reported to Loughborough before he flew out to South Africa. They gave him a programme and told him to stick to it but he was never told not to go running.”
The ECB is clearly sensitive that its two best players, Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, both centrally contracted, played in the IPL immediately before one of the busiest and most important international summers in memory. Now Pietersen has been ruled out of the remaining three Tests of the Ashes series and is extremely doubtful for the heavy one-day programme that follows it.
Flintoff, meanwhile, was the star turn in England’s victory over Australia at Lord’s, which gave them a 1-0 lead in the series. But doubts also hang over his continued involvement. The all-rounder hurt his knee playing for Chennai Super Kings and was unable to play in the Tests and one-day matches against West Indies. He also missed the World Twenty20 after having an operation on his knee following his return from South Africa. Pietersen went under the knife this week, after playing a subdued part in the victory at Lord’s.
The plight of the two players has made many question the worth of lucrative central contracts. Hugh Morris, the managing director of the England team, was criticised for allowing Pietersen and Flintoff to go. In reality, though, he had little choice. The ECB had agreed on a “window” of opportunity in South Africa before the new central contracts were signed. The farce has led to Sean Morris, of the Professional Cricketers’ Association, saying that big-name cricketers could quit their fat contracts and turn freelance instead.
Pietersen and Flintoff plan to play more IPL cricket next spring, in addition to a hectic international schedule. Flintoff is also due to play for Queensland in Australia’s own Twenty20 tournament this winter. Sean Morris said: “I can see issues with the ECB wanting to restrict players’ appearances in non-international Twenty20 cricket.”
Clarkson makes another Brown slur
Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson risks ire after making more offensive comments about the prime minister
Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson is facing new controversy after making more offensive comments about the prime minister, Gordon Brown, two weeks running in front of the hit BBC2 show’s studio audience, MediaGuardian.co.uk can reveal.
Clarkson, who previously had to apologise to the prime minister in February after calling him “a one-eyed Scottish idiot”, is understood to have described Brown as a “cunt” in not-for-broadcast comments to the studio audience during the recording of this week’s Top Gear programme on Wednesday night.
At the filming of the previous week’s Top Gear, on Wednesday 15 July, Clarkson also called Brown a “cunt” as part of a joke he made in front of the studio audience, one person present told MediaGuardian.co.uk. This remark was not included in the transmitted version of the show on Sunday, 19 July.
The BBC2 controller, Janice Hadlow, was present at the second recording this Wednesday and is said to have confronted Clarkson about the remark.
A BBC spokeswoman confirmed that the pair had a “conversation”, but said the issue was now over. “There was a discussion about the programme,” she said. “It is certainly not an ongoing issue.”
It is understood that Hadlow did not ask Clarkson to apologise for the incident.
In a further statement, the BBC said: “Janice went to watch a recording of Top Gear as it is BBC2′s top-rated programme, and as controller of BBC2, she holds both the programme and Jeremy in high regard. After the recording, she and Jeremy had a discussion about the programme as controllers and presenters often do.”
Downing Street declined to comment.
Clarkson is currently in Belfast, where he is filming for Top Gear in the city’s new sewer system. His manager had not returned calls before publication.
This week’s episode of Top Gear, which airs on BBC2 on Sunday at 8pm, features AC/DC singer Brian Johnson as the star in a reasonably priced car.
Clarkson and his co-hosts Richard Hammond and James May will also be attempting to buy a pre-1982 car at auction with a budget of £3,000 each and taking part in a classic car rally in Majorca.
During a press conference in February in Australia, Clarkson compared Brown to Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd, after Rudd had just addressed the country on the global financial crisis.
“It’s the first time I’ve ever seen a world leader [Rudd] admit we really are in deep shit,” Clarkson was reported as saying in the Australian newspaper.
“He genuinely looked terrified. Poor man, he’s actually seen the books. We have this one-eyed Scottish idiot who keeps telling us everything’s fine and he’s saved the world, and we know he’s lying but he’s smooth at telling us.”
Clarkson, whose Sunday Times columns are syndicated in the Weekend Australian, was referring to Brown, who lost his sight in one eye in an accident playing rugby as a teenager.
Clarkson was forced to apologise after a barrage of criticism from politicians and disability groups.
In a statement, he said: “In the heat of the moment I made a remark about the prime minister’s personal appearance for which, upon reflection, I apologise.”
Clarkson is no stranger to controversy. In November last year he opened the latest series of Top Gear by suggesting that truck drivers only cared about fuel prices and murdering prostitutes, drawing hundreds of complaints.
The presenter and his Top Gear co-hosts were also condemned by the BBC Trust in July for “glamourising the misuse of alcohol” by drinking at the wheel during a Polar special.
The BBC Trust’s editorial complaints unit said a special edition of the motoring show, aired in July 2007, in which Clarkson and May attempted to drive a pickup truck to the magnetic north pole, broke its guidelines.
In the programme, Clarkson and May were shown drinking gin and tonics as they raced Hammond, who was using a sled pulled by a team of dogs, to reach the pole.
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Poetry on the march
It’s been a busy few weeks for poetry. On this week’s programme, Claire Armitstead talks to Sarah Crown and Forward prize judge Nicholas Wroe about the 2009 Forward shortlists, announced yesterday, and the latest projects from the newly-annointed poet laureate, Carol Ann Duffy – which include the launch of a prize, the Ted Hughes award for new work in poetry, and the curation of a collection of war poems from some of our finest contemorary poets, showcased this week in the Guardian.
Mick Wood, the winner of this year’s Ledbury Festival poetry competition, also comes in to the studio to read his winning poem, “Trashbots”, and discuss poetry, politics and what you can create with a cereal packet.
N Korea calls Clinton ‘pensioner going shopping’
Exchange of insults reflects lack of progress at regional summit over country’s nuclear programme
The stand-off over North Korea’s nuclear programme took a turn for the petty today, with the country’s leadership claiming Hillary Clinton looked like a “primary schoolgirl” or “a pensioner going shopping”, after Clinton compared them to “small children”.
The exchange of jibes reflected the lack of progress at a regional summit being held in Phuket, Thailand.
North Korea, attending the talks, said it had no intention of re-entering six-nation talks on its nuclear programme, because of the “deep-rooted anti-North Korean policy” of the US.
“The six-party talks are over,” the spokesman for the North Korean delegation, Ri Hung Sik, said at the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) security forum.
Clinton said North Korea had “no friends left that will protect them” from international determination that the regime dismantle its nuclear programme.
She called on North Korea to dismantle its weapons programme verifiably and irreversibly or face further isolation and the “unrelenting pressure” of international sanctions. She said the international community was prepared to offer a package of incentives if Pyongyang complied, including the normalisation of diplomatic relations.
A 2007 six-party agreement in which North Korea began dismantling its nuclear complex at Yongbyon in return for fuel oil deliveries broke down in April this year, when North Korea threw out UN inspectors and restarted its weapons programme. It has since raised tensions by conducting an apparent nuclear test (some experts say it could have been a hoax using huge quantities of high explosive) and a series of missile tests.
In an interview on Monday, Clinton said the US should not over-react to North Korean provocation. She told ABC television: “Maybe it’s the mother in me, the experience I’ve had with small children and teenagers and people who are demanding attention: Don’t give it to them.”
Pyongyang’s reaction took three days to come, but the delay did not lessen its evident fury.
“We cannot but regard Mrs Clinton as a funny lady as she likes to utter such rhetoric, unaware of the elementary etiquette in the international community,” a foreign ministry statement said. “Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping.”
Israel sees Brazil help with Iran
By Gary Duffy
BBC News, Sao Paulo

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman says Brazil perhaps "more than other countries" can help convince Iran to suspend its nuclear programme.
Mr Lieberman is on a 10-day visit to Latin American partly to promote trade but also to try to counter the influence of Iran in the region.
He said Brazil traditionally had strong ties with Arab countries and Israel and could be a "good negotiator".
Mr Lieberman is also due to visit Colombia, Peru and Argentina.
Mr Lieberman is in Brazil, where he held what were described as "constructive talks" with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in the capital, Brasilia.
Israeli diplomats had acknowledged that unease about Iranian influence in Latin America would be a major issue on this trip, and that Mr Lieberman would be keen to raise those concerns.
However while Israel appears uncomfortable with Brazil’s cordial relations with Iran, its foreign minister suggested this might also offer an opportunity.
"I think that Brazil more than other countries can try to convince Iranians to sop their nuclear programme and, of course, to convince the Palestinians to start direct talks," Mr Lieberman said.
However Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim indicated support for Iran’s goal of nuclear development for "exclusively non-military purposes" and within a "verifiable framework".
In what could be seen as a message for Israel he also spoke of the desire to see a Middle East free of nuclear weapons.
No detail was given about any potential role Brazil might play but there could soon be a chance to test the idea.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad unexpectedly cancelled a visit to Brazil earlier this year, but is said to have promised it will be his first overseas trip after he is sworn in for a second term of office. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
North Korea ‘has no friends left’

North Korea has no friends to protect it from international efforts to end its nuclear programme, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said.
At an Asian regional forum in Thailand she said there was widespread agreement that North Korea could not be allowed to maintain nuclear weapons.
North Korea’s envoy at the meeting said his nation would not re-enter six-party talks on ending its nuclear programme.
A spokesman in Pyongyang added that Mrs Clinton was "not intelligent".
Mrs Clinton said there was widespread concern among the members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) over North Korea’s recent "provocative behaviour".
"Sometimes [Mrs Clinton] looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping"
North Korean spokesman
North Korea dropped out of the six-party talks after the UN censured its long-range missile test in April.
An underground nuclear test and further missile tests followed, provoking new UN Security Council sanctions, allowing for inspections of North Korean vessels suspected of carrying banned arms and tighter financial pressure on the already isolated state.
‘No place to go’
At the Asean forum on the resort island of Phuket, Mrs Clinton said North Korea’s nuclear ambitions threatened regional security and risked triggering an arms race.
"The United States and its allies and partners cannot accept a North Korea that tries to maintain nuclear weapons, to launch ballistic missiles or to proliferate nuclear materials," Mrs Clinton said in Phuket.
"And we are committed to the verifiable denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner."

"There is no place to go for North Korea; they have no friends left that will protect them from the international community’s efforts to move towards denuclearisation."
Even Burma had said it intended to implement the new UN resolution, she said.
Mrs Clinton outlined benefits for North Korea if it ends its nuclear activity.
"Full normalisation of relations, a permanent peace regime and significant energy and economic assistance are all possible in the context of full and verifiable denuclearisation."
Before she spoke, the spokesman for North Korea’s delegation in Phuket, Ri Hung Sik, attacked Washington’s "deep-rooted hostile policy" and said there would be no return to the six-party talks until US policy changes.
Separately, a spokesman in Pyongyang described Mrs Clinton as a "funny lady" – responding to her comments that North Korea’s behaviour was that of an unruly child.
"Her words suggest that she is by no means intelligent," the spokesman said, quoted by state news agency KCNA.
"Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping. Anyone making misstatements has to pay for them."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
UN sets new North Korea sanctions

A United Nations committee has added a number of North Korean individuals and firms to a sanctions blacklist.
Five individuals, five firms and two weapons-related items are subject to the new sanctions regime.
A UN resolution in June toughened sanctions against North Korea after it conducted nuclear and missile tests.
The last time the UN imposed sanctions on Pyongyang, it responded by carrying out a nuclear test, says the BBC’s Laura Trevelyan in New York.
According to the UN Security Council sanctions committee, nations are now banned from doing business with five firms involved in North Korea’s nuclear programme, and five individuals are to have their financial assets frozen and face a travel ban.
They include:
- three North Korean trading corporations – Namchongang, Korea Hykosin and Korea Tangun, as well as North Korea’s bureau of atomic energy
- an Iranian-based company, Hong Kong Electronics, is also sanctioned, accused of moving millions of dollars used for North Korea’s nuclear programme
- Yun Ho-jin, Ri Je-son, Hwang Sok-hwa, Ri Hong-sop and Han Yu-ro now face sanctions because of their involvement in the development of North Korea’s banned activities
- countries cannot sell North Korea certain types of graphite or para-aramid fiber because they could be used to make parts for ballistic missiles
The UN resolution in June called for inspections of ships to or from North Korea believed to be carrying goods connected to weapons of mass destruction.
It also broadened the arms embargo and further cut the North’s access to the international financial system, but did not authorise the use of force.
Ties between North Korea and the outside world have grown extremely tense since it walked away from six-nation talks aimed at ending its nuclear programme.
It subsequently said it would "weaponise" its plutonium stocks and start enriching uranium, prompting fears that it is working to produce nuclear warheads small enough to put on missiles – though analysts say it could take a long time to do so.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Tortured row
By Hilary Andersson
BBC Panorama, Washington

In making Licence to Torture, Panorama did not set out to ask whether the US practices adopted in the aftermath of 9/11 were right, wrong, justified or fruitful. We aimed to find out if they broke US and international law.
One might think that in the world’s most powerful democracy this would be the central public debate. But not in America. The debate that dominates here today is whether torture worked.
At a public forum at a southern California college, we tracked down one of the legal architects of the Bush interrogation programme, a man named John Yoo.
He pointed out that the legal advice that he and other senior lawyers in the Bush administration wrote were not policy recommendations.
Still, Mr Yoo defended the harsh interrogation techniques.
"Was it worth it" Yoo asked the crowd rhetorically. "Well, we haven’t had an attack in seven years."
The audience burst into applause.
There is a significant number of Americans who are sickened by the Bush administration’s interrogation tactics, but many are unsure if they want to see prosecutions.
Legal memos
It came as little surprise that our project, looking into the question of guilt, was not popular with some CIA and White House insiders. Nevertheless we were granted extraordinary access to a large number of key individuals who helped piece together the story, mostly off camera.
As we ploughed through legal memos, court cases, government reports and books and talked to lawyer after lawyer, it emerged that a central legal question was this: Did America’s leaders intend to torture
"There was a real sense that there was going to be a major new attack that was going to come and that we needed to somehow prevent it"
John Bellinger
Former legal adviser, US National Security Council
Did the White House approve torture "by accident", because their lawyers decided that waterboarding and confining someone in a box was not actually torture
Or was there a policy and an intent to torture behind it all
In investigations of this nature, the answer lies in the detail. In this case, chronology was the key.
America’s leaders say they only authorised the controversial techniques because their lawyers advised that they did not constitute torture. It therefore became critical for us to find out if the torture started before the key legal memos were issued.
We spoke to several people who we believed knew this very precise piece of information. But so often in our inquires, the answer came back: "I cannot recall."
Then we met John Kiriakou, the former CIA operative who had led the capture of key al-Qaeda suspect Abu Zubaydah in 2002. He had flown back to the US shortly after the capture and monitored Abu Zubaydah’s interrogation from CIA headquarters in Virginia.
Kiriakou was categorical that Abu Zubaydah was waterboarded in the early summer of 2002. This became a crucial piece for the Panorama team in the puzzle that we were slowly piecing together, because the key legal memos that approved the method were not issued until August 2002.
The CIA has told the BBC that waterboarding did not happen before that August 2002 memo but would not reveal when it did occur.
It is not clear that any oral legal advice that told White House leaders that the harsh techniques were not torture before August would amount to much of a legal defence in court.
For more than 50 years, waterboarding has been considered torture in America, and torture is illegal.
Secretive techniques
Abu Zubaydah was strapped to a board, with his face partially covered, while water was poured onto his nose and mouth.

According to his lawyer, the detainee had begun to drown until they stopped. This happened at least 82 more times.
It has emerged partly from newly-released government legal memos that the CIA borrowed some of its new interrogation techniques from a secretive US military programme called SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape).
The SERE programme teaches American soldiers how to cope in captivity. Amongst other training techniques, it simulates torture used by the Chinese on American soldiers in Korea in the 1950s.
These methods were intended for training US soldiers, not for use in the interrogation of enemy suspects.
But a recent report by the Senate Armed Service Committee traces how Donald Rumsfeld’s Department of Defense, in parallel with the CIA, also contacted the SERE programme, and modelled its interrogation plans on the same techniques.
The Pentagon says SERE techniques were never authorised.
Post 9/11 reality
All this has left many in America asking themselves how they got to this point in the first place
The reality is that on 11 September 2001 the CIA had virtually no interrogation capacity but, the BBC was told, the agency was rapidly authorised by President Bush to set up a detention and interrogation programme anyway.
A senior CIA insider said they trawled intelligence agencies worldwide in the hunt for new techniques. SERE was contacted as part of this.
Donald Rumsfeld, it was suggested, pushed for his own tough programme.
"Rumsfeld needed intelligence and he didn’t trust the CIA", said Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff to Colin Powell, former US secretary of state.
Critically, there was distressing intelligence in the aftermath of 9/11 that another attack was imminent.
"There was a real sense that there was going to be a major new attack that was going to come and that we needed to somehow prevent it," said John Bellinger who at the time was legal adviser to the National Security Council.
Insiders say the resulting atmosphere in the White House was that extraordinary measures were called for.
Shock waves
Within months the Bush administration announced that the Geneva Conventions, which ban cruel and degrading treatment, did not apply to suspected members of al-Qaeda.
This sent shock waves around the world.

William Taft, who was Colin Powell’s lawyer, drafted a memo arguing that detainees be treated humanely in accordance with article three of the Geneva Conventions, but he said his memo was blocked by the administration.
"I really do think at that time that the reason that they didn’t approve publishing my memo was that they intended to actually use coercive techniques," said Mr Taft.
The Bush administration said it was committed to humane treatment along the lines of Geneva, as long as it was consistent with "military necessity", a significant caveat.
"The decision was that the rules were gone" said Mr Taft.
Department of justice lawyers began to prepare legal memos that redefined torture in terms broad enough to allow harsh interrogation techniques, including waterboarding.
With the legal ground dramatically altered, widespread use of controversial interrogation techniques and systematic abuses appeared across US military bases.
Later, concern mounted inside the administration. John Bellinger, who believes existing international law is poorly equipped to deal with al-Qaeda, nevertheless worried that applying none of the Geneva conventions left a large legal grey area.
"I said well if the Geneva conventions in their entirety don’t apply, that we need to conclude that something does apply because we are a nation of laws, we’re not just a nation of men and of policies".
Panorama has been told by other insiders that President Bush personally authorised the CIA’s interrogation programme soon after 9/11, and that he may have personally approved the specific programme by the early summer of 2002.
The net of responsibility could go much wider. The CIA says that over the years more than 50 members of Congress were briefed on elements of the CIA’s tactics. Objections were few. But exactly what Congress was told and when is hotly disputed, particularly with recent allegations that the CIA misled Congress during the Bush era.
The Obama administration has not ruled out criminally investigating the lawyers involved in all this. Even interrogators who may have acted beyond the controversial legal advice could face investigation. A major CIA watchdog report with more information, is due to be released this summer.
But with mounting evidence pointing to fundamental responsibility at a very high level, President Obama appears little inclined to pursue anyone who was senior.
Panorama: Licence to Torture, BBC One, Monday 13 July at 2030 (1930 GMT).</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Cheney ‘ordered CIA to hide plan’

Former US Vice-President Dick Cheney gave direct orders to the CIA to conceal an intelligence programme from Congress, US media reports say.
The existence of the programme, set up after 9/11, was hidden for eight years and even now its nature is not known.
CIA director Leon Panetta is said to have abandoned the project when he learnt of it last month.
He has now told a House committee that Mr Cheney was behind the secrecy, the unnamed US sources say.
There has been no comment from Mr Cheney.
War of words
The claims come amid an increasingly bitter row between the CIA and Congress over whether key information was withheld about other aspects of the agency’s operations.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has claimed that the CIA misled her about interrogation methods including waterboarding, while other senior Democrats have quoted Mr Panetta as admitting that his agency regularly misled Congress before he took office.

Details of the newly-revealed secret programme have still not been divulged, but sources say it did not relate to the CIA’s rendition programme, interrogation methods or a controversial domestic surveillance project.
Officials quoted by the New York Times say the programme was launched by anti-terror operatives at the CIA soon after the 2001 attacks, and involved planning and training but never became fully operational.
Another unnamed official told AP it was an embryonic intelligence-gathering effort, aimed at yielding intelligence that would be used to conduct a covert operations abroad.
Sources have told a number of US media outlets Mr Cheney personally instructed the CIA to withhold information about the programme from Congress.
Mr Panetta – who took over directorship of the CIA under President Obama’s administration – is said to have learnt about the programme only on 23 June.
The next day he called an emergency meeting with congressional intelligence committees to tell them about its existence and to say that it was being cancelled, the reports say.
Veto threat
The allegations come as the Democrats in Congress are trying push through new rules that would increase the number of members of Congress who are told about covert operations.
The White House is threatening to veto the bill, fearing that operational secrecy could be compromised.
The CIA has not commented on the reports of Mr Cheney’s role.
"It’s not agency practice to discuss what may or may not have been said in a classified briefing," said spokesman Paul Gimigliano.
"When a CIA unit brought this matter to Director Panetta’s attention, it was with the recommendation that it be shared appropriately with Congress. That was also his view, and he took swift, decisive action to put it into effect."
A CIA spokesman insisted earlier this week that "it is not the policy or practice of the CIA to mislead Congress." </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.








Clarkson makes C-word attack on PM
The Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson is at the centre of a new controversy after again making offensive comments about the prime minister in front of the BBC2 show’s studio audience.
Clarkson, who previously had to apologise to Gordon Brown in February after calling him “a one-eyed Scottish idiot”, described him as a “cunt” in not-for-broadcast comments during the recording of this week’s Top Gear programme on Wednesday night.
The BBC2 controller, Janice Hadlow, was present at the recording and is said to have confronted Clarkson about the remark. A BBC spokeswoman confirmed the pair had a “conversation”, but said the issue was now over.
“There was a discussion about the programme,” she said. “It is certainly not an ongoing issue.”
It is understood that Hadlow did not ask Clarkson to apologise for the incident.
In a further statement, the BBC said: “Janice went to watch a recording of Top Gear as it is BBC2′s top-rated programme, and as controller of BBC2, she holds both the programme and Jeremy in high regard. After the recording, she and Jeremy had a discussion about the programme as controllers and presenters often do.”
At the filming of the previous week’s programme, on 15 July, Clarkson also used the same word to describe Brown as part of a joke, one person present told the Guardian. This remark was not included in the transmitted version of the show on Sunday 19 July.
“Clarkson was talking about a government policy and said as his payoff line: ‘The reason you can’t do that is because Gordon Brown is a cunt,’ ” the eyewitness said. “Everyone found it very funny.”
Downing Street declined to comment, although the Conservative MP John Whittingdale, the chairman of the House of Commons culture, media and sport select committee, criticised the presenter.
“Many people will find that offensive, many people will find that word in particular very offensive,” he said. “I am surprised he felt it appropriate to use it.”
Clarkson, who is currently in Belfast filming for Top Gear in the city’s new sewer system, could not be contacted for comment.
During a press conference in February in Australia, Clarkson courted controversy by using personal remarks to criticise Brown’s handling of the global financial crisis.
“We have this one-eyed Scottish idiot who keeps telling us everything’s fine and he’s saved the world, and we know he’s lying but he’s smooth at telling us,” he said.
Brown lost his sight in one eye in an accident playing rugby as a teenager. Clarkson was forced to apologise after a barrage of criticism from politicians and disability groups. “In the heat of the moment I made a remark about the prime minister’s personal appearance for which, upon reflection, I apologise,” he said in a statement at the time.
The controversy was just the latest to hit the 49-year-old presenter, who is one of the star attractions of Top Gear, which regularly pulls in more than 6 million viewers.
In November last year, he suggested that truck drivers only cared about fuel prices and murdering prostitutes, drawing hundreds of complaints.
The presenter and his Top Gear co-hosts were also condemned by the BBC Trust in July last year for “glamorising the misuse of alcohol” by drinking at the wheel during a polar special.
The trust’s editorial complaints unit said the edition broke its guidelines after Clarkson and James May were shown drinking gin and tonics as they attempted to drive a pickup truck to the magnetic north pole.