Friday, January 30, 2004

Overseas Flights Watched for Terror Attacks; Medicare Reform Bill To Cost More Than Stated; Dean Trying to Regain Political Footing

Overseas Flights Watched for Terror Attacks; Medicare Reform Bill To Cost More Than Stated; Dean Trying to Regain Political Footing

Aired January 30, 2004 - 22:00 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

AARON BROWN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again everyone.We have found ourselves fascinated this week by the battle over intelligence and WMDs. When David Kay came out the other day to say flatly we all got it wrong, the central underpinnings of the administration's rationale for war looked quite different.It was not the only reason for war and, as James Woolsey, the former CIA director opined on this program the other night, maybe not even the best reason for war but clearly it was the central selling point and that is costing lives this war still most every day.Mr. Woolsey the other night here made his case that while imperfect it is better to overestimate the enemy than underestimate him. You will hear a far different argument tonight, the words later in the program of Greg Thielmann while softly spoken are perhaps the harshest words we've ever aired on the program, the interview a little bit later.The whip and the news of the day comes first and the whip begins in Washington and new concern, again, about possible terror attacks, Kelli Arena, again, having the duty, Kelli a headline.

KELLI ARENA, CNN JUSTICE CORRESPONDENT: Aaron, new intelligence coming in over the last 48 hours that sources tell me is both specific and credible indicate that al Qaeda may once again be targeting international flights into the United States for acts of terror.BROWN: Kelli, thank you.On to Baghdad and the story of terror connections established after the war began, Michael Holmes there on a Saturday morning, Michael a headline from you.

MICHAEL HOLMES, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Aaron, just how may al Qaeda are in Iraq, what are they doing if they are here? We'll have the full story -- Aaron.

BROWN: Thank you, Michael, good to see you.Over at the White House the issue is how much more the Medicaid drug benefit plan is going to cost than everyone thought, including the White House, Suzanne Malveaux with the watch tonight, Suzanne a headline. 

SUZANNE MALVEAUX, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Well, Aaron, the White House made its case to go to war based in part on faulty intelligence. Now the administration sold its Medicare reform bill which used a figure that may have grossly underestimated the cost. While nobody knows just how much it's going to be critics charge that the White House has a credibility problem.

BROWN: Suzanne, thank you.And we'll have presidential politics tonight, the last days before seven state primaries on Tuesday. In the corner of the screen you can see an event in Albuquerque. That's a Dean event. Candy Crowley is there. Candy joins us later in the program as well, all that and more coming up.Right, how did I get to all that and more already? We'll spend time on the question of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Is it Friday? Yes, it is. Was the intelligence bad, exaggerated? If it was by whom, again, Greg Thielmann on a blistering assessment of the administration.Later, the only man who connects presidential politics and the Super Bowl. Oh, it's a fabulous connection and Jeff Greenfield has that.And, it being Friday morning papers includes the week's tabloids, a fabulous tabloid selection too. The rooster is excited. So are we, all that and more in the hour ahead. I knew I'd say it.We begin with a story we've led with before and probably will again, this being the new normal, new intelligence in just the last two days suggest that bad guys again are planning attacks against the United States, again planning to use aircraft, this time as with past terror threats not a lot of details here.We begin with CNN's Kelli Arena.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ARENA (voice-over): U.S. officials tell CNN al Qaeda may again be targeting international flights into the United States. Sources say the new intelligence, electronic intercepts, is both credible and specific. The possible use of aircraft by terrorists has been a continuing concern.

TOM RIDGE, SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY: One of the most persistent and consistent reports that we have from multiple sources continued interest by al Qaeda to use commercial -- to use aircraft but particularly commercial aircraft.

ARENA: According to officials the new intelligence mentions two airlines, British Airways and Air France. At least one flight path was identified from London to the Washington, D.C. area and at least one flight number came up, British Airways Flight 223.That is the same flight that was canceled several times around the Christmas holidays. Multiple dates were mentioned. Officials say they fall within the next couple of weeks but would not elaborate. What was not mentioned was how the planes would be used in any possible attack. Homeland security officials say they shared this information with overseas partners and the airline industry. Passenger lists are being scoured and air marshals put on flights.It makes me nervous to think that they do have the warnings but it also makes me feel a little secure that they're paying a lot of attention to security of flights.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ARENA: While the new information is similar to intelligence gathered around Christmas, officials say that the threat does not appear to be as imminent and there are no plans at this time to raise the national threat level -- Aaron.

BROWN: Obviously a huge American event this weekend, the Super Bowl. Is any of this tied to that?

ARENA: No, it's not but the Super Bowl and the festivities that surround it do add to the general level of concern, Aaron, and there are extra security precautions as you know in place for that event.BROWN: Kelli, thank you. Have a good weekend, Kelli Arena.On to politics and health care, President Bush presents his budget for 2005 to Congress on Monday and at least one number in that budget will be a lot larger than estimated last fall, about $135 billion larger. That would be the cost of the president's Medicare overhaul, including the prescription drug benefit.Yesterday, the White House said that the actuaries' estimates turned out to be too low. Call it a miscalculation or sticker shock. Many in Congress are not happy.From the White House tonight, CNN's Suzanne Malveaux.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

MALVEAUX (voice-over): President Bush insisted he can still cut the deficit in half over five years despite news his Medicare overhaul has a much higher price tag than initially forecast but it's up to Congress to help.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Congress is now going to have to work with us to make sure that we set priorities and are fiscally wise with the taxpayers' money. I'm confident they can do that if they're willing to make tough choices.

MALVEAUX: But the Medicare Reform Bill passed the House by just five votes last November and only after the White House convinced reluctant fiscally conservative Republicans that the ten year plan would cost close to the $395 billion estimated by the Congressional Budget Office. Now the White House's Office of Management and Budget estimates it will cost nearly 30 percent more, as much as $540 billion and conservatives aren't happy.

REP. JEFF FLAKE (R), ARIZONA: Had everyone known it would be $534 billion it may have caused a few other members of Congress to not get onboard and that would have been helpful frankly to those of us who didn't want to see it pass.

MALVEAUX: Press Secretary Scott McClellan insists the president did not mislead Congress.

SCOTT MCCLELLAN, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: There are hundreds of assumptions that you make when you make those estimates and obviously changes in one or two of those assumptions can significantly impact those estimates.

MALVEAUX: But Democrats questioned the size of the change.

SEN. TOM DASCHLE (D), SOUTH DAKOTA: The problem is that they are off by over 35 percent in the first year. That's phenomenal. Even government doesn't make a mistake that big most of the time, so this is an embarrassment to the administration.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MALVEAUX: Well, Monday President Bush is going to be presenting his budget to Congress. It's not likely, Aaron that he's going to please either Democrats or Republicans. Republicans believe that the war in Iraq essentially is robbing domestic programs of much needed resources. Republicans are not pleased at all with that record breaking federal deficit estimated to be $520 billion -- Aaron.

BROWN: And, again the president said again today he still believes he can cut the deficit in half in five years and there's a lot of I guess skeptics on that score as well.

MALVEAUX: Well, you're absolutely right. One of the things that the administration says is that they're going to be limited discretionary spending to one percent. They are hoping to satisfy some of the fiscally conservative Republicans on that front but, of course, it brings up a very good question just whether or not they're going to be able to pull this off in five years.

BROWN: And just before we let you get away the White House, at least behind the scenes, seemed to soften a bit today on the question of an independent inquiry into the pre-war intelligence.

MALVEAUX: Well, that's right. Well, we have understood and what administration and congressional sources have told us is that essentially Vice President Dick Cheney was making calls to prominent lawmakers essentially indicating that the White House is open to a number of possibilities, including an independent probe of some sort into pre-war intelligence on these weapons of mass destruction, not necessarily an independent commission which is more formal but something that would all the administration to show that it's open to trying to get to the bottom of this. At the same time they realize, and this is the political calculus here, they realize that this question would go on and on this year during this election cycle of why won't this administration cooperate? That is something that the White House is definitely trying to address.

BROWN: Suzanne, thank you very much and we'll have more on that question a little bit later in the program as well.In the last two weeks the battle for the Democratic nomination for the presidency has changed remarkably. Howard Dean has gone from frontrunner to conserving cash. John Kerry has gone from flawed candidate to frontrunner. Tuesday, seven more states weigh in and could, not will but could, make the end of the story clear. We begin our political coverage tonight with CNN's Kelly Wallace.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

KELLY WALLACE, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): In South Carolina, John Kerry sticks to his Iowa/New Hampshire playbook trying to court the state's more than 400,000 military men and women. But here the decorated Vietnam veteran has to do something else, answer lingering questions after recently saying a Democrat could become president without winning the south.

SEN. JOHN KERRY (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: If I win the nomination we will be actively campaigning in the south and there are states that I am convinced we can win.

WALLACE: One of Kerry's opponents from the south, the other veteran in the race, tried Friday to stop the Massachusetts Senator's momentum. Wesley Clark accused Kerry of not acknowledging in Thursday night's debate that he called affirmative action divisive back in 1992.

WESLEY CLARK (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Because we're not going to beat George Bush with old style fudge it up politics.WALLACE: Kerry shot back saying he has always supported affirmative action, accusing Clark of twisting his "mend it don't end it" position.

KERRY: I did what Jim Clyburn and what Bill Clinton did, which is amend it, and Jim Clyburn wouldn't be supporting it if it were otherwise. So let's not have any politics here. Let's keep the truth.

WALLACE: No politics says the frontrunner, although every move right now is political, Kerry touting the endorsement from South Carolina's most popular African American lawmaker, Clark hitting Kerry on affirmative action all in a state where African Americans could make up to 50 percent of primary voters. Kerry arrived in Delaware Friday night, his third stop of a seven state swing before Tuesday's contests. (on camera): Asked earlier about Howard Dean's comments that he could stay in this race until the Democratic convention this summer even if he is not winning a large number of states, Kerry said he was not concerned saying "let's just see how this unfolds."Kelly Wallace CNN, New Castle, Delaware.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: If John Kerry these days is feeling the wind at his back, Howard Dean must feel like he's walking headlong into a hurricane. Parts of his message have been lifted by opponents. His money is getting tight. His campaign staff was shaken up and may be just shaken. In politics, like boxing, once you've been knocked down it's hard to get back up and win but that is now what Dr. Dean must do. Here's CNN's Candy Crowley.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CANDY CROWLEY, CNN SR. POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Somewhere between asterisk and frontrunner Howard Dean struggles to find his footing.

HOWARD DEAN (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: We are running a 50 state campaign. Of course we're going to make priority decisions about where to put our advertising dollars.

CROWLEY: Having raised an estimated $42 million, Dean has spent it down to the single digit millions, somewhere between $2 million and $5 million though you can't find out by asking him.

DEAN: I have no idea, sorry. Roy Neel is presumably working on that right now.

CROWLEY: While his new campaign chief works the books, Dean's job is to work on John Kerry, first in South Carolina.

DEAN: I think Senator Kerry is a fine person but he hasn't accomplished much in the Senate.

CROWLEY: And again in Missouri.

DEAN: You're not going to change America by nominating somebody who is a Washington insider whose biggest long suit is talk.

CROWLEY: Dean's schedule now is largely a series of drop bys to some of the Tuesday states but not a single ad is on the air in any of the seven. Strategists cannot name a single one they are certain he can win.The blow out he expected in Iowa and New Hampshire didn't happen. Now he looks further down the calendar for friendly states with big delegate counts. It is what's left.

DEAN: You work and you work and you work. That's all I can tell you. You know the only one I really care about winning is the convention on July 25th.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

CROWLEY: The Dean campaign touched down here in Albuquerque, the second stop on a three state day which will take him to three of the seven Tuesday states but this campaign, Aaron, is looking far beyond Tuesday. In a note to the log on the campaign for Dean Web site, Roy Neel who is the campaign manager said this campaign has always defied conventional wisdom. Conventional wisdom has been wrong throughout this campaign and it's wrong now. He laid out the goal very specifically. The goal of the Dean campaign is to move to the next two and a half weeks and try to become the only person standing against John Kerry -- Aaron.BROWN: I'm curious about it. You've been with the campaign a while now. Are the audiences that he attracts different in any way? Are they smaller, less boisterous, anything there?

CROWLEY: No. I mean when they are flat or less boisterous it's generally the campaign. Now we have, for instance, in South Carolina this morning this very quiet five person roundtable where Dean listened quietly. It was almost like the pre Howard who days when he was just sitting around with people telling them what he thought.And then you can come to something like this and they are wild about him and he gives, you know, one of those rip-roaring speeches, so it can be kind of a mix that sometimes where the asterisk days and sometimes it's the frontrunner days and, as I say, he's trying to find where that is and where he can go to get back up to where he was.

BROWN: In the week after Iowa and the I-have-a-scream speech and whether that was played fairly or not fairly by us and others aside the candidate seemed to have trouble finding out what his voice was and try to find a new voice. Does he seem to have one voice now?

CROWLEY: Sometimes. I think it's still hard for him. He'll come in front of a crowd like this and they'll scream for him. I mean they're very aware of what happened in Iowa and he'll look and say, oh, don't tempt me. Don't tempt me. So, he still has fun with them but it's obviously in the back of his mind so he's trying to be both a candidate and a presidential figure and that's not always, you know, something that comes to a crossroads. So, you can tell that he's a little bit different. We haven't seen that, you know, completely revved up like you saw in Iowa but he still can get them going and it's always in the back of his mind but it's in the crowd's mind as well.

BROWN: Candy, thank you very much, Candy Crowley on the campaign now. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT, terror ties in Iraq as the U.S. presence there continuing to draw al Qaeda members to the country and are they behind the attacks on the Americans and others?And later, super Sunday and its connection to presidential politics, mostly we haven't figured this out yet but Jeff Greenfield has.From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: It's no great secret that the Taliban fundamentalists who once ruled Afghanistan gave safe haven to Osama bin Laden but today some newly declassified documents from the State Department show that between 1996 and just before September 11, 2001, both the Clinton and Bush administrations tried more than 30 times to have bin Laden expelled from Afghanistan. They were turned aside obviously every time.Most of those attempts, 27 of them, were during the Clinton years. There were three conversations or meetings about this during the Bush administration, all prior to 9/11.In Baghdad today, a rocket-propelled grenade struck the Dutch Embassy. There was a fire but no one was hurt. The mission was closed for the day when the rocket hit.It is the kind of attack that has become sadly familiar of course in Iraq and today there are some hints that at least some of these attacks have links to al Qaeda or at least one particular al Qaeda terrorist.Here's CNN's Michael Holmes.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

HOLMES (voice-over): U.S. officials say large scale attacks like the bombing of U.N. headquarters in Iraq last year, the attack on Italian soldiers and the bombing of the Imam Ali Mosque in Najaf all bear the fingerprints of this man, Abu Musab Zarqawi, a man they say is linked to al Qaeda.The officials say they believe Zarqawi moved into Iraq to plan the attacks. That and the recent capture of Hasan Guhl, a key al Qaeda member as he tried to enter Iraq from Iran, adds to what those officials and military chiefs believe is evidence of a mounting threat from al Qaeda and foreign fighters in general inside Iraq.

GEN. RICARDO SANCHEZ, COALITION FORCES COMMANDER: Of course the capture of Guhl is pretty strong proof that al Qaeda is trying to gain a foothold here to continue their murderous campaigns. Guhl's capture is great news for both Iraqis, for the coalition and for the international community's war against terror.HOLMES: Part of the rationale for believing there is a growing influence of al Qaeda in Iraq is the way the U.S. military says insurgents are changing, refining their tactics.

BRIG. GEN. MARK KIMMITT, COALITION SPOKESMAN: Anytime you have a car bombing, a suicide bombing, you don't typically associate that with what's happening inside of Iraq or homegrown. That gives us an indicator that that's probably somebody from abroad or somebody who has had some training from abroad. That kind of extremism we don't typically see here in country.

HOLMES: The arrest of one al Qaeda member is hardly compelling proof of a large scale offensive by the group but analysts say proof of any presence of al Qaeda in Iraq will be of great concern to the 

U.S.DR. DAVID CLARIDGE, AEGIS DEFENSE: My view is that al Qaeda has in its rhetoric has talked about going to Iraq and fighting the Americans. I think that al Qaeda sees Iraq as a potential crucible for confrontation with American forces.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

HOLMES: Aaron, one problem that continues to face coalition and Iraqi security forces is the porous borders of Iraq. There is evidence that foreign fighters have crossed over into this country from neighbors like Syria, Turkey and Iran. They're having some successes in stopping some of them but it is very difficult to stop them all -- Aaron.

BROWN: That's how they got Mr. Guhl. Do they have any feel for how many?

HOLMES: No. In fact, what they will admit is that the numbers so far have been very small and there's really two or three different groups they're worried about, homegrown insurgents of course but also foreign fighters who are coming here to generally carry out jihad using Iraq as a battleground, a convenient place if you like to take on the west.And then those who are either linked to al Qaeda, al Qaeda trained or have at least been in touch with them and share the ideals so there's different groups. As for numbers they're said to be fairly small. The U.S. is not giving us complete and accurate numbers about the number of foreign fighters they've caught but it's not a big number yet.

BROWN: Michael, do they think that these various groups are working together or that they're operating separately?

HOLMES: One of the concerns is that those who are coming in are linking up with either organized insurgents on a local level or linking up with disaffected Iraqis, essentially paying people who don't have jobs but do have some military experience, as in the former Iraqi Army, giving them $200 to carry out plans that have been hatched by those who are non-Iraqi and that is a concern given the economic situation here -- Aaron.

BROWN: Michael thanks a lot, Michael Holmes back on duty tonight.A look now at some of the other stories that made news around the world beginning in London where the BBC reporter who first reported on the allegations of the "sexed up report" on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction has now resigned. Andrew Gilligan's departure comes two days after a British investigation criticized the reporting as unfounded. The chairman of the BBC and another ranking executive have already left the company as well.To Bethlehem where Israeli troops rolled through the streets and demolished seven buildings, including the home of a bomber, the bomber in yesterday's suicide attack in Jerusalem. The Israelis said the other buildings housed Hamas operatives. Palestinian officials say 50 people are now homeless.Still to come tonight on NEWSNIGHT, back to the question of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, we'll talk with the former top State Department official who quit because he believed the intelligence was being cooked to find a cause for going to war, a break first.From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: Back now to one of the big stories of the week, perhaps the biggest story of the week, the assertion by Dr. David Kay, the administration's chief weapons inspector, that this country's pre-war intelligence on Iraq was pretty much all wrong.We heard the opinion a couple of nights back here from former CIA Director James Woolsey who said that the White House may have made "presentational errors" in the area of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. That was his phrase "presentational error" but that was about all the criticism he offered on the intelligence.We talked earlier today with Greg Thielmann who is the director of Strategic Proliferation and Military Affairs at the State Department's Intelligence Bureau, a very high level intelligence analyst in other words. And, to say the least, Mr. Thielmann thinks what was going on was a whole lot more than a presentational error.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Sir, David Kay said the other day that it was the intelligence community that badly served the president and by extension I guess the country. You're not nearly ready to give the president or the administration a pass.No, I'm not. I think there's plenty of blame to go around and the American people misunderstanding the nature of the Iraqi threat but one has to at least acknowledge that on certain issues on the short range ballistic missiles that Iraq was testing, for example, the intelligence community got it exactly right. On the lack of a connection between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden the intelligence community also got it right and the administration in the way that they used the intelligence community product made the mistakes of the intelligence community much worse and did not report faithfully on some of the areas that the intelligence community did a good job on.

BROWN: Let's talk a bit more about that and then we'll work that area if you don't mind. Is it your view that the intelligence community in a sense knew exactly what the administration wanted to hear, what the vice president and the president wanted to hear and essentially served that master?

THIELMANN: I have the impression that at the top levels of the intelligence community, and I'm talking principally now of the CIA and George Tenet as director of Central Intelligence, that they knew what the president wanted to hear and they knew what the president wanted to hear and they knew, also, that the White House was essentially deaf to any dissenting opinion. What the administration, what the White House wanted to hear was what kind of intelligence arguments could they use to convince the nation to go to war. 

BROWN: Was Secretary Powell a part of this? 

THIELMANN: I have said, from my point of view, as the director of the office that was responsible for monitoring all of the intelligence for the secretary of state and interpreting it, that we certainly had the impression at the time that the secretary of state wanted our best information and our honest explanation of what was going on. So, our assumption at the time was that, at least in the case of Secretary Powell, there was someone in the inner circle of the administration that did represent the truth as we understood it. I have since revised my opinion a little bit, partly because of what Secretary Powell was willing to say to the world community during his February 5, 2003, address to the United Nations. 

BROWN: And when you watched that, that talk to the U.N. that day, did you say to yourself and to others, that's not true? 

THIELMANN: Well, what I said to myself was -- and I was already retired at that point -- that Secretary Powell was saying things to the world community and to the American nation that we certainly had not agreed with. And, in some cases, he was saying things that were exactly the opposite of some of the facts that I think that he was well aware of. 

BROWN: These are enormously, I think, serious accusations to make. Beyond -- I guess what I'm wanting from you is to know that this is something more than a hunch. How do you know this? 

THIELMANN: I was responsible professionally for following the intelligence for two years prior to the October national intelligence estimate. And I know what my office wrote in analyzing these issues for the secretary of state. And I also have a pretty good idea of what others in the intelligence community were saying, because we would participate in interagency discussions about the evidence. And I know, on things like the uranium from Niger, on things like the aluminum tubes issue, that what was being said to the public did not represent accurately what the intelligence community was saying. There should have at least been an acknowledgement on issues like the aluminum tubes allegedly going into the nuclear weapons program that there was an enormous disagreement within the intelligence community on this issue and that some of the most logical and distinguished experts on this issue had the opposite opinions. 

(CROSSTALK) 

BROWN: I'm sorry. 

THIELMANN: There was no clue given by the White House that there was any dissent on this issue, when the president essentially declassified top-secret information and announced to the United Nations in September of 2002 that Iraq was obtaining aluminum tubes for the nuclear weapons program. 

BROWN: Right. Just finally, the president said -- and this is pretty close to a quote, what difference does it make whether it was exactly right or not, because Saddam was a bad guy? He killed lots of people. He was a danger in the region. The world is better off without him. Iraqis are better off without him. Americans are better off without him. What difference does it make? What difference does it make? 

THIELMANN: The implications of that statement astound me. For the president of the United States to say that the reason that he gave for the nation going to war, a war which has cost us 500 dead already, thousands of Americans maimed, and has so tarnished America's credibility and reputation in the world, that he would say, essentially, that it does not matter if the reasons that we convinced the American people to go to war for are no longer applicable or were not true or were exaggerated or misstated, that is an astounding statement. 

BROWN: Mr. Thielmann, we appreciate very much your time today. Thank you for joining us. Have a good weekend, sir.

THIELMANN: You're welcome. 

BROWN: Thank you, sir.

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: Greg Thielmann.A range of opinions on the program this week, from his to James Woolsey earlier.So what does the administration do now? After the break, David Sanger of "The New York Times" joins us to talk about that. Around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: In a perfect world, problems would have just two possible solutions, one good, the other bad. It wouldn't be terrible, I suppose, if the choices were one good and the other better. We could deal with that. But when the possible choices are bad, bad, and bad, now, that's tough. And maybe that's where the president is tonight in dealing with what appear to be intelligence failures and the question of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. David Sanger laid out these unpleasant options in an analysis piece in today's "New York Times." We are always pleased to have him on the program. We are tonight.David, nice to see you. 

DAVID SANGER, "THE NEW YORK TIMES": Good to see you, Aaron. 

BROWN: We talked earlier that the vice president was making some calls today to try and figure out what sort of independent inquiry. That is one of the options, but it's not a perfect option for the administration. 

SANGER: It certainly isn't. Here's the fundamental problem. We're in an election year. Any inquiry that you start now could easily spin out of control. And they are in the middle right now still of dealing with the 9/11 inquiry. And, as you have reported before, there's a lot of tension between the 9/11 Commission and the White House about what they can learn and so forth. You could see that possibility in this case very easily, where there's a big dispute over who got what intelligence when and who interpreted it and whether or not it was manipulated. 

BROWN: Just one question on that. Are they, do you believe, particularly concerned that the vice president has some vulnerability here? 

SANGER: I think they are some. And if you go across the range of administration officials, the president certainly had a series of statements that he made, starting in October of 2002 in a speech in Cincinnati, where he first laid out the nature of the threat. If you add up all the vice president's comments, I think that you'll find that he pushed it in -- with a bit more urgency, that he took away a number of the qualifiers, every once in a while, had to back up and reinsert them. And then Secretary Powell was more cautious. But based on what we now know from -- or think we know -- from Dr. Kay's testimony this week, even the Powell presentation, cautious as it was, seemed to go beyond the facts they found on the ground. 

BROWN: Clearly, I'm a reporter and not a political analyst in this, but it does seem to me that the advantage of agreeing to the inquiry is, to some extent, it takes it off the table. You know, in a campaign year, you could say, well, we need to wait for the independent commission to finish its work. 

SANGER: It does, but there are other complications. We're in a situation right now where the Democrats, and particularly the Democratic candidates, would like to pin this on President Bush or Vice President Cheney and say that they manipulated the data. You have already heard John Kerry, Howard Dean, some of the other candidates make that argument, that they were misled and that the nation was misled. On the other hand, you have a number of Republicans who have never been thrilled by George Tenet, who, of course, was appointed by President Clinton. And so what they would like to do, many of them, not all of them, is put the blame at the CIA and say, look, you sent bad information along and it got the president in trouble. And some of them, of course, were calling for Mr. Tenet's head back in the summer. You will remember that the White House and Tenet got cross-wired. And that didn't work out well for anybody involved. So there's a significant risk in starting that up. 

(CROSSTALK) 

BROWN: The president, to my ear, went out of his way the other day to give support to the intelligence community, to say -- I think he said, these are very hardworking and dedicated people. He seemed to make a point of trying to pat them on the back. 

SANGER: He did. And that was precisely because they have gotten into -- or we believe it's because they had gotten into this very public disagreement with the agency in the summer over the question of the president's statements on uranium in Niger and who put that or didn't put it into the State of the Union. 

BROWN: What's the risk of doing nothing? 

SANGER: Well, I think the risk of doing nothing, Aaron, is that you keep it alive as a political issue. Now, some in the president's circle may well decide that that works, that many Americans will accept the argument that you described before with your previous guest, Mr. Thielmann, and that in fact people will think getting Saddam out was a good idea, and the president had offered WMD as one rationale, but certainly not the only reason that the world would be better off without Saddam Hussein. On the other hand, you have continuing erosion of our credibility. And, remember, we have other cases coming along that are going to have to be dealt with. There's Iran. There's North Korea. There's the recent case with Libya. There's the continuing issue of Pakistan and how much Pakistani -- the Pakistani government knew about what its scientists were selling. In each of these cases, you don't want to be in a position where other governments can say, why should we believe your intelligence now? You were wrong on Iraq.

BROWN: David, we know you were fighting a deadline most of the day today. We appreciate your time. Thank you very much. 

SANGER: Thank you, Aaron. Good to see you. BROWN: Good to see you, David Sanger of "The New York Times."A few other stories that made news around the country today. Flags flying at half-staff at all U.S. space agencies to commemorate the loss of the space shuttle Columbia and its seven astronauts a year ago Sunday. NASA has named the landing site of its Mars rover Spirit in honor of the crew of the Columbia. In Georgia today, former President Jimmy Carter said he was embarrassed -- his word -- by a proposal to eliminate the word evolution from the state's science curriculum for middle and high school students. Georgia's school superintendent prefers the term biological changes over time. She says evolution is a buzzword that causes lots of negative reaction. And, in the better-you-than-us category, parts of Upstate New York, along Lake Ontario's Eastern shore, are buried tonight -- my goodness, they are, aren't they? -- under snow. Nearly six feet of snow fell on the town of Parish in the last two days. Other towns have slightly less, but still a lot. One resident said, it's not a good place to be if you are claustrophobic. Yes. Still ahead on NEWSNIGHT, the big event this Sunday, the Super Bowl, and its so obvious connection to presidential politics.Jeff Greenfield in "Greenfield at Large," as NEWSNIGHT continues on a Friday from New York. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: The biggest football game of the year is two days away. And here at NEWSNIGHT, we have prepared a terrific pregame report on the strength and weakness of both the New England Patriots and the Carolina Panthers. OK, we haven't. Not even close.In fact, we're so uncool here, we don't even have an office pool, as far as I know. No, this is NEWSNIGHT, a sometimes pretentious little newscast that looked at the Super Bowl and saw -- we'll let Jeff Greenfield tell you what we saw. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

JEFF GREENFIELD, CNN SR. ANALYST (voice-over): As the conflict nears, armies of supporters and reporters are in a near frenzy. The question, will New England or Carolina prevail? 

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Are you going to win in South Carolina?

SEN. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Yes. 

GREENFIELD: As the conflict nears, armies of supporters and reporters are in a near frenzy. The question, will New England or Carolina prevail? Yes, in a startling, incredible coincidence, the teams that will meet in Super Bowl XXXVIII come from the same homes as two of the leading candidates who will face off in South Carolina and six other states. Why, that hasn't happened since -- since -- well, in fact it hasn't happened since the last presidential campaign, when the Saint Louis Rams met the Tennessee Titans in Super Bowl XXXIV, just two days before Tennessean Al Gore and Missouri native Bill Bradley met in the New Hampshire primary. (on camera): Now, I know what you're thinking. You're thinking, who cares? Not so fast. Those of us in the business of covering campaigns are constantly looking for any link we can find between the world of politics and the far more exciting ratings-rich of sports. And, in fact, those connections are there, just maybe just not the way we'd like to think they are. (voice-over): Now, as far as supporting events predicting the political future goes, the record isn't so hot. Back in 2000, Tennessee fell, literally, a yard or so short of winning the Super Bowl. But, two days later, Tennessee's Al Gore narrowly beat Missouri's hometown boy Bill Bradley in the New Hampshire primary. There was a time when the World Series provided a clue. From 1952 to 1976, every time the American League won the World Series, a Republican won the White House. Every election year the National League won the series, a Democrat won the White House. But then, in 1980, when the National League Philadelphia Phillies, Ronald Reagan was elected. And every since then, the whole idea has gone 'blooey.OK, so maybe sports can't predict politics, but politicians sure think it's neat to hang around sports. In 1969, beleaguered New York Mayor John Lindsay rode the New York Mets' miracle run right into city hall for a second term. President Nixon not only liked to call the winning Super Bowl team in the locker room. In 1972, he actually called a play into the Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula before Super Bowl VI. The first President Bush captained the Yale football team. And this President Bush made his fortune and reputation as owner of the Texas Rangers, giving him a neat answer when he was asked about his worst mistake ever. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) 

GOV. GEORGE W. BUSH (R-TX), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Sammy Sosa for Harold Baines. 

(LAUGHTER) 

(END VIDEO CLIP) 

GREENFIELD: He's the guy who traded Sammy Sosa. And just to show you how deadly seriously politicians take this stuff, the Capitol Hill newspaper "Roll Call" reports that the Edwards and Kerry camps cut a deal, no Super Bowl bet this year, protecting Carolina's Edwards and New England's Kerry from the wrath of fans in each other's home turf. (on camera): So, as you are in the middle of Sunday's semi- official national holiday, keep in mind that we political types will be watching a very different event. To you, it's a football game. To me, it's an exit poll. Jeff Greenfield, CNN, New York. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

(LAUGHTER) 

BROWN: Morning papers, which include the tabloids, because it's Friday, like it or not. A break first. Right back. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

(ROOSTER CROWING) 

BROWN: OK, time to check the morning papers from around the country and around the world. We'll throw in the tabloids, it being Friday. "The International Herald Tribune," published in France, leads with the Middle East. "Bus Bombing Deepens Misery on Both Sides." The story that caught my eye, though, I like this story a lot. "Jesus On Film Stirring Discord Again. Sides have Changed in the Culture War." It's the take, a take, on the Mel Gibson film, which opens next month and has caused lots of chatter, lots of talk. 

"The Guardian," a British paper. Down at the bottom, if you don't mind. "Cannabis Online. Click Now and It's With You in 24 Hours." They changed the drug laws in Britain over the last couple of days. 

And, apparently, it's having an immediate effect, because "The Times" also leads that way. "Police in Daze Over Public Dope Smoking." Yikes. "The San Antonio Express." "Booming Economy? More Like Loud Pop: 4 Percent Growth in the Final Quarter Fails to Live Up to Expectations."How much time, Jerry? One-zero-eight.

"The Boston Herald" leads with the Super Bowl. I think you could say that, because the New England Patriots are there. And I have no idea if they will win, but they might, I guess is the answer. Let's do the tabloids. What do you say? "The Globe" leads with politics. 

(LAUGHTER) 

BROWN: "Clinton Tells All in New Bombshell Book, His Favorite Lesbian Fantasy." My goodness. Comes on. "Guess Who With?" And "His Hundred Affairs," according to "The Globe." I'm willing to bet that's not in that book. That's my feel. 

But my favorite of the tabloids is "The Weekly World News," because they come up with some fabulous stories, like this one. "Titanic Survivors Alive: Frozen in Iceberg, Found Floating in the Atlantic." They're alive. And up here -- wait, let me do it this way. How we doing on time? Fifteen.Here's news you can use. "Five Telltale Signs Your Kids Are Trying to Kill You." And if I -- just, I'll get this one in. "Tiny Terrorist" -- I'm sorry, guys -- "Disguised as Garden Gnomes." 

(LAUGHTER) 

BROWN: OK? Look at them. That's al Qaeda, folks. The weather tomorrow in Chicago is "humbling."We'll be right back to wrap up the day. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: A quick recap of our top story before we say goodbye. Government officials say al Qaeda may again be targeting international flights to the United States. New intelligence picked up in the last 48 hours mentions British Airways and Air France. At least one flight path identified, London to Washington, D.C., and at least one flight number, British Air Flight 223, the same flight that was canceled several times around the holiday. This time, officials say the threat does not appear to be as imminent. There are no plans to raise the national threat level. On Monday on this program -- this is a great story, you guys -- Jay Williams had the world at his feet, the former college star at Duke, a starter for the Chicago Bulls, then a motorcycle accident that may have ended his career. You'll hear from him for the first time on his long road back. He's a terrific kid. And you will like him a lot. That's Monday on NEWSNIGHT. Here's Soledad with a look at what's coming up Monday morning on "AMERICAN MORNING."

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

SOLEDAD O'BRIEN, CNN ANCHOR: Thanks, Aaron. Monday on "AMERICAN MORNING," Democrats try to prove their strength in the crucial South Carolina primary. But is Southern symbolism more important than the delegate-rich state of Missouri? Also Monday, those 30-second show-stoppers that everybody is talking about, a look at the best commercials of the Super Bowl, 7:00 a.m. Eastern Monday on CNN's "AMERICAN MORNING" -- Aaron, back to you.

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: Thank you. And back to you all, "LOU DOBBS TONIGHT" for most of you.Have a wonderful weekend. We'll see you back here on Monday. Good night for all of us at NEWSNIGHT. 

TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.comReform Bill To Cost More Than Stated; Dean Trying to Regain Political Footing>

Thursday, January 29, 2004

BBC Apologizes To Tony Blair, British Government; Democratic Debate "Tame"

BBC Apologizes To Tony Blair, British Government; Democratic Debate "Tame"

Aired January 29, 2004 - 22:00 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

AARON BROWN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again everyone.Remember 9/11? I do. Do you wish you knew more about what happened that day what failed why it failed? I do too. We raise this because the independent commission looking into the attack says it needs more time to do its work and there is political opposition, at least it looks political, to giving them that time.The commission is co-chaired by two distinguished people, one Republican, one Democrat. It does not seem to us their motives are political at all. They just want to do their job. But unless people, unless the country demands that they be given the time and the resourced that may not happen and we may never know all we should know and all we need to know about the horrible day. The squabble, it's more than that isn't it, is one of the items in the program and in the whip.But we begin in South Carolina where the Democrats dance again, another debate, Candy Crowley there, Candy a headline from you tonight.

CANDY CROWLEY, CNN SR. POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT: Aaron, seven candidates have five days to convince voters in seven states that they are the one who should to up against George Bush their electability was on center stage tonight at this debate -- Aaron.

BROWN: Candy, thank you. We'll get to you at the top tonight.Back to the White House where, as we said the issue of getting to the bottom of what happened on September 11th just will not go away. Dana Bash has been working on this for us, Dana a headline.

DANA BASH, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Well, Aaron, the commission investigating 9/11 want two more months to finish their work. It's a request that sounds simple enough but it's run into a political headwind as things often do in an election year -- Aaron.

BROWN: Dana, thank you.To New York, the Martha Stewart trial screeched to a halt today. Allan Chernoff was there, Allan the headline.

ALLAN CHERNOFF, CNN CORRESPONDENT: The judge imposes a delay in the trial of Martha Stewart and her broker just when the government's star witness was about to take the stand. It's a delay that could hurt the prosecution.

BROWN: And, finally -- Allan thank you.And finally to Atlanta and our Technology Correspondent Daniel Sieberg keeping an eye on My Doom the virus, Daniel a headline.

DANIEL SIEBERG, CNN TECHNOLOGY CORRESPONDENT: Aaron the e-mail virus, My Doom, has already spelled doom for hundreds of thousands of people worldwide and caused millions of dollars in damage but another attack is on the way. I'll tell you why and when it's scheduled to happen -- Aaron.

BROWN: Thank you. We'll get back to you and the rest shortly.Also ahead on the program tonight, the uproar over a job offer to a key Congressman who worked on the Medicare prescription drug benefit bill, a big bill that.Later, the fascinating story of Nick Kristof of the "New York Times," who brought two young women out of sexual slavery in Cambodia.And we'll end the evening with a jump on tomorrow, morning papers for Friday. It's already that late in the week, all that and more in the hour ahead.We begin with the debate in South Carolina, the first since John Kerry emerged as the undisputed frontrunner. Political history and conventional wisdom suggest the Democratic nominee, whoever he ends up being, must be able to compete in the south, maybe not win it all but compete there and that alone made the debate tonight important if not in all honesty especially memorable.Here's CNN's Candy Crowley.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CROWLEY (voice-over): Given that seven states vote in five days and most of the candidates are running out of money it was a remarkably laid back debate save for the former frontrunner's assault on the man who took his place.

HOWARD DEAN (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Just to make this a little less mellow when I was governor I got everybody in my state who was under 18 health insurance. I got a third of all our seniors prescription benefits. Now, Senator Kerry is the frontrunner and I mean him no insult but in 19 years in the Senate, Senator Kerry sponsored nine -- eleven bills that had anything to do with healthcare. Not one of them passed.

CROWLEY: John Kerry, who has bested the field with two wins in the first two states spent much of his time attacking the president but would not let that one pass.

SEN. JOHN KERRY (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: One of the things that you need to know as a president is how things work in Congress if you want to get things done and one of the things that happens in Congress is you can, in fact, write a bill but if you're smart about it you can get your bill passed on someone else's bill that doesn't carry your name.

CROWLEY: Well, that settles that. Mostly the candidates disagreed agreeably on everything except for their unanimous opinion that George Bush has handled the war in Iraq very badly. Mostly though they spent the time touting their electability, Lieberman stressing his centrist views, Kerry his foreign policy credentials, Edwards his roots as a poor kid from the south.

JOHN EDWARDS (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: You know 40 miles from here when I was born 50 years ago my parents brought me home to a mill village, to a textile mill village. I have seen this my entire life growing up. I've seen mills close. I've seen what it does to communities. I've seen what it does to families.CROWLEY: Dean and Clark their life outside the beltway.

WESLEY CLARK (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: I want to make very clear that I'm not a career politician. I'm not a Washington insider. I am an outsider.

CROWLEY: A question about whether any of them can survive a shutout during next Tuesday's seven state contest produced the most harmonious responses.

SEN. JOSEPH LIEBERMAN (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Candidates who run for president are very optimistic people so I -- I intend to win some.

CROWLEY: So do they all.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

CROWLEY: But somewhere inside all those optimists are some realists. They know that come next Tuesday some of them may have the will to go on but not the money -- Aaron.BROWN: Candy, stay with us. We'll bring Jeff Greenfield into the conversation as well and, Jeff, we'll start with you. My that was a tame little affair today wasn't it?

JEFF GREENFIELD, CNN SR. ANALYST: Well, at the break, according to Tom Brokaw, Howard Dean said we're all so mellow. I mean one explanation may be simple exhaustion but I think there's another one. I think that the candidates are all still in the shadow of Iowa when at least as perceived wisdom has it Dick Gephardt, remember him, and Howard Dean went at each other and as former campaign of Dean, Joe Trippi said it was a murder/suicide. But boy we'll get to this a little later but in past Democratic debates over the years, you know, they have really laid some heavy lumber on each other in other years. This time they really all seem almost gun shy.

BROWN: Candy, you spent a lot of time in and around the Dean campaign. Do they believe now they have a voice, they have the right voice, they have a voice that will get through again?

CROWLEY: Well they're hoping. I mean what they've done here is take the governor's message, I'm an outsider, the governor's message, I've got something done as a governor and his message that I'm the one who stands up even when it's not popular. Those are the three things he's going to hit on very hard trying to remind voters, you know, of why they liked him in the first place.Having said that they know next Tuesday is very, very tough. In fact, Aaron, we have gone now to states that aren't even on that Tuesday list that are on the next Saturday list because they are looking for a place to start picking up a major load of delegates. No better place to go than Michigan.

BROWN: Candy, cough for a second. Jeff, go back to you and the thing, the notion you started. A political campaign you ought to be able to say, it seems to me in a respectful way, I'm better than he is.

GREENFIELD: Yes. This just -- what's happened I think is that -- and we the press bear some of this blame for using the word "negative" so indiscriminately. Negative can mean smearing a guy with, you know, vicious personal stuff as happened to John McCain from sources unknown in South Carolina. Or it can mean saying here's why I think I'm better at this job than you and here's why I think your record bears criticism.In 1972, when Hubert Humphrey and George McGovern were debating, Humphrey basically said to McGovern you want to cut the muscle out of the defense budget. And, in 1988, it was Al Gore in his first presidential run who first raised the Willy Horton issue against Michael Dukakis.Now maybe that's why they don't want to do it this time. In both those cases the Democrats lost but this notion that you can't say, look, I've got problems of why you should be president, you shouldn't be our nominee, this is just not the way I think politics, even clean politics ought to be run.

BROWN: The advantage in that case has to go to Kerry.

GREENFIELD: Yes and by the way I think one of the reasons why the Dean campaign, apart from the fact they don't have any money right now, is looking down the road is I think they think if John Kerry is out there as the undisputed frontrunner the same things that bothered people about him last summer and fall may come to the surface again, whether he's too elitist or too liberal and we're going to go in retreat for higher ground maybe in Michigan and Wisconsin. Two weeks down the road the rant will be forgotten, which is almost is. I think that's what's going on here. Right now John Kerry, nobody is laying a glove on him except for this, oh he's an insider. I'm an outsider. That's not going to do it.

BROWN: So that's their gamble in much the same way that the Kerry gamble earlier was to throw it all at Iowa and hope it bleeds into New Hampshire.

GREENFIELD: Yes, and by the way it's not crazy.

BROWN: Yes.

GREENFIELD: I mean given the Dean thing, you know, we've picked one percent of the delegates so far, OK.

BROWN: yes. That's a good thing to keep in mind. Candy, we'll give you the last word in all of this. Did anybody from your observation anybody do much good for themselves and conversely I suppose did anyone hurt themselves tonight?

CROWLEY: I don't think anyone hurt themselves. Al Sharpton as usual proved to be very quick on his feet, certainly has grown as a debater, is able to make sharp, humorous points. He may be a factor down here so he may have done himself some good but largely I think you have to give it to Kerry simply because nobody laid a glove on anybody. In that case you kind of have to give it to the frontrunner if you give it to anybody.

BROWN: Candy, thank you for good, quick work tonight, Candy Crowley, Jeff Greenfield with us on the debate.As the campaign moves on this next round of states is dovetailing with, of course, the provocative testimony by the former top U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq David Kay. He told the Senate yesterday, he's been telling lots of people that U.S. intelligence on WMDs was flat out wrong.He called for an independent investigation to find out why. Several of the Democratic candidates today were calling on CIA Director George Tenet to resign. They did that months ago. They did it again. Not many people paid attention when they first did it, paying a bit more attention now, including John Kerry, reporting for us tonight CNN's David Ensor.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DAVID ENSOR, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): George Tenet and the issue of intelligence on Iraq before the war have now become a presidential election year issue with the current Democratic frontrunner calling for Tenet to resign.

KERRY: I think there's been a lack of accountability at the CIA. I regret it. I know him personally but that's the nature of responsibility.

ENSOR: On Capitol Hill, Democrats and others are calling for an independent probe into why U.S. intelligence may have gotten it so wrong and what role the administration played.S

EN. JOHN MCCAIN (R), ARIZONA: It's inevitable that there will be an outside commission appointed on an issue of this gravity. 

ENSOR: Then there's a Senate Intelligence Committee report due out soon which congressional sources say will likely accuse the CIA of poor judgment in its pre-war analysis that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.And, the 9/11 commission report due in May expected to say the U.S. government could have, maybe should have stopped those terrorist attacks.

REP. PORTER GOSS (R), CHAIRMAN, INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE: We simply didn't make the right investments. We weren't paying enough attention to the warnings.

ENSOR: But George Tenet is a survivor, appointed by Bill Clinton, kept on and trusted by his Republican successor.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I've got great confidence in our intelligence community. These are unbelievably hard-working, dedicated people who are doing a great job for America.

ENSOR: At the CIA, officials say Kay is premature suggesting no weapons will be found. A U.S. official says there are millions of pages of documents yet to be translated, hundreds of suspect sites yet to be visited and thousands of Iraqi scientists and former officials yet to be interrogated about what they know.

RICHARD BOUCHER, STATE DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN: I don't think one can draw conclusions at this point.

ENSOR: Tenet considered resigning more than a year ago, sources say, but the timing was never right. Now many expect him to stay on through the elections in November to keep up the search for weapons, the hunt for Osama bin Laden and to defend his legacy.(on camera): The White House spokesman said this week that George Tenet retains the president's full confidence. As for Senator Kerry saying that he should go, one U.S. official said that just makes it even less likely.David Ensor, CNN, Washington.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Election years can complicate many things, large and small. This one is enormous. The 9/11 commission said this week it needs more time to complete its investigation of the terrorist attack. Its task has been and remains daunting as well as historic the sheer volume of witnesses and documents overwhelming. The deadline is soon, May 27th, and the White House doesn't want to budget on that deadline. Those who want more time, including the 9/11 families, say politics and the upcoming election are jeopardizing the search for truth.From the White House tonight, CNN's Dana Bash.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BASH (voice-over): For more than a year, an independent commission has investigated what the government knew and did not know about the September 11th terrorist plot but they had a late start and months of wrangling with the administration for access to key information. Now they want Congress and the White House to extend their May 27th deadline by two months.

THOMS KEAN, CHAIRMAN 9/11 COMMISSION: To do the best possible report the staff would like another 60 days, so we decided simply, frankly to put politics aside.BASH: But politics is why the commission's request is meeting resistance. The White House position get the report out as far before election day as possible for fear the findings will give Democrats fresh ammunition against the president.

SCOTT MCCLELLAN, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: There was a timetable that was agreed to and so we have been working in a way to help them move forward as quickly as they possibly can.

BASH: House Speaker Dennis Hastert also opposes an extension saying the commission's recommendations on how to avoid another attack should not be delayed. Some Republicans on Capitol Hill are reluctant to say no.

SEN. KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON (R), TEXAS: No one wants this to be prematurely stopped. We need to have all the facts that we can.

BASH: Senator John McCain says there's only one way to take the politics out of the process.

MCCAIN: The administration's concern is that this report could come out and be critical of the administration and then be part of the election year mix. I sympathize with that position so let's say their report will come out in January off 2005.

BASH: Family members of 9/11 victims say a longer, more thorough investigation is what they've wanted all along.

KRISTEN BREITWEISER, 9/11 FAMILY STEERING COMMITTEE: To take this into politics in an election year it's really an insult to the dead and it's a dishonoring of the dead and the victims' families have always wanted this investigation pure, transparent and removed from the political process.BASH: But the commission vice-chair, a Democrat, warns there is a political danger in waiting. In Washington there are always leaks. 

LEE HAMILTON, VICE-CHAIR, 9/11 COMMISSION: The disadvantage is you have a report that might dribble out and you don't know what parts will dribble out and you could get a very distorted view of what the commission actually decided.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BASH: And, Aaron, whether or not they get an extension, commission sources say they are planning another round of public hearings later this winter and they say we'll see some familiar faces, high-ranking officials from administrations past and present but, of course, they want more time to have even more of those public hearings -- Aaron.

BROWN: Has the White House agreed that Dr. Rice testifies, that the vice president testifies, that the president testifies?

BASH: Well, according to commission sources we are told that Condoleezza Rice actually will go and be interviewed privately, in addition, so will the deputy national security adviser Stephen Hadley. That should happen in the next few weeks and commission sources say that they fully expect they will get some high-ranking officials, including perhaps Condoleezza Rice, perhaps some other cabinet officials.But, of course, because there is a time crunch they say that they have a lot of work to do to keep gathering information, to keep investigating, to actually write a report and figure out what could be declassified. So, the public hearings might have to be squeezed if they don't have an extension of the deadline. They have to keep doing their other work.

BROWN: Dana, thank you, Dana Bash at the White House tonight.On to politics, this time overseas or perhaps more correctly political fallout. Things did not get better today for the BBC in the wake of a devastating report condemning its journalistic practices.That same report absolved Tony Blair's government of allegations it relied on sexed up charges to make its case on WMDs and the case for war in Iraq, a good week for the prime minister it seems, a very bad one for the venerable British Broadcasting Corporation, reporting for us tonight CNN's Robin Oakley.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ROBIN OAKLEY, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Wednesday, Hutton inquiry clears government, castigates BBC and BBC Chairman Gavyn Davies resigns. Thursday, BBC governors meet in crisis and Director General Greg Dyke decides to go too.

GREG DYKE, FORMER BBC DIRECTOR GENERAL: I am today announcing that I've resigned from the BBC. My position as director general has inevitably been compromised by the criticisms of BBC management in the Hutton report.

OAKLEY: Dyke added that he hoped a second departure would draw a line under the whole affair. So, was the bloodletting going to bring peace with the government and lift the climate of fear from the BBC? One more thing it seems was needed.Tony Blair's spokesman said he wanted a formal apology too for the BBC report which accused him of lying over Saddam Hussein's weapons, cue for the BBC's acting chairman.

RICHARD RYDER, ACTING BBC CHAIRMAN: On behalf of the BBC, I have no hesitation in apologizing unreservedly for our errors and to the individuals whose reputations were affected by them.

OAKLEY: That sent Tony Blair significantly echoing Mr. Dyke's choice of phrase was all he'd ever wanted.

TONY BLAIR, BRITISH PRIME MINISTER: But what this does now is it allows us to draw a line and move on, the BBC to get on with their job and the government to get on with ours.

OAKLEY: But if the government sees Hutton as a huge victory that view wasn't much shared by the British public or in the British media. Many papers accused Lord Hutton of a whitewash and the same message in the street.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I don't know where the Hutton report stops and the Iraq question starts (unintelligible).

OAKLEY (on camera): For Tony Blair, the immediate political problems are over but with a growing backlash against Lord Hutton's inquiry report, which analysts say gave the government the benefit of every doubt, opposition parties are keeping up their pressure for another inquiry this time in to how Britain became embroiled in the war against Iraq.Robin Oakley, CNN, London.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Still ahead on the program tonight, questions of a conflict of interest being thrown at Louisiana Congressman Billy Tauzin for a job offer he says he's not even considering, hum.And later a big pothole in the prosecution of Martha Stewart, a key witness who did not testify today.From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: There are a number of stories that made news around the world today beginning in the Middle East. In Jerusalem, the deadliest attack in four months occurred when a suicide bomber blew up a bus packed with morning rush hour commuters. The blast killed ten, injured 50. The bomber was a policeman from Bethlehem who wrote he wanted to revenge, or avenge, the killings of Palestinians in Gaza. The bus blast was only 50 feet away from Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's home, Sharon not home at the time.And later in the day did attend a ceremony for the remains of three Israeli soldiers returned today as part of a prisoner swap with Hezbollah. Under the deal, Israel released two dozen Lebanese and Arab prisoners, another 400 Palestinians were freed to the West Bank and Gaza. Hezbollah also freed an abducted Israeli businessman.In Afghanistan, an explosion at a weapons cache today killed seven U.S. soldiers, wounded three others. The blast occurred about 60 miles southwest of Kabul, one of the deadliest days for GIs since the United States entered Afghanistan now more than two years ago.And finally, Guantanamo Bay where three teenagers, young teenagers at that, were sent home after spending more than a year in military detention. The Defense Department said the juveniles no longer posed a threat and were not going to be tried for any crimes. The Defense Department would not reveal their identities or the countries they came from.The White House said today that actuaries who crunched the numbers for the president's drug prescription plan for Medicare didn't have time to crunch all the data before Congress voted on the bill. It turns out they underestimated the cost by more than 30 percent. The price tag over ten years will be $540 billion not the $400 billion advertised. This is not the only surprise stemming from the new law. Billy Tauzin, a powerful Republican who helped negotiate the prescription drug benefit has been offered a lucrative new job lobbying for the drug industry. Here's CNN's Joe Johns.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JOE JOHNS, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Congressman Billy Tauzin played a leading role writing and selling the big new prescription drug plan that passed the Congress in November but now he's choosing his words carefully.Now it's come out that PhRMA the drug company's powerful trade association has offered Tauzin well over $1 million to be their top lobbyist.

REP. BILLY TAUZIN (R), TENNESSEE: When I decide my future the folks of Louisiana will be the first to know not you and I'll know that in time. Right now I'm just doing my job.JOHNS: Critics called the drug plan a gift. Watchdog groups are asking whether the drug companies are returning a favor.

CRAIG HOLMAN, PUBLIC CITIZEN: This certainly does not pass the smell test. I mean it reeks of an exchange of personal benefit for Representative Tauzin and direct benefits to the pharmaceutical industry and 

PHARMA.REP. NANCY PELOSI (D), MINORITY LEADER: This is abuse of power. This is conflict of interest if it indeed is true.

JOHNS: Tauzin denies any impropriety. His spokesman says the job discussions began within the last week to ten days and that no one approached Tauzin during the Medicare debate. Democrats want to know when did the job talks start.

TAUZIN: I'm not personally discussing this with anybody.

JOHNS: The spokesman says Tauzin has twice been hospitalized with a bleeding ulcer in recent weeks and wants a lower stress job. Experts say taking a job with PhRMA is perfectly legal as long as Tauzin doesn't lobby the Congress for one year.(on camera): PhRMA has declined to talk specifics about the offer. So far, Tauzin has not indicated whether he plans to accept it. Joe Johns, CNN, Capitol Hill.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: A couple of other stories that made news around the country today starting in Massachusetts where Terry Lee Sampson, a carjacker who murdered three men in a weeklong crime spree was sentenced to death by a federal judge today, the first federal death sentence handed down in the state in three decades. There is no state death penalty in Massachusetts.In Florida on the eve of his 17th birthday, Lionel Tate pleaded guilty to second degree murder today, the final step in a deal that freed him from prison this week. The teenager, you'll recall, was sentenced to life without parole three years ago for killing a girl when he was 12. His conviction was overturned.And Lloyd Pete Bucher of the USS Pueblo, the spy ship, had died. He was 76. The Pueblo, you'll recall, was monitoring communist ship movements, intercepting messages when it was captured by the North Koreans in 1968. The captain helped his crew survive months of brutal captivity. They nearly faced a court martial. In 1989 the Pentagon awarded him and his crew prisoner of war medals.Still to come tonight on NEWSNIGHT, the Martha Stewart case and the key witness who did not testify, the details when we come back.And later tonight a story of freedom from sexual slavery, we'll be joined by Nick Kristof of the "New York Times" about his purchase of two slaves and what happened when he set them free.That's coming up tonight on NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: This was supposed to have been an important and juicy day at the obstruction of justice trial of Martha Stewart. The former assistant to her broker, the broker who is on trial with her, was to take the stand and tell all he knew about her plan, their plan to sell ImClone shares. A last-minute surprise delayed everything. Here's NEWSNIGHT's financial correspondent, Allan Chernoff. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

ALLAN CHERNOFF, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): A forced shakeup in the prosecution's batting order against Martha Stewart and her co- defendant and stockbroker Peter Bacanovic. Star government witness government witness Douglas Faneuil, assistant to Bacanovic, may have to wait until next Thursday to testify. Late last night prosecutors sent defense attorneys an FBI report of an interview with Faneuil's first attorney, a gentleman in his 80s who could not recall if it had been Bacanovic or Sam Waksal, former CEO of ImClone, who instructed Faneuil to pass information about ImClone to Martha Stewart. The government alleges Stewart sold her shares after Bacanovic ordered Faneuil to share the tip that Waksal was trying to dump his stock. It's a story that Faneuil is expected to tell on the stand. 

BENJAMIN BRAFMAN, ATTORNEY: If there is a reasonable doubt as to whether he was the source or not, the government's case against Bacanovic can be undermined just by that little piece of information. 

CHERNOFF: Bacanovic's attorney, Richard Strassberg, says, "There is some chutzpah with giving us the documents last night at 10: 15." Judge Cedarbaum said she found it troubling and granted Strassberg a week to investigate, a delay that would force the government to switch the order of its witnesses. After court, Stewart's attorney was tight-lipped. 

ROBERT MORVILLO, MARTHA STEWART'S ATTORNEY: It's not a big deal. I'm not going to be in a position to comment on what happens in the courtroom other than in the courtroom. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

CHERNOFF: Once Faneuil does take the stand, he's going to face a blistering cross-examination, as defense attorneys need to damage his credibility. They've already called him a liar in open court and they plan to ask him about possible drug use -- Aaron. 

BROWN: Allan, thank you. We're joined tonight to talk about all of this by John Coffee. He is the director of the Center of Corporate Governance at Columbia University Law School. It's good to have you with us.One slightly off-point question, I fear. Why is someone's conversation with their lawyer in play at all? Why isn't that privileged? 

JOHN COFFEE, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Because the privilege has been waived. Mr. Faneuil has been cooperating with the government, telling them everything he knew. And the judge ruled on Monday that the attorney-client privilege has been waived by Mr. Faneuil. 

BROWN: OK. But I was paying attention. Get a point for that. 

COFFEE: OK.

BROWN: How big a deal do you think this is? 

COFFEE: It's a pothole. It's not yet a roadblock. What we don't know at this point is whether the confusion is Mr. Faneuil, whether he made an inconsistent statement that suggested he wasn't sure and didn't recall who told him. 

BROWN: In which case it's a pretty big deal.

COFFEE: This would be a big deal. Or whether it's an 82-year-old lawyer who didn't keep accurate notes and can't seem to have kept a clear memory of what he heard from his client. 

BROWN: Either way -- and maybe we'll never know which way it was. But, either way, is there -- if all you're going for here is the benefit of the doubt, a little bit of doubt here -- you just need one juror to doubt -- that's all will you need -- is this big enough to create that? 

COFFEE: I don't think it creates a doubt on what will be the critical issue. This may absolve Mr. Bacanovic of the charge that he was the person who called Faneuil and told Faneuil to call Stewart. 

BROWN: Right. 

COFFEE: But the real core of this trial is whether or not Stewart and Bacanovic arranged this fabricated story over a $60 stop- loss order and came in and told the government this concocted story. That's what the jury is going to have to ultimately decide is truth or false. If they think that's a lie, then the two defendants will be convicted. 

BROWN: Is there more to the government's case than sort of he said/she said/they said? 

COFFEE: Yes, I think the government is going to try to corroborate their story, which Mr. Faneuil will tell, that this was all a made-up, fabricated story, with suspicious behavior that both Bacanovic and Stewart allegedly engaged in. Martha Stewart appears to have altered the telephone logs of her secretary. That's an unusual thing for a chief executive officer to do, to go and play around with your secretary's telephone logs. Mr. Bacanovic is alleged to have altered Merrill Lynch's records to add in an after-the-fact reference to the stop-loss order. Both of those events, if the jury believes them, look suspicious and seem to suggest that there was a cover-up in progress. 

BROWN: Without getting precisely into the question of whether Ms. Stewart is guilty or innocent, that's -- I think a lot of her supporters say, this whole thing is phony and there's nothing there. Is there -- just, is there enough there, there to have proceeded this way enough to dispel the notion that if it were somebody Stewart, someone other than Martha Stewart, we wouldn't be going through this exercise at all? 

COFFEE: Well, yes and no. I think the government is always entitled to say anyone who comes into the U.S. attorney's office and tells them what they believe is a fabricated story and lies to them is someone they can take to trial, because you're obstructing a serious investigation. However, the securities fraud charge here has bothered lots of lawyers, because it essentially says, in saying that you're innocent, in saying you didn't do this crime, you were in effect manipulating the securities markets. That's pushing the envelope quite far. And, on that part of the case, this does look a little bit like post-Enron jurisprudence, where we're interpreting the law very strictly against defendants. But in the core part of the case, the simple part of the case, was she lying, that's going to be for the jury to decide. 

BROWN: Well, we hope they get there eventually. Nice to meet you. Thanks for coming in, sir, very much. Still to come on the program, morning papers, of course, at the end, as always. Up next, the dangers from the latest computer virus, what it does, how can you avoid it, if you're wise. Around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: This is a warning. Beware, for the 100th time, of e- mails with attachments from people you don't know. It also turns out that you need to beware of e-mail with attachments from people you do know. Both could contain the latest virus, Mydoom, which is a nasty little thing attacking millions of computers and Web sites, some as far away as China and one really, really close to home. Here's CNN's Daniel Sieberg. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DANIEL SIEBERG, CNN TECHNOLOGY CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Mydoom begin as a seemingly innocent e-mail that looks like an official error message. It might even appear to come from someone you know. Clicking on the e-mail's attachment causes the virus to worm its way through your hard drive, searching for stored e-mail addresses in order to keep sending itself out. It then opens an electronic back door on your computer, allowing a hacker to return over the Internet later to steal personal information. 

STEPHEN TRILLING, SYMANTEC CORP.: It's a little bit like somebody breaking in through the front door of your house. You come home, notice your front door lock has been opened, but you don't notice that the person on their way out left a window open in the basement allowing them to come back a week later without you realizing it. 

SIEBERG: The virus is designed to target the Web site of a Utah- based company called the SCO Group. You can think of it as an army of computer slaves all set to attack this Sunday. (on camera): The SCO Group is battling IBM in court over copyright issues relating to the operating system that is known as Linux. Now, that being said, there's no evidence yet that a Linux supporter is behind the worm. 

DARL MCBRIDE, CEO, SCO GROUP: In an attempt to get us from winning through the court system, there appears to be an approach to intimidate us, to harass us, typical kinds of things you see with terrorists. In this case, we're dealing not with actual terrorists, but with cyber-terrorists. 

SIEBERG (voice-over): The SCO Group is serious about catching whomever spawned the worm, offering a $250,000 bounty. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

SIEBERG: And at least one copycat version of the Mydoom virus is already circulating on the Internet. This one targets both the SCO Group and Microsoft's Web site. So, Microsoft is now offering a $250,000 reward as well. Federal authorities are investigating both cases, but, so far, no arrests have been made -- Aaron. 

BROWN: Let's say, for example, just hypothetically, that one's spouse had this virus on her computer, hypothetically. How would she or anyone else get rid of that? 

SIEBERG: Well, Aaron, in that particular hypothetical case...

BROWN: Right. It's just all hypothetical. 

SIEBERG: All hypothetical here.In that particular case, or anyone's case, for that matter, the first thing is trace your Internet activity back over the last few days. Try and remember if you've clicked on something that might resemble this particular attachment. Once you do, you're going to need to scan your computer and see if that file exists. Then you need to go through the process of removing it. Now, a lot of anti-virus companies make products available that do this automatically. In some cases, you have to do it manually and sort of poke around in your computer and try and remove it. But it can be a tricky process, but it can be done. 

BROWN: That depends on by whom. Thank you very much.

(LAUGHTER) 

SIEBERG: Right. 

BROWN: I think. A quick look at some of the business stories that made news today. This is our "Moneyline Roundup," beginning with mad cow and the Bush administration's plan for a national cattle identification program. The proposal calls for $33 million to be spent to develop an identification system for the nation's 96 million cattle. Another $27 million -- a lot of numbers in this "Moneyline" thing -- would be spent on other programs to combat the spread of the disease. For that and $60 million more, you could get one-seventh of the Los Angeles Dodgers. I get this one. Baseball owners today approved the sale of the team by the News Corp. to a Boston real estate developer, sale price, $430 million. Huge moneymaking partnership between Disney and Pixar, which made movies like "Toy Story," will be no more, after their current deal expires in two years. Important talks broke off today. The five movies made under the partnership have earned more than $2.5 billion at the box office. Disney shares, as you might imagine, were down in after-hours trading. Here's the rest of the market. Blue chips on the Dow rose after a choppy day. Tech stocks on the Nasdaq fell. And the S&P was up a skosh, a financial term, that. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT, an old friend of this program and his remarkable story, Nicholas Kristof of "The New York Times" and how he bought and freed two sex slaves and what happened to them. A break first. This is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: It is a fine line that journalists walk, getting close enough to a story, but not too close, earning the trust of your sources, but maintaining a professional distance. We're not supposed to become part of the story, which brings us to Nicholas Kristof of "The New York Times" and two young girls in Cambodian he met while reporting on the sex slave trade, an ugly, horrible story, and a chance to change its outcome for these two young girls. We're pleased to have Nick with us, as we always are, to talk about the columns that he wrote for "The Times" over the last week. Did you set out to do this story or did it find you? 

NICHOLAS KRISTOF, COLUMNIST, "THE NEW YORK TIMES": I set out, in a sense, to do it, because I thought that the main moral challenge we face in this century is to address the plight of women in the Third World. And I think sex trafficking is a big part of that. And I had been to Cambodian before, had been horrified by what I'd seen. BROWN: It is particularly horrible in Cambodia, isn't it? 

KRISTOF: More than anywhere else I had seen. I had gone there in 1996 and had not been able to shake the thought of 13- and 15-year-old girls whom I had seen who were really slaves, in a way that we think has been consigned to history. 

BROWN: And sometimes, or maybe even often, sold into this by their families. 

KRISTOF: Often by their parents, and often by their mothers.And that was one thing that I really wanted to find, to talk to some of the parents who had done this. I didn't. I did talk to the girls. And for a 13-year-old girl to deal with having her own mother sell her is pretty excruciating. 

BROWN: Yes. You find these two kids, these two children, and you make a decision. 

KRISTOF: Which is to purchase their freedom. It's not very journalistic. And yet, you know, here is -- one of the girls I met, the first one, she was stuck in the brothel for a debt of $150. And if she could pay that, if I could pay that, then she would be able to go back to her village and so on. She desperately wanted to go. The other one was stuck for $203. And, you know, what could I do? 

BROWN: So, for 300 bucks, give or take, you bought these two girls out of slavery, and, in fact, got receipts to prove it. 

KRISTOF: That's right. That's right. It's -- yes. I mean, I don't think that buying the sex slaves is a solution to the problem. 

BROWN: Sure.

KRISTOF: Ultimately, it raises the market price for them and creates incentives to do that elsewhere. 

BROWN: Right. 

KRISTOF: On the other hand, it did transform the lives of these two individuals. 

BROWN: Do you know that? 

KRISTOF: No. And it will be very interesting to see how this goes. I took them back to their villages. The first one, Srey Neth, was -- I set her up having a little grocery store in her village to make money as an alternative. The other one, Srey Mom, I set her up selling meat in the village. Srey Neth is still there with the grocery store. Unfortunately, Srey Mom, a few days, later disappeared. 

BROWN: Why? Do you know?

KRISTOF: She had a blowup with her parents.

BROWN: She went back to the brothel.

KRISTOF: She went back to the brothel. She went back to the brothel. And she's there now.And, you know, when I left Srey Mom in that village, it was so happy. Everybody was crying. They thought she was dead. And I've almost never been happier as a journalist at what I've done. And then, just a few days later, to hear from my translator that she had left and gone back to the brothel was just horrifying. 

BROWN: It breaks your heart. 

KRISTOF: It breaks your heart to have a kid make these decisions. But I think there aren't any fairy tale endings in this business. And it's more realistic, in that sense. 

BROWN: Just one question on the journalism. You are a columnist for "The Times." You are not a reporter for "The Times," as such. Does that make a difference in how your bosses and our viewers and your readers ought to see what you did? 

KRISTOF: I think it does. The notion of entering a story, of paying money for a human being is obviously something that, you know, isn't customary journalistic practice. Columnists have more license to do things. And I think, you know, in that spirit, it made more sense. But, fundamentally, it made a huge difference for these two people. And I think especially for one, it has saved her life from dying of AIDS, stuck in a brothel. 

BROWN: Good for you. 

KRISTOF: Thank you. 

BROWN: Good to see you.. 

KRISTOF: Good to be back. 

BROWN: Thank you. Morning papers after the break. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

(ROOSTER CROWING) 

BROWN: That thing hasn't made me laugh in a while.Time to check morning papers from around the country. And I think they are around the country today. I don't see even a Canadian one in there. If you're traveling, you might run into this under your hotel room doorstep. Doorstep? I'm not sure that's right. 

"USA Today" leads with the Super Bowl, with its official Super Bowl guide. "What it takes to win. Who gets a ticket? Not Joe fan. Celebs, corporate types land most of Super Bowl's pricey seats." But you could probably go and get one in the cheap seats with me. "Candidates Feel Cash Crunch" is their political story on the front page of "USA Today," the tonight's newspaper. It's also a great. It's a fun read, too.

"The Miami Herald." A couple good ones on the front page, I think. "Day of Fear and Freedom," two stories out of the Middle East, the horrible suicide bombing and the release of prisoners, a rather large prisoner release. Down at the bottom, "An Unblinking Tate Victim Hears Pleas of His Victim's Mother," as that case finally comes to an end, and a sad case all around.

"The Oregonian." Man, these guys turn this around really quickly out on the West Coast. "Dean Takes Issue With Kerry's Success in The Senate" is how they led the debate. "The former Vermont governor tries to reclaim his momentum with criticism of front-runner in debate in South Carolina." "The Oregonian" out of Portland, Oregon. 

Pretty straightforward headline in tomorrow's "Boston Herald." "Hang Him. Judge: Noose or Needle for Killer Sampson." We told you about this story a little bit earlier in the program. "The Richmond Times-Dispatch" leads with this claim. "Bin Laden Will Be Caught Soon, Military Says, But Pakistan Says U.S. Troops Can't Cross Border to Hunt Him." Somebody in the Pentagon said today that they thought they'd get him within a year.And, quickly, 

"The Chicago Sun-Times." I'm not sure what that picture is, but it's pretty cool. And the weather tomorrow is not. Well, actually, it's quite cool. "Putrid" is the weather word, four degrees. Yikes.We'll wrap up the day in a moment.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: Before we leave you, a quick recap of our top story tonight.The seven Democratic candidates faced off in South Carolina, the debate important because of where it was, the South, where whoever wins the Democratic nomination will have to compete. Tonight, they just tried to connect, just five days until next Tuesday's seven states, including South Carolina.Tomorrow, right here on this program, the uncanny connection between the Super Bowl and presidential politics. Jeff Greenfield reports on that -- all the day's news and other good stuff right here on NEWSNIGHT tomorrow."LOU DOBBS TONIGHT" is next for most of you.We'll see you tomorrow, 10:00 Eastern time. Until then, good night for all of us at NEWSNIGHT. 

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