March 10, 2009 05:52 PM
Boston Globe
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2009/03/top_intelligenc.html
Another top Obama administration appointee pulled the plug today on their nomination, and this time it has nothing to do with unpaid taxes.
Charles Freeman, picked as chairman of the National Intelligence Council, withdrew after criticism over policy, specifically his opprobrium for Israel and his ties to Saudia Arabia.. "Director of National Intelligence Dennis C. Blair announced today that Ambassador Charles W. Freeman Jr. has requested that his selection to be Chairman of the National Intelligence Council not proceed. Director Blair accepted Ambassador Freeman's decision with regret," Blair's office said in a statement.
Freeman served as assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs from 1993 to 1994 and was US ambassador to Saudi Arabia heading into and during the Persian Gulf War.
Since 1997, the Washington Post reported today, he has presided over the Middle East Policy Council, a Washington-based nonprofit funded in part by Saudi money. In that role, Freeman has occasionally criticized the Israeli government. The Post says that in 2007 he said, "The brutal oppression of the Palestinians by the Israeli occupation shows no sign of ending," adding, "American identification with Israel has become total."
Republicans on the Senate Intelligence Committee questioned Freeman's nomination. So did groups including the National Jewish Democratic Council, whose executive director Ira N. Forman had said Freeman is "not a pick I would make" and appears to be a "strong Arabist."
Republican Jewish Coalition Executive Director Matt Brooks applauded Freeman's withdrawal. "This news will come as a relief to the large and growing group of Americans who have grown concerned about the judgment and process that led to the selection of this flawed appointment," he said in a statement, adding that "it is unfortunate that important questions went unaddressed by the Obama White House on those occasions they were raised. It's troubling how much effort it took to get them to face up to this problem."
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