By the time you

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By the time you read this post you’ll likely already know that today’s Financial Times makes stunning new claims about alleged sales of uranium from Niger to Iraq.

In brief, the main article in the FT makes two points …

First, that there is much more information than the forged ‘Niger-uranium’ documents backing up the claim that Iraq (and other countries) sought to clandestinely purchase ‘yellowcake’ uranium from Niger.

(I think point two is the real point of the FT story, not point one. But we’ll get to that in another post.)

The second assertion requires a touch more explanation.

If you’re up on the arcana of the ‘Niger-uranium’ story you’ll remember that they first came to light when a source — an unnamed Italian businessman and security consultant — gave copies of them to an Italian journalist named Elisabetta Burba.

(For more on the tick-tock of what Burba did with them and how they eventually got into US hands, see this piece by Sy Hersh from last year in The New Yorker.)

There has been endless speculation about who this mystery man was and who actually did the forging. Was he the forger? And if so, what were his motives? If not, who put them into his hands? And what were their motives?

According to the Financial Times article, that business man is likely himself the forger of the documents and he has a long history of bad acts which, they say, discredit him as a source of information. That last tidbit plays a key part in the FT story because, in their words, the provider of the documents is “understood to be planning to reveal selected aspects of his story to a US television channel.”

That’s what the FT says.

I hear something different.

In fact, I know something different.

My colleagues and I have reported on this matter extensively, spoken to key players involved in the drama, and put together a detailed picture of what happened. And that picture looks remarkably different from this account which is out today — specifically on the matter of the origins of those forged documents and who was involved.

I cannot begin to describe how much I would like to say more than that. And at some later point in some later post I will do my best to explain the hows and whys of why I can’t. But, for the moment, I can’t.

Let me, however, offer a hypothetical that might help make sense of all this.

Let’s say that certain individuals or organizations are responsible for some rather unfortunate misdeeds. And let’s further postulate that such hypothetical individuals or organizations find out that some folks are on to them, that a story is in the works — perhaps more than one — and that it’s coming right at them. Those individuals or organizations — as shorthand, let’s call them ‘the bad actors’ — might well start trying to fight back, trying to gin up an alternative storyline to exculpate themselves and inculpate others. If that story made its way into the news, at a minimum, it might help the bad actors muddy the waters for when the real story comes out. You can see how such a regrettable turn of events might come to pass.

This is of course only a hypothetical. But I thought it might provide a clarifying context.

So read the FT article. But also keep your ears open. It is, I’m quite confident, not the last word you’ll hear on this story.

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