Special ops group attacks Obama over bin Laden bragging, leaks
I remember Obama's statement. He used "I", "me", "my" about 100 times.
Funny how business owners "didn't build that" but he single-handedly killed
bin laden.
Obama has highlighted his foreign policy record on the campaign trail,
emphasizing how he presided over the killing of bin Laden, as well as how he
ended the war in Iraq and set a timeline for winding down the war in
Afghanistan.
However, Obama has come under sharp attack from Republican lawmakers who
have accused his administration of being behind high-level leaks of
classified information.
They have pointed to media reports about clandestine drone attacks,
informants planted in al Qaeda affiliates and alleged cyber-warfare against
Iran that Republicans say were calculated to promote Obama's image as a
strong leader in an election year.
The White House has denied leaking classified information.
The president of Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund Inc, Scott Taylor,
is a former Navy SEAL who in 2010 ran unsuccessfully for the Republican
nomination for a congressional seat in Virginia.
Calling itself "OPSEC" for short - which in spy jargon means "operational
security" - the anti-leak group incorporated last June in Delaware, a state
that has the most secretive corporate registration rules in the U.S.
It also set itself up as a nonprofit organization under section 501(c)4 of
the U.S. Tax Code, allowing it to keep donors' identities secret. Spokesmen
for the group declined to discuss its sources of financing.
Several group representatives say their main motivation for setting up OPSEC
was dismay at recent detailed media leaks about sensitive operations.
In an interview, Taylor denied OPSEC had any political slant. He described
the group as a "watchdog organization" but added that the current
administration "has certainly leaked more than others."
OPSEC spokesmen said the group has about $1 million at its disposal and
hopes to raise more after the release of its mini-documentary, entitled
"Dishonorable Disclosures," which aims, in spy-movie style, to document a
recent spate of leaks regarding sensitive intelligence and military
operations.
Following the film's release, OPSEC's spokesmen said, the group expects to
produce TV spots on the anti-leak theme that will air in a number of states,
including Virginia, Florida, Ohio, Colorado, North Carolina and Nevada - key
battleground states.
Fred Rustmann, a former undercover case officer for the CIA who is a
spokesman for the group, insisted its focus on leaks was "not a partisan
concern." But he said the current administration had been leaking secrets
"to help this guy get re-elected, at the expense of peoples' lives.... We
want to see that they don't do this again."
Chad Kolton, a former spokesman for the office of Director of National
Intelligence during the George W. Bush administration who now represents
OPSEC, also said the group's message and make-up are nonpolitical.
"You'll see throughout the film that concern about protecting the lives of
intelligence and Special Forces officers takes precedence over
partisanship," he said.
Responding to criticism about the president taking credit for the bin Laden
raid, an Obama campaign official pointed to an interview with CNN last month
in which Admiral Bill McRaven, commander of the raid, said: "At the end of
the day, make no mistake about it, it was the president of the United States
that shouldered the burden for this operation, that made the hard decisions,
that was instrumental in the planning process, because I pitched every plan
to him."
"I think Admiral McRaven knows more about the President's role in the bin
Laden operation than this group," the campaign official said.