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looks like marc cooper is out of a job.<br><br>
R<br><br>
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<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite><u><a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-022602office_wr.story" eudora="autourl">http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-022602office_wr.story</a></u><br>
<b>Pentagon Will Close Embattled Office</b><br>
By MATT KELLEY<br>
Associated Press Writer<br><br>
February 26 2002, 11:26 AM PST<br><br>
WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon will close a new office that reportedly has
proposed spreading false information abroad, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld said today.<br><br>
Rumsfeld denied that the Office of Strategic Influence would have spread
misinformation but said news reports and commentary have made it
impossible for the agency to do its job.<br><br>
"While much of the thrust of the criticism and the cartoons and
comment has been off the mark," Rumsfeld told reporters, "the
office has been damaged so much that it could not operate
effectively."<br>
<br>
The Defense Department created the office after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. Rumsfeld said the office was supposed to help get the United
States' side of the story out to counter the views of opponents such as
the Taliban and the al-Qaida terrorist network.<br><br>
Last week, reports surfaced that the office had proposed giving false
information to foreign journalists as a means of furthering the U.S. war
against terrorism.<br><br>
The New York Times reported that the office, headed by Air Force Brig.
Gen. Simon P. Worden, had begun circulating classified proposals calling
for using the Internet and clandestine operations to spread such
disinformation.<br><br>
Rumsfeld said the Pentagon has not spread lies and would never do so in
the future. President Bush pledged on Monday that "we'll tell the
American people the truth."<br><br>
The Pentagon will continue trying to get its message across overseas,
just not through the Office of Strategic Influence, Rumsfeld
said.<br><br>
"The office is done. What do you want, blood?" he said at a
Pentagon news conference.<br><br>
Rumsfeld said last week that the Pentagon might engage in what he called
strategic or tactical deception, as it has in the past. For example, if
U.S. troops were about to launch an attack from the west, they might
"do things" that would make the enemy believe an attack was
instead coming from the north, Rumsfeld said.<br><br>
Douglas Feith, the undersecretary of defense who oversaw the now-closed
office, had said he created the bureau to oversee all of the military's
"information operations," such as dropping leaflets and
broadcasting radio messages in battlefield areas.<br>
Rumsfeld said he met with Feith this morning and Feith said he decided to
close the office.</blockquote></html>