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you know things are getting rough when this happens to a NR
reporter.<br><br>
<br>
July 12, 2002, 6:00 p.m.<br><br>
<b>Free Joel Mowbray!<br>
A wild afternoon at the State Department.<br><br>
</b>By NRO Staff<br>
<a href="http://www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.asp?ref=/nr_comment/nr_comment071202.asp" eudora="autourl">http://www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.asp?ref=/nr_comment/nr_comment071202.asp</a>
<br><br>
Would that the State Department were as tough on the Saudis.
<br><br>
NRO contributor Joel Mowbray was detained this afternoon at the State
Department after an acrimonious exchange with top Foggy Bottom press
flack Richard Boucher.<br><br>
Mowbray had challenged Boucher on his account of events at State this
week, which had to fire its longest-serving career diplomat in response
to the congressional uproar created by Mowbray's reporting on the
"Visa Express" program (the program gives the Saudis easy
access to U.S. visas — see Mowbray's reporting here. <br><br>
<a href="http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray061402.asp" eudora="autourl">http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray061402.asp</a><br><br>
Mowbray read from a classified cable that had been leaked to him and that
contradicted Boucher's spin (both Mowbray and the Washington Post quoted
from the cable earlier this week). <br><br>
<a href="http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray071002.asp" eudora="autourl">http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray071002.asp</a><br><br>
State Department officials were not amused. Very not amused.<br><br>
When Mowbray was leaving the briefing, a State Department official,
accompanied by four guards, asked him to stay to answer a few questions.
Mowbray said he could come back later. The official said, no, they wanted
him to answer a few questions immediately.<br><br>
When Mowbray began to get the feeling that he couldn't leave even if he
wanted to, he asked, "Am I being detained?"<br><br>
When a diplomatic security official — who had showed up on the scene —
told him "no," Mowbray announced that he was leaving.<br><br>
At which point, the guard stepped in front of Mowbray and said,
"Now, you're being detained."<br><br>
The guards wouldn't let him leave until Mowbray had called a lawyer from
his cell phone and National Review had called the State Department's
press office to ask what was happening — about a half-an-hour after the
run-in began. <br><br>
When NRO contacted an official in the State Department's press office
later this afternoon to ask if State had a comment on the incident, she
said, "He wasn't detained!"<br><br>
Asked to elaborate, the press official continued, "I wasn't there! I
don't know what happened!" <br><br>
But for at least a few minutes, Mowbray had a harder time leaving the
State Department than many Saudis have had entering the country.
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