House Foreign Affairs leadership offered viewing of Afghanistan cable

The State Department has offered to let House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) and Ranking Member Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) see a dissent cable related to the 2021 withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan at its headquarters.

“The Department is prepared to invite you and the Ranking Member of the Committee to visit the Department at your convenience to read this cable and its response, with the names of the signatories redacted and with the understanding that the Committee would suspend possible enforcement actions related to the Committee’s subpoena,” the department wrote in a letter obtained by POLITICO.

McCaul called the offer “significant progress” on CNN’s “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer” and said the “only remaining issue” would be allowing others on the committee to gain access to the cable.

“I have a lot of Afghan veterans on this committee, and in fairness to them, I believe that they should be able to see the dissent cable as well — not just me and the ranking member,” he said. “If we can work out this last step, then I think we’ve resolved a litigation fight in the courts and [achieved] a good result for our veterans.”

The July 2021 document from diplomats in Afghanistan warned of the possible rapid fall of Kabul, which proved accurate.

Reaching final agreement with McCaul would stave off the threat of Secretary of State Antony Blinken being held in contempt of Congress, which the Texas Republican had threatened to vote on in his committee on May 24. Blinken would be the first secretary of State ever held in contempt.

In its response, the State Department argued it believed it had “satisfied the Committee’s informational needs” through a written summary and classified briefing on the cable but that it wished to “resolve this matter expeditiously and continues to commit itself to the accommodation process.”

McCaul subpoenaed the dissent cable — and Blinken’s response to it — in late March after making several document requests earlier in the Congress.

Meeks, the top Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, told reporters that he spoke with McCaul after the offer but that the two had yet to schedule their visit to view the document.

“Hopefully, this brings everything else to a close,” Meeks said of the conflict with the State Department. “What I will say is that we’ll go together when it happens.”

Related articles

Gateway Pundit warned by its own lawyer it was using ‘a damned fraud’ as a source: report



A new filing in a defamation lawsuit filed by Georgia poll workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss against the conspiracy theory website Gateway Pundit reveals that workers at the site feared for their credibility, reported The Guardian — and their own attorney warned them that the source for their claims was not to be trusted.

The site's founder, Jim Hoft, has earned the nickname "The Dumbest Man on the Internet" for years of strange and sloppy claims. Despite this, former President Donald Trump has been reported to be an avid reader of the site.

"Attorneys for Freeman and Moss ... said in their filing that John Burns, a lawyer for Gateway Pundit, had warned the site about relying on Kevin Moncla, a source in Georgia who fed the site information on Freeman and Moss, including their non-public personnel files, according to the filing," said the report.

"'Moncla is a known fabricator. I wouldn’t touch/publish anything he produces,” Burns reportedly wrote, while also calling Moncla “a g-------d fraud."

ALSO READ: Read this powerful GOP senator’s pay-to-play 'benefits package' for lobbyists

As if that weren't enough, Freeman and Moss’s attorneys also unearthed messages from Moncla said in which he said of their clients, "I will help you nail these b----s."

According to the report, Moncla was charged with voyeurism and ordered to pay $3.25 million after filming guests in the bathroom at his house.

Earlier this week, Gateway Pundit filed for bankruptcy amid the litigation against them.

Moss and Freeman, who counted ballots in Atlanta in 2020, have become a focus of numerous MAGA conspiracy theories, spread in part by Trump allies like Rudy Giuliani, who claimed that they were stuffing ballots — based in part on a supposed "flash drive" one passed to the other that turned out to be a ginger mint. Giuliani was found liable for $148 million in a defamation default judgment for his role in these claims.

In addition to the defamation cases, efforts to harass the two workers form part of the election racketeering case against Trump's allies in Fulton County.

Facebook posts – Debt relief offer is from private UK company, not US government program

"The administration (has) passed a new bill to help Americans with $15,000+ in credit card debt to write off their balance by 50%."

Buffalo Police update on double homicide

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Y5b4ZZOWEUM
01:53:35

Grisanti Censured for 2020 Incident Involving Police; Neighbor

The New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct has...