LONDON(AP)
A British civil servant and an aide to a legislator were
convicted Wednesday of leaking a classified memo about a meeting
between Prime Minister Tony Blair and President Bush in a breach of
the Official Secrets Act.
David Keogh, a cipher expert who was convicted on two counts,
had admitted passing on the secret memo about April 2004 talks
between the two leaders in which Bush purportedly referred to
bombing Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera.
Keogh was accused of passing the memo to his co-defendant, Leo
O'Connor, 44, who in turn handed it to his boss, Tony Clarke,
then a legislator who voted against Britain's decision to join
the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Keogh, 50, told London's Central Criminal Court he felt
strongly about the memo, which he had to relay to diplomats
overseas using secure methods, and hoped it would come to wider
attention.
"The main person in my mind was John Kerry, who at the time
was American candidate for the U.S. presidential election in
2004," Keogh had testified.
He admitted holding "unfavorable" views on Bush, but
said he did not think publishing the document would hurt
Britain's security or international relations.
The Daily Mirror newspaper reported that the memo showed Blair
arguing against Bush's suggestion of bombing Al-Jazeera's
headquarters in Doha, Qatar. The Daily Mirror said its sources
disagreed on whether Bush's suggestion was serious.
Blair said he had no information about any proposed U.S. action
against Al-Jazeera, and the White House called the claims
"outlandish and inconceivable."
The document, marked "Secret-Personal," was intended
to be restricted to senior officials. The memo's contents are
considered so sensitive that much of the trial was heard behind
closed doors. Witnesses and counsel did not refer to the contents
in open court.
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