Difference between revisions of "Stephen D. Bryen"
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+ | According to a Dec. 24, 1985, Associated Press report, [[Richard Perle]], still a Reagan Defense Department official, was challenged by Jeremiah Denton, then a Republican senator from Alabama, on Perle's choice of Stephen D. Bryen as a Pentagon aide. In the email copy of Lee Byrd's report provided by John Sugg (JohnSugg@aol.com), Denton charged that Bryen, moving from a job with the powerful [[American-Israel Public Affairs Committee]], had been forced to resign his Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff job after being investigated for trying to gain information for the Israeli government. Federal prosecutors dropped the case, with Perle defending Bryen's integrity, the AP report says. | ||
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'''See also:''' | '''See also:''' | ||
*[[Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]] | *[[Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]] |
Revision as of 18:11, 28 August 2004
According to a Dec. 24, 1985, Associated Press report, Richard Perle, still a Reagan Defense Department official, was challenged by Jeremiah Denton, then a Republican senator from Alabama, on Perle's choice of Stephen D. Bryen as a Pentagon aide. In the email copy of Lee Byrd's report provided by John Sugg (JohnSugg@aol.com), Denton charged that Bryen, moving from a job with the powerful American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, had been forced to resign his Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff job after being investigated for trying to gain information for the Israeli government. Federal prosecutors dropped the case, with Perle defending Bryen's integrity, the AP report says.
See also: