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Campbell Brown does another preview of the AQI document piece, and also gets Michael's reaction to something that Senator McCain said today.
(The AQI piece did not air on 360 due to breaking news.)
CAMPBELL
BROWN: Michael Ware in Baghdad, he's got a CNN
exclusive: new secrets about al Qaeda.
That's next.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: Tonight, Democrats are jumping all over
something John McCain said on NBC's "Today Show" this
morning.
And here it is. Listen closely. It's very quick.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE TODAY SHOW")
MATT LAUER, CO-HOST, "THE TODAY SHOW": Do you now
have a better estimate of when American forces can
come home from Iraq?
SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R-AZ), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: No,
but that's not too important.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: Now, we're going to play that again in a
second, but that remark set off a Democratic
firestorm today. Senator John Kerry, Senator Joe
Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blasted McCain for
saying it is -- quote -- "not too important" when
U.S. troops come home from Iraq.
But wait. Tonight, the McCain camp, as well as
Senator Joe Lieberman, accuse the Democrats of
distorting what McCain said. So, you can decide what
to make of it. I want you to hear a longer take from
McCain's appearance. Take a listen.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE TODAY SHOW")
LAUER: Do you now have a better estimate of when
American forces can come home from Iraq?
MCCAIN: No, but that's not too important. What's
important is the casualties in Iraq. Americans are in
South Korea. Americans are in Japan. American troops
are in Germany. That's all fine.
American casualties and the ability to withdraw.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: So, how will the troops in Iraq feel about
McCain's comment?
Who better to ask than our very own Michael Ware, who
is in Baghdad for us tonight?
Michael, there must have been some reaction.
MICHAEL WARE, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Well, we haven't
heard directly from the troops. Obviously, they are
very professional. They keep these things close to
their chest.
But if you are amongst them, you certainly get the
feel. This comment would have very much felt like a
wet blanket to them. These guys are indeed volunteers
and a professional army. And they will do their job
until they are told to stop. But the frustration,
particularly amongst these guys I see who are here
for their third time and seeing relatively little
progress, certainly where it counts, is starting to
grind them down.
It's so evident. Morale is not what it once was. So,
a comment like that, as throwaway as it might be,
isn't going to be welcome. Yet, at the same time, a
senior U.S. official in the mission here just today
told me that, if you want to pull out, that's fine,
but you need to think about the consequences of
America not being here -- Campbell.
BROWN: Michael, I want to move on, because, for
weeks, you and your team in Baghdad have been sifting
through a mother lode of secret information about al
Qaeda in Iraq.
It is almost hard to believe. We're talking about
application forms to join al Qaeda, pay stubs,
strategy plans, hit lists, and thousands of hours of
video, all of it detailing al Qaeda's secret
operations, all of it handed over to Michael. Take a
look.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
WARE (voice-over): al Qaeda gunmen brought this man
here to die. Staged for maximum impact, he's to be
executed on this busy market street. We don't know
why; the al Qaeda members who recorded this tape
offer no explanation. But the anticipation is
agonizing, leading to a moment we cannot show you.
A punishment for betraying al Qaeda or for breaking
their strict version of Islamic law. Either way, it
was public executions like this that would help lead
to the unraveling of al Qaeda in Iraq. And al Qaeda
knew it.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: And, Michael, it's brutal, but give us your
take. What insight to these documents, do these
videos give us about the inner workings of al Qaeda
in Iraq?
WARE: Look, Campbell, this is the largest collection
of al Qaeda in Iraq materials to ever come into
civilian hands.
And what they give you is a window into this
organization that only members of al Qaeda itself or
a few people in the Western intelligence community
would have ever had.
What we see is an al Qaeda that is far more
sophisticated, far more complex, far better
organized, and far more deeply penetrated into the
Iraqi government and to some degree even into U.S.
bases than most could have ever imagined.
In talking to intelligence officials here on the
ground, though al Qaeda now is under stress more than
ever before, this smaller organization is -- today is
operating in just the same way -- Campbell.
BROWN: Michael Ware for us from Baghdad tonight --
Michael, as always, thanks.
And Michael has much more on this story. And he's
going to have it all tonight on "AC 360" at 10:00
Eastern time.