A.Yes he mentions the Clinton "murder" accusation and
B.He shreds them to pieces.
Well, by all means, give me some details. What are his specific arguments against the Ron Brown and Vince Foster allegations? Because I didn't find anything while browsing to indicate he's ever debunked the Brown allegations and the only comments I found about his views on the Foster allegation were all vague, hand-waving arguments like these:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/david_aaronovitch/article6790709.ece
[by] David Aaronovitch
… snip …
The previous one, Bill Clinton, was enveloped — from before his first day in office — in a series of accusations of scandal that simply rose in volume: Whitewatergate, Troopergate, Travelgate, the accusation (made by supposedly serious journalists) that he had his friend Vince Foster, the White House counsel who committed suicide in July 1993, murdered. None of these accusations was substantiated, despite the £2.4 million spent on investigating and publishing them by the multimillionaire Richard Mellon Scaife, who told George magazine in 1999: “Listen, Clinton can order people done away with at his will ... God, there must be 60 people who have died mysteriously.”
In short, does Aaronovitch deal specifically with the facts in the case or does he just ignore them (like all the rest of you naysayers)? For example, does he discuss any the following:
1) The oven mitt *evidence* that clearly shows it was a fabrication introduced by Starr to try and explain the lack of fingerprints on the gun.
2) The sworn testimony of the first person to find Foster's body that there was no gun and his hands were in a different position than in the "official" police photos.
3) The fact that the only doctor to see Foster's body at the crime scene and almost all of the emergency responders say there was an exit wound in Foster's neck, not in the back of his head as officially claimed.
4) The fact that Starr's top investigator is on record saying that an analysis of the one photo of Foster's head that he got access to showed a neck wound.
5) The fact that the only witnesses to claim that Foster was severely depressed all changed their stories, from originally claiming they saw absolutely no sign of depression, after a meeting a full week after the death which those individuals attended in the Whitehouse.
6) The fact that the handwritten FBI interview form shows that Lisa Foster said her husband was "fighting prescription" (other testimony indicates he was afraid of becoming addicted to regular sleeping pills) but the typewritten version of that form in the Starr report quotes her saying he was "fighting depression".
7) The fact that multiple documents and witness statements prove the medical examiner, Dr Beyer, lied when he said the x-ray machine wasn't working to explain the lack of x-rays of Foster's head.
8) The fact that Starr's own top investigator is on record saying the government investigation was a coverup.
9) The fact that all the handwriting experts that have examined the so-called suicide note (including the one who originally stated it was authentic) have now said it's not authentic.
And I could go on and on listing facts like the above that should make any real skeptic (are there really any here at JREF?) reasonably doubt the *approved* government scenario. I'll bet Aaronovitch, being a long standing leftist (he's actually the son of a communist and became a communist himself), completely ignores every one of them in his book, much less "shreds" any of them. But go ahead, try to prove me wrong, dudalb.
I think the real truth is that Aaronovitch is trying to discredit the very serious and credible Foster allegation by linking it to other conspiracies that are indeed more than a little nutty. That's a tactic that leftists have been using for more a decade to try and protect their idol, Bill Clinton, in both this matter and the Ron Brown matter.
