Princess Diana 'leaked royal phone numbers to NotW'

Phone-hacking trial hears how Princess of Wales was News of the World's ‘mole in the palace
PRINCESS DIANA leaked a phone book of Buckingham Palace contacts to News of the World, the phone-hacking trial heard yesterday. Clive Goodman, the tabloid's former royal editor, has claimed the Princess of Wales sent him the book and then personally called him to recruit him as an "ally" against Prince Charles. Goodman made the claim as part of his defence against accusations he paid police for royal phone books, reports the Metro, which describes Diana as the News of the World's "mole in the palace". The jury heard that when Goodman was originally arrested for phone hacking in August 2006, police found 15 royal phone directories in his home. He denies two counts of misconduct in public office, including accusations that he obtained three of the directories illegally by paying a public official. Asked by his counsel how he received them, he recalled how one book was given to him in 1992 by the Princess of Wales. He said: "That arrived at my office in Wapping with my name on it." Shortly afterwards, he told the court, Diana phoned to ask if he had received it. Goodman, 56, from Addlestone in Surrey, told the Old Bailey: "She was at the time going through a very, very tough time. She told me she wanted me to see this document to see the scale of her husband's staff and household compared to the scale of hers. She was in a very bitter situation with the Prince of Wales at the time. "She felt she was being swamped by the people close to him in the household. She was looking for an ally to take him on, to show just the kind of forces that were ranged against her, to put the press on her side. We were quite a powerful organisation." Diana was separated from her husband in 1992 after 11 years of marriage. They divorced in 1996, a year before she was killed in car crash in Paris. For further concise, balanced comment and analysis on the week's news, try The Week magazine. Subscribe today and get 6 issues completely free.  Source: The Week UK
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Rupert Murdoch: hall of fame or den of infamy?

Charles LaurenceJude Law's claim that his phone was hacked on US soil haunts Murdoch as he prepares for TV honour. NEW YORK – Has Jude Law rained on Rupert Murdoch’s parade? The 
octogenarian media magnate is due to be inducted into America’s Television Academy Hall of Fame in a Hollywood ceremony six weeks from now. Murdoch will be honoured on 11 March alongside five others including Jay Leno, the talk show host who will have just retired from decades hosting The Tonight Show, and the actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, star of Seinfeld and Veep. Academy chairman Bruce Rosemblum explained the reasoning: "The six individuals being inducted into the Hall of Fame have all made a profound impact on the landscape of television, leaving their own mark within our industry and with audiences around the world. "Their groundbreaking contributions will last for generations, making them true icons who could not be more deserving of the Television Academy's highest honour." Murdoch has without doubt made a “profound impact on the landscape of television” since he followed Columbus over the Atlantic in the early 1970s. Whether he should get an award for it is a matter of contentious debate. On one side, he gets credit for creating Fox TV as America’s fourth television network, muscling his way into the company of the Big Three, CBS, NBC and ABC. This is no mean feat. On the other side, he gets brickbats for creating Fox News, a money-spinner that has gone to the top of the ratings in a manner familiar to British newspaper readers – by pandering to the lowest common denominator. Fox News, the Tea Party trumpet with its astonishingly cynical claim to be “fair and balanced”, has unarguably become a cancer in the American body politic. And Murdoch gets honoured for this? This is where Jude Law comes in. Yesterday, the English movie star appeared at the Old Bailey in London as a prosecution witness in the trial of Rebekah Brooks and other News International employees, charged with misconduct in public office and illegal phone hacking. Law's evidence made the overnight headlines for the shocking revelation that a member of own family had been paid by the News of the World to leak information about his girlfriend Sienna Miller's affair with Bond actor Daniel Craig.  But what will have sounded the alarm for Murdoch in America was Law's claim from the witness box that his phone was accessed on American soil. As the Daily Beast reports, “Law told the court that while he was in the US filming Cold Mountain and Alfie, the phone numbers of his American agent and cell phones he had been given by the film studio appeared in the notebooks of a private investigator working for the News of the World.”  The actor told the court how he had been shown the list of numbers by police officers. "One of the numbers that appeared on the notes was an agent... and several other numbers I'd been loaned," he said. "They were able to follow me not just in this country but abroad as well.” This has special significance for Fox and all Murdoch’s operations on this side of the pond. If it is proved that his companies engaged in illegal activity and that Murdoch can be held responsible for the culture of those companies, there is a chance that Fox could lose its operation licences. All broadcasting in America is regulated through licencing by the Federal Communication Commission, the FCC. Murdoch is no stranger to wrangling with it. One of their rules is that you cannot own a broadcast station and a newspaper in the same “market”. He was forced to sell the New York Post, his beloved tabloid, in order to get Fox on the air in New York, and he never forgave the Democrat majority on the Senate committee that refused to bend the rules for him. But this could be a different level of war altogether. If there are convictions in London, the FCC might be persuaded that Murdoch is not an owner of “good character”, and therefore withdraw all his US licences. Last year, the organisation Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) challenged the renewal of licences for two Murdoch stations in DC and one in Baltimore, Maryland. They argued that as the law demanded owners of “good character” who acted “in the public interest” and spoke with “candour”, News Corp, as the parent company of both Fox and News International, no longer qualified. In its petition CREW stated: “It is well established that News Corp has been involved in one of the biggest media scandals of all time. Its reporters hacked voicemails and bribed public officials while top executives — including Rupert Murdoch — either approved the conduct or turned a blind eye. To say those responsible are not of good character is a colossal understatement – ‘despicable’ and ‘loathsome’ are more apt.” Last May, the FCC turned down the CREW petition and renewed the licences. But as The Wrap reported, the decision left the door wide open by specifying that it could act only after a British court had established that the alleged misconduct had indeed taken place. “Serious questions have been raised regarding non-FCC misconduct by News Corp subsidiaries,” the FCC decision said. A combination of expensive lawyers, company restructuring and a very great deal of power and influence in Washington makes Murdoch a hard man to take down. But the long-running phone-hacking trial will not have concluded by the time he attends the Hall of Fame ceremony on 11 March. The threat of guilty verdicts will hang over his night of glory. Source: The Week UKImage
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Robert Gates: military cuts will end UK's global role

Britain can no longer be a full military partner of the United States, says former US defence secretary
THE spending cuts imposed on British armed forces will mean the UK can no longer be a full military partner of the United States, a former US defence secretary has warned.  Robert Gates, who served under Presidents Barack Obama and George W Bush, said the cuts would limit the UK's ability to be a major player on the world stage. He singled out cuts to the Navy as particularly damaging, noting that for the first time since World War One Britain did not have an operational aircraft carrier. While the Ministry of Defence insists Britain still has the fourth largest defence budget in the world, it plans to cut 20,000 personnel from the Army, 6,000 from the Navy and 5,000 from the RAF by 2020. "With the fairly substantial reductions in defence spending in Great Britain, what we're finding is that it won't have full spectrum capabilities and the ability to be a full partner as they have been in the past," Gates told BBC Radio 4's /Today/ programme. His comments come a month after General Sir Nicholas Houghton, the Chief of the Defence Staff, warned that Britain could be left with the "spectre" of a hollowed-out force. Defence Secretary Philip Hammond conceded last week that Army recruitment represented a "big challenge", but said there was not a crisis. Many voices have warned of the scale of the government's defence cuts, says Jonathan Beale, defence correspondent for BBC News. But it will be harder to ignore that of Gates, a man who served two US presidents of very different political persuasions, and oversaw the wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan. "Given the unpopularity of the wars during his tenure, some may now be breathing a sigh of relief. But that's not true for senior politicians and military brass inside the MoD. They value being so close to the most powerful military nation on earth," says Beale. Gates's intervention is unlikely to reverse the cuts, he adds, but it will wound Britain's pride. For further concise, balanced comment and analysis on the week's news, try The Week magazine. Subscribe today and get 6 issues completely free. Source: The Week UK
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