Although it was approved for publication by the agency's review board, the book has been savaged in print by some of the CIA's old hands. |
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The car bomb had savaged the street and fire was ripping through buildings, with burning cars and debris blocking escape paths. |
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The book, influenced greatly by him, had largely been savaged by Australian critics and I wanted to see what he himself would make of it. |
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It hardly seems to matter that the critics have universally savaged this show. |
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Critics across the country savaged the film upon its initial release, dismissing it as directionless and dreary. |
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Wilson tried to toss his coat over the dog to subdue it, but the dog savaged his hand and wrist until J.M. shot it. |
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Most critics savaged his comedy when it was released last fall, but really, what were they expecting? |
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Since then, every TV critic has savaged it, although it's like shooting fish in a barrel. |
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This new film, Full Frontal, was savaged by critics and stayed in theaters for roughly four hours. |
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The lions chased him, and savaged his leg before he fell into a thorn bush too dense for them to reach him. |
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While still intact for the most part, the body has been chewed and savaged brutally. |
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Helen treats the fact that the bear has savaged her hands and reduced them to bleeding stumps as a minor inconvenience. |
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In the meantime, the bear that savaged Mitch also makes a return and is taken into captivity, bringing back another ghost from Einar's past. |
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The family's cat, she said, had savaged the bird, and one wing had been torn. |
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The dog savaged the plaintiff when she entered the yard at night with her boyfriend who worked there. |
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Perhaps no other great European choreographer, save Roland Petit, has been as neglected and critically savaged in the United States. |
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A Wandsworth window cleaner was savaged to death by his adored bull terrier after he had an epileptic fit, an inquest heard this week. |
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A boy of five was pulled to the ground and savaged by a bull terrier in a horrific attack witnessed by his father and identical twin brother. |
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He got savaged, for the umpteenth time, by a horde of ravening Republicans. |
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The attraction of this film is watching it all go wrong and seeing the organ grinder savaged by his own monkey. |
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Molly was taken to the vet after her back leg was savaged while she was in her kennel outside the house. |
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In the 1920s, British historian Charles Grey savaged the American adventurer as an unhinged embellisher at best, and a liar at worst. |
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Popular British and Australian historians have savaged the commanders at the Dardanelles as cold-blooded murderers. |
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As an infant, he came down with some kind of pox that savaged even his eyeballs. |
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Rarely in the history of magazines has a former editor so savaged his successor. |
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Critics have, predictably, savaged the story, but everyone agrees the show is spectacular. |
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A top infotech executive has savaged his industry rivals, saying they have only themselves to blame for the cash crisis many of them face. |
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Four stags and three hinds were savaged in two separate attacks at Tatton Park, Knutsford. |
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As Toronto theatre critics dispense increasingly disparate opinions, some shows are savaged in one rag and lionized in another. |
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His introduction to Test cricket in 1993 saw him savaged by the Australians and he looked like another devastating county bowler not tough enough for England. |
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Wales were savaged by the absence of a galaxy of their players. |
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In the wake of Sandy, the cyclone that savaged America's North Atlantic coast, rival religious figures found unwonted if unconscious agreement. |
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Raddatz's performance was not without its detractors, but Lehrer's performance was savaged for its passivity. |
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The former's medieval extravaganza Marco Polo was critically savaged although Netflix has still ordered a second season. |
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In fact, the possibility of being savaged seemed so low on her sense of possibilities that she was almost instantly distracted by a bluebottle banging against the window. |
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However, the two transportation sectors that are getting savaged the most are taxis and independent truckers. |
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A National Film Board documentary recently savaged the legend of one of Canada's most cherished heroes, Billy Bishop, the World War I flying ace. |
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We once had a Europe that was absolutely suffused, suffocated and savaged by hatred. |
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And the euro, scorned and savaged for weeks beforehand, suddenly bounced back. |
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A passer-by who saved a man from being savaged by his own dog and an off-duty policeman who intervened in a nightclub brawl were today honoured for their bravery. |
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The fact that the animal rights lobby savaged his campaign opponent is pure coincidence, his supporters say. |
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And yet, while most of us basked in these literary offerings, less generous critics ruthlessly savaged these works. |
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The first legislative elections in December threw out the sitting candidates, notably the leading lights of the Fourth Republic, and savaged the left. |
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People are still savaged by dogs, but the topic is no longer fashionable. |
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We'd have heard if people were being savaged by vulpine man-eaters. |
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No one savaged the law's delays and inequities more energetically than Dickens, yet no one worried more about the results of revolution and lawlessness. |
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Marxist critics savaged La Strada as an abandonment of neorealist principles, but as a director, Fellini was never really a neorealist to begin with. |
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A search for last year's helleborines almost drew a blank, until the discovery of just three withered stems that had been completely savaged by slugs. |
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My little, gentle ten-year-old Jack Russell terrier was attacked and savaged by two Akitas in the rear garden of my house in October last year. |
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It's not quite being savaged by a dead sheep, as Labour's Denis Healey famously once claimed to have been, more gently micturated upon on by an angry tomcat. |
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A WOMAN savaged by a dog has undergone agonising skin grafts to repair her badly mauled arm. |
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A BABYSITTER ended up in court after her customer's dog attacked a neighbour then savaged a cat. |
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However, it was savaged by the movie critics as a disjointed mess and ignored by the public. |
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After being savaged by the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, confidence has been gradually rebuilt thanks to forceful interventions by governments and central banks. |
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I recall watching a corporal savaged by shrapnel struggle to survive. |
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Your engineering and manufacturing industries have been savaged by the quest for ever-increasing profit levels, and the consequent loss of contracts to foreign countries. |
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Some horses can handle being blind and can get along within their own personal space but, in a herd situation, they may be savaged or injured by other horses or run into a fence or other physical hazard. |
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These are retrieved by Thoth and Nephthys, who kill the lioness and use her skin to wrap the child's savaged corpse. |
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The Commissioner recognises this and has come forward with an ambitious programme, as our rapporteur has said, but the budget was savaged by two-thirds. |
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Photographs show savaged dogs and cattle with their rumps chewed off. |
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But more often they saw it through its grisly aftermath: human bodies savaged by shells, bullets, shrapnel, trench foot, gangrene, mustard gas, typhoid or shell shock. |
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A 2013 paper by Professor Mark Regenus implying deficiencies in same-sex parents was championed by conservative organisations worldwide, despite being academically savaged. |
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She quit the show after four years to concentrate on her film career, and landed the lead role in notorious movie Showgirls, which was savaged by the critics. |
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Gianfranco Zola's men were savaged for gutlessly waving SCOTT PARKER sealed almost certain safety for West Ham on a day of unbelievable tension at Upton Park. |
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Yovy Suarez Jimenez had been out for a run along a bicycle path by the waterway near her home in Davie, Florida, when she was savaged by the eight to ten foot reptile. |
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