Its existence was first revealed by a November 17, 2005, article by Dana Priest in The Washington Post, who also broke the story concerning the existence of the CIA's "black sites".
priest | Judas Priest | Canon (priest) | Dana Andrews | Dana | canon (priest) | Richard Henry Dana, Jr. | Priest | Dana Delany | Dana White | Dana Gould | Saint-Priest | Matthew Fox (priest) | Dana Point, California | Dana Plato | Killah Priest | Joshua the High Priest | James Dwight Dana | Dana Scully | Dana Point | Dana Carvey | Viola Dana | Priest (2011 film) | Dana Rosemary Scallon | Dana Perino | Dana Ivey | Dana Gioia | Charles Dana Gibson | Charles Dana | Charles Anderson Dana |
In the days before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, DeYoung and fellow Post reporter Dana Priest filed a story with their editors that the CIA had significant doubts about documents alleging an attempted uranium purchase, but The Post did not publish the story until March 22, 2003, after the invasion had begun.