The Case of the Missing Crime

Feldman, Clarice

The Case of the Missing Crime The CIA leaker has been found. No law was broken. Why is the prosecutor still going after Scooter Libby? By Clarice Feldman The New York Times and Washington Post...

...Wilson...
...Political cowardice is always a possibility...
...Libby seemed to think that, in the course of this, Russert told him about Plame and said "everybody knew...
...The White House, in a poorly considered move, said it had been a mistake to include the claim about African uranium in the State of the Union...
...It was not of "extremely slight news value" that Plame had suggested Wilson for his trip...
...The weight he places on this is such that it seems almost as if Fitzgerald is trying to justify to himself his decision to go after Libby, who didn't leak to Novak, while treating Armitage, who did leak, as an "innocent accused...
...Fitzgerald argued: One key factor in deciding whether to issue a subpoena has been whether the "source" to be identified appears to have leaked to discredit the earlier source (Wilson) as opposed to a leak who revealed information as a "whistleblower...
...She subsequently, and not credibly, has tried to back off this statement...
...That Fitzgerald bought into the left-wing typology of bad leakers (defenders of the Iraq war like Libby) and blameless leakers (Armitage) is evident in his August 27, 2004, affidavit to the court seeking to compel the testimony of New York Times reporter Judith Miller, who had discussed the Wilson story with Libby but never published anything about it...
...All of these claims were false, but the White House was unable to mount a vigorous defense...
...Fitzgerald's theory that Libby was "first to tell" was always a stretch, given the variety of people who already knew Wilson's story...
...And the email says—talks about him having an administration source for the information about Mrs...
...Libby first discussed or that Mr...
...While minimizing their own responsibility for the three-year witchhunt for an imagined White House conspiracy, they still suggest that I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby—Vice President Cheney's former chief of staff and the only man indicted in the case—committed a crime for which he must be held accountable...
...The memo was originally written for him...
...By Clarice Feldman The New York Times and Washington Post are hard at work airbrushing history to obscure their role in promoting Joseph C. Wilson's incredible tale of his Mission to Niger and subsequent fantasy of martyrdom at the hands of Karl Rove...
...The call was to complain about MSNBC's coverage of the Bush administration...
...I won't touch the specific damage assessment of what specific damage was caused by her compromise"—none has ever been shown—"I won't touch that with a 10-foot pole...
...Why the original memo was not given a new cover, instead of being redated and read-dressed, is still a mystery...
...Libby's defense is that he was very busy during this period, that Plame's identity was then a minor point to him, and that he testified to the best of his recollection on these mat-ters—which in any event he would have had no motive to lie about, and which seem not to have been material to any other crime, none having ever been charged...
...Russert is Mitchell's boss, and as inconceivable that Fitzgerald never interrogated her is the claim that she never told him...
...Why were reporters subpoenaed, compelled to testify, even jailed...
...Since Armitage had testified that he was the source of the leak that served as the basis for the CIA referral letter at the very outset of the investigation, what had the prosecution been up to all that time...
...And your honor again will see in her notes—in the midst of her notes of her meeting with Mr...
...Miller's testimony is baffling and, when read in conjunction with her newspaper accounts of her September 30, 2005, grand jury appearance, is even less comprehensible...
...Libby and five days after his conversations with Mr...
...Wilson, as would later become clear, had never debunked anything...
...Many, like Corn and Kristof— for whom Plame and Wilson were the obvious sources— were never questioned at all...
...This affidavit was a model of disingenuousness, misleading Judge David Tatel, who revealed his utter lack of political sophistication in the decision compelling the testimony of Miller and other reporters (which paved the way for Miller's 85 days in jail for contempt, when she at first refused to testify): While another case might require more specific evidence that a leak harmed national security, this showing suffices here, given the information's extremely slight news value and the lack of any serious dispute regarding Plame's employment...
...Those, like Libby, who shared the president's views were targets to be pursued for having attempted to answer the serial lies of a prominent critic...
...Plame?' rather than 'Who outed Ms...
...For another, he had never denied it when asked, and he did seem to many to fit Novak's description of his source from that October 1, 2003, column as someone not in the White House and not a "partisan gunslinger...
...Why, then, was a special prosecutor unleashed two months after that...
...But why was this sermon being delivered with Libby in the dock, and not Armitage, the confessed source...
...The next day, a team of FBI agents and Justice prosecutors investigating the leak questioned the deputy secretary...
...As Libby's lawyer argued in May: "Mr...
...Armitage replied, in so many words, Clarice Feldman, a Washington lawyer who served in the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations in the Reagan administration, has written extensively on the Plame case for The American Thinker (www.americanthinker.com...
...I can say," he announced that day, "that for the people who work at the CIA and work at other places, they have to expect that when they do their jobs that classified information will be protected...
...The source of this claim, which so distorted the prosecution's view of the matter, has not been revealed...
...Plame," the Time lawyer contended, "that would in no way support Mr...
...Within hours," wrote Isikoff, William Howard Taft IV, the State Department's legal adviser, notified a senior Justice official that Armitage had information relevant to the case...
...There are numerous entries throughout those notebooks to "V.F...
...As far as we can tell, nobody claims to have said to Mr...
...Wilson before the very first time that she met with Mr...
...It is far from clear why the prosecutor felt testimony in which Libby said he thought he raised the issue to Cooper becomes a charge for false testimony in the indictment, when Cooper said he raised it, and when, moreover, Cooper's contemporaneous notes do not reflect any discussion with Libby about Plame...
...But, "even if other Time, Inc...
...Moreover, this outing probably violated the law, placing her, intelligence agents everywhere, and national security at risk...
...Tim Russert: Which leaves the final witness...
...He seems to have been the only reporter named in the indictment whom Libby called on July 10, 2003...
...here's a good nugget for your column: It was Wilson's wife's idea to send him, she works at the CIA...
...Indeed, his interviews with officials there, the Senate Intelligence Committee would later conclude, "lent more credibility, not less, to the reported Niger-Iraq uranium deal...
...He has added that if he'd been asked earlier, when his recollection was fresher, he could perhaps have shed more light on their conversation...
...Left unanswered in this narrative is why, with the leaker identified, Justice plowed ahead with its investigation...
...No one came forward...
...Those who accused the administration of lying and deception were assumed from the outset to be "good leakers" and "whistle-blowers" deserving protection...
...It does appear, however, that Wilson himself might have been one source for Miller, as he had been for so many other reporters...
...That is, no matter how Cooper testifies, there is evidence in Time's documents that might well discredit his testimony...
...Fitzgerald connects the dots to a baffling June 23, 2003, conversation Libby had with Judith Miller, which then allows him to tag Libby "it"—making him the "first to tell" a reporter of Plame...
...Armitage acknowledged that he had passed along to Novak information contained in a classified State Department memo: that Wilson's wife worked on weapons-of-mass-destruction issues at the CIA...
...Cooper, again to his editor, on July 16, four days after his conversation with Mr...
...The New York Times admitted that it had in its possession documents that named Wilson and/or Plame, and resisted turning them over on the ground that, since the reporters and editors were not likely to be government witnesses, the defense was not entitled to them—the documents being producible in a criminal proceeding only for impeachment purposes...
...Comey himself was in the middle of many of these fights from the time of his appointment as deputy attorney general on October 3, 2003—the day after Isikoff and Corn say Armitage and Taft notified Justice officials that Armitage was Novak's source—until his departure in April 2005...
...Among the reporters he's known to have talked to were Walter Pincus of the Washington Post, John Judis and Spencer Ackerman of the New Republic, and Andrea Mitchell, who hosted Wilson's appearance on Meet the Press the morning of July 6 and who would, at the very least, have had advance notice that his op-ed would be appearing that day...
...Count one of the Libby indictment charges, inter alia: "On or about June 11 or 12, 2003, the Under Secretary of State orally advised Libby in the White House that, in sum and substance, Wilson's wife worked at the CIA and that State Department personnel were saying that Wilson's wife was involved in the planning of his trip...
...Instead the prosecutor fixed his course on determining whether Rove or Libby said anything to any reporter prior to Armitage's conversation with Novak on July 8, 2003...
...Animus between Justice and the White House is also a real possibility...
...And this ignores that he was telling lots of reporters the same story he told Kristof...
...The First Amendment interests are clearly different when the "source" being sought may have committed a crime in order to attack a person such as Wilson who, correctly or incorrectly, sought to expose what he perceived as misconduct by the White House...
...Libby that she did work in WINPAC...
...It's long past time for the president to call in the attorney general, seek an accounting of the case from Fitzgerald, and order him to dismiss the charges or be dismissed himself...
...The judge reviewed documents in Time's possession that they had not turned over to Libby, and ruled that no matter how Cooper testified, the documents would make his testimony impeachable...
...This notion might well have been gleaned from a poorly written, later edited, account in the Washington Post...
...Barely a month into his investigation, in February 2004, Fitzgerald sought and quickly received from Comey an expansion of his mandate to cover process crimes such as perjury and obstruction...
...This ignores that Wilson was the star witness at the May 2, 2003, Senate Democratic Policy Committee meeting (minutes of which are inexplicably missing from the committee website and seemingly impossible to obtain), where he and his wife met with Kristof and set the game in play...
...Instead, as noted by the astute observer Tom Maguire (who reported on the case in great detail at his website justoneminute.typepad.com), Fitzgerald seemed "to be investigating 'Did the White House conspire to out Ms...
...His lodestar was a June 10 memo prepared by Carl Ford Jr., assistant secretary of state for intelligence and research, detailing a meeting of INR and CIA officials at which Plame had introduced her husband and explained the mission the agency intended to send him on...
...Plame did not work in WINPAC...
...Bush's State of the Union claim—"The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa"—was sound...
...The memo never suggests that Plame was covert or even classified, which seems odd, too, given that, were her identity to be kept secret, there'd be no reason to identify her in the memo and even less reason for her to have attended a meeting at which she introduced her husband to State Department officials...
...On July 6, 2003, with press interest piqued by Kristof's report, a similar account from the Washington Post's Walter Pincus and other intimations of a possible Watergate sequel, Wilson went public as the former ambassador in an op-ed for the New York Times, which repeated, in somewhat muted form, the original Kristof account...
...Two reporters whose testimony is not likely to stand up well under cross examination, and one reporter who says that he and the only charged defendant (Libby) never discussed the woman at all...
...I'll let the CIA speak to that, if they wish or not...
...District Judge Reggie B. Walton has said he will not allow the Libby trial to become a trial about the war in Iraq, the prosecution most certainly appears to have been deeply influenced by the debate over the decision to go to war...
...It would appear that the Fourth Estate has been as inattentive to the criminal case as it was to the facts that led up to it...
...Let's review the origins of this sorry story...
...Columnist Robert Novak wondered (as did many in Washington) why such an acid critic of the Bush administration's Iraq policy as Joe Wilson—not a spook but a retired foreign service officer and Clinton NSC staffer—had been chosen by the CIA to investigate Saddam Hussein's interest in Niger's uranium...
...The prosecutor claimed in court that "Mr...
...And as for Armitage, who did tell a reporter, and who told a second reporter, Woodward, whom he kept from coming forward in a timely fashion with the truth—that Armitage had told him long before Libby spoke to any reporter about the matter—well, Fitzgerald calls him an "innocent accused...
...Adding to this failure to acknowledge the variety of ways in which knowledge of the Plame/Wilson connection could have spread, Fitzgerald was constrained by Department of Justice guidelines: He could not ask reporters broad questions about their sources, but had to focus on whether they spoke to specified sources...
...Miller said at the grand jury appearance, when the prosecutor breached that agreement, that she could not recall who those sources were...
...Nor is it easy to imagine a jury would find this a compelling count either...
...Judging from the parade of witnesses who would eventually be called before the grand jury, it seems he and his team of investigators were under the impression that before Novak's column ran, a senior administration official had told two White House officials to leak the Plame story to six reporters...
...As late as this year's February 24 discovery hearing, Fitzgerald revealed his utter cluelessness about how and why information spreads in Washington...
...The memo made no reference to her undercover status...
...Russert has been tight-lipped about the substance of the conversation, but there has been wide speculation that Libby called to heatedly complain of the anti-Semitic tone of Chris Matthews's reporting...
...Miller was investigating and focusing on Mr...
...Without naming his sources, Kristof reported that a former ambassador had been sent to Niger by Vice President Cheney, had "debunked" forged evidence of a Niger-Iraq uranium deal, that his report had been sent to the White House, and yet the president had repeated the phony uranium story in his State of the Union Address...
...As Armitage put it earlier this month, in an interview with CBS News, while the document was classified, "it doesn't mean that every sentence in the document is classified...
...In fact, Armitage had been considered the likely Novak source for months among those of us who had done extensive reporting and research on the case for the online media...
...reporters knew about Ms...
...The second entry that is of importance here is on July 8th of 2003...
...Novak confirmed the gossip and included it as a detail in his next column...
...The presupposition driving Fitzgerald's quest—that White House officials had conspired to "attack" a whistle-blower who sought merely to expose misconduct—was deeply politicized, and so skewed the investigation that the results were preordained: Somehow, someone would be tagged "it...
...You cannot wear blinders and suggest someone kept you from seeing the whole picture...
...In the indictment, the prosecutor puts great weight on Grossman's recollection of this conversation, as he does of every scrap of information suggesting Libby knew of Plame before Armitage's disclosure to Novak...
...He didn't mention Armitage...
...The judge disagreed, holding that, depending on how Miller testified, these documents might impeach her and therefore Libby was entitled to see them, though only after she testifies...
...She simply might have been unprepared to be questioned about them...
...And finally, Fitzgerald ignores that on June 14, 2003, in downtown Washington, at a conference sponsored by an antiwar group called the Education for Peace in Iraq Center, Wilson strongly implied that he was the ambassador sourced anonymously by Kristof...
...Fitzgerald had obviously bought the Corn-generated Emma Peel-on-the-railroad-tracks fable...
...The president's lawyer, playing the case by the book, said no, and Taft told him nothing more...
...That the original leak came from a repentant Armitage, who apparently testified that he was unaware Plame had ever been under cover, should have been a clue for the prosecution...
...There were bitter fights over a number of war-on-terror issues—everything from the definition of "torture," to the treatment of prisoners, to the secret NSA surveillance program—that almost certainly involved contentious relations between Justice lawyers and Cheney counsel David Addington (who would succeed Libby as chief of staff) and possibly Libby himself...
...Both add insult to injury...
...Libby's counsel indicated he'd called six or seven reporters with whom Libby talked at roughly the same time, all of whom would say Libby never mentioned Wilson's wife...
...In any event, that's the case against Libby...
...The sum and substance of the charges against Libby are his differing recollections of conversations with three reporters: Matthew Cooper (formerly with Time magazine), Judith Miller, and Tim Russert of NBC...
...Time testified that it had another document, which it had not turned over to Libby, that mentioned Plame...
...Here, in summary, is what we know from the Libby indictment and from the May 16, 2006, discovery hearing, at which some evidentiary matters not disclosed previously were revealed: * Matthew Cooper: Libby recalled and testified that on July 12, 2003, Cooper called him and he (Libby) raised the subject of Wilson's wife...
...So at the end of an hour-long interview with Colin Powell's top aide at the State Department, Richard Armitage, Novak put the question to him...
...In both instances, the aggressive and able work of Scooter Libby on the president's behalf made him a target of those who opposed the White House view that the normal tools of law enforcement were insufficient to protect this country from further terrorist attacks...
...While tensions between the White House (particularly the Office of the Vice President) and the mandarinate in the State Department and CIA over the Iraq war are hardly a secret, infighting between the White House and Justice is less well known, if no less real...
...Wilson didn't reveal himself as the unnamed Ambassador [of Kristof's column] until July 6," when Wilson's own New York Times op-ed appeared...
...As Corn and Newsweek's Michael Isikoff learned in reporting their new book Hubris, Armitage knew from a description in a follow-up column Novak published on October 1, 2003, that he was Novak's primary source...
...The forgeries had not shown up until eight months after his February 2002 trip to Niger...
...This was the very cornerstone of the "Bush Lied" lie—which has now traveled all the way around the world many times over without the truth ever having caught up...
...The frenzied backers of Wilson would undoubtedly have accused Justice of a coverup...
...The case against Libby is as weak as the basis for the investigation was, and the animus that impelled it so distorted the investigative process as to make its continuation a travesty...
...Libby's grand jury testimony...
...Libby testified that he believed Russert was the first to tell him of Plame and her connection to Wilson...
...And while Plame's name in some form or another is in Miller's notes, it is unclear who raised it and when...
...And they have to expect that when they do their jobs, that information about whether or not they are affiliated with the CIA will be protected...
...By the end of December 2003, Attorney General Ashcroft had removed himself from the case, placing it in the hands of his newly confirmed deputy James Comey, who in turn assigned the matter to a newly appointed special prosecutor, his friend U.S...
...In the program distributed to attendees and posted online until recently, he listed his wife's name, Valerie Plame, in his bio...
...He says that when Vice President Cheney asked who Nick Kristof's unnamed ambassador was, and how and why he had been sent to Niger—remember, Wilson had suggested to reporters that he'd gone at Cheney's "behest," and Cheney most certainly had not "behested" this—Grossman asked Ford to prepare the memo...
...Matthews says that if so, Russert never conveyed the complaint to him...
...The theory of the case in which a "thuggish" White House set out to punish Joe Wilson simply wasn't true...
...It collapsed definitively when Woodward—whom Armitage had twice in 2004 refused to grant a waiver of confidentiality, finally getting one after the indictment of Libby—came forward to say that on June 12, 2003—well before the Libby-Miller conversation—Armitage had told him of Plame and her role in Wilson's trip...
...Cooper took notes—He sat there and typed on his computer as he talked to Libby of everything they talked about...
...He also denies that Grossman told him of Plame's identity...
...Armitage's role thus remained that rarest of Washington phenomena: a hot secret that never leaked...
...Just as Cooper is unlikely to be a star witness, Miller is likely to bomb on the stand...
...Having received Miller's notes, Libby's lawyer observed that they revealed she had conversations with other people besides Libby that had never been fully explored: You will see that Ms...
...Just as the fractiousness between the Department of State and CIA on the one hand and the White House and the Pentagon on the other must be considered when we weigh the reasons Tenet pushed for an investigation after the Department of Justice at first refused to proceed—presumably on the sound basis that there was no crime com-mitted—so the tensions and animus against Cheney's office on the part of Justice must not be ignored in considering the path taken by the investigation...
...The prosecutor who directed Armitage not to tell the president or anyone else that he was the source dares to charge another man with obstructing his so-called investigation...
...And in the midst of this appeared Novak's column, reporting that Wilson's "wife, Valerie Plame, is an agency operative" and that "two senior administration officials told me his wife suggested sending Wilson to Niger...
...Cooper sent to his editor an email describing the important things that Libby said...
...It was redated July 7, 2003, and while it never was distributed to the White House, it was faxed to Armitage and Powell...
...If the prosecutor had asked and Armitage had failed to reveal the conversation with Woodward, and Armitage had then for years refused to allow Woodward to reveal this information to the prosecution, Armitage obstructed the investigation...
...All these details, in their essentials, were known to the Justice Department by October 2003...
...Russert apparently has no notes of the conversation...
...I will say this: To the CIA people who are going out at a time that we need more human intelligence, . . . they need to know that we will not cast their anonymity aside lightly...
...Immediately after the call with Mr...
...Most significantly, Armitage, whose calendar showed a meeting with the Washington Post's Bob Woodward, seems never to have been asked if he told other reporters what he told Novak...
...In fact, it appears both may have faulty recollections...
...There is another email...
...For one thing, his was the only name that fit the redacted portions of the prosecution's court filings (redacted, Fitzgerald said, to protect the name and reputation "of an innocent accused...
...Astonishingly, even before Ashcroft recused himself, and even before Comey appointed Fitzgerald, the Justice Department knew that Armitage was the source of the disclosure to Novak...
...But Powell and his aides feared the White House would then leak that Armitage had been Novak's source— possibly to embarrass State Department officials who had been unenthusiastic about Bush's Iraq policy...
...Enter their NBC colleague Andrea Mitchell...
...Judith Miller: The charges relating to Miller are hardly stronger, though they, too, give a revealing view of the one-sidedness of Fitzgerald's investigation and prosecution...
...Subsequently, according to Isikoff's account in Newsweek: Taft, the State Department lawyer, also felt obligated to inform White House counsel Alberto Gonzales...
...Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, to whom he granted extraordinary power over the course of the investigation...
...So where does that come from...
...Marc Grossman plays a role in this as well...
...Taft asked if Gonzales wanted to know the details...
...We now know that the July 2003 leak that launched this case came from the State Department, not the White House...
...If, as seems more likely, the prosecutor, with Armitage's notebooks and calendar in hand, never asked him about his conversations with other reporters, Fitzgerald would now seem to be trying to disguise his own mishandling of the investigation as obstruction by others...
...Taken together, the pieces painted a picture of an administration that had deliberately lied to justify war in Iraq...
...This inaccurate, thinly sourced story— which might well have been told to Fitzgerald's investigators as well as to the Post—somehow seems to have become the template for the investigation, which from then on focused on who those presumptive two White House officials were...
...Plame?'" This may explain the odd focus of Fitzgerald's investigation, including his outrageously prejudicial remarks at the October 28, 2005, press conference in which he announced Libby's indictment for perjury, false statements, and obstruction, as well as his decision to proceed with such a thinly justified indictment...
...In discovery, Libby's defense team made clear that they think it was Marc Grossman, Armitage's undersecretary for political affairs, who they contend has been a friend of Wilson's since the two went to college together...
...This was a lie that undermined public trust in the president in the middle of a war, and has persisted despite the contrary findings of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Butler and Robb-Silberman commissions...
...At the time he filed the affidavit, he of course knew that Armitage had been Novak's source...
...Cooper, on the other hand, says that he recalls it differently, that he raised the matter with Libby...
...Wilson, already a media darling, looked forward to seeing "Karl Rove frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs...
...Why is Libby still under indictment and threatened with prison in a trial expected to begin next January...
...There is an email by Mr...
...Meanwhile Libby, who fully cooperated with the prosecution, told what he recalled as best he could recall, and promptly gave waivers of confidentiality to all reporters known to have talked to him in this period, is charged with crimes for which the prosecutor is seeking a 25-year prison term...
...Libby, Mr...
...Libby, there is again a parenthetical—it's sort of odd, but there is a parenthetical that says "wife works in WINPAC," question mark...
...It's long past time for Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to do the right thing and drop the charges...
...The undersecretary referred to is Grossman, and Libby says he has no recollection of any such conversation...
...None whatsoever...
...I had never seen a covered agent's name in any memo in, I think, 28 years of government...
...As Libby notes, she is an "access" reporter with contacts in the State Department and CIA...
...I will say this...
...And for each reporter who knew, we must assume a number of editors, colleagues, and friends were also apprised of the ambassador's identity...
...Wilson's wife was first mentioned in a conversation with Mr...
...Now as far as we can tell—and we haven't gotten discovery from the government on this issue as yet, but as far as we can tell, Ms...
...Powell, Armitage and Taft, the only three officials at the State Department who knew the story, never breathed a word of it publicly and Armitage's role remained secret...
...Moreover, though she conceded the notes reflected conversations with others, by his explicit agreement with her, the prosecutor had promised not to ask her about her other sources...
...or "Victoria Wilson" or to "Valerie Wilson," all of which indicate that she is talking to somebody else about Mr...
...CIA director George Tenet publicly accepted blame...
...There is no reference to the wife whatsoever...
...We have those...
...The story of Joe Wilson's heroic Mission to Niger was explosive because of Wilson's disingenuous original version: Cheney had sent him, had knowledge of his findings that Iraq never sought uranium in Niger, and had ignored those findings...
...But the appearance of Wilson's op-ed set Washington afire that week...
...So Taft told Gonzales the bare minimum: that the State Department had passed some information about the case to Justice...
...This blonde Emma Peel-tied-to-the-railroad-tracks-by-lying-warmon-gers version of the story (assisted by a timely leak from the CIA that Director Tenet had referred the case to the Justice Department) led to press and congressional demands for an investigation by an outside prosecutor...
...This ignores that, by Wilson's own admission, before his op-ed he had contacted a number of people in the Senate and State Department to tell them the same story...
...In retrospect, this should have been a tipoff that Fitzgerald was changing focus from the underlying "crime"—which was nonexistent...
...After appearing before a May 2, 2003, hearing of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, he and his wife, Valerie Plame, were interviewed by Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times, who was interested that no WMDs had yet turned up in Iraq...
...Again, we have this one...
...Rove, about the article they are planning to write in which they are going to mention the wife...
...On July 6, 2003, the morning of Wilson's inflammatory and false op-ed in the New York Times, Wilson appeared as a guest on Mitchell's show—an appearance that certainly required some foreknowledge of Wilson's identity and background, and of the planned op-ed...
...Even then, the reporters refused to respond, absent waivers to testify about those conversations...
...There is no reference to the wife...
...Really...
...In her defense, she was blindsided by the prosecution, which had apparently not known about or asked for her notes on the June 23 meeting before her appearance in court...
...Wilson's wife...
...Three months later, asked in an October 3, 2003, appearance on CNBC how widely known it had been in Washington before the Novak column that Wilson's wife worked for the CIA, Mitchell said, "It was widely known among those of us who cover the intelligence community and who were actively engaged in trying to track down who among the foreign service community was the envoy to Niger...
...Further, Woodward has revealed that he bumped into Libby in the hallway that same day, that his notes indicate he might well have told Libby what he'd heard from Armitage, but that those same notes do not show Lib-by as having responded...
...To Fitzgerald, the source of any "bad" leak had to be found among the recipients in the White House of this memo...
...At this point, the Nation's David Corn, a friend of Wilson's, reframed the tale, giving it a more lurid cast and a plotline that would drive media coverage—and in turn Fitzgerald's investigation—for the next three years...
...The president ordered anyone in the administration who leaked this information to report it immediately to him...
...She is Russert's subordinate...
...It was, in many respects, a routine Washington transaction between a political columnist and a well-placed source...
...While U.S...
...Fitzgerald further ignores that in the post-May 6 period, before his own op-ed appeared, Wilson briefed two congressional committees about his trip to Niger...
...A former envoy to Iraq, Wilson was a frequent TV guest in the weeks and months before the Iraq war, never suggesting that the Bush administration was relying on false intelligence or that he had played any role in gathering intelligence on Iraq...
...Libby, that is, before June 23rd of 2003, which is the date she says that she and Mr...
...Valerie Plame, he reported, was a "covert agent" who had been deliberately "outed" as "thuggish" payback for her husband's brave whistle blowing...

Vol. 12 • September 2006 • No. 2


 
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