DAVID MACMICHAEL: "Well after the Mrs. Bushs memoir came out with that statement which charged Phillip Agee effectively with commission of a felony, that is, violation of exposing this - exposing Richard Welch ok, thats a libel per se, as they say in law. Phillip Agee filed a suit some months after the book came out in Washington DC charging libel and seeking damages for that. He did not drop the suit. The case was dismissed by the presiding judge on grounds that Phillips place of residence at the time did not give him standing to sue in US courts on this, and the case went away. The subsequent, as I think the article indicates and you said, the subsequent additions of Mrs. Bushs book did not contain this erroneous charge, but it serves to indicate that this is a very serious matter. If former President Bush could define Philip Agee as a traitor for exposing the identities of serving intelligence officers, if his sons political advisor has done the same, while it has not come under the heading of treason, believe me, it is a very serious felony under the current Act."
I notice that one thing Ray McGovern's buddy MacMichael didn't mention was where Agee's place of residence was- he moved a lot because he had to but didn't he end up in Cuba? And wasn't he considered a Cuban agent? And didn't he form a worldwie leftwing organization whose stated goal was to undermine the CIA?