April 22, 1999 Valerie Wilson lists Brewster-Jennings & Assoc." - later revealed to be a CIA front companyas her employer when making a donation to the Gore campaign. (Gore FEC filing).
1999 Joseph Wilson takes a trip to Niger .
September 30, 2003 Wilson endorses Senator John Kerry for president. (Man With an Independent Streak, Washington Post, October 1, 2003).
The Wall Street Journal's conservative editorial page, defended the administration saying: "Mr. Wilson became an antiwar celebrity who joined the Kerry for president campaign." Discussing his trip to Niger, the Journal judged: "Mr. Wilson's original claims about what he found on a CIA trip to Africa, what he told the CIA about it, and even why he was sent on the mission have since been discredited."
CUT
June 1997 Joseph Wilson returns to Washington DC as Senior Director for African Affairs at the National Security Council. At about the same time, Plame also moves back to the United States (Wilson, Politics 240), in part because the CIA suspects her name was leaked to the Russians in 1994. (Vanity Fair, Jan. 04).
April 3, 1998 Wilson and Plame marry. (Wilson, Politics 276).
July 1998 Joseph Wilson leaves government service to open a consulting firm specializing in assisting international investment in Africa. (Wilson, Politics 275).
1999 Joseph Wilson takes a trip to Niger at the behest of the CIA to investigate uranium-related matters separate from Iraq (Wilson, Politics lv-lvi). According to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report on pre-war intelligence, Wilson was selected for the 1999 trip after his wife mentioned to her supervisors that her husband was planning a business trip to Niger in the near future and might be willing to use his contacts in the region. (Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Report on Prewar Assessment of Iraq Intelligence, 39, July 2004).
June 1999 Nigers former prime minister Ibrahim Mayaki meets with an Iraqi delegation wanting to discuss expanding commercial relations. Mayaki interprets this as an interest in uranium, Nigers main export, and later tells Wilson that he did not discuss it because Iraq remained under UN trade sanctions. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 43-44, July 2004).
February 12, 2002 The Defense Intelligence Agency writes a report concluding Iraq is probably searching abroad for natural uranium to assist in its nuclear weapons program. Vice President Cheney reads this report and asks for the CIAs analysis. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 38-39, July 04).
Responding to inquiries from Cheneys office, the State Department, and the Defense Department, the CIAs Directorate of Operations Counterproliferation Division (CPD) look for more information. They consider having Wilson return to Niger to investigate. In the process, Valerie Wilson writes a memo to a superior saying, My husband has good relations with both the PM [prime minister] and the former Minister of Mines (not to mention lots of French contacts), both of whom could possibly shed light on this sort of activity. One of Valerie Wilsons colleagues later tells Senate investigators she offered up his name for the trip. Wilson says that her agency made the decision and she only later approached her husband on the CIAs behalf. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 39, July 2004).
February 19, 2002 Joseph Wilson meets with officials from CIA and the State Department. According to a State Department intelligence analysts notes, the meeting was convened by Valerie Wilson. She later testifies that she left the meeting after introducing her husband. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 40, July 04).
February 26, 2002 Wilson arrives in Niger. He concludes, after a few days of interviews, that it was highly unlikely that anything was going on. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 42, July 2004).
March 5, 2002 Wilson reports back to two CIA officers at his home. Valerie Wilson is present but does not participate. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 43, July 2004).
March 8-9, 2002 An intelligence report of Wilsons trip is sent through routine channels, identifying Wilson only as a contact with excellent access who does not have an established reporting record. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 43-44, July 04). The CIA grades Wilsons information as good, the middle of five possible grades. Cheney is not directly briefed about the report. (Senate Intelligence Cmte., Iraq 46).
MORE:http://ifk-johnkerry.blogspot.com/2005_07_01_ifk-johnkerry_archive.html
Joe Wilson's Top Ten Worst Inaccuracies and Misstatements
And note, Ms. Mitchell, that each point has been documented and sourced.
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