Mr. Wilson, appearing at a news conference with Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, said Mr. Rove should go. "Irrespective of whether a law has been violated, it's very clear to me that the ethical standards to which we should hold our senior public servants have been violated," he said, calling on President Bush "to honor his word that he would fire anybody who was involved in the leak."
Mr. Schumer, who supports the security-clearance amendment to the Homeland Security spending bill, said Mr. Bush should "do the right thing, and immediately suspend Karl Rove's security clearance."
But former President Bill Clinton said he was withholding judgment on what, if anything, should happen to Mr. Rove. "It depends on what the facts are," Mr. Clinton said in an interview on CNN. But he said that neither Mr. Wilson nor his wife had deserved the damage done to their lives and careers by the disclosure of her C.I.A. employment.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/14/politics/14cnd-rove.html?oref=login
"... by the disclosure of her C.I.A. employment."
And .. since her husband was the person who made this DISCLOSURE PUBLIC - then there is no need for Rove to do anything.