Yet the NBC nitely nudes reported with a strait facade that she WAS undercover when identified!!! And they wonder why their credibility, ratings and ad revenue are floundering around the the doldrums!!!
She outed herself sometime in the last decade.
She hasn't been an agent nor a special intel person for a long time.
She probably had business cards with her CIA phone number and speciality.
I think I still have some of those cards I got from non agents who worked for the agency from 1964-70.
The lying bastards at the NY Slimes admitted way back that Plame was probably outed by Aldrich Ames before his arrest in 1994.
""The C.I.A. suspected that Aldrich Ames had given Mrs. Wilson's name (along with those of other spies) to the Russians before his espionage arrest in 1994," revealed the New York Times on Saturday."
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/999667/posts
Valerie Plame Outed as CIA Agent Long Before Novak Column (by Aldrich Ames to the Russians)
NewsMax.com ^ | Saturday Oct. 11, 2003 | Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff
Posted on 10/11/2003 8:29:16 PM PDT by jmstein7
Valerie Plame, wife of Leakgate accuser Joseph Wilson, was outed as a CIA agent at least nine years before conservative columnist Robert Novak supposedly blew her cover three months ago in his column.
"The C.I.A. suspected that Aldrich Ames had given Mrs. Wilson's name (along with those of other spies) to the Russians before his espionage arrest in 1994," revealed the New York Times on Saturday.
In a column revealing the critical information for the first time since the Leakgate scandal exploded two weeks ago, Times columnist Nicholas Kristof explained that the Ames tip compromised Valerie Plame's undercover secrecy so thoroughly that "she was brought back to Washington for safety reasons."
At the time, he noted, Mrs. Wilson "was already in transition away from undercover work to management, and to liaison roles with other intelligence agencies. So this year, even before she was outed, she was moving away from 'noc' -- which means non-official cover."
What's more, said the Times writer, Mrs. Wilson's intelligence connections became known a bit in Washington as she rose in the C.I.A. - an assessment that stands in marked contrast to Mr. Wilson's portrayed of his wife's identity as being so secret that she was endangered when Novak revealed her name.
Concludes Kristof:
"All in all, I think the Democrats are engaging in hyperbole when they describe the White House as having put Mrs. Wilson's life in danger and destroyed her career; her days skulking along the back alleys of cities like Beirut and Algiers were already mostly over."