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Accusations obscure facts in leak - Scandal around Karl Rove, Joseph Wilson, and who said what
Houston Chronicle ^ | July 17, 2005 | MICHAEL HEDGES and BENNETT ROTH

Posted on 07/17/2005 12:41:48 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

Accusations obscuring facts in Washington leak

Scandal circles around Karl Rove, Joseph Wilson, and who said what

WASHINGTON - The escalating calls by Democrats and some liberal commentators for Karl Rove to resign, and the countercharges by conservatives that Rove is the victim of a political witch hunt, have obscured many of the facts in a tangled Washington story.

President Bush unwittingly touched off the controversy during his State of the Union address in January 2003, when, in making the case for war with Iraq, he said, "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."

Those 16 words became the target of a New York Times op-ed piece in July of that year, after the United States had invaded Iraq, written by an obscure career foreign service officer named Joseph Wilson who had worked for both Bush's father and President Clinton.

Claims of uranium

Wilson described going to Niger to check into the claim that Saddam was seeking yellowcake uranium from Niger or other African countries in early 2002 — almost a year before Bush's speech.

Wilson described himself as a whistle-blower whose findings contradicted the notion Saddam was seeking uranium in Africa. He said Bush's claim "was twisted to exaggerate the Iraqi threat."

But Wilson's version of events turned out to be off the mark.

His article implied he had been dispatched to Africa at least indirectly by Vice President Dick Cheney.

What actually happened is that Wilson had gotten the job to go to Africa after his wife, Valerie Plame, a CIA official, suggested he be sent.

Nor did any of Wilson's findings directly influence the administration's position on whether Saddam was trying to buy African uranium, according to a detailed Senate report.

In a line buried deep in his New York Times article, Wilson conceded, "I did not file a written report" on the African trip. Instead he theorizes that his findings would have bubbled up from oral briefings he gave to intelligence officials.

That was a groundless assumption, Senate investigators said.

Still, Wilson's charges became a rallying cry for anti-war groups and for Democrats opposed to Bush. Wilson later went to work for Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry.

Wilson seemed to be at least partially vindicated when top Bush officials, including Condoleezza Rice, said in the summer of 2003 that Bush's staff should have edited the words from his speech because the CIA had not been able to independently confirm British findings.

But since then, Wilson's original assertions have been severely tested.

Finding 'well-founded'

One year after Wilson's article, in July 2004, the Butler commission in Britain found that Bush's original claim that Saddam was seeking African uranium was "well-founded."

That report said, "It is accepted by all parties that Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999. The British government had intelligence from several different sources indicating that this visit was for the purpose of acquiring uranium."

Wilson's credibility took a more serious blow when a bipartisan Senate panel released its massive report that same month. The Senate Intelligence Committee reviewed the Iraq-Niger uranium matter exhaustively, and found many of Wilson's assumptions and claims in error.

The Senate report concluded that Cheney had never been briefed on Wilson's findings because the CIA considered them of marginal value. The official CIA assessment of Wilson's trip was that it "did not provide substantial new information."

Wilson had made one finding that intrigued the CIA but it was not in his New York Times article. Wilson described a meeting with a Nigerian official during his visit who told him that an Iraqi delegation had visited Nigeria and Niger in the late 1990s. In Nigeria at least, the Iraqis had made inquiries about buying uranium, Wilson was told.

The Senate Intelligence Committee stated, "The report (based on Wilson's information) did not change any analyst's assessment of the Iraq-Niger uranium deal." For most CIA analysts, in fact, Wilson's findings "lent more credibility" to the idea that Saddam sought African uranium, according to intelligence officials who testified to Senate investigators.

A dramatic turn

Whatever the merits of Wilson's original article, the dispute between him and the Bush White House took a radically different direction when syndicated columnist Robert Novak identified Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, as a CIA employee just days after Wilson's New York Times piece.

In an online story three days later, Time Magazine reporter Matthew Cooper also suggested that the Bush administration had declared war on Wilson and noted that government officials had said that his wife was a CIA official.

The reports drew criticism from Wilson, who fingered Rove as the leaker and said he wanted to see "whether or not we can get Karl Rove frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs."

The CIA also raised objections, noting that federal law prohibited officials from intentionally disclosing the identity of a covert agent.

The CIA referred its complaint to the Justice Department, where the FBI commenced an investigation that included interviewing more than three dozen administration officials, including Bush's top political adviser, Rove.

At the time, White House spokesman Scott McClellan, stressing that he had spoken with Rove, denied that the political adviser or other top administration officials were involved in the leak.

In a CNN interview last year during the GOP convention, Rove said, "I don't know her name and didn't leak her name."

Under pressure from Democrats to appoint an independent investigator, the Justice Department in December of 2003 named Patrick Fitzgerald, the U.S. attorney for Northern Illinois, as a special counsel.

Fitzgerald mounted an aggressive probe that included issuing subpoenas to journalists to testify about the possible leak.

The White House, meanwhile, directed officials to sign waivers releasing journalists from any confidentiality pledge they had made in conversations concerning Plame.

Novak, along with Tim Russert, the host of NBC's Meet the Press, and Walter Pincus and Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post, worked out agreements to provide limited testimony.

However, Cooper and New York Times reporter Judith Miller, who had investigated the Plame issue but had never written a story, balked at revealing their sources and appealed their case to the Supreme Court, which in June refused to quash the subpoenas.

Cooper, saying his source had given him a last-minute reprieve from his confidentiality pledge, agreed to testify before a grand jury last week. Rove's lawyer, Robert Luskin, has disputed Cooper's account, saying he merely reiterated the confidentiality waiver that Rove signed at the outset of the investigation. Miller refused to cooperate and was ordered to jail by U.S. District Court judge Thomas Hogan.

Meanwhile, the source for Cooper's story was revealed by rival Newsweek magazine, which obtained a copy of an e-mail sent by Cooper to his bureau chief that said he had spoken to Rove about Plame "on double super secret background."

The e-mail regarding the conversation, which occurred before Novak had published his column, did not indicate that Rove used Plame's name or suggest she was a covert agent.

Not under investigation

On Friday, published reports indicated that Rove was one of two senior administration officials who had spoken with Novak about Plame.

The reports said that Rove had told investigators that he did not supply Novak with Plame's name, but he confirmed that he had heard that she worked for the CIA.

Rove's lawyer has repeatedly said that the political strategist has not broken the law and noted that Rove has not been told that he is the "target" of an investigation. Prosecutors generally warn individuals if they may be facing prosecution.

Analysts have said that it will be difficult for Fitzgerald to prosecute any official for violating the 1982 law regarding disclosure of covert agents.

The law requires the prosecutor to prove that the disclosure was made by someone with access to classified information and who intentionally revealed the name of a covert agent who has served outside the United States in the last five years.

However, even if Rove is not prosecuted under that law, it is not clear whether Fitzgerald is looking at other charges such as perjury or obstruction of justice. Questions remain as to who the other senior administration official was who spoke to Novak or who Miller's sources were.

michael.hedges@chron.com

bennett.roth@chron.com


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: cia; cialeak; dirtytricks; joewilson; karlrove; leak; media; msm; valerieplame; wot
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To: Wristpin
I worked a highly classified program most of my adult life and find the disregard for security procedures in this case astounding.

I totally agree. Between this case and the Sandy Berger pilferage of classified documents, the efforts we make to secure classified information appear to be woefully inadequate.

121 posted on 07/17/2005 3:20:11 PM PDT by Ben Hecks
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Wilson campaigning for Kerry in January, 2003

source

122 posted on 07/17/2005 3:40:51 PM PDT by F-117A
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To: Echo Talon

Could minor Ambassador Joe Wilson himself have been the source in blowing his own Wife's cover?

It is distinctly possible, (though it may be unlikely that Joe Wilson himself directly was NY Times Judith Miller's source), since Joe Wilson himself evidently routinely bragged openly to strangers about her CIA employment, prior to such "cover" being "blown" in the press.

Here's an example of Joe's apparently routine and open bragging about Valerie being a "CIA agent," which became known directly to me over a year ago:

He certainly bragged about it per a famous and highly reliable source's (named below) account of his own face-to-face encounter with Amb. Joe Wilson prior to Valerie Plame's "outing" as a CIA agent/employee.

Based upon a personal conversation (we were in a small group eating; it was NOT an "off the record") I had with eminent historian Victor Davis Hanson (we were at a luncheon table together during a trip to Europe), it appeared entirely possible that Joe Wilson himself was the (or one source, if not the original one) possible source in revealing his own wife's status as a CIA agent or employee.

Victor Davis Hanson (Wilson presumably knew Victor Davis Hanson wrote regularly for NRO (National Review Online), had done OpEds for the Wall street Journal, and other publications, and had his own Website with a widespread following) said he (VDH) & Joe Wilson were both in the same "Green Room" before a televised debate-discussion on Iraq, etc. and Joe first warned the TV make-up person not to get powder on his $14,000 Rolex watch, then he bragged to Victor about several things (possessions and trips to Aspen, etc.), like his expensive car (I think it was a Mercedes), and then bragged about his beautiful ("hot") wife who, Joe Wilson said (braggingly) was a CIA operative.

I asked Victor Davis Hanson Why he didn't write up this account.(?) He replied that Joe Wilson would probably simply deny it, since only he (VDH) & Joe Wilson were in the Green Room together before the broadcast.

However, it is now easy to surmise that Joe Wilson is a crass, materialistic, self-promoting, vain, egotistical, bragaddocio-opportunist, so this account is perfectly consistent with Valerie Plame's TWO photo shoots in Vanity Fair. (Or was it Vogue? No, probably too crass for Vogue, n'est pas?)


123 posted on 07/17/2005 5:14:57 PM PDT by FReethesheeples (Gonzales appears to be quite WEAK on Property rights!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Announcer: And now, a message from Pathological Liars Anonymous.

Joe Wilson: Hello, my name is Joe Wilson, and I'm a member of Pathological Liars Anonymous. In fact.. I'm the president of the organization! I didn't always lie. No, when I was a kid, I told the truth. But then one day, I got caught stealing money out of my mother's purse. I lied. I told her it was homework -that my teacher told me to do it. And she got fired! Yeah, that's what happened! After that, lying was easy for me.

I lied about my age and joined the army. I was thirteen at the time. Yeah.. I went to Vietnam, and I was injured catching a mortar shell in my teeth. And they made me a three-star general! And then I got a job in journalism, writing for the National Enquire.. er, Geographic! Yeah.. I was making twenty thousand a ye.. month! In fact, I won the Pulitzer Prize that year! Yeah, that's the ticket.

And then my cousin died - Joe Louis - and I took it hard. Maybe too hard - I tried to kill myself. Yeahh.. I did kill myself! Sure! I was medically dead for a week and a half! It was a woman that brought me out of it - Indira Gandhi! Yeah, right.. And she told me about Pathological Liars Anonymous. Oh, you'd be surprised how many famous people belong. In fact.. at one of the meetings I met my wife - Morgan Fairchild! Yes, I'm a change man now, and all because of Pathological Liars Anonymous. Why, I - I even have my picture on the cover of Newsweek magazine. Yeah. Every day! Yeah.. that's the ticket! Yeah, you betcha!


124 posted on 07/17/2005 5:17:28 PM PDT by FormerACLUmember (Honoring Saint Jude's assistance every day.)
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To: FReethesheeples

could you post to me the pictures of Plame? NOT the of her with the turbin on, but the one of her sitting next to Joe. I'm working on a "toon" and need that shot, but i cant find it, now... :( thanks in advance. :D


125 posted on 07/17/2005 5:21:45 PM PDT by Echo Talon (http://echotalon.blogspot.com)
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To: FReethesheeples

im sorry, i just found it..(the picture) it was on this thread.. :D


126 posted on 07/17/2005 5:23:43 PM PDT by Echo Talon (http://echotalon.blogspot.com)
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To: Echo Talon

Okay & thank YOU!


127 posted on 07/17/2005 6:18:53 PM PDT by FReethesheeples (Gonzales appears to be quite WEAK on Property rights!)
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To: STARWISE

Hey, Wilson knew FOR A FACT that Saddam had WMD and would use them against us if we invaded.

So how could Bush and the CIA be so stupid as to ignore what he "didn't find" while sipping tea in Nigeria?


128 posted on 07/17/2005 6:40:45 PM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Sam Hill

Who said they ignored it?


129 posted on 07/17/2005 7:15:23 PM PDT by STARWISE
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To: STARWISE

He did. Bush anyway. That was the import of his NYT editorial that started all of this crapola.

Turns out that the CIA thought it was so important nobody bothered to ask him to even write it down.


130 posted on 07/17/2005 7:22:10 PM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Sam Hill

I think we're smoking different brands .. you've lost me.


131 posted on 07/17/2005 7:27:06 PM PDT by STARWISE
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To: STARWISE

Wilson's complaint (voiced in his NYT editorial) is that his research in Nigeria was ignored by Bush. Wilson said he found no evidence that Iraq had tried to buy Yellowcake. And yet Bush had the temerity to say (citing the Brit intel) that they had tried to do so.

Wilson was dead wrong about Saddam having WMDs. Wilson was certain they would be used against the US forces--which was his reason for saying we should not invade Iraq.

My point (or attempt at humor) was, since Wilson was so wrong about WMDs, why should he have been listened to about Yellowcake?

Clear now?


132 posted on 07/17/2005 7:41:35 PM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
It must just kill the msm to include Joe Wilson as an ingredient in their Bush/Rove roast.

Unsavory men and their wives certainly are making headlines lately.

Question: Which of these two bullying, lying men was married to


Answer: Both men.

133 posted on 07/17/2005 8:23:47 PM PDT by syriacus (To WHICH entity does LIBELLER JOE WILSON pledge his allegiance?)
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To: Sam Hill

In a convoluted way ..;)


134 posted on 07/17/2005 8:50:01 PM PDT by STARWISE
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To: F-117A
Wilson campaigning for Kerry in January, 2003

I just saw Wilson and his wife's attorney, Christopher Wolf, on Hardball (Campbell Brown sitting it for the prissy one) and he (Wolf) said in no uncertain terms that Wilson did not become a supporter of nor start campaigning for Kerry until 2004. Your link clearly suggests he's mistaken or lieing.

Now it seems to me information like when Wilson became a Kerry supporter would be something a lawyer would get from his client so there's a distinct possibility that Joe lied to his own attorney.

Not necessarily an overly important fact but interesting nonetheless.

135 posted on 07/18/2005 8:54:54 PM PDT by blake6900 (YOUR AD HERE)
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To: blake6900
Sorry, I though I'd pulled my post or added a correction.

Unfortunately, I missed the fact that the Kerry people had a typo in their press release. It should have read January 13, 2004, not January 13, 2003! Later in the release they have the 2004 date.

I'm having the Moderator pull #122.

136 posted on 07/18/2005 9:29:13 PM PDT by F-117A
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