Posted on 02/07/2007 5:30:00 AM PST by slowhand520
Is Everything We Know About Joe Wilsons Trip to Niger Wrong? New evidence from the Libby trial evidence Senate investigators never saw could change the storyline.
By Byron York
For the last two weeks, a number of Republicans in Washington in the administration, on Capitol Hill, and in the intelligence community have been watching closely as the perjury and obstruction of justice trial of Lewis Libby unfolds in federal court. In particular, those Republicans have been poring over dozens of documents released as evidence in the case. Much of what theyve seen is old stuff, things theyve known about for years. But two documents are new, to most eyes at least, and they may significantly change our understanding of how the entire Joseph Wilson-Valerie Plame Wilson-Niger affair began.
The accepted version of events is that Vice President Dick Cheney got things started when he asked for information about possible Iraqi attempts to purchase uranium in Africa. After that request, CIA employee Valerie Plame Wilson suggested sending her husband to look into the question, and after that, the CIA flew Joseph Wilson to Niger to investigate. But the new documents suggest that Mrs. Wilson suggested her husband for the trip before the vice president made his request. In other words, Joseph Wilsons visit to Niger, which everyone believes was undertaken at the behest of the vice president, was actually in the works before Dick Cheney asked his now-famous question. And if that is true, our current understanding of the chronology of events is wrong.
The story is contained in two exhibits, known in court as DX 66.2 and DX 66.3, entered into evidence by Libbys defense team. The first is a CIA document headlined, Briefers Tasking for Richard Cheney on 02/13/2002. It begins:
Briefer: David D. Terry Briefing Date: 02/13/2002 Principal: Richard Cheney
Tasking: The VP was shown an assessment (he thought from [the Defense Intelligence Agency]) that Iraq is purchasing uranium from Africa. He would like our assessment of that transaction and its implications for Iraqs nuclear program. A memo for tomorrows brief would be great.
The document doesnt seem particularly newsworthy until it is viewed alongside a memo first revealed by the Senate Intelligence Committee in its report on the African uranium matter, released in July 2004. That report cited an e-mail written by Valerie Plame Wilson to her boss, the deputy chief of the CIAs Counterproliferation Division, in which she suggested her husband for the fact-finding mission to Niger. A CIA official told the committee that Mrs. Wilson offered up [Joseph Wilsons] name for the job, and the Senate report quoted the e-mail written by Mrs. Wilson 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.
According to the Senate report, Valerie Plame Wilson sent her e-mail on February 12, 2002 the day before the vice president was briefed on the African uranium matter. The discrepancy between the two dates seems glaring, but was not included in the Senate report. That is because, according to a source familiar with the committees investigation, the CIA did not include the document in the materials it turned over to the committee. Senate investigators apparently never knew the exact date of the vice presidents request, so they never knew it came after Plames e-mail.
What does the new information mean? On February 12, 2002, the Defense Intelligence Agency released inside the government, not publicly a report covering the Africa uranium issue; its title said that Niger had signed an agreement to sell 500 tons of uranium a year to Baghdad. CIA officials told Senate investigators the report spurred requests for information from both the State Department and the Department of Defense. Knowledgeable sources speculate and they stress, they are speculating that those inquiries from State and Defense were made on the 12th, the day the Defense Intelligence Agency report was sent around, and that Valerie Plame Wilson, in suggesting her husband be sent to investigate, was reacting to those requests, and not to the vice presidents question, which came the next day. In this new version of events, Dick Cheney was the last guy to request more information, not the first; the notion that his request started the whole affair seems wrong.
The other new document entered into evidence in the trial is another CIA memo, this one headlined Memorandum for the Vice President and dated February 14, 2002. That memo appears to begin its not possible to say for sure because it is blacked out with a discussion of the uranium issue, followed by this statement:
We have tasked our clandestine source[s] with ties to the Nigerien Government and consortium officials to seek additional information on the contract. We also are working with the Embassy and the defense attachés office in Niamey [Niger] to verify their reports.
It is not clear from the poorly-defined copies released as evidence whether the memo refers to a clandestine source or clandestine sources. But from everything that we know about the case, Joseph Wilson was the person who was given the assignment to check out the Niger uranium story. Embassy officials were also told about it, as the memo indicates, but Wilson was the CIAs man with ties to the Nigerien government.
If the timing spelled out in the new document is accurate if Wilson had already been picked for the task by February 14 the new evidence sheds a different light on the version of events given by Wilson himself in his book The Politics of Truth. In that, Wilson wrote about a meeting with CIA officials a meeting that took place on February 19, 2002 at which I was asked if I would be willing to travel to Niger to check out the report in question. Perhaps Wilson was indeed asked to go to Niger at that meeting, but the newly-released CIA document suggests the agency settled on Wilson several days earlier.
The source familiar with the Senate Intelligence Committees investigation says the committee was never given the second document, either.
Perhaps it will turn out that there is some mistake in the memos, or in the interpretation of them, and that the generally-accepted version of the story remains accurate. But if the story told in the newly-public memos is correct, our entire understanding of how the CIA leak affair began will have to change.
Remember this?
---
Former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, dispatched by the CIA in February 2002 to investigate reports that Iraq sought to reconstitute its nuclear weapons program with uranium from Africa, was specifically recommended for the mission by his wife, a CIA employee, contrary to what he has said publicly.
Wilson last year launched a public firestorm with his accusations that the administration had manipulated intelligence to build a case for war. He has said that his trip to Niger should have laid to rest any notion that Iraq sought uranium there and has said his findings were ignored by the White House.
Wilson's assertions -- both about what he found in Niger and what the Bush administration did with the information -- were undermined yesterday in a bipartisan Senate intelligence committee report.
The panel found that Wilson's report, rather than debunking intelligence about purported uranium sales to Iraq, as he has said, bolstered the case for most intelligence analysts. And contrary to Wilson's assertions and even the government's previous statements, the CIA did not tell the White House it had qualms about the reliability of the Africa intelligence that made its way into 16 fateful words in President Bush's January 2003 State of the Union address.
Yesterday's report said that whether Iraq sought to buy lightly enriched "yellowcake" uranium from Niger is one of the few bits of prewar intelligence that remains an open question. Much of the rest of the intelligence suggesting a buildup of weapons of mass destruction was unfounded, the report said.
The report turns a harsh spotlight on what Wilson has said about his role in gathering prewar intelligence, most pointedly by asserting that his wife, CIA employee Valerie Plame, recommended him.
Plame's role could be significant in an ongoing investigation into whether a crime was committed when her name and employment were disclosed to reporters last summer.
Administration officials told columnist Robert D. Novak then that Wilson, a partisan critic of Bush's foreign policy, was sent to Niger at the suggestion of Plame, who worked in the nonproliferation unit at CIA. The disclosure of Plame's identity, which was classified, led to an investigation into who leaked her name.
The report may bolster the rationale that administration officials provided the information not to intentionally expose an undercover CIA employee, but to call into question Wilson's bona fides as an investigator into trafficking of weapons of mass destruction. To charge anyone with a crime, prosecutors need evidence that exposure of a covert officer was intentional.
The report states that a CIA official told the Senate committee that Plame "offered up" Wilson's name for the Niger trip, then on Feb. 12, 2002, sent a memo to a deputy chief in the CIA's Directorate of Operations saying her 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." The next day, the operations official cabled an overseas officer seeking concurrence with the idea of sending Wilson, the report said.
Wilson has asserted that his wife was not involved in the decision to send him to Niger.
"Valerie had nothing to do with the matter," Wilson wrote in a memoir published this year. "She definitely had not proposed that I make the trip."
Wilson stood by his assertion in an interview yesterday, saying Plame was not the person who made the decision to send him. Of her memo, he said: "I don't see it as a recommendation to send me."
The report said Plame told committee staffers that she relayed the CIA's request to her husband, saying, "there's this crazy report" about a purported deal for Niger to sell uranium to Iraq. The committee found Wilson had made an earlier trip to Niger in 1999 for the CIA, also at his wife's suggestion.
The report also said Wilson provided misleading information to The Washington Post last June. He said then that he concluded the Niger intelligence was based on documents that had clearly been forged because "the dates were wrong and the names were wrong."
"Committee staff asked how the former ambassador could have come to the conclusion that the 'dates were wrong and the names were wrong' when he had never seen the CIA reports and had no knowledge of what names and dates were in the reports," the Senate panel said. Wilson told the panel he may have been confused and may have "misspoken" to reporters. The documents -- purported sales agreements between Niger and Iraq -- were not in U.S. hands until eight months after Wilson made his trip to Niger.
---
So tell us what your agenda is.
None. This is not significant new news, and even if it was the MSM (except Fox) will continue with their lies.
There has to be a reason why Wilson avoided a paper trail. Wilson avoided turning in a written report to CIA when he returned from Niger. Instead, Wilson (or Plame), arranged for some low level CIA wienies to go to his house and he dictated an after-action report to them.
Which would certainly account for no written reporte, wouldn't it? Wilson himself said that he gave the report orally sitting in his own living room.
And I never understood why he wasn't paid -- but maybe he was, under the table???
And then they used this against Cheney!
"The document doesnt seem particularly newsworthy until it is viewed alongside a memo first revealed by the Senate Intelligence Committee in its report on the African uranium matter, released in July 2004. That report cited an e-mail written by Valerie Plame Wilson to her boss, the deputy chief of the CIAs Counterproliferation Division, in which she suggested her husband for the fact-finding mission to Niger. A CIA official told the committee that Mrs. Wilson offered up [Joseph Wilsons] name for the job, and the Senate report quoted the e-mail written by Mrs. Wilson 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.
"According to the Senate report, Valerie Plame Wilson sent her e-mail on February 12, 2002 the day before the vice president was briefed on the African uranium matter. The discrepancy between the two dates seems glaring, but was not included in the Senate report. That is because, according to a source familiar with the committees investigation, the CIA did not include the document in the materials it turned over to the committee. Senate investigators apparently never knew the exact date of the vice presidents request, so they never knew it came after Plames e-mail."
"What does the new information mean? On February 12, 2002, the Defense Intelligence Agency released inside the government, not publicly a report covering the Africa uranium issue; its title said that Niger had signed an agreement to sell 500 tons of uranium a year to Baghdad. CIA officials told Senate investigators the report spurred requests for information from both the State Department and the Department of Defense. Knowledgeable sources speculate and they stress, they are speculating that those inquiries from State and Defense were made on the 12th, the day the Defense Intelligence Agency report was sent around, and that Valerie Plame Wilson, in suggesting her husband be sent to investigate, was reacting to those requests, and not to the vice presidents question, which came the next day. In this new version of events, Dick Cheney was the last guy to request more information, not the first; the notion that his request started the whole affair seems wrong."
Plames boss at this time, made a quick retirement shortly after the Plame/Wilson lies became national pseudo news.
See #57; that's why!
It was a CIA black ops!
They should have asked him to sign the dictated report, if they did not. If he refused then they should have not payed his expenses.
Isn't this amazing? And why did the CIA not give the memo to the SSCI and why did the SSCI not demand that it do so?
You obviously don't know what you're talking about.
Clarice Feldman asked Foley and in an email to her he absolutely denied that he was Plame's boss--said he never heard of her until all this broke.
Best reason I've seen.
You aren't alone; I can't tell you how many times I've asked myself "Could we be THIS wrong? What am I missing?"
Take a look at this and add that to the equation; what do you think?
man, ditto that.York has evidence and seems to be asking himself, do I believe the cover story or my lieing eyes
details please..I loathe spitty Chrissy
However, let's be more precise.
Virtually NOTHING is ever refuted by the Administration's PR machine nor the pseudo-conservative talking heads on TV so that the truth of this affair can be disseminated in easy-to-understand terms to the public.
As we all know, the never-ending, pernicious White House "New Tone", plus the comatose Justice Department under Rip Van Gonzales, plus the almost non-existent PR and rapid-response capabilities of the White House, Republican leaders, the RNC, and GOP hired public-relations hacks are and have been deader than dirt for 6 years.
Does anyone dispute the the Dem/liberal propaganda machine is effective and that of the GOP's is pathetic?
The Wilsons, Fitzmas and the MSM traitors are well aware of this and smack their lips every day as they get away with everything......virtually unchallenged.
Leni
If anything goes up over there about Timmy testifying, will you ping us and post it?
Another thing that has always bothered me is what is the damn big deal about an administration defending itself from a pack of lies?
After we dispense with Val being covert, what is the problem.
Of course, in light of this, it benefited Wilson to scream "they're trashing my wife" because it changed the direction of the discussion, didn't it?
It's second hand. Was discussed on the Daily Talk Show Thread.
I'm not smart enough to figure out the plan, but I bet he's looking for revenge.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.