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Perverse Libby trial was revealing
Chicago Sun Times ^ | March 11, 2007 | MARK STEYN

Posted on 03/11/2007 3:56:16 AM PDT by Laverne

A couple of days ago, Shane Gibson, the Bahamian immigration minister, resigned. The Tribune in Nassau had published front-page pictures of him in bed with Anna Nicole Smith. Could happen to anyone. Riding high in February, shot down in March. And, in fairness to the minister, both parties were fully clothed. Indeed, Anna Nicole was more fully clothed than she usually was out of bed.

My point here is that this is a classic scandal in the Westminster parliamentary tradition: On Monday, you're blandly denying vague rumors; on Tuesday, they're all over the front page; on Wednesday, you're photographed alongside your long-suffering wife vowing to fight this outrageous slur; on Thursday, you're resigning to spend more time with your family and the prime minister issues a statement saying the nation will always be grateful to you for your long years of public service culminating in the passage of the Municipal Airports (Parking Lot Signage) Bill, and on Friday your successor is seated behind your desk already working on his own career-detonating scandal.

Washington doesn't seem to do things that way. In a Beltway political scandal, you appoint a special prosecutor who investigates it for years and the scandal metastasizes and morphs in bizarre fantastic ways. I'm not being especially partisan here. I thought Bill Clinton should have resigned when the blue dress showed up. But the months pass and instead he's testifying to the grand jury about his definition of non-sexual relations -- if the party of the first part is apart from the parts of the party of the second part while the party of the second part is partaking of the parts of the party of the first part, etc. -- and once you're arguing on that basis the very process is a mockery.

What's just happened to Scooter Libby is, I think, worse. In his closing remarks, Patrick Fitzgerald invited the jury to view a narrow perjury case as something epic: ''What is this case about?'' the special counsel mused. ''Is it about something bigger?'' Fortunately, he was musing rhetorically, and he had the answer on hand: ''There is a cloud over the vice president. . . . There is a cloud over the White House.''

Indeed. And what exactly is the cloud? Is it that the name of a covert agent was intentionally leaked in breach of the relevant law on non-disclosure?

No. On the alleged violation of Valerie Plame's identity, Fitzgerald was unable to produce not only a perpetrator but any crime.

Is the cloud then a more general murk? A politically motivated attempt to damage the white knight Joe Wilson as he sallied forth against the Bush dragon?

No. The man who leaked Valerie Plame's name was Richard Armitage, Colin Powell's deputy at the State Department and a man who dislikes Rove, Cheney and all their neocon warmongering works. The journalist he leaked it to -- Bob Novak -- was also opposed to the Iraq war. Neither Armitage nor Novak had any animus against Joe Wilson. On the contrary, they broadly share Wilson's skepticism on the threat posed by Saddam. There was no conspiracy, just Armitage gossiping like the gravelly voiced schoolgirl he's been for years.

When a prosecutor speaks about ''a cloud over the vice president's office'' and ''a cloud over the White House,'' he is speaking politically. There is no law about the amount of cumulus permitted over 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The prosecutor is speculating on political capital -- reputation, credibility, the currency of politics. Once damaged, they're hard to recover. So, even if it's not within the purview of the jury, his question is relevant to the wider world: How did this cloud get there and stay there even though it had no meaningful rainfall?

Answer: Patrick Fitzgerald.

The prosecutor knew from the beginning that (a) leaking Valerie Plame's name was not a crime and (b) the guy who did it was Richard Armitage. In other words, he was aware that the public and media perception of this ''case'' was entirely wrong: There was no conspiracy by Bush ideologues to damage a whistleblower, only an anti-war official making an offhand remark to an anti-war reporter. Even the usual appeals to prosecutorial discretion (Libby was a peripheral figure with only he said/she said evidence in an investigation with no underlying crime) don't convey the scale of Fitzgerald's perversity: He knew, in fact, that there was no cloud, that under all the dark scudding about Rove and Cheney there was only sunny Richard Armitage blabbing away accidentally. Yet he chose to let the entirely false impression of his ''case'' sit out there month in, month out, year after year, glowering over the White House, doing great damage to the presidency on the critical issue of the day.

So much of the current degraded discourse on the war -- ''Bush lied'' -- comes from the false perceptions of the Joe Wilson Niger story. Britain's MI-6, the French, the Italians and most other functioning intelligence services believe Saddam was trying to procure uranium from Africa. Lord Butler's special investigation supports it. So does the Senate Intelligence Committee. So Wilson's original charge is if not false then at the very least unproven, and the conspiracy arising therefrom entirely nonexistent. But the damage inflicted by the cloud is real and lasting.

As for Scooter Libby, he faces up to 25 years in jail for the crime of failing to remember when he first heard the name of Valerie Plame -- whether by accident or intent no one can ever say for sure. But we also know that Joe Wilson failed to remember that his original briefing to the CIA after getting back from Niger was significantly different from the way he characterized it in his op-ed in the New York Times. We do know that the contemptible Armitage failed to come forward and clear the air as his colleagues were smeared for months on end. We do know that his boss Colin Powell sat by as the very character of the administration was corroded.

And we know that Patrick Fitzgerald knew all this and more as he frittered away the years, and the ''political blood lust'' (as National Review's Rich Lowry calls it) grew ever more disconnected from humdrum reality. The cloud over the White House is Fitzgerald's, and his closing remarks to the jury were highly revealing. If he dislikes Bush and Cheney and the Iraq war, whoopee: Run against them, or donate to the Democrats, or get a talk-radio show. Instead, he chose in full knowledge of the truth to maintain artificially a three-year cloud over the White House while the anti-Bush left frantically mistook its salivating for the first drops of a downpour. The result is the disgrace of Scooter Libby. Big deal. Patrick Fitzgerald's disgrace is the greater, and a huge victory not for justice or the law but for the criminalization of politics.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fitzman; joewilsonlied; partisanwitchhunt; showtrial
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1 posted on 03/11/2007 3:56:19 AM PDT by Laverne
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To: Laverne

Meanwhile Hillary illegaly holds 900+ FBI files and nothing is done. We damn sure don't want any of that law and order going on around the Nation.


2 posted on 03/11/2007 4:10:22 AM PDT by Waco
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To: Laverne

A good article that finally tells the truth.

That truth is that Libby was convicted in a Kangaroo court where even the jurists realise they sacrificed Scooter Libby to the gods of Democratic political personal destruction.

Fitzgerald as large a piece of dog dung as he is ,is just a pawn used by the Democrats in their efforts to bring down the president.

This is one of the most shameful episodes in American Jidicial history and by doing their dirty work for them Fitzgerald has perhaps assured himself a high office in any democrat administration. I say perhaps because when the Dems look close even thaey might not want to be associated with his slime or have him in their proximity.

This man deliberately set out to hang someone close to Cheney, Scooter was available.


3 posted on 03/11/2007 4:12:10 AM PDT by sgtbono2002 (I will forgive Jane Fonda, when the Jews forgive Hitler.)
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To: Laverne

" but for the criminalization of politics "

Boy, does that phrase bring mixed feelings....

I understand what Mr. Steyn is getting at -- but I've also felt for years that congresscritter politicians would benefit from a (pardon the term) liberal application of tar 'n feathers....

"Politics", as practiced in 2007 America, *should* be declared a criminal act.....


4 posted on 03/11/2007 4:14:33 AM PDT by Uncle Ike (Aspiring Guru Seeks Disciples and Admiring Followers -- apply within)
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To: Cannonette

ping


5 posted on 03/11/2007 4:15:08 AM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (Civilian Irregular Information Defense Group -- Distributed IO and counter-PsyOps)
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To: Laverne

Makes my blood boil.


6 posted on 03/11/2007 4:16:47 AM PDT by Loyal Buckeye
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To: sgtbono2002

And the Bush administration played right into his hands by appointing him in the first place or even agreeing to a special prosecutor just to appease congressional Democrats.

Gross stupidity, and not just because of Scooter Libby, but also for the reason cited by the author - Fitzgerald and his kangaroo investigation dragged on casting a pall over the administration and, even more importantly, the war effort and the WoT.


7 posted on 03/11/2007 4:21:45 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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To: Laverne

Wow - I'm not familiar with Mark Steyn - which way does he generally lean in his editorials? He hit it right on.


8 posted on 03/11/2007 4:34:25 AM PDT by RushingWater (Pres. Bush honors Mexican sovereignty over our own - Pardon Ramos/Campeon/Hernandez)
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To: Laverne; Miss Marple; Molly Pitcher; lysie; kassie; Jemian; kstewskis; Victoria Delsoul; ...

Spot on!


9 posted on 03/11/2007 4:35:21 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
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To: sgtbono2002

Steyn is great as always, but I wish he would have addressed the Judge in the case. Fitzy is a creep, a political hack who used both the Grand Jury and Judge Walton to misstate the case. The question is: Was Judge Walton a willing participant? I think the answer is yes, the Judge's decisions favored Fitzy time and time again. I have said it before, I'll say it again: Judge Walton should hang up his black robe and hang his head in shame.

The question is: Who will write the article on the Judge's decisions? I may be overreacting to what Judge Walton did in this case, as I am not a lawyer, and I'm ignorant on legal proceedings. But Walton's refusal to allow a memory expert (and retrospectively we know that at least one of the jurors asked why was no memory expert testified), and his refusal to allow Andrea Mitchell to testify, and his decision to disallow testimony that would impeach Russert, tells me the Judge was pushing for a guilty outcome. That is not his job, or at least not a normal jugde with integrity. Does Walton have any integrity? If he did, he would overturn the verdict, claim that Fitzy overstepped his bounds, and dismiss all charges.

Remember, Russert filed a false affidavit and did so with Fitzy's knowledge.

Furthermore, the judge allowed that Collin's guy on the jury, a guy who worked for Woodward and was a neighbor of Russerts, knew Pincus and used to work for the WAPO. And this is fairness? It is a travesty.

FREE SCOOTER


10 posted on 03/11/2007 4:35:59 AM PDT by Laverne
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To: RushingWater

" which way does he generally lean in his editorials? He hit it right on. "

Asked and answered.....


11 posted on 03/11/2007 4:36:05 AM PDT by Uncle Ike (Aspiring Guru Seeks Disciples and Admiring Followers -- apply within)
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To: RushingWater

Steyn is awesome; I never miss reading any of his articles when posted here on FR.


12 posted on 03/11/2007 4:37:10 AM PDT by Laverne
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To: Howlin; STARWISE; the Real fifi

Scooter ping.


13 posted on 03/11/2007 4:38:17 AM PDT by Laverne
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To: Laverne

Is it really worth having special prosecutors? Has this been a practice before the Clinton Administration? It seems like a lot of wasted money on both Administrations? I am seriously not sure if we ever had one before.


14 posted on 03/11/2007 4:44:41 AM PDT by napscoordinator
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To: RushingWater
Mark Steyn is very conservative, and nails these things perfectly.

Keep an eye out for him every Sunday.

15 posted on 03/11/2007 4:46:27 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
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To: napscoordinator

" I am seriously not sure if we ever had one before. "

Does the name "Richard M. Nixon" ring a bell??


16 posted on 03/11/2007 4:46:31 AM PDT by Uncle Ike (Aspiring Guru Seeks Disciples and Admiring Followers -- apply within)
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To: Laverne

This says much about the low state of politics today. A virtual, political, show-trial is conducted on an innocent man with a connection to the administration, while the real guilty party is all but forgotten, or purposely ignored. Meanwhile the man in charge of the investigation has an axe to grind and is an appointee of the Bush administration.

All the usual suspects then line up and offer their opinion: all based on cheap party politics. At least Steyn got it right.


17 posted on 03/11/2007 4:46:43 AM PDT by period end of story ("Fred C. Dobbs don't say nothing he don't mean.")
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To: RushingWater

"Wow - I'm not familiar with Mark Steyn "

Steyn is to pundits as Tiger Woods is to golfers, he is that good. Best of century quality.


18 posted on 03/11/2007 4:47:22 AM PDT by FastCoyote
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To: Laverne
Big deal. Patrick Fitzgerald's disgrace is the greater, and a huge victory not for justice or the law but for the criminalization of politics.

Amen.

19 posted on 03/11/2007 4:49:44 AM PDT by mewzilla (Property must be secured or liberty cannot exist. John Adams)
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To: napscoordinator
Wasn't Walsh a special prosecutor during the Reagan Administration? (Think Iran/Contra) Reagan was very sensitive of undue criticsm of Lawrence Walsh, that he made sure those in the administration were not critical of him.

Ken Starr on the other hand was slimed by the Clinton machine for following the law. Typical Clinton BS.

20 posted on 03/11/2007 4:50:41 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
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