Valerie Plame Redux

R. Richard

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Yet more Valerie Plame. However, this time from the man who actually "outed" Valerie Plame. If you read the whole article, it may just cjange your mind about who was invovled and how. Comment?

NOVAK SPEAKS ON SPY 'OUTING' & REVEALS: LEAKER'S NEW TALE IS ALL WET
By ROBERT NOVAK
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INTEL TELL-ALL: The State Department's Richard Armitagesays he inadvertently dropped the name of CIA employee Valerie Plame, above with her Bush-bashing hubby, Joseph Wilson. But his story may not be the whole truth.

September 14, 2006 -- COLUMNIST Robert Novak sets the record straight about Richard Armitage's real role in the Valerie Plame affair and reveals that the former top State Department official's recent mea culpa isn't the whole truth.

WASHINGTON - When Richard Armitage finally acknowledged last week he was my source three years ago in revealing Valerie Plame Wilson as a CIA employee, the former deputy secretary of state's interviews obscured what he really did. I want to set the record straight based on firsthand knowledge.

First, Armitage did not, as he now indicates, merely pass on something he had heard and that he "thought" might be so. Rather, he identified to me the CIA division where Mrs. Wilson worked, and said flatly that she recommended the mission to Niger by her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson. Second, Armitage did not slip me this information as idle chitchat, as he now suggests. He made clear he considered it especially suited for my column.

An accurate depiction of what Armitage actually said deepens the irony of him being my source. He was a foremost internal skeptic of the administration's war policy, and I long had opposed military intervention in Iraq. Zealous foes of George W. Bush transformed me improbably into the president's lapdog. But they cannot fit Armitage into the left-wing fantasy of a well-crafted White House conspiracy to destroy Joe and Valerie Wilson. The news that he and not Karl Rove was the leaker was devastating news for the left.

A peculiar convergence had joined Armitage and me on the same historical path. During his quarter of a century in Washington, I had no contact with Armitage before our fateful interview. I tried to see him in the first 21/2 years of the Bush administration, but he rebuffed me - summarily and with disdain, I thought.

Then, without explanation, in June 2003, Armitage's office said the deputy secretary would see me. This was two weeks before Joe Wilson surfaced himself as author of a 2002 report for the CIA debunking Iraqi interest in buying uranium in Africa.

I sat down with Armitage in his State Department office the afternoon of July 8 with tacit, rather than explicit, ground rules: deep background with nothing said attributed to Armitage or even an anonymous State Department official.

Consequently, I refused to identify Armitage as my leaker until his admission was forced by "Hubris," a new book by reporters Michael Isikoff and David Corn that absolutely identified him.

Late in my hourlong interview with Armitage, I asked why the CIA had sent Wilson - lacking intelligence experience, nuclear policy or recent contact with Niger - on the African mission. He told The Washington Post last week that his answer was: "I don't know, but I think his wife worked out there."

Neither of us took notes, and nobody else was present. But I recalled our conversation that week in writing a column, while Armitage reconstructed it months later for federal prosecutors. He had told me unequivocally that Mrs. Wilson worked in the CIA's Counter-Proliferation Division and that she had suggested her husband's mission. As for his current implications that he never expected this to be published, he noted that the story of Mrs. Wilson's role fit the style of the old Evans-Novak column - implying to me it continued reporting Washington inside information.

Mrs. Wilson's name appeared in my column July 14, 2003, but it was not until Oct. 1 that I heard about it from Armitage. Washington lobbyist Kenneth Duberstein, Armitage's close friend and political adviser, called me to say the deputy secretary feared he had "inadvertently" (the word Armitage used in last week's interviews) disclosed Mrs. Wilson's identity to me in July and was considering resignation. (Duberstein's phone call was disclosed in the Isikoff-Corn book, which used Duberstein as a source. They reported Duberstein was responsible for arranging my unexpected interview with Armitage.)

Duberstein told me Armitage wanted to know whether he was my source. I did not reply because I was sure that Armitage knew he was the source. I believed he contacted me Oct. 1 because of news the weekend of Sept. 27-28 that the Justice Department was investigating the leak. I cannot credit Armitage's current claim that he realized he was the source only when my Oct. 1 column revealed that the official who gave me the information was "no partisan gunslinger."

Armitage's silence the next 21/2 years caused intense pain for his colleagues in government and enabled partisan Democrats in Congress to falsely accuse Rove of being my primary source. When Armitage now says he was mute because of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's request, that does not explain his silent three months between his claimed first realization that he was the source and Fitzgerald's appointment on Dec. 30. Armitage's tardy self-disclosure is tainted because it is deceptive.
 
Novak said some of this last Friday. A little insight into Armitage himself is helpful in placing his politics squarly in the Bush camp.

Armitage was first in line to head the State Department before Powell was selected. The problem was Armitage was in the center of the "Iran Contra Scandal" under Regan. Bush's handlers knew he would never be confirmed by congress when that came to light, so he was given the number two slot in State.

His story that Carl Rove just happened to have "circulated a memo" detailing Plame's job at the CIA makes no sense at all unless Rove (with White House approval) was looking for someone to leak the story. In fact it turns out the memo only mentions Plame as an "employee of the CIA". She could have been a secretary for all that memo says.

If Novak is telling the truth, it seems Armitage had a lot more information on Plume than he was cleared to have and his story was seriously "deflated" for the Congressional Investigators.
 
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Jenny_Jackson said:
If Novak is telling the truth, it seems Armitage had a lot more information on Plume than he was cleared to have and his story was seriously "deflated" for the Congressional Investigators.

Interesting that Armitage can "deflate" the story he tells the congressional investigators with no apparent consequences. However, "Scooter" Libby is required to tell the absolute truth at all times.
 
R. Richard said:
Interesting that Armitage can "deflate" the story he tells the congressional investigators with no apparent consequences. However, "Scooter" Libby is required to tell the absolute truth at all times.
I thought so too. But appearently that's what happened
 
Novak and others would love to rewrite the history of all this. Bush himself said he, as President, simply declassified the information, so that no crime occurred when it was leaked.

Why would he have made this statement if it happened as Novak would have you believe?
 
I love the way he says he had "first-hand" knowledge" that this desperate pre-election malarkey was "devastating to the Left"!

We got them on exposing Plame, on bungling the Middle East, on torture. This week they have a bill in the Congress to dismantle the Bill of Rights. So sad, son. This crapola ain't gonna fly.
 
Interesting comment from Don Rumsfield on "Meet the Press" Sunday morning. Tim Russart asked him if he told Libby about Plume's work at the CIA.

Rumfield refused to answer directly. What he said was, "The President gave me the authority to classify and declassify information. Anything I told Libby was within those parameters."

So now we have Bush saying he declassified the information and Rumsfield declassifying it too? That just don't sound right.
 
But that isn't enough. Not only are they able to wave their magic tails and declassify Plame's status, they have this concocted story that it wasn't what it was anyway.

They've started early on it. Maybe with so-called news people like Novak to help, they can repeat the lies often enough to make them true.
 
Again, Armitage was one of the primary conspirators in Irangate. Or at the very least - he fell on his sword for the other co-conspirators.

He was also one of the architects for the Project for a New American Century. This is the group of war hawks placed into key roles in formulizing the strategy for making war against Iraq. After Irangate, this guy should have never been appointed to ANY position....yet he was...by Bush himself.

Now we are being fed this red herring. Woe is poor Scooter and Rovie. However, Cooter and Rovie leaked to Cooper and Miller. Rovie was also Novaks second source.

This was not an accidental slip of the tongue. This was a conspiracy to silence a critic who discovered that the evidence to support going to war with Iraq was all based on a pack of lies. The public was and is being lied to. And who will ever know how many CIA agents were compromised.
 
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