'PlameGate' Hardly a Summer Squall
by
Jim Lobe by
Jim Lobe
While
to people living outside the Washington Beltway, the current affair
over the disclosure by top White House officials of the identity
of a covert intelligence officer may seem somewhat esoteric, the
stakes could not be higher.
It is not just
that Karl Rove, President George W. Bush's top political adviser,
and Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, may have violated a 1982 law to protect U.S. spies and could
face criminal indictments, at least for perjury or obstruction of
justice.
The case may
also prove to be one more string albeit a very central one
that, if pulled with sufficient determination, could well
unravel a very tangled ball of yarn, and one that would confirm
recent revelations in the British press the so-called Downing
Street memo that the Bush administration was "fixing
the facts" about the alleged threat posed by Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein in order to grease the rails to war.
It may also
expose how a close-knit group of neoconservatives and Republican
activists both inside and outside the administration also waged
war against professionals in the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
and the State Department in the run-up to war precisely because,
as experts, they repeatedly came up with new "facts" that
contradicted the propaganda of both the White House and its backers.
Facts that somehow either had to be "fixed" or discredited.
If special
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and his grand jury find that the White
House and its "nongovernmental" supporters conducted a
deliberate campaign to discredit Ambassador Joseph Wilson, in part
by revealing the identity of his CIA spouse, Valerie Plame, many
Republican lawmakers, who are increasingly nervous and tightlipped
about the case, will be forced to distance themselves from Bush
and the Iraq war, making it far more difficult for him to rally
support for new adventures, such as air strikes or covert actions
against Iran.
"This
case is about Iraq, not Niger," wrote the New York Times'
Frank Rich in a widely noted column Sunday entitled "Follow
the Uranium," a reference to Wilson's trip in February
2002 to Niger to follow up on an intelligence document since
found to have been forged that appeared to show that Hussein
had bought a large quantity of yellowcake uranium from that African
nation, presumably for his alleged nuclear weapons program.
"The real
victims are the American people, not the Wilsons," Rich went
on. "The real culprit
is not Mr. Rove but the gang that
sent American sons and daughters to war on trumped-up grounds and
in so doing diverted finite resources, human and otherwise, from
fighting the terrorists who attacked us on 9/11. That's why the
stakes are so high
."
Wilson, of
course, first suggested that "fixing facts" was precisely
what the administration was doing when he wrote his July 6, 2003,
Times op-ed. The article recounted how he had been sent by
the CIA to Niger to investigate the yellowcake report, found that
such a transfer was "highly unlikely," and reported his
conclusions orally to CIA debriefers after his return.
He also wrote
that he originally understood that Cheney had asked the CIA that
such a mission be carried out and thus assumed it had been reported
back up to the vice president's office.
The fact that
references to Hussein's alleged acquisition of yellowcake kept popping
up in Bush's and Cheney's speeches over the following months, however,
prompted him to pose the key question in his article: "Did
the Bush administration manipulate intelligence about Saddam Hussein's
weapons programs to justify an invasion of Iraq?" Eight days
later, Chicago Sun-Times columnist Robert Novak, citing "two
senior administration officials" as sources, not only publicly
identified Plame as Wilson's wife, but also stressed that Plame,
whose expertise in the agency was weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
had proposed her husband for the mission in part because he had
served in Niger. In fact, as a result of new information that has
come to light over the past week, it is now known that both Rove
and Libby told or confirmed to at least two other reporters before
Novak's article appeared that Wilson's wife worked for the CIA and
that she had played a role in his selection.
That the aim
of these contacts was to discredit Wilson also now appears beyond
question. Indeed, citing sources close to the grand jury investigation,
the Los Angeles Times reported Monday that Rove and Libby
were "especially intent on undercutting Wilson's credibility,"
to the point where it caused some consternation in the White House.
The White House
"off-the-record" campaign against Wilson was supplemented
by a very loud "on-the-record" effort by prominent neoconservatives
and their news media, including the Wall Street Journal's
editorial page, The Weekly Standard, and National Review
online.
The last kicked
it off July 11 with an article by Clifford May, the president of
the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD) and the only
person who was neither a journalist nor an administration official
who claims to have known about Plame's relationship to Wilson before
Novak reported about it.
While May,
a former communications director for the National Republican Committee,
did not identify Wilson's relationship with Plame, he included a
litany of "talking points" about Wilson's objectivity.
"[H]e's a pro-Saudi, leftist partisan with an ax to grind,"
May declared.
A week later,
May published a second article in which he broadened his attack
to the CIA in general, calling the selection of "a retired,
Bush-bashing diplomat" for such a sensitive mission a "dereliction
of duty," suggesting the choice showed either incompetence
or a deliberate effort to derail the administration's march to war.
It was a familiar
theme that he and other neoconservative critics of the agency, such
as Richard Perle, James Woolsey, Frank Gaffney, Newt Gingrich, and
the Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol all of whom serve
on FDD's board of directors and were outspoken supporters of the
war have voiced frequently over the past several years, and
particularly in the run-up to the war itself.
Indeed, just
as lower level CIA officials were discussing sending Wilson to Niger,
top agency officials several stories higher were already discussing
how to implement a new top-secret intelligence order from Bush ordering
the CIA to support the U.S. military in achieving regime change
in Iraq, according to the Bob Woodward's Plan
of Attack.
And just as
the CIA debriefers were presumably compiling their assessment of
the yellowcake report based in part on Wilson's mission after his
return in March 2002, Cheney was declaring publicly for the first
time that Hussein was "actively pursuing nuclear weapons at
this time."
With
the CIA having been given its marching orders and Cheney squarely
on the record, top agency officials saw that Wilson's "facts"
would be unwelcome. Three months before the Downing Street memo,
the "fix" was in, and it now appears that Wilson's conclusions
were never passed along to the vice president's office.
July
19, 2005
Jim
Lobe [send him mail] is Inter Press
Service's correspondent in Washington, DC. Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service Jim
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