July 15, 2005
Rove-gate: Who Leaked to the Leakers?
This isn't about Karl Rove
by Justin Raimondo
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=6677
What if Karl Rove isn't guilty of knowingly leaking Valerie Plame's name as a
covert CIA agent involved in nuclear proliferation issues? What if Rove's
lawyer, Robert Luskin, is correct when he says that he's been assured by
prosecutors that his client is not a target of the ongoing investigation into
Plame-gate? I'm going to swim against the tide, here, and against the
expectations of my readers, by suggesting that this investigation isn't about
Rove and, furthermore, that Rove is a victim, in an important sense, someone
who was used and abused by the real culprits. And who are these mysterious
culprits? We'll get to that in a moment, but first some background
One thing that has always struck me as odd about this whole affair and I
wasn't the only one is a seemingly minor detail: why did Novak's original
column, which started all this brouhaha, identify Valerie Plame by her maiden
name? After all, most married women even in this era of Women's Liberation
defer to the tradition of taking their husband's name, but I have to admit
that, even after wondering about it for a brief moment, I shrugged and moved
on. As it turns out, however, this is an important detail, because now we have
Rove's lawyer saying that he at no time gave out Valerie Plame's name: but if
Rove identified her as Joe Wilson's wife, what the heck is the difference?
The difference is that, as Valerie Plame, Mrs. Wilson was affiliated with a
CIA front company, Brewster-Jennings & Associates, engaged in tracking and
stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons. As soon as her name was made
public, the implications for U.S. national security amounted to a grave breach
far more of a crime than merely violating the Intelligence Identities
Protection Act, which has only had a single prosecution since its passage in
1982. As the Washington Post reported when the Plame scandal broke:
"A former diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity said yesterday that
every foreign intelligence service would run Plame's name through its
databases within hours of its publication to determine if she had visited
their country and to reconstruct her activities. 'That's why the agency is so
sensitive about just publishing her name,' the former diplomat said."
The publication of her maiden name not only endangered Valerie Wilson, but
also blew the cover of a CIA front and imperiled anyone she might have come in
contact with during her stint overseas. This isn't just a matter of of
violating a statute that, at most, entails a 10-year jail sentence and a fine
this is a question of possible espionage.
What also seems fairly clear is that Karl Rove would not have had direct
knowledge of Plame-Wilson's covert activities on behalf of the CIA, and that
only a very few people high up in the national security bureaucracy had the
clearance to get access to her name. So who was it? If Rove leaked to Novak,
and half a dozen Washington reporters, then who leaked to the leakers?
This isn't about Rove.
It's about a cabal of war hawks inside the administration who passed on this
information to others without telling them about Plame-Wilson's deep cover
status, perhaps suggesting that she was just an analyst working at a desk
rather than a covert operative involved in a vitally important overseas
operation, the knowledge of which was highly compartmentalized and only
dispensed on a need-to-know basis. When Rove and his shills blabbed to
reporters and anyone who would listen, they didn't realize that they were
aiding and abetting an elaborate ploy to stick it to the CIA.
Seen against the backdrop of the fierce intra-bureaucratic war that broke out
in the administration in the run-up to the Iraq war with the CIA and the
mainline intelligence and diplomatic communities pitted against civilian
neoconservatives in the upper echelons of the Pentagon and the Office of the
Vice President the outing of Plame and her colleagues amounts to an act of
espionage committed out of a desire to exact revenge. The leakers meant to
retaliate not just against Joe Wilson, through his wife, but against the "old
guard" that was resisting the campaign to lie us into war. When the CIA
wouldn't go along with the neocon program and "spice up" their analyses with
Ahmed Chalabi's tall tales and the outright forgery of the Niger uranium
documents, the War Party struck back at them with the sort of viciousness for
which the neocons are rightly renowned.
The neocons had a fix on their target; now the question was how to get someone
else to pull the trigger. The leakers, in order to protect themselves,
"laundered" the leak through journalists (Judith Miller, one of their favorite
conduits) and Bush operatives Rove. In his book, The Politics of Truth, Joe
Wilson says as much:
"Apparently, according to two journalist sources of mine, when Rove learned
that he might have violated the law, he turned on Cheney and Libby and made it
clear that he held them responsible for the problem they had created for the
administration. The protracted silence on this topic from the White House
masks considerable tension between the Office of the President and the Office
of the Vice President.
"The rumors swirling around Rove, Libby, and Abrams were so pervasive in
Washington that the White House press secretary, Scott McClellan, was obliged
to address them in an October 2003 briefing, saying of Rove: 'The president
knows he wasn't involved.
It's simply not true.' McClellan refused to be
drawn into a similar direct denial of Libby's or Abrams's possible
involvement, however."
Suddenly, the complacent and often complicit American media seems to be
waking up. Reporters are now publicly pillorying White House spokesman Scott
McClellan:
"QUESTION: You're in a bad spot here, Scott
"(LAUGHTER)
"
because after the investigation began after the criminal investigation
was under way you said, October 10th, 2003, 'I spoke with those individuals,
Rove, Abrams and Libby. As I pointed out, those individuals assured me they
were not involved in this,' from that podium. That's after the criminal
investigation began. Now that Rove has essentially been caught red-handed
peddling this information, all of a sudden you have respect for the sanctity
of the criminal investigation.
"MCCLELLAN: No, that's not a correct characterization. And I think you are
well aware of that."
Reporters who heard McClellan's assurances back in October 2003 weren't being
deceived so much as lulled to sleep, and that really didn't take much of an
effort on the part of the administration, now did it? They were basically
asleep anyway, and weren't really listening to what was being said. Some
people were paying attention, however, and taking notes, Joshua Marshall for
one:
"So, when McClellan was asked to be more clear, he opted for a meaninglessly
vague statement and then fell back on the 'leaking of classified information'
dodge. Can we all take note of this now? That denial wasn't what it seemed to
be. In fact, I doubt it was a real denial at all.
"There's more there. Why not find it?"
Patrick J. "Bulldog" Fitzgerald is now in the process of finding it and Rove
is not his real quarry, although he and some others in the White House could
wind up as collateral damage. By all indications, Bulldog's real target points
more in the direction of the Office of the Vice President. Ambassador Wilson
knows who his enemies are, and he pointed to them in his book and in an
interview with Joe Conason in Salon:
"Gleaned from all those crosscurrents of information, the most plausible
scenario, and the one that I've heard most frequently from different sources,
has been that there was a meeting in the middle of March 2003, chaired by
either [Cheney's chief of staff] Scooter Libby or the vice president but
more frequently I've heard chaired by Scooter at which a decision was made
to get a 'work-up' on me. That meant getting as much information about me as
they could: about my past, about my life, about my family. This, in and of
itself, is abominable. Then that information was passed at the appropriate
time to the White House Communications Office, and at some point a decision
was made to go ahead and start to smear me, after my opinion piece appeared in
the New York Times."
"Salon: You mention two other names: John Hannah, who works in the Office of
the Vice President, and David Wurmser, who is a special assistant to John
Bolton, the undersecretary of state for arms control and national security.
Last Wednesday, their names both appeared on a chart that accompanied an
article in the New York Times about the Pentagon's Office of Special Plans and
the war cabal within the Bush administration. Did these people run an
intelligence operation against you?"
"Wilson: I don't know if it's the same unit, but it's very clear, from what
I've heard, that the meeting in March 2003 led to an intelligence operation
against my family and me. That's what a work-up is to try to find everything
you can about an American citizen."
After the War Party met in solemn conclave, and the command went out from
Cheney: "Bring me the head of Joe Wilson!", there was only one logical place
for Cheney's minions to go. Who in the administration would've had access to
the specific information regarding Plame-Wilson's role in a deep-cover CIA
operation involving nuclear proliferation? Why, the man who was the State
Department deputy secretary in charge of "weapons of mass destruction" the
somewhat irritable if not downright reckless John Bolton, would-be ambassador
to the UN, who played a central role in promulgating the Niger Uranium Myth.
Conveniently, two of Bolton's assistants, David Wurmser and John Hannah, also
worked in Cheney's office. A story by UPI's Richard Sale, published last year,
points at Cheney's office and specifically at Hannah as having played a key
role in all this:
"Federal law-enforcement officials said that they have developed hard evidence
of possible criminal misconduct by two employees of Vice President Dick
Cheney's office related to the unlawful exposure of a CIA officer's identity
last year. The investigation, which is continuing, could lead to indictments,
a Justice Department official said.
"According to these sources, John Hannah and Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis
'Scooter' Libby, were the two Cheney employees. 'We believe that Hannah was
the major player in this,' one federal law-enforcement officer said.
The
strategy of the FBI is to make clear to Hannah 'that he faces a real
possibility of doing jail time' as a way to pressure him to name superiors,
one federal law-enforcement official said."
Hannah is Cheney's Middle East policy point-man, and before that was director
of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP). Middle East expert
Juan Cole shines his reportorial flashlight on what's under that particular
rock:
"Libby and Hannah form part of a 13-man vice presidential advisory team, sort
of a veep NSC [National Security Council], which helps underpin Cheney's
dominance in the US foreign policy area. Hannah is a neoconservative and old
cold warrior who is really more of a Soviet expert than a Middle East expert.
But in the 90s he for a while headed up the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy (WINEP), a think tank that represents the interests of the American
Israel Political Action Committee (AIPAC). Hannah is said to have been behind
Cheney's and consequently Bush's support for refusing to deal with Yasser
Arafat. But he was also deeply involved in getting up the Iraq war.
"
The AIPAC connection should raise a red flag: AIPAC is already at the center
of a case involving espionage conducted by Israel against the United States,
with Pentagon analyst Larry Franklin indicted [.pdf] for passing classified
information on to longtime AIPAC leader Steve Rosen and his aide Keith
Weissman, with an Israeli embassy official, chief political officer Naor Gilon,
directly involved. In both cases, which involve the unlawful dissemination of
sensitive U.S. secrets, the defense is claiming that "everyone does it" and
that the classified information they're accused of leaking or, in AIPAC's
case, directly handing over to the Israeli government is supposedly "common
knowledge."
Treason is nothing to these people, because their real allegiance is not to
the U.S., but to their own cause, which is perpetual war. Libby and Hannah
were the enforcers who made sure that the lies put out by this administration
to bamboozle us into war with Iraq were strictly adhered to within the
government. Libby was a frequent visitor over at CIA headquarters, along with
his boss, and, as Juan Cole writes:
"[H]annah had fingers in all three rotten pies from which the worst intel came
Sharon's office in Israel, the Pentagon Office of Special Plans (for which
Hannah served as a liaison to Cheney), and fraudster Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi
National Congress. Hannah had probably been the one who fed Cheney the Niger
uranium story, triggering a Cheney request to the CIA to verify it and thence
Joe Wilson's trip to Niamey in spring of 2002, where he found the story to be
an absurd falsehood on the face of it."
In short, Hannah was at the center of that vortex of deception that swept us
into a disastrous war. When Ambassador Wilson came out with his famous
debunking of the infamous "16 words," Hannah was well positioned to go after
the heretic.
If we look at the passing of this leak as we would a ball game, as "super
smart commenter Sara" pointed out on Digby's blog, the probable trajectory of
the ball as it makes its way to the goal goes something like this: "Bolton to
Wurmser and Hannah, to Cheney (and/or Libby) to Rove."
In this case, however, unlike soccer or basketball, possession of the ball is
not an asset: according to the rules of this game, the last man holding it
loses.
I do not believe for a moment that this lengthy and increasingly controversial
investigation is centered around alleged violations of a rarely invoked
statute, incurring a penalty that hardly seems proportionate to the energy
expended to get a conviction. It is extremely hard to prove that someone has
violated the Intelligence Identities Protection Act; there are all sorts of
conditions and sub-clauses that provide a legal escape route for anyone so
charged: that can't be what all this is about.
If, however, Fitzgerald can prove there was a conspiracy inside the government
to collect and selectively reveal classified information in order to crush
political opponents, and shape U.S. policy, then the charges could be much
more serious. By all accounts, the Plame investigation is said to be widening,
and I would venture to say that by this time it is wide enough to include
charges of espionage. The mere existence of a highly placed cabal that was
engaged in collecting and utilizing highly sensitive information a kind of
intelligence bank that existed outside of normal governmental channels would
be of great interest to the FBI's counterintelligence unit, and word is out
that they've been plenty busy lately. Who made withdrawals from this
Intelligence Bank, and did any of these account holders include foreign
governments such as Iran, which received an intelligence treasure trove from
neocon poster boy Ahmed Chalabi, and Israel, which is already under suspicion
because of the Franklin affair, and has close links to several of the suspects
in the Plame-gate investigation?
And then there is the question of the Niger uranium forgeries themselves: who
forged the documents that fooled a president? Wilson's exposure of the Niger
uranium ploy angered whoever introduced those documents into the U.S.
intelligence stream it was Hannah and Libby, by all accounts, who fought to
keep these allegations in the president's speech, in spite of opposition from
the CIA and the State D
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