CIA Leak Probe Widens to Cheney's Office

United Press International
The U.S. inquiry into how a CIA agent's name was leaked
to the media has widened and now includes the office of
Vice President Dick Cheney.
Lawyers who asked not to be identified told the
Washington Post Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is
trying to determine if tensions between Cheney and the
spy agency could have been part of the chain that led to
the leak.
The cover for agent Valerie Plame was blown soon after
her husband, a U.S. diplomat, criticized the Bush
administration's justifications for going to war with
Iraq three years ago.
One of the reporters involved spent 85 days in jail for
refusing to divulge her sources at grand jury hearings.
Fitzgerald has personally interviewed numerous officials
from the CIA, White House and State Department, although
the Washington Post said Tuesday it was not clear
whether Fitzgerald plans to charge anyone inside the
Bush administration with a crime.
================================
Administration officials are reportedly bracing for
possible indictments as early as this week.
White House Watch: Cheney resignation rumors fly
Posted on Tuesday, October 18 @ 16:19:40 EDT by drew
http://www.globalnewsmatrix.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3088
Sparked by today's Washington Post story that suggests
Vice President Cheney's office is involved in the Plame-CIA
spy link investigation, government officials and
advisers passed around rumors that the vice president
might step aside and that President Bush would elevate
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
"It's certainly an interesting but I still think highly
doubtful scenario," said a Bush insider. "And if that
should happen," added the official, "there will
undoubtedly be those who believe the whole thing was
orchestrated – another brilliant Machiavellian move by
the VP."
Said another Bush associate of the rumor, "Yes. This is
not good." The rumor spread so fast that some
Republicans by late morning were already drawing up
reasons why Rice couldn't get the job or run for
president in 2008.
"Isn't she pro-choice?" asked a key Senate Republican
aide. Many White House insiders, however, said the Post
story and reports that the investigation was coming to a
close had officials instead more focused on who would be
dragged into the affair and if top aides would be
indicted and forced to resign.
"Folks on the inside and near inside are holding their
breath and wondering what's next," said a Bush adviser.
But, he added, they aren't focused on the future of the
vice president. "Not that, at least not seriously," he
said.
link
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CIA leak probe widens to Cheney's office
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CIA Leak Probe Widens to Cheney's Office
WXXA, NY - 22 minutes ago
The US inquiry into how a CIA agent's name was leaked to
the media has widened and now includes the office of
Vice President Dick Cheney. ...
MORE:>>
==================================

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What did Dick Cheney know and when did he know it?
Insiders report that the vice president’s office is a
major focus of the TraitorGate scandal.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/17/AR2005101701888_pf.html
washingtonpost.com
Cheney's Office Is A Focus in Leak Case
Sources Cite Role Of Feud With CIA
By Jim VandeHei and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, October 18, 2005; A01
As the investigation into the leak of a CIA agent's name
hurtles to an apparent conclusion, special prosecutor
Patrick J. Fitzgerald has zeroed in on the role of Vice
President Cheney's office, according to lawyers familiar
with the case and government officials. The prosecutor
has assembled evidence that suggests Cheney's
long-standing tensions with the CIA contributed to the
unmasking of operative Valerie Plame.
In grand jury sessions, including with New York Times
reporter Judith Miller, Fitzgerald has pressed witnesses
on what Cheney may have known about the effort to push
back against ex-diplomat and Iraq war critic Joseph C.
Wilson IV, including the leak of his wife's position at
the CIA, Miller and others said. But Fitzgerald has
focused more on the role of Cheney's top aides,
including Chief of Staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby,
lawyers involved in the case said.
One former CIA official told prosecutors early in the
probe about efforts by Cheney's office and his allies at
the National Security Council to obtain information
about Wilson's trip as long as two months before Plame
was unmasked in July 2003, according to a person
familiar with the account.
It is not clear whether Fitzgerald plans to charge
anyone inside the Bush administration with a crime. But
with the case reaching a climax -- administration
officials are braced for possible indictments as early
as this week-- it is increasingly clear that Cheney and
his aides have been deeply enmeshed in events
surrounding the Plame affair from the outset.
It was a request by Cheney for more CIA information
that, unknown to him, started a chain of events that led
to Wilson's mission three years ago. His staff pressed
the CIA for information about it one year later. And it
was Libby who talked about Wilson's wife with at least
two reporters before her identity became public,
according to evidence Fitzgerald has amassed and which
parties close to the case have acknowledged.
Lawyers in the case said Fitzgerald has focused
extensively on whether behind-the-scenes efforts by the
vice president's aides and other senior Bush aides were
part of a criminal campaign to punish Wilson in part by
unmasking his wife.
In a move people involved in the case read as a sign
that the end is near, Fitzgerald's spokesman yesterday
told the Associated Press that the prosecutor planned to
announce his conclusions in Washington, where the grand
jury has been meeting, instead of Chicago, where the
prosecutor is based. Some lawyers close to the case
cited courthouse talk that Fitzgerald might announce his
findings as early as tomorrow, though hard evidence
about his intentions and timing remained elusive.
In the course of the investigation, Fitzgerald has been
exposed to the intense, behind-the-scenes fight between
Cheney's office and the CIA over prewar intelligence and
the vice president's central role in compiling and then
defending the intelligence used to justify the war.
Miller, in a first-person account Sunday in the Times,
recalled that Libby complained in a June 23, 2003,
meeting in his office that the CIA was engaged in
"selective leaking" and a "hedging strategy" that would
make the agency look equally prescient whether or not
weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq.
The special prosecutor has personally interviewed
numerous officials from the CIA, White House and State
Department. In the process, he and his investigative
team have talked to a number of Cheney aides, including
Mary Matalin, his former strategist; Catherine Martin,
his former communications adviser; and Jennifer
Millerwise, his former spokeswoman. In the case of
Millerwise, she talked with the prosecutor more than two
years ago but never appeared before the grand jury,
according to a person familiar with her situation.
Starting in the days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, the vice president was at the forefront of a
White House campaign to convince Congress and the
American public that invading Iraq was central to
defeating terrorists worldwide. Cheney, a longtime
proponent of toppling Saddam Hussein, led the White
House effort to build the case that Iraq was an imminent
threat because it possessed a dangerous arsenal of
weapons.
Before the war, he traveled to CIA headquarters for
briefings, an unusual move that some critics interpreted
as an effort to pressure intelligence officials into
supporting his view of the evidence. After the war, when
critics started questioning whether the White House
relied on faulty information to justify war, Cheney and
Libby were central to the effort to defend the
intelligence and discredit the naysayers in Congress and
elsewhere.
Administration officials acknowledge that Cheney was
immersed in Iraq intelligence, and pressed aides
repeatedly for information on weapons programs. He
regularly requested follow-up information from the CIA
and others when a piece of intelligence caught his eye.
Wilson's trip, for example, was triggered by a question
Cheney asked during a regular morning intelligence
briefing. He had received a Defense Intelligence Agency
report alleging Iraq had sought uranium from Niger and
wanted to know what else the CIA may have known.
Cheney's office was not told ahead of time about the
Wilson mission to investigate the claim.
In the Bush White House, Cheney typically has operated
secretly, relying on advice from a tight circle of
longtime advisers, including Libby; David Addington, his
counsel; and his wife, Lynne, and two children,
including Liz, a top State Department official. But a
former Cheney aide, who requested anonymity, said it is
"implausible" that Cheney himself was involved in the
leaking of Plame's name because he rarely, if ever,
involved himself in press strategy.
One fact apparently critical to Fitzgerald's inquiry is
when Libby learned about Plame and her CIA employment.
Information that has emerged so far leaves this issue
murky. A former CIA official told investigators that
Cheney's office was seeking information about Wilson in
May 2003, but it's not certain that officials with the
vice president learned of the Plame connection then.
Miller, in her account, said Libby raised the issue of
Plame in the June 23, 2003, meeting, describing her as a
CIA employee and asserting that she had arranged the
trip to Niger. Earlier that month, Libby discussed
Wilson's trip with The Washington Post but never
mentioned his wife.
Senior administration officials said there was a
document circulated at the State Department -- before
Libby talked to Miller -- that mentioned Plame. It was
drafted in June as an administrative letter and
addressed to then-Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman,
who was acting secretary at the time since Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell and Deputy Secretary Richard L.
Armitage were out of the country.
As a former State Department official involved in the
process recalled it, Grossman wanted the letter as
background for a meeting at the White House, where the
discussion was focused on then growing criticism of
Bush's inclusion in his January State of the Union
speech of the allegation that Hussein had been seeking
uranium from Niger.
The letter to Grossman discussed the reasons the Bureau
of Intelligence and Research (INR) did not believe the
intelligence, which originated from foreign sources, was
accurate. It had a paragraph near the beginning, marked
"(S)," meaning it was classified secret, describing a
meeting at the CIA in February 2002, attended by another
INR analyst, where Plame introduced her husband as the
person who was to go to Niger.
Attached to the letter were the notes from the INR
analyst who had attended the session, but they were
written well after the event occurred and contained
mistakes about who was there and what was said,
according to a former intelligence official who reviewed
the document in the summer of 2003.
Grossman has refused to answer questions about the
letter, and it is not clear whether he talked about it
at the White House meeting he was said to have attended,
according to the former State official.
Fitzgerald has questioned several witnesses from the CIA
and State Department before the grand jury about the INR
memo, according to lawyers familiar with the case.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
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CIA LEAK: JUDITH MILLER
OPERATION MOCKINGBIRD ASSET!
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/JUDITH_MILLER.HTM