Cheney 'Authorized' Libby to Leak Classified Information
By Murray Waas - The National Journal
http://nationaljournal.com/about/njweekly/stories/2006/0209nj1.htm
Thursday 09 February 2006
Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, I. Lewis
(Scooter) Libby, testified to a federal grand jury that he had
been "authorized" by Cheney and other White House "superiors" in
the summer of 2003 to disclose classified information to
journalists to defend the Bush administration's use of prewar
intelligence in making the case to go to war with Iraq,
according to attorneys familiar with the matter, and to court
records.
According to sources with firsthand knowledge, Cheney authorized
Libby to release additional classified information, including
details of the NIE, to defend the administration's use of prewar
intelligence in making the case for war.
Libby specifically claimed that in one instance he had been
authorized to divulge portions of a then-still highly classified
National Intelligence Estimate regarding Saddam Hussein's
purported efforts to develop nuclear weapons, according to
correspondence recently filed in federal court by special
prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald.
Beyond what was stated in the court paper, say people with
firsthand knowledge of the matter, Libby also indicated what he
will offer as a broad defense during his upcoming criminal
trial: that Vice President Cheney and other senior Bush
administration officials had earlier encouraged and authorized
him to share classified information with journalists to build
public support for going to war. Later, after the war began in
2003, Cheney authorized Libby to release additional classified
information, including details of the NIE, to defend the
administration's use of prewar intelligence in making the case
for war.
Libby testified to the grand jury that he had been authorized to
share parts of the NIE with journalists in the summer of 2003 as
part of an effort to rebut charges then being made by former
U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson that the Bush administration had
misrepresented intelligence information to make a public case
for war.
Wilson had been sent on a CIA-sponsored mission to investigate
allegations that the African nation of Niger had sold uranium to
Iraq to develop a nuclear weapon. Despite the fact that Wilson
reported back that the information was most likely baseless, it
was still used in the President's 2003 State of the Union speech
to make the case for war.
But besides sharing details of the NIE with reporters during the
effort to rebut Wilson, Libby is also accused of telling
journalists that Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, had worked for
the CIA. Libby and other Bush administration officials believed
that if Plame played a role in the selection of her husband for
the Niger mission, that fact might discredit him.
A federal grand jury indicted Libby on October 28, 2005, on five
counts of making false statements, perjury, and obstruction of
justice, alleging that he concealed his role in leaking
information about Plame to the media. He resigned his positions
as chief of staff and national security adviser to Cheney the
same day. Libby has never claimed that Cheney encouraged him to
disclose information about Plame to the media.
In a January 23 letter, related to discovery issues for Libby's
upcoming trial, Fitzgerald wrote to Libby's attorneys: "Mr.
Libby testified in the grand jury that he had contact with
reporters in which he disclosed the content of the National
Intelligence Estimate ("NIE") … in the course of his interaction
with reporters in June and July 2003.… We also note that it is
our understanding that Mr. Libby testified that he was
authorized to disclose information about the NIE to the press by
his superiors."
Although it is not known if Cheney had told the special
prosecutor that he had authorized Libby to leak classified
information to reporters, Dan Richman, a professor of law at
Fordham University and a former federal prosecutor for the
Southern District of New York, said, "One certainly would not
expect Libby, as part of his defense, to claim some sort of
clear authorization from Cheney where none existed, because that
would clearly risk the government's calling Cheney to rebut that
claim."
The public correspondence does not mention the identities of the
"superiors" who authorized the leaking of the classified
information, but people with firsthand knowledge of the matter
identified one of them as Cheney. Libby also testified that he
worked closely with then-Deputy National Security Adviser
Stephen Hadley and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove
in deciding what information to leak to the press to build
public support for the war, and later, postwar, to defend the
administration's use of prewar intelligence.
In the correspondence, Fitzgerald also asserted that Libby
testified that he had met with then-New York Times reporter
Judith Miller on July 8, 2003, with the "purpose" of intending
"to transmit information" to her "concerning the NIE."
That particular meeting has been key to Fitzgerald's
investigation because the special prosecutor alleges that Libby
lied both to the FBI and to his federal grand jury by saying
that he had not discussed Plame with Miller on that date, when
in fact he did tell her of Plame's work for the CIA.
In an account of her grand jury testimony, Miller has written
that Libby discussed the NIE with her: "Mr. Libby also cited a
National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, produced by American
intelligence agencies in October 2002 … which he said had firmly
concluded that Iraq was seeking uranium." Portions of the NIE
were later declassified, but the material in it related to Niger
was still classified at the time.
Libby, through a spokesperson, declined to comment, and the vice
president, through a spokesperson, also declined to comment for
this story.
The new disclosure that Libby has claimed that the vice
president and others in the White House had authorized him to
release information to make the case to go to war, and later to
defend the administration's use of prewar intelligence, is
significant for several reasons. First, it significantly adds to
a mounting body of information that Cheney played a central and
personal role in directing efforts to counter claims by Wilson
and other administration critics that the Bush administration
had misused intelligence information to go to war with Iraq.
Second, it raises additional questions about Libby's motives in
concealing his role in leaking Plame's name to the press, if he
was in fact more broadly authorized by Cheney and others to
rebut former Ambassador Wilson's charges. The federal grand jury
indictment of Libby alleges that he had lied to the FBI and the
federal grand jury by claiming that when he provided information
to reporters about Plame's CIA employment, he was only passing
along what he understood to be unverified gossip that he had
heard from other journalists.
Instead, the indictment charges that Libby had in fact learned
of Plame's CIA status from at least four government officials,
Cheney among them, and from classified documents. Indeed, much
of Libby's earliest and most detailed information regarding
Plame's CIA employment came directly from the vice president,
according to information in Libby's grand jury indictment. "On
or about June 12, 2003," the indictment stated, "Libby was
advised by the Vice President of the United States that Wilson's
wife worked at the Central Intelligence Agency in the
Counterproliferation Division."
Libby testified that Cheney told him about Plame "in an off sort
of, curiosity sort of, fashion," according to other information
recently unsealed in federal court. Not long after that date,
Libby, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove, and a third
administration official began to tell reporters that Plame had
worked at the CIA, and that she had been responsible for sending
her husband to Niger.
Finally, the new information indicates that Libby is likely to
pursue a defense during his trial that he was broadly
"authorized" by Cheney and other "superiors" to defend the Bush
administration in making the case to go to war. Libby does not,
however, appear to be claiming that he was acting specifically
on Cheney's behalf in disclosing information about Plame to the
press.
Libby's legal strategy in asserting that Cheney and other Bush
administration officials authorized activities related to the
underlying allegations of criminal conduct leveled against him,
without approving of or encouraging him to engage in the
specific misconduct, is reminiscent of the defense strategy used
by Oliver North, who was a National Security Council official in
the Reagan administration.
North, a Marine lieutenant colonel assigned to the National
Security Council, implemented the Reagan administration's
efforts to covertly send arms to Iran in exchange for the
release of American hostages held in the Middle East, and to
covertly fund and provide military assistance to the Nicaraguan
Contras at a time when federal law prohibited such activities.
Later, it was discovered that North and other Reagan
administration officials had diverted funds they had received
from the Iranian arms sales to covertly fund the Contras.
If Libby's defense adopts strategies used by North, it might be
in part because the strategies largely worked for North and in
part because Libby's defense team has quietly retained John D.
Cline, who was a defense attorney for North. Cline, a
San-Francisco partner at the Jones Day law firm, has specialized
in the use of classified information in defending clients
charged with wrongdoing in national security cases.
Among his detractors, Cline is what is known as a "graymail"
specialist-an attorney who, critics say, purposely makes onerous
demands on the federal government to disclose classified
information in the course of defending his clients, in an effort
to force the government to dismiss the charges. Although Cline
declined to be interviewed for this story, he has said that the
use of classified information is necessary in assuring that
defendants are accorded due process and receive fair trials.
In the Libby case, Cline has frustrated prosecutors by
demanding, as part of pretrial discovery, more than 10 months of
the President's Daily Brief, or PDBs, the president's morning
intelligence briefing. The reports are among the most highly
classified documents in government, not only because they often
contain sensitive intelligence and methods, but also because
they indicate what the president and policy makers consider to
be the most pressing national security threats. In the past, the
Bush administration has defied bipartisan requests from the
Intelligence committees in Congress to turn over PDBs for
review.
After Cline demanded the PDBs, Fitzgerald wrote to him on
January 9 that the prosecutor's office has only "received a very
discrete amount of material relating to PDBs" and "never
requested copies of PDBs" themselves, in part because "they are
extraordinarily sensitive documents which are usually highly
classified." Moreover, Fitzgerald wrote, only a relatively small
number of PDB pages included reference to Wilson's trip to
Niger.
But Cline has insisted that it is imperative for his client's
defense to be able to review the PDBs because part of Libby's
defense is that he may have had a faulty memory regarding
conversations he had with government officials and reporters
regarding Plame, in that he had so many other pressing issues to
consider every day as chief of staff and national security
adviser to the vice president.
In a January 31 court filing, attorneys for Libby argued: "Mr.
Libby will show that, in the constant rush of more pressing
matters, any errors he made in FBI interviews or grand jury
testimony, months after the conversations, were the result of
confusion, mistake, faulty memory, rather than a willful intent
to deceive."
In the North case, the Iran-Contra independent counsel, Lawrence
Walsh, was forced to dismiss many of the central charges against
North, including the most serious ones-that North defrauded
taxpayers by diverting proceeds from arms sales to Iran to
finance the Nicaraguan Contras-because intelligence agencies and
the Reagan administration refused to declassify documents
necessary for a trial on those charges.
Walsh and many of his deputies believed that the Reagan Justice
Department refused to declassify documents necessary to try
North because officials were personally sympathetic to him. A
North trial would also have politically embarrassed the Reagan
administration, and a North conviction might have led to charges
against higher officials.
In court filings, Walsh said that much of what intelligence
agencies and the Reagan administration had refused to declassify
had long before been published in the media or made public in
some other way.
"It was a backdoor way of shutting us down," said one former
Iran-Contra prosecutor, who spoke only on the condition that his
name not be used, because his current position as a private
attorney requires frequent dealings with attorneys who were on
the other side of the North case at the time. "It was a cover-up
by means of an administrative action, and it was an effective
cover-up at that."
The former prosecutor added: "The intelligence agencies do not
declassify things on the pretext that they are protecting state
secrets, but the truth is that we were investigating and
prosecuting their own. The same was true for the Reagan
administration. Cline was particularly adept at working the
system."
Is it possible that a prosecution of Libby might be impeded or
even derailed entirely by the refusal of the Bush White House or
its Justice Department to declassify information that might be
necessary to try Libby? "Under the current statute, it may well
be the attorney general's call - or whomever he designates - to
ultimately decide what should be declassified, and what might
not be, in the Libby case," said Michael Bromwich, a former
associate Iran-Contra independent counsel and a former Justice
Department inspector general.
William Treanor, the dean of Fordham University's Law School,
and also a former associate Iran-contra special counsel, said
that it is less likely that the Bush administration would
challenge Fitzgerald as former administrations did with special
prosecutors. Walsh, dealing with the Reagan and elder Bush
administrations, and Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth
Starr, dealing with the Clinton administration, often alleged
that political appointees in the Justice Department worked
purposely to undermine their investigations.
"Walsh and Starr were not appointed by an attorney general,"
Treanor said, noting that Walsh, Starr, and earlier special
prosecutors had been appointed by a three-judge federal panel
instead of by the Justice Department. Currently, he pointed out,
special prosecutors are appointed by the attorney general or
their designate.
"With Walsh or Starr, the president and his supporters could
more easily argue that a prosecutor was overzealous or
irresponsible, because there had been a three-judge panel that
appointed him," Treanor said. "With Fitzgerald, you have a
prosecutor who was appointed by the deputy attorney general [at
the direction of the attorney general]. The administration
almost has to stand behind him because this is someone they
selected themselves. It is harder to criticize someone you
yourself put into play."
There are other reasons why it might prove difficult to undercut
Fitzgerald, including outstanding questions about the role that
Cheney and others in the Bush administration played in the
effort to discredit Wilson, and the fact that Cheney is still
the point man in defending the White House's use of prewar
intelligence on Iraq.
And the new disclosure, that Libby is alleging that Cheney and
other Bush administration officials "authorized" h