CIA LEAK INVESTIGATION
What Ashcroft Was Told
By Murray Waas, National Journal
© National Journal Group Inc.
Thursday, June 8, 2006
http://news.nationaljournal.com/articles/0608nj1.htm
Then-Attorney General John Ashcroft continued to oversee the
Valerie Plame-CIA leak probe for more than two months in late
2003 after he learned in extensive briefings that FBI agents
suspected White House aides Karl Rove and I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby of trying to mislead the FBI to conceal their roles in the
leak, according to government records and interviews. Despite
these briefings, which took place between October and December
2003, and despite the fact that senior White House aides might
become central to the leak case, Ashcroft did not recuse himself
from the matter until December 30, when he allowed the
appointment of a special prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, to take
over the investigation.
In late 2003, the attorney general was told that FBI agents
suspected White House aides of trying to conceal their roles in
leaking Valerie Plame's identity.
According to people with firsthand knowledge of the briefings,
senior Justice Department officials told Ashcroft that the FBI
had uncovered evidence that Libby, then chief of staff to Vice
President Dick Cheney, had misled the bureau about his role in
the leaking of Plame's identity to the press.
By November, investigators had obtained personal notes of
Libby's that indicated he had first learned from Cheney that
Plame was a CIA officer. But Libby was insisting in FBI
interviews that he had learned Plame's name and identity from
journalists. Libby was also telling investigators that when he
told reporters that Plame worked for the CIA, he was only
passing along an unsubstantiated rumor.
Officials also told Ashcroft that investigators did not believe
Libby's account, according to sources knowledgeable about the
briefings, and that Libby might have lied to the FBI to defend
other -- more senior -- administration officials.
Ashcroft was told no later than November 2003 that investigators
also doubted the accounts that Rove, President George W. Bush's
chief political adviser, had given the FBI as to how he, too,
learned that Plame was a CIA officer and how he came to disclose
that information to columnist Robert Novak.
It was Novak who, in a July 14, 2003, syndicated column, outed
Plame as a CIA employee, relying on Rove as one of his sources.
In a briefing devoted specifically to Rove and Novak, sources
said, officials told Ashcroft that investigators believed it was
possible that the presidential aide and the columnist had
devised a cover story to present to the FBI to make it appear
that Rove had not been a source for Novak's column.
Ashcroft's decision to continue overseeing the leak
investigation through December of 2003 was a sore point among
some federal investigators: Rove and Libby were top aides to the
president and vice president at the time, and Rove also had been
a political consultant to Ashcroft in his senatorial and
gubernatorial campaigns.
Since the Watergate era, attorneys general have traditionally
disqualified themselves from politically sensitive
investigations that involve their friends and political
associates, or those of the presidents they serve. Stephen
Gillers, a professor of legal ethics at New York University,
said in an interview that Ashcroft should have recused himself
from the Plame probe "once he learned that the people
professionally trained to draw these inferences" -- namely, the
FBI investigators -- "believed there was substantial reason that
Rove and Libby were involved in the leak."
Gillers added: "There is always going to be an interim period
during which you decide you will recuse or not recuse. But
[Ashcroft] should have had an 'aha!' moment when he learned that
someone, figuratively, or in this case literally, next door to
the president of the United States -- who was Ashcroft's boss --
was under suspicion."
Ashcroft declined to comment for this article. But in October
2003, Mark Corallo, then a spokesman for Ashcroft, said in an
interview with this reporter that Ashcroft maintained an intense
interest in the probe because he considered it imperative to
determine who leaked Plame's identity. "The attorney general
wants this to be investigated thoroughly and promptly, and to
that end, he wants to be informed of the progress of the
investigators," Corallo said. Corallo now serves as a spokesman
for Rove on the CIA leak case.
Current and former Justice officials not directly involved in
the case said in interviews for this article, almost without
exception, that once senior aides to both the president and vice
president came under suspicion, Ashcroft should have recused
himself entirely from the case.
Ashcroft's Deep Interest
Although it has been known that Ashcroft was briefed on the
Plame investigation in the months before Fitzgerald was
appointed, details of those briefings have not emerged until
now.
The Justice Department's involvement in the case began with the
announcement on September 30, 2003 -- two and a half months
after Plame was outed in Novak's column -- that the department
was responding to a CIA request to launch an investigation.
Plame, who had a covert agency job working on issues of weapons
proliferation, was unmasked at a time when the White House was
conducting a broad effort, led by Cheney and his staff, to
discredit Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson
IV.
In March 2002, the CIA had sent Wilson to Niger to look into
allegations that Saddam Hussein had tried to procure
weapons-grade uranium from the African nation. Wilson reported
back that he found no factual basis for the allegations.
President Bush and other senior administration officials,
however, cited the Niger-Iraq connection as one reason for
invading Iraq. In the spring of 2003, Wilson was publicly
alleging that the Bush administration had misrepresented
intelligence information to make its case to go to war with
Iraq. Wilson's best-known account of his findings in Niger
appeared in a July 6, 2003, New York Times op-ed.
Looking to undermine Wilson's credibility, Rove, Libby, and at
least one other senior administration official told reporters
that Plame had arranged for her husband's CIA-sponsored trip,
casting it as nepotism.
On September 30, the same day that Justice announced the leak
probe, Bush praised the decision: "There's just too many leaks,
and if there is a leak out of my administration, I want to know
who it is. If the person violated [the] law, the person will be
taken care of. And so I welcome the investigation."
In a statement that day, Ashcroft, perhaps sensitive to the fact
that he was a political appointee of the president, said that
prosecutors and FBI agents "who are and will be handling the
investigation are career professionals with extensive experience
in handling matters involving sensitive national security
information."
Ashcroft showed a deep interest in the investigation from its
very inception, seeking regular briefings on its progress,
according to Corallo, to the congressional testimony of senior
Justice officials who briefed the attorney general on the
matter, and to interviews with current and former federal law
enforcement officials.
The briefings for Ashcroft were conducted by Christopher Wray,
then the assistant attorney general in charge of the Criminal
Division, and John Dion, a 30-year career prosecutor who was the
day-to-day supervisor of the investigation.
On October 16, about two weeks after the investigation had
begun, Ashcroft assured the public, "I believe that we have been
making progress that's valuable in this matter." Asked about the
possible appointment of a special prosecutor, Ashcroft said, "I
have not foreclosed any options in this matter."
What the public did not know was that two days earlier, the FBI
had interviewed Libby for the first time. It was in that
interview that Libby first insisted that in mentioning to
reporters -- specifically Matthew Cooper of Time magazine and
Judith Miller of The New York Times -- that Plame worked for the
CIA, he had been careful to point out that the information was
unsubstantiated gossip he had heard from other journalists.
Libby also told the FBI that a day or two before he spoke to
Cooper and Miller, he was told about Plame by NBC Washington
Bureau Chief Tim Russert.
According to Libby's first FBI interview, which is summarized in
the grand jury indictment of Libby that was handed up in October
2005: "During a conversation with Tim Russert on NBC News on
July 10 or 11, 2003, Russert asked Libby if Libby was aware that
Wilson's wife worked for the CIA; Libby responded to Russert
that he did not know that, and Russert replied that all the
reporters knew it." On July 12, 2003, Libby spoke with Miller
and Cooper, telling them that Plame worked for the CIA.
In November 2003, the FBI interviewed Libby a second time, and
information derived from that briefing was also passed on to
Ashcroft, sources said.
Around this same time, FBI agents had obtained Libby's own notes
stating that Cheney, not Russert, was the person who told Libby
about Plame's CIA connection. Also by then, investigators had
obtained other government records and the accounts of other
witnesses indicating that Wilson's Niger mission and Plame's
possible role in sending her husband to Africa were major
preoccupations for the vice president. As the agents interviewed
Libby, they showed him his own notes on Cheney's disclosure to
him about Plame's CIA job.
According to the FBI report cited in Libby's indictment, when
Russert supposedly told Libby that Plame worked for the CIA,
"Libby was surprised by this statement because, while speaking
with Russert, Libby did not recall that he previously had
learned about Wilson's wife's employment from the vice
president."
Although the FBI had not yet been able to interview any of the
journalists -- Russert, Cooper, or Miller -- they were skeptical
of Libby's account, sources said. Word of their concern was
passed up to Ashcroft in a routine briefing on the status of the
leak probe.
Within, at most, 10 days of the interview with Libby, sources
said, Ashcroft was briefed not only on what Libby had told the
FBI but also on the evidence that had made FBI agents and
prosecutors doubt his story. Later, investigators obtained
Libby's handwritten notes that showed that Libby had learned
about Plame from Cheney.
Wray, the head of the criminal division, and Bruce C. Swartz, a
deputy assistant attorney general who oversees criminal
investigations involving sensitive national security matters,
were later told of the notes' existence and of the
investigators' belief that Libby might have been holding back to
protect Cheney. It is unclear, however, whether Ashcroft was
briefed in detail regarding Cheney before he recused himself
from the Plame case.
Other papers that the White House later turned over to federal
investigators would show that Cheney had been a driving force in
encouraging Libby to discredit Wilson's allegations against the
Bush administration.
Both Libby and Cheney have adamantly denied that the vice
president ever encouraged Libby to leak Plame's CIA status to
the media. But over time, both Fitzgerald and attorneys for
Libby have presented new information in court filings that
Cheney was personally involved in the broader effort against
Wilson.
In papers filed in federal court on May 12, 2006, for example,
Fitzgerald noted that Cheney was so upset over Wilson's New York
Times op-ed that the vice president made handwritten notes in
the margin of a photocopy of the column. Cheney wrote in the
margin: "Have they done this sort of thing before? Send an
Amb[assador] to answer a question?" referring to the CIA's
decision to send a former ambassador, Wilson, on an intelligence
fact-finding mission. Cheney also wrote: "Do we ordinarily send
people out pro bono to work for us? Or did his wife send him on
a junket?"
In his filing, Fitzgerald wrote: "Those annotations support the
proposition that publication of the Wilson op-ed acutely focused
the attention of the vice president and the defendant -- his
chief of staff -- on Mr. Wilson, on assertions made in his
article, and on responding to those assertions." It is unclear
whether investigators reviewed Cheney's annotations while
Ashcroft was overseeing the CIA probe, but sources say that
investigators had by then already theorized that Libby might be
trying to stymie the FBI.
Charles Wolfram, a professor emeritus of legal ethics at Cornell
Law School, said the "most distressing" ethical aspect of the
case was that Ashcroft continued overseeing the Plame probe even
after Cheney's name arose. "This should have been a matter of
common sense," Wolfram said. Ashcroft "should have left it to
career prosecutors whether or not to go after politically
sensitive targets. You can't have Ashcroft investigate the
people who appointed him or of his own political party."
Unique Hurdles
Around the same date that Libby was interviewed, the FBI also
questioned Rove for the first time. During that interview, and
later in his initial appearance before the grand jury, Rove did
not disclose that he had spoken about Plame to Time magazine's
Cooper. Ashcroft wasn't briefed about the omission because at
that time investigators apparently didn't know that Rove and
Cooper had talked on July 9, 2003, just before Novak's column
appeared.
Rove's failure in the early stages of the CIA leak probe to
provide information on his conversation with Cooper about Plame
is one of the reasons Rove is still under investigation by
Fitzgerald.
Although FBI investigators did not know of the Rove-Cooper phone
call, they were skeptical about Rove's account of his July
conversation with Novak. Both Rove and Novak have since said
that Rove was one of "two senior administration officials" cited
as sources in Novak's column.
According to the accounts of their conversation that both Rove
and Novak later gave to investigators, the subject of Wilson's
trip to Niger and any role played by Plame came up at the very
end of a conversation on an entirely different matter.
Rove told the FBI that when Novak mentioned Plame's CIA
connection and that she might have played a role in selecting
her husband to go to Niger, he (Rove) simply said that he had
heard much the same information. According to sources, Novak
later told investigators a virtually identical story.
Ashcroft was advised during the fall 2003 briefings that
investigators had strong doubts about Novak's and Rove's
accounts of their July 9 conversation. The investigators were
skeptical that Novak would have relied merely on an offhand
comment from Rove as the basis for writing his column about
Plame.
Questioned further, Rove told investigators that he originally
heard the information about Plame from a person whose name he
could not remember. That person, he said, might have been a
journalist, although he was not certain. Rove has also said that
he could not recall whether the conversation about Plame took
place in person or over the telephone.
Rove's version was strikingly similar to the one from Libby, who
had also been a source for reporters about Plame. Libby's
version to the FBI was that in telling reporters that Plame
worked for the CIA and may have played a role in sending Wilson
to Niger, he was merely passing on unsubstantiated rumors that
he had heard from other reporters. But the indictment of Libby
alleges that he lied about this, and instead was told about
Plame by Cheney, an undersecretary of State, and at least two
other government officials.
As National Journal reported recently, investigators further
believed -- based on the timing of phone calls between Rove and
Novak, and on other evidence -- that the Bush adviser and the
columnist may have devised a cover story to conceal Rove's role
in leaking information about Plame to Novak. Investigators were
so concerned about this possibility that Ashcroft received a
briefing specifically on that one topic, according to people
familiar