KARL ROVE: AN AMERICAN TRAITOR

Bill Gallagher
KARL ROVE: AN AMERICAN TRAITOR
Wed Jul 27, 2005 15:01
64.140.158.65


 

KARL ROVE: AN AMERICAN TRAITOR
By Bill Gallagher

DETROIT -- It is the holy of holies, the sanctum sanctorum, the
secret underground bunker where Vice President Dick Cheney, the
Bushevik Buddha, holds court, shares his wisdom and issues orders.
It is also a crime scene. It's the dark cave where Cheney and other
conspirators plotted the outing of an undercover CIA officer. And
when their treasonous deed was exposed, they used this vile den to
map their cover-up plan, which mounting evidence shows may well have
included perjury and obstruction of justice.

President George W. Bush was certainly involved as the initiator of
the crimes, and he bears the ultimate responsibly for the felonious
behavior of his loyal followers. Given his short attention span,
aversion to details and unwillingness to work long hours, the sordid
task was delegated to others.

The president never saw the implications of selling the big lie that
Saddam Hussein was seeking enriched uranium in Niger to use as fuel
for an imaginary nuclear weapons program. First of all, Bush had
sold so many lies -- as he does to this day, linking Iraq to 9/11 --
that he figured, no big deal about the Niger hoax.

And never forget, our "war president" only sees the world in clear,
unequivocal terms. Saddam is "evil." We are fighting for "freedom."
So if the president must exaggerate, deceive or flat-out lie to make
his case, George W. Bush just shrugs.

When former ambassador Joseph Wilson went public and challenged the
Bush administration's phony claims that Iraq was trying to acquire
uranium for its nuclear program, the president may have cared little
about the exposure, but men around him smelled big trouble.

They knew that, when Wilson told the truth, others might follow. Nip
it in the bud. Punish Wilson and fire a warning shot to intimidate
others. You talk, and you'll pay a price. While the president went
to work in his own way -- trying to learn how to ride a new bike,
pumping iron, playing video games and watching sports on TV -- three
of his closest confidants knew what needed to be done and began the
dirty work.

Karl Rove, Bush's "brain," relished the task. It involved his
specialties: vengeance and destroying enemies. I can hear it now.
The year is 2003. Rove, in the midst of a White House Bible-study
class, ducks out for a minute and gets on the phone with
Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the vice president's chief of staff.

Rove: "Scooter, did you read what that f----r Joe Wilson wrote in
the New York Times? We'll f--k him like no one has ever f----d him."

Libby: "Right you are, Karl. We've got to break his legs and I know
just how. His wife is in the CIA. I saw the State Department memo on
her. She's been doing covert stuff for years. You'd never know it.
She keeps a real low profile and does WMD analysis. She does her job
and she's a babe."

Rove: "Scooter, I can't believe this. I'll bet she got the Africa
assignment for Wilson and he got paid to go out and screw us over."

Libby: "No, she didn't, Karl. It was one of those other f---ks in
Langley who tried to scuttle us at every turn. But she did know he
was going over there. Her name is Plame, Valerie Plame. But she
sometimes goes by Wilson."

Rove: "Does Dick know this?"

Libby: "Sure, he showed me the memo. He's down in his den. Let's
check in with him."

Rove: "I'll be there in 10 minutes. I've got Cardinal Law on hold,
and I've got to wrap up my Bible-study class."

The next scene takes place 10 minutes later in Cheney's secret
bunker.

Cheney: "What's up, guys? Don't bring me any bad news and spoil my
day. The price of sweet crude is going out of sight and Rummy just
told me he ordered his auditors to lay off Halliburton and quit all
this chicken-sh-t documentation stuff. Hell, we're at war. What's
up?"

Libby: "Remember that State Department memo about Joe Wilson's
wife?"

Cheney: "Of course. I still can't understand what she sees in that
bastard Wilson."

Rove: "Dick, Scooter and I were sort of thinking out loud about that
and one way to f--k Wilson and send a message to any other loudmouth
liberal traitors might be to drop his wife's name and her
connections on a few friendly reporters."

Cheney: "She's fair game, my friends. Who'd you have in mind?"

Rove: "Well, Bob Novak, of course. He'll do it in a minute. I
thought about Brit Hume, but it's too obvious. We can't use Fox all
the time. Maybe we should drop a dime on a few others to cover our
tracks?"

Libby: "I could call Tim Russert. He's usually helpful, and he likes
you, Dick."

Rove: "Matt Cooper from 'Time' would go for it, and we could ask
Chalabi to slip it to Judy Miller at the Times. She'll repeat
anything he tells her. Besides, we owe her for all those front-page
stories."

Cheney: "Do it yourself, Karl. Chalabi will ask for money. Sounds
like a plan. Let me know what happens."

Rove: "Any down sides to this?"

Cheney: "Don't get caught. But, Karl, remember, all we have to do is
win another term and this will all be behind us."

Libby: "Besides, this is all about national security and we can use
that to protect ourselves."

Rove: "Should I tell the president?"

Cheney: "I'll handle that, Karl. I'll tell him what we've decided."

Unfair? Implausible? No. This dramatic re-enactment creates scenes
that portray the Busheviks just as they are -- ruthless apparatchiks
willing to do and say anything to crush an enemy. Their actions were
unlawful and treasonous. When they got caught in their treachery,
they lied and broke more laws in an attempt to save their own hides.

While Karl Rove is usually viewed as the central figure in this
blossoming scandal, Dick Cheney's dirty fingerprints are found
everywhere in these serial crimes and deceptions.

Cheney, more than anyone else in the Bush administration, was eager
to make the public case that Saddam Hussein was a dangerous threat
to our national security and that the invasion of Iraq was the only
way to stop him.

Since the facts didn't support those wild claims, Cheney was hell-
bent to fabricate them any way he could. He had his old pal, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, set up his own operation in the Pentagon
to cherry-pick, shape and "fix" intelligence to ramp up the case
against Iraq.

Cheney would personally handle the troublesome CIA. He, Libby and
others would pull up to CIA headquarters on Saturday mornings to
review the work being done on the Iraq "threat." Like mafia heavies,
they'd pull up in their big black cars, burst through the doors and
oversee the intelligence-refining process.

Munching on doughnuts, they'd look over the shoulders of
professional CIA intelligence analysts, looking for holes in their
work and scouring for any scintilla of evidence that Saddam was
planning to build nukes.

There wasn't much to go on. But when Cheney's thugs would find
crumbs, they'd slip them over to Rummy's boys, who would try to make
them into something more tasty for Lord Halliburton to chew on.

That's why Cheney went crazy when Joe Wilson blew the lid off their
lies. If he got away with it, what about others at the CIA? This
could open up floodgates at the Pentagon, the State Department and
the National Security Council. Not to mention what the Brits might
reveal about the phony reasons for war (See: Downing Street Memo).

So Cheney, Rove and Libby set out to discredit and harm Joe Wilson,
a career diplomat George H.W. Bush had hailed as a "hero" when
Wilson served as acting U.S. ambassador to Iraq during the first
Gulf War. The slimy plot failed in part. They outed Valerie Plame,
but her husband kept talking. We'll never know, though, how many
others were driven into silence.

The plot began unraveling when former attorney general John
Ashcroft, in a moment of forced candor, had to admit he had too many
conflicts of interest to conduct a fair investigation into who
leaked the identity of the CIA officer. The probe required a special
prosecutor.

Now, Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor, is moving beyond
the question of whether White House officials broke the law when
they exposed an undercover agent into far more dangerous waters for
the conspirators. The prosecutor is after the big sharks.

The Los Angeles Times and Washington Post are both reporting that
Fitzgerald's team is looking at possible perjury in Rove and Libby's
statements to FBI agents and in their testimony before a federal
grand jury. The two most powerful White House staffers are also
suspected of obstructing justice by trying to cover up their
prominent roles in leaking Plame's identity.

Rove's attorney, Robert Luskin, told the Los Angeles Times his
client "has, from the beginning, been candid, forthcoming and
accurate." Matt Cooper, of "Time" magazine, says he phoned Rove to
discuss Plame's CIA job and that Rove confirmed she worked at the
agency. It turns out Rove never mentioned this conversation during
his first interview with the FBI. Candid? Forthcoming? Accurate?

The Washington Post reports Libby testified that he learned about
Plame from NBC's Tim Russert. But Russert flatly denies that story.
In a written statement, the Post reports Russert "told the
prosecutor that 'he did not know Ms. Plame's name or that she was a
CIA operative' and that he did not provide such information to Libby
in July 2003." Someone committed perjury and I don't think it's that
fine Irish-Catholic lad from Buffalo.

People in the intelligence community are outraged over Plame's
outing and the administration's cavalier attitude.

James Marcinkowski is a former CIA operations officer and was a
classmate of Plame's when they trained for service in the agency.

Marcinkowski now works as an attorney for the city of Royal Oak,
Mich., and we have had several conversations about the scandal. He
told me the identities of covert officers have been revealed in the
past, but said, "Never in the history of the CIA has the White House
been responsible and that's what makes this so outrageous."

Scene: Cheney's secret bunker, last Thursday night, 8 p.m., just
before the president's bedtime.

President: "Hey, Dick. What's all this stuff about ole Turd Blossom
and Scooter being in deep sh-t? They can't really send them to jail.
What the hell did they do wrong? Ya know, I'm a war president.
You're my vice president. We're up against evil. We're being strong
leaders."

Cheney: "Well, sir, that's right, but they might have some problems.
That's why we have the best lawyers anywhere lined up. In the worst-
case scenario, if Karl and Scooter are convicted, all you have to do
is pardon them. I'll explain what you have to do when the time
comes. I feel terrible about this."

President: "Me too, Dick. Hey, I got an idea. I'll give 'em both
Presidential Medals of Freedom. I like doing that and it does make
people feel better when they really f----k-up big time. I was
wonderin', though -- Laura mentioned this -- are me and you in any
trouble on this thing?"

Cheney: "No, sir, not in the least. We cannot be charged with crimes
while in office. The only way they can get at us is through
impeachment and we control the Congress."

President: "That's good. But I hate to think people would start
talkin' impeachment about trivial things, like that stuff we said
about Saddam, the war and what we did to that liberal traitor
Wilson."

Cheney: "No, sir. Don't worry. Impeachment is for grave, serious
matters. Good night, Mr. President."

President: "You bet, D.C. Dick. By the way, can't tell ya enough
what a great job yer doin' fur my administration."

Cheney: "Thank you, sir." (Muttering under his breath) "Go f--k
yourself."


http://niagarafallsreporter.com/gallagher223.html
Bill Gallagher, a Peabody Award winner, is a former Niagara Falls
city councilman who now covers Detroit for Fox2 News. His e-mail
address is gallaghernewsman@sbcglobal.net .
Niagara Falls Reporter www.niagarafallsreporter.com  July 26 2005


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