New Clues in the Plame Mystery
By Robert Parry
September 15, 2006
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/091506.html
A well-placed conservative source has added an important clue to
the mystery of the Bush administration’s “outing” of CIA officer
Valerie Plame after her husband, former Ambassador Joseph
Wilson, became one of the first Establishment figures to accuse
George W. Bush of having “twisted” intelligence to justify the
Iraq War.
The source, who knows both White House political adviser Karl
Rove and former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, told
me that the two men are much closer than many Washington
insiders understand, that they developed a friendship and a
working relationship when Bush was recruiting Colin Powell to be
Secretary of State.
In those negotiations, Armitage stood in for Powell and Rove
represented Bush – and after that, the two men provided a back
channel for sensitive information to pass between the White
House and the State Department, the source said.
The significance of this detail is that it undermines the
current “conventional wisdom” among Washington pundits that
Armitage acted alone – and innocently – in July 2003 when he
disclosed Plame’s covert identity to right-wing columnist Robert
Novak, who then got Rove to serve as a secondary source
confirming the information from Armitage.
This new revelation that Armitage and Rove worked together
behind the scenes also lends credence to Novak’s version of his
contacts with Armitage and other administration officials, both
as Novak sketched out those meetings in 2003 and then filled in
the details in a column on Sept. 14, 2006.
A week after Novak revealed Plame’s identity in a July 14, 2003,
column, he told Newsday that “I didn’t dig it out, it was given
to me,” adding that Bush administration officials “thought it
was significant, they gave me the name and I used it.” [Newsday,
July 22, 2003]
In the Sept. 14, 2006, column, Novak wrote that Armitage
divulged Plame’s identity toward the end of an hour-long
interview on July 8, 2003. According to Novak, he asked Armitage,
who was then deputy Secretary of State, why former Ambassador
Wilson had been sent on the trip to Africa.
Novak wrote that Armitage “told me unequivocally that Mrs.
Wilson worked in the CIA’s Counter-proliferation Division and
that she had suggested her husband’s mission. As for his [Armitage’s]
current implication that he [Armitage] never expected this to be
published, he [Armitage] noted that the story of Mrs. Wilson’s
role fit the style of the old Evans-Novak column – implying to
me that it continued reporting Washington inside information.”
In other words, Novak is challenging the version spun out in the
last two weeks by Armitage and his supporters who have claimed
that Armitage let Plame’s name slip out “inadvertently,” almost
as gossip, and never intended for it to be published.
When I asked my well-placed conservative source about that
scenario, he laughed and said, “Armitage isn’t a gossip, but he
is a leaker. There’s a difference.”
Nevertheless, the Armitage version was embraced by leading
Washington pundits as the final proof that Rove and the White
House had gotten a bum rap on the Plame affair. Washington Post
columnist David Broder even demanded that those who had
implicated Rove in what appeared to be a dirty trick “owe Karl
Rove an apology.”
But the new information from Novak’s column and my conservative
source points to a very different conclusion: that Armitage was
much more part of the White House team than the “conventional
wisdom” understood and that Broder and other big-time pundits
were snookered again.
Key Timing Question
Novak also contradicted the Armitage scenario on another key
point, that Novak supposedly had arranged the interview with the
help of longtime Republican operative Kenneth Duberstein.
Instead, Novak reported that Armitage’s granting of the
interview came out of the blue.
“During his quarter of a century in Washington, I had had no
contact with Armitage before our fateful interview,” Novak wrote
in his Sept. 14, 2006, column. “I tried to see him in the first
2 ½ years of the Bush administration, but he rebuffed me –
summarily and with disdain, I thought.
“Then, without explanation, in June 2003, Armitage’s office said
the deputy secretary would see me.” [Emphasis added]
Novak dated that call from Armitage’s office at about two weeks
before Wilson published his July 6, 2003, Op-Ed in the New York
Times, entitled, “What I Didn’t Find in Africa.” The time frame
of the call fits with when the White House was initiating a
preemptive strike against Wilson’s anticipated criticism of
Bush’s bogus claims about Iraq seeking uranium ore from Niger.
On June 23, 2003, also two weeks before Wilson’s article, Vice
President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, Lewis Libby, gave an
interview to New York Times reporter Judith Miller about Wilson
and, according to a later retrospective by the Times, may then
have passed on the tip that Wilson’s wife worked at the CIA.
In other words, just as Bush’s operatives were launching their
smear campaign against Wilson by briefing “friendly” reporters,
Armitage reversed his longstanding refusal to meet with Novak
and “without explanation” granted an interview. During that
interview, according to Novak, Armitage encouraged him to write
about Plame’s identity, much as Rove and Libby were doing with
other journalists simultaneously.
After the Armitage interview, Novak got confirmation about his
highly sensitive tip – a covert CIA officer’s identity – from
Rove, who – according to my conservative source – had been
working behind the scenes sharing sensitive information with
Armitage since the earliest days of the Bush administration.
Despite all that’s been written on the Plame affair, there has
never been an adequate explanation of why the President’s
political adviser would ever have been granted access to a
detail as discrete and dangerous as the identity of a CIA
officer, the kind of information that is traditionally
disseminated only on a strict need-to-know basis.
In this case, that “need to know” may have been that the Bush
administration put discrediting and damaging Joe Wilson ahead of
protecting the identity of a covert officer and her undercover
operation, which involved investigating the spread of dangerous
weapons in the Middle East.
These new clues in the Plame mystery suggest that – contrary to
Washington’s “conventional wisdom” which holds that Armitage’s
confession clears Rove and the White House of wrongdoing –
Armitage may have simply been another participant in the ugly
scheme.
[For a more details on the Plame case and Washington’s misguided
consensus on the story, see Consortiumnews.com’s “U.S. Press
Bigwigs Screw Up, Again.”]
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s
for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy
& Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq,
can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available
at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras,
Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'
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This White House Scandal Finally Tips the Scale!
LEAKGATE
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/leakgate.htm
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9am - Robert Novak, Syndicated Columnist | Columns
http://www.cspan.org
The real story behind the Armitage story
When Richard Armitage finally acknowledged last week he was my
source three years ago in revealing Valerie Plame Wilson as a
CIA employee, the former deputy secretary of state's interviews
obscured what he really did. I want to set the record straight
based on firsthand knowledge.
http://www.suntimes.com/index/novak.html