While You Were Watching Katrina
House Republicans derail probes of Plame affair
by Murray Waas
September 16th, 2005 3:10 PM
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0538,waas,67952,2.html
Murray Waas will continue covering the Plame affair on his blog,
http://www.whateveralready.blogspot.com
Republicans on three separate congressional committees this week
derailed three formal "resolutions of inquiry" by Democrats that
would have required the Bush administration to turn over
sensitive information and records relating to the outing of CIA
officer Valerie Plame.
Had the resolutions of inquiry been adopted, they would have led
to the first independent congressional inquiries of the Plame
affair, and perhaps even the public testimony of senior Bush
administration aides such as Karl Rove, the White House deputy
chief of staff, and I. Lewis (Scooter) Libby, the chief of staff
to Vice President Dick Cheney, about their personal roles.
As things currently stand, a special prosecutor, Patrick J.
Fitzgerald, continues to conduct a grand jury investigation of
Rove, Libby, and other White House officials, but the public has
gained scant insight into what, if anything, that inquiry has
uncovered.
Votes on all three House committees this week were along
strictly partisan lines. The House Select Committee on
Intelligence voted 11-9 on Thursday to adversely report H. Res.
418, which would have opened a formal inquiry by Congress of the
Plame affair. The House International Relations Committee voted
26-21 against the same resolution one day earlier. And the House
Judiciary Committee voted 15-11 on Wednesday as well against
launching an inquiry.
Republicans argued that any vote in favor of the resolution
might impair Fitzgerald’s ongoing probe. In the case of the
House Intelligence Committee, they were aided when, at the very
last minute, the Justice Department informed the committee that
Fitzgerald himself opposed any independent inquiry by Congress
at this point.
In a letter to the committee, dated September 14, William E.
Moschella, an assistant attorney general for legislative
affairs, wrote: "Mr. Fitzgerald has advised that production at
this time of the documents responsive to H. Res.418 and the
other resolutions, and any attendant hearings, would interfere
with his investigation. Accordingly, we request that the
committee report adversely H. Res. 418."
Democrats, however, pointed out that Congress engaged in its own
extensive formal investigations of Watergate and Whitewater even
while special prosecutors conducted criminal inquiries.
Representative John Conyers of Michigan, the ranking Democrat
and former chairman of the Judiciary Committee, made just that
point during the debate, telling his colleagues:
"Let us not forget the endless hearings in this committee and
others on alleged Clinton-Gore campaign finance violations, the
Whitewater claims, and Clinton White House Travel Office
firings. These were matters all under Justice Department review
at the time of our hearings.
"Finally, I must remind my colleagues of the numerous House and
Senate hearings on Watergate that were simultaneous with the
Justice Department's own investigation."
In making the case for the resolutions, Conyers also cited a
recent Voice story about the rationale for appointing a special
prosecutor. The article disclosed that Justice Department
officials made that crucial move because investigators had
serious concerns that then attorney general John Ashcroft
continued to receive regular briefings about the inquiry despite
the fact that Karl Rove—a close personal and political friend of
Ashcroft—had become a subject of the probe. The story quoted
senior law enforcement sources as saying that Ashcroft continued
the briefings even after he was told investigators firmly
believed that Rove had withheld important information from them
during an FBI interview.
Conyers questioned the Justice Department's handling of the
Plame investigation prior to Fitzgerald's appointment virtually
since its inception, alleging that Bush administration officials
botched the initial stages of the inquiry, or perhaps even
purposely stymied the efforts of investigators:
"The purpose of this resolution is to get to the bottom of what
happened and why the Justice Department slow-walked the
investigation at the beginning. We know that, despite [initial]
urgent pleas from the CIA for a criminal investigation into the
leaker, the Justice Department and White House dragged their
feet. The Department then waited three days before notifying the
White House of the breach and subsequent investigation. The
White House then waited an additional 11 hours before telling
staff to preserve evidence."
Conyers wasn’t done there:
"We now know that then attorney general John Ashcroft insisted
on being briefed on Department interviews of Mr. Rove that were
conducted in connection with the leak. He did so despite his own
long-standing ties to Mr. Rove; Mr. Ashcroft had paid Mr. Rove
almost $750,000 for work on several campaigns. That Mr. Ashcroft
eventually recused himself demonstrates there were conflicts of
interest with his continued involvement."
A Justice Department spokesman did not return telephone calls
for comment either on Wednesday or Thursday. Ashcroft also
declined to comment.
The House Armed Services Committee will be soon the fourth
congressional committee to consider the matter. Their vote is
scheduled for September 20. But it's similarly unlikely that any
Republicans will break ranks and vote in favor an inquiry.
======================

In this photograph taken in June 2003, Karl Rove, senior advisor
to President Bush and Robert Novak are pictured together at a
party marking the 40th anniversary of Novak's newspaper column
at the Army Navy Club in Washington DC. At the event a number of
people wore buttons reading, 'I'm a source, not a target.' Rove
is at the center of a controversy about the leaking of a CIA
operative's identity which originally appeared in Novak's
newspaper column. (AP Photo/Lauren Shay)

http://www.apfn.org/apfn/leakgate.htm
Judith Miller has been in jail for 78 days... 9/22/05
village voice > news > What Now, Karl? by Murray Waas
Murray Waas will be writing more about the latest in the Plame
affair
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