Role of Rove, Libby in CIA Leak Case Clearer
Bush and Cheney Aides' Testimony Contradicts Earlier
White House Statement
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/01/AR2005100101317.html
By Jim VandeHei and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, October 2, 2005; A05
As the CIA leak investigation heads toward its expected
conclusion this month, it has become increasingly clear
that two of the most powerful men in the Bush
administration were more involved in the unmasking of
operative Valerie Plame than the White House originally
indicated.
With New York Times reporter Judith Miller's release
from jail Thursday and testimony Friday before a federal
grand jury, the role of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice
President Cheney's chief of staff, came into clearer
focus. Libby, a central figure in the probe since its
earliest days and the vice president's main counselor,
discussed Plame with at least two reporters but
testified that he never mentioned her name or her covert
status at the CIA, according to lawyers in the case.
His story is similar to that of Karl Rove, President
Bush's top political adviser. Rove, who was not an
initial focus of the investigation, testified that he,
too, talked with two reporters about Plame but never
supplied her name or CIA role.
Their testimony seems to contradict what the White House
was saying a few months after Plame's CIA job became
public.
In October 2003, White House spokesman Scott McClellan
told reporters that he personally asked Libby and Rove
whether they were involved, "so I could come back to you
and say they were not involved." Asked if that was a
categorical denial of their involvement, he said, "That
is correct."
What remains a central mystery in the case is whether
special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald has accumulated
evidence during his two-year investigation that any
crime was committed. His investigation has White House
aides and congressional Republicans on edge as they
await Fitzgerald's announcement of an indictment or the
conclusion of the probe with no charges. The grand jury
is scheduled to expire Oct. 28, and lawyers in the case
expect Fitzgerald to signal his intentions as early as
this week.
Fitzgerald is investigating whether anyone illegally
disclosed Plame's name or undercover CIA job in
retaliation against her husband, Joseph C. Wilson IV. In
the summer of 2003, Wilson, a former diplomat, accused
the White House of using "twisted" intelligence to
justify the invasion of Iraq.
He claimed firsthand evidence: At the behest of the CIA,
he had flown to Niger in February 2002 to investigate
the administration's assertion that Iraq was trying to
purchase uranium in the African nation for use in its
nuclear weapons program. Wilson returned unconvinced the
assertion was true. However, Bush himself made the
charge in his 2003 State of the Union address, prompting
Wilson to spread word throughout the government and
eventually make public his rebuttal.
Many lawyers in the case have been skeptical that
Fitzgerald has the evidence to prove a violation of the
Intelligence Identities Protection Act, which is the
complicated crime he first set out to investigate, and
which requires showing that government officials knew an
operative had covert status and intentionally leaked the
operative's identity.
But a new theory about Fitzgerald's aim has emerged in
recent weeks from two lawyers who have had extensive
conversations with the prosecutor while representing
witnesses in the case. They surmise that Fitzgerald is
considering whether he can bring charges of a criminal
conspiracy perpetrated by a group of senior Bush
administration officials. Under this legal tactic,
Fitzgerald would attempt to establish that at least two
or more officials agreed to take affirmative steps to
discredit and retaliate against Wilson and leak
sensitive government information about his wife. To
prove a criminal conspiracy, the actions need not have
been criminal, but conspirators must have had a criminal
purpose.
Lawyers involved in the case interviewed for this report
agreed to talk only if their names were not used, citing
Fitzgerald's request for secrecy.
One source briefed on Miller's account of conversations
with Libby said it is doubtful her testimony would on
its own lead to charges against any government
officials. But, the source said, her account could
establish a piece of a web of actions taken by officials
that had an underlying criminal purpose.
Conspiracy cases are viewed by criminal prosecutors as
simpler to bring than more straightforward criminal
charges, but also trickier to sell to juries. "That
would arguably be a close call for a prosecutor, but it
could be tried," a veteran Washington criminal attorney
with longtime experience in national security cases said
yesterday.
Other lawyers in the case surmise Fitzgerald does not
have evidence of any crime at all and put Miller in jail
simply to get her testimony and finalize the
investigation. "Even assuming . . . that somebody
decided to answer back a critic, that is politics, not
criminal behavior," said one lawyer in the case. This
lawyer said the most benign outcome would be Fitzgerald
announcing that he completed a thorough investigation,
concluded no crime was committed and would not issue a
report.
The campaign to discredit Wilson's accusations came at a
critical moment in the Bush presidency. It occurred a
few months after the United States invaded Iraq and at a
time when Bush, Cheney and the entire administration
were under extraordinary pressure to back up their
prewar allegations that Iraq had large stockpiles of
chemical weapons and was working on a nuclear weapons
program.
The Niger claim was central to the White House's
rationale for war, and Wilson was on a one-man crusade
to disprove it. Early on, his actions caught the eye of
the vice president's office, which was often the
emotional and intellectual force pushing the United
States to war based on fears of potential weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq. Cheney and Libby were
intimately involved in building the case for the war,
which included warnings that Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein was actively pursuing nuclear weapons.
Cheney's staff was looking into Wilson as early as May
2003, nearly two months before columnist Robert D. Novak
identified Wilson's wife as a CIA operative, according
to administration sources familiar with the effort. What
stirred the interest of the vice president's office was
a May 6 New York Times column by Nicholas D. Kristof in
which the mission to Niger was described without using
Wilson's name. Kristof's column said Cheney had
authorized the trip.
According to former senior CIA officials, the vice
president's office pressed the CIA to find out how the
trip was arranged, because Cheney did not know that a
query he made much earlier to a CIA briefer about a
report alleging Iraq was seeking Niger uranium had
triggered Wilson's trip. "They were very uptight about
the vice president being tagged that way," a former
senior CIA official said, speaking on the condition of
anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. "They
asked questions that set [off] a chain of inquiries."
By early June, several weeks before Libby is said to
have known Plame's name, the State Department had
prepared a memo on the Niger case that contained
information on Plame in a section marked "(S)" for
secret. Around that time, Libby knew about the trip's
origins, though in an interview with The Washington Post
at the time, he did not mention any role played by
Wilson's wife.
By July 12, however, both Rove and Libby and perhaps
other senior White House officials knew about Wilson's
wife's position at the CIA and, according to lawyers
familiar with testimony in the probe, used that
information with reporters to undermine the significance
of Wilson's trip.
Staff writer Carol D. Leonnig contributed to this
report.
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