July 17, 2005
THE NATION
Memo May Hold Key to CIA Leak
# Prosecutors are asking whether anyone on Air Force One learned
Valerie Plame's identity from an official report, and gave it to
journalists.
By Tom Hamburger and Sonni Efron, Times Staff Writers
WASHINGTON — Prosecutors investigating whether Bush
administration officials disclosed the name of an undercover CIA
operative to news reporters have focused on a 2003 State
Department memo that investigators believe might help point to
the source of the leak, according to those directly familiar
with the proceedings.
The memo detailed how a former diplomat was chosen to
investigate claims that Iraq had sought to purchase uranium from
the African nation of Niger, and it included a description of
the role that the CIA operative, who was the diplomat's wife,
played in suggesting his name for the assignment.
Prosecutors have been asking key witnesses whether they had seen
the document.
The former diplomat, Joseph C. Wilson IV, came to national
attention in July 2003 after he wrote an op-ed article in the
New York Times suggesting that the Bush administration had
manipulated intelligence to exaggerate Baghdad's nuclear weapons
program and justify the invasion of Iraq. After his article
appeared, his wife's name and CIA status were leaked to
columnist Robert Novak in what critics of the administration
have alleged was an act of retribution.
A probe was launched in 2003 to determine whether anyone
deliberately leaked the name of Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame. It
is a felony to knowingly reveal the identity of covert
personnel.
The memo was sent by State Department officials to then-
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, who according to news
reports has testified before the grand jury. Powell had the memo
with him on Air Force One when President Bush traveled to Africa
on July 7, 2003, the day after Wilson's piece was published,
according to a person with knowledge of the investigation.
What happened on Air Force One has been of interest to
prosecutors, who want to know whether anyone who saw the memo
learned Plame's identity and told it to journalists.
Telephone logs from the presidential aircraft have been
subpoenaed. Among those on the flight was then-Press Secretary
Ari Fleischer, who has testified before the grand jury.
Fleischer declined to comment for this article, referring all
questions to prosecutors. But in a Sept. 29, 2003, e-mail to The
Times, Fleischer denied he was the source of the leak. "I have
no idea who told Novak, but it was not me," he wrote.
Investigators' apparent focus on the memo was first reported
Saturday by the New York Times. But not everyone with knowledge
of the memo finds it to be significant.
One former State Department official, who because of the
sensitive nature of the case asked not to be named, said that
the information on Plame in the memo was sparse, but that her
identity was known through other means in much of the
intelligence community, suggesting that the memo might not have
been the way her name spread among government officials — and
the media. As the former State Department official recalled, the
memo identified Plame only as "Wilson's wife" — it did not give
her first or last name, and it did not mention her undercover
status.
"The Niger uranium issue was a huge argument within the
intelligence community for over a year before the Novak column,"
the former official said. "So all the ins and outs of Niger
uranium were the subject of endless meetings and discussions and
food fights among people in the intelligence community and all
the details of it were well-known."
Once Wilson's July 6, 2003, article appeared, then-Deputy
Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage arranged for a copy of
the memo, which had been drafted earlier detailing the Niger
matter, to be forwarded to Powell, who was on his way to Africa
with Bush.
"There was never any feedback from anyone on the memo," the
former State Department official said. "The memo itself was
basically repeating common knowledge in the community."
The memo was written by the State Department's intelligence and
research bureau. It outlined the history of the Niger uranium
controversy and emphasized the bureau's view that there was no
substance to reports that Iraq had sought to purchase uranium
from Niger.
A State Department analyst who had attended the meeting at which
the CIA decided to dispatch Wilson to Africa to check out the
story kept the notes from that session, the former official
said. The notes mentioned that Wilson's wife had suggested
sending Wilson.
After getting Armitage's request, the State Department's
then-intelligence chief, Carl Ford, ordered the original memo —
along with the analyst's notes about that meeting — to be sent
to Powell, the former official said. Ordinarily, the memo would
have been transmitted directly to Powell over the State
Department's secure communications lines. But because Powell was
traveling with Bush, the memo was transmitted via the White
House operations center.
Because both documents were classified, it would have been
necessary for someone on the plane to sign for having received
them from the White House operations center, the former official
said. But once someone signed for them, the document could have
been passed around freely on the plane among senior officials
who had security clearances.
*
Times staff writers Peter Wallsten and Richard B. Schmitt
contributed to this report.
===================================
NOTE THE COTRADICTIONS OF FACTS IN THESE TWO REPORTS:
I.
I. **This memo was sent by State Department officials to then-
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, who according to news
reports
has testified before the grand jury. Powell had the memo with
him on
Air Force One when President Bush traveled to Africa on July 7,
2003, the day after Wilson's piece was published, according to a
person with knowledge of the investigation.
What happened on Air Force One has been of interest to
prosecutors,
who want to know whether anyone who saw the memo learned Plame's
identity and told it to journalists
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-
memo17jul17,1,2152689.story?coll=la-headlines-nation****
SIDEBAR: But then we have a contradiction of facts.... Look
carefully over timeline links for July 7th, 2003 - Evening
departure
on Air Force One:
http://www.dkosopedia.com/index.php/Plame_Leak_timeline
QUESTION IS: Who signed for the diverted State Department Memo?
My bet -- (SHAMANKA - astrological analysis is)
CONDOLEZZA RICE....IS WHO SIGNED THE RECEIPT FOR THE MEMO TO BE
DELIVERED TO BUSH ON AIR FORCE ONE AND IS THE PERSON BEHIND THE
SMOKING MEMO GUN.
SHE SHOWED IT FIRST TO BUSH...AND BUSH GAVE HER THE HEADS UP TO
WHISPER IT TO CHENEY/ ROVE & GANG OVER SECURE LINE BACK TO THE
WH
WHILE THEY WERE ON AIR FORCE ONE. IT'S A BUSH/RICE THING (WINK
WINK)
Do you all think that Bush has a taste for brown sugar? ...CS
Now get this......
The White House retracts the Niger allegation, which is its sole
admission to date of a flaw in the case for war, which was built
on
charges of an illegal Iraqi arsenal that has not been found.
After being called at home, State Department's then-intelligence
chief, Carl Ford gets the INR to work on providing Powell the
requested information and the June 10 memo, either because he
remembers the memo, or Armitage does.
The State Department's June 10 INR memo is located and copied.
It
says Joseph Wilson had been approved for the Niger trip by
mid-level
CIA officials on the recommendation of his wife, a counter-
proliferation expert at the CIA.
Robert Novak places a call to White House Press Secretary Ari
Fleischer accroding to White House phone logs. It is not clear
whether Fleischer returned the call, and Fleischer has refused
to
comment.
And here's the SMOKING GUN....
Evening (7/7/03)- Bush leaves for his trip to Africa. (ON
AIRFORCEONE, OF COURSE)
State Department:
Carl Ford, orders the copy of the original memo, along with the
analyst's notes about that meeting, be sent to Powell.
Ordinarily,
the memo would have been transmitted directly to Powell over the
State Department's secure communications lines. "But because
Powell
was traveling with Bush aboard Air Force One, the memo is
transmitted via the White House operations center."
I repeat: "But because Powell
was traveling with Bush aboard Air Force One, the memo is
transmitted via the White House operations center."
Now here is the tricky part!!!
Someone on Air Force One, because both documents were classified
by
regulations, signs for receiving the memo and breifing note
transmission from the White House operations center. Once
someone
signed for them, the document could be passed around freely on
the
plane among senior officials who have security clearances.
Press Secretary Ari Fleischer, at some point during the flight
sees
the INR memo aboard Air Force One.
--------------------
GOOGLE: KARL ROVE "CIA LEAK"
Rove Takes on CIA Leak Grand Jury Again in High-Stakes Gamble
Bloomberg - 11 hours ago
7 (Bloomberg) -- Presidential adviser Karl Rove, who has played
for the highest stakes in American politics, is taking his
biggest gamble yet to avoid possible ...
Rove to Testify Again on CIA Leak FOX News
Rove Ordered to Talk Again in Leak Inquiry New York Times
Rove May Again Testify in CIA Leak Investigation Muslim American
Society
Los Angeles Times - Guardian Unlimited -

all 711 related »
21 Administration Officials Involved In Plame Leak
The cast of administration characters with known
connections to the outing of an undercover CIA agent:
http://www.thinkprogress.org/leak-scandal
APFN: CIA LEAK INFO AND LINKS:
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/LEAKGATE.HTM