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Cliff Kincaid- Contributor
Cliff Kincaid, serves as editor of the Accuracy
in Media (AIM)
Report. A veteran journalist and media critic, Cliff has
appeared on the Fox News programs Hannity & Colmes and
The O'Reilly Factor, where he debated O'Reilly on global
warming, the death penalty,
and the homosexual agenda. He was a guest co-host on CNN's Crossfire
(filling in for Pat Buchanan) in the 1980s, where he confronted
the then-Libyan Ambassador to the U.N. with evidence of Libyan
involvement in international terrorism. Through his America's
Survival, Inc., organization (www.usasurvival.org), he has been
an advocate on behalf of the families of victims of terrorism
and has published reports and held conferences critical of the
United Nations. His articles have appeared in the Washington
Post, Washington Times, Chronicles, Human Events, Insight, and
other publications. He served on the staff of Human Events for
several years and was an editorial writer and newsletter editor
for former National Security Council staffer Oliver North at
his Freedom Alliance educational foundation. He has written or
co-authored nine books on media and cultural affairs and foreign
policy issues. Cliff is married and has three sons.[go to
Kincaid index]
Media
Shoot Blanks at Rove
A phony controversy…
[Cliff Kincaid] 7/15/05
Lacking evidence of criminal conduct, Democrats are nevertheless
urging the resignation of White House deputy chief of staff Karl
Rove for talking to Time magazine staffer Matt Cooper about CIA
employee Valerie Plame. But Rove deserves a medal for trying
to warn the media about the ulterior motives of Plame and her
husband, Joseph Wilson, who would later become a Kerry campaign
adviser.
The media
are in a feeding frenzy over the fact that Rove told Cooper
that Plame “apparently” worked for the CIA.
But this shows that Rove wasn’t even aware of her actual
status at the agency and could not, therefore, have violated
a law against knowingly disclosing the identity of an undercover
CIA operative.
The phony controversy, which featured reporters asking 30 questions
about this matter at the Monday White House press briefing, demonstrates
how Republicans and conservatives come under fire for doing nothing
wrong. No matter how many questions they ask, there is still
no evidence that Rove broke the law.
The White
House position_that Rove did not disclose classified information_remains
intact. The only new development
is that
the White House will not say anything further on the case, which
is somehow being interpreted by the liberal press as a contradiction
of what the White House previously said. But there is no contradiction.
It’s wise to refrain from comment when New York Times reporter
Judith Miller, who may have some critical testimony and might
be able to exonerate Bush administration officials of deliberately
leaking Plame’s name, refuses to talk. It is possible that
Miller could set the record straight about who told what to whom
and where the information about Plame came from. It could have
come from Miller, who has a waiver from her “source” to
talk about the case to a grand jury but decided to go to jail
instead. Rather than speculate on Miller’s motives, the
liberal press would rather hype the Rove story into something
it is not, in an obvious effort to damage the Bush administration.
The Washington
Post media reporter, Howard Kurtz, jumped on the bandwagon,
saying that “politically, this is a bombshell.
Rove, who has insisted he did not leak Plame’s name, had
something to do with this effort, even if he didn't ‘name’ her.”
But wait
a minute. If Rove did not identify her by name, and seemed
to be unclear about her actual employment
status, how
can he be accused of violating the law against deliberately disclosing
the name of a covert CIA operative? And what is “this effort” and
why does it matter?
Showing complete
disregard of the facts of the case, Kurtz said that Rove “was attempting to undercut Wilson when he told
Cooper that wifey had helped set up Wilson’s fact-finding
trip to Niger (where Wilson didn’t find the facts the administration
wanted on Saddam seeking uranium) and that the uranium business
could still be true (it wasn’t). And didn’t the White
House promise to fire anyone involved in the leak?”
To repeat:
there’s no evidence that Rove was involved
in violating the law by leaking classified information about
the identity of a CIA operative. What the evidence shows is that
Rove was familiar with the role played by Plame in arranging
her husband’s mission to Africa to investigate an Iraq-uranium
link, and that Rove talked to Cooper about this. Rove gave Cooper
a “big warning” not to “get too far out on
Wilson,” and Rove told Cooper that Plame “authorized” Wilson’s
trip to Africa to probe the Iraq-uranium link. In this case,
Rove was telling the truth.
It appears
that Rove was aware that Plame’s role in her
husband’s mission may have violated federal nepotism laws
and that it was a set-up to embarrass the administration. On
page 346 of his own book, Wilson noted that the law against nepotism
would forbid his wife from recommending him for the job, which
may be why he adamantly insisted that she had nothing to do with
it. However, a Senate Intelligence Committee report on this matter
includes a memo from Plame to the CIA recommending her husband’s
involvement.
Plame’s role was disclosed to columnist Bob Novak because
some official or officials knew that she was involved in the
Wilson mission and found this objectionable. It would not be
surprising to learn that Rove was a source for other journalists
on this story because Wilson spewed false information about his
mission and why it occurred. Is Rove supposed to be fired because
he fought back against the administration’s political enemies
and tried to provide the press some accurate information?
Another critical
fact is that, contrary to media reports, including his own
New York Times column, Wilson’s
report did confirm Iraqi interest in obtaining uranium from
Niger.
British Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw had noted that Wilson’s
report to the CIA found that “in 1999 an Iraqi delegation
sought the expansion of trade links with Niger—and that
former Niger government officials believed that this was in connection
with the procurement of yellowcake [uranium ore].” Uranium
is Niger’s main export. In other words, this element of
Wilson’s report actually supported Bush’s State of
the Union statement that the British reported that Iraq had sought
uranium from Africa. Then-CIA director George Tenet, referring
to what was in the Wilson report, noted that a former Niger official “said
that in June 1999 a businessman approached him and insisted that
the former official meet with an Iraqi delegation to discuss ‘expanding
commercial relations’ between Iraq and Niger. The former
official interpreted the overture as an attempt to discuss uranium
sales.”
So on what
basis does Howard Kurtz, who is supposed to keep the media
honest, come to the conclusion that what
the administration
said about the “uranium business” was not true? What
Bush said was true, certainly in the sense that Iraq had expressed
interest in uranium in the past. But Wilson misrepresented the
findings of his own mission in order to write that New York Times
op-ed bashing the Bush administration.
As it happened,
rather than push for an investigation of violations of federal
nepotism laws involving Wilson and
his wife, the White
House panicked under a media assault and gave way to critics,
including the New York Times, who wanted the White House investigated
for an alleged role in a classified leak to Novak. There is still
no evidence of any such leak. But there is clear evidence that
Times reporter Judith Miller is obstructing justice in this case.
And that is why she sits in jail. Our right to know has become
a right to remain silent by the press. It’s more fun for
the press to talk about Karl Rove. tRO
copyright
2005 Accuracy in Media
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