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Was
the Wilson Affair a CIA Plot?
Undermining Bush…...
[by Cliff Kincaid] 10/24/05
The
media version of the CIA leak case is that
the White House illegally revealed a CIA
employee’s identity because her husband,
Joseph Wilson, was an administration critic.
But former prosecutor Joseph E. diGenova
says the real story is that the CIA “launched
a covert operation” against the President
when it sent Wilson on the mission to Africa
to investigate the Iraq-uranium link. DiGenova,
a former Independent Counsel who prosecuted
several high-profile cases and has extensive
experience on Capitol Hill, including as
counsel to several Senate committees, is
optimistic that Special Prosecutor Patrick
Fitzgerald will figure it all out.
DiGenova
tells this columnist, “It seems to
me somewhat strange, in terms of CIA tradecraft,
that if you were really attempting to protect
the identity of a covert officer, why would
you send her husband overseas on a mission,
without a confidentiality agreement, and
then allow him when he came back to the United
States to write an op-ed piece in the New
York Times about it.”
Contributor
Cliff Kincaid
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]
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That mission,
he explained, leads naturally to the questions: Who is this
guy? And how
did he get this assignment? “That’s
not the way you protect the identity of a covert officer,” he
said. “If it is, then [CIA director] Porter Goss is doing
the right thing in cleaning house” at the agency.
If the CIA
is the real villain in the case, then almost everything we
have been
told about the scandal by the media is wrong. What’s
more, it means that the CIA, perhaps the most powerful intelligence
agency in the U.S. Government, was deliberately trying to undermine
the Bush Administration’s Iraq War policy. The liberals
who are anxious for indictments of Bush Administration officials
in this case should start paying attention to this aspect of
the scandal. They may be opposed to the Iraq War, but since when
is the CIA allowed to run covert operations against an elected
president of the U.S.?
DiGenova
first made his astounding comments about the Wilson affair
being a covert
operation against the President on the
Imus in the Morning Show, carried nationally on radio and MSNBC-TV.
I wondered whether these serious charges would be refuted or
probed by the media. Imus, a shock jock who has spent several
days grieving and joking about the death of his cat, didn’t
grasp their significance. But the mainstream press didn’t
seem interested, either.
DiGenova
told me he believes there has been a “war between
the White House and the CIA over intelligence” and that
the agency, in the Wilson affair, “was using the sort of
tactics it uses in covert actions overseas.” One has to
consider the implications of this statement. It means that the
CIA was using Wilson for the purpose of undermining the Bush
Administration’s Iraq policy.
If this
is the case, then one has to conclude that the CIA’s
covert operation against the President was successful to a point.
It generated an investigation of the White House after officials
began trying to set the record straight to the press about the
Wilson mission. At this point, it’s still not clear what
if anything Fitzgerald has on these officials. If they’re
indicted for making inconsistent statements about their discussions
with one another or the press, that would seem to be a pathetically
weak case. And it would not get to the heart of the issue—the
CIA’s war against Bush.
One of those
apparently threatened with indictment, as Times reporter Judith
Miller’s account of her grand jury testimony
revealed, is an agency critic named Lewis Libby, chief of staff
to Vice President Dick Cheney. Miller said that Libby was frustrated
and angry about “selective leaking” by the CIA and
other agencies to “distance themselves from what he recalled
as their unequivocal prewar intelligence assessments.” Miller
said Libby believed the “selective leaks” from the
CIA were an attempt to “shift blame to the White House” and
were part of a “perverted war” over the war in Iraq.
Wilson was clearly part of that war. He came back from Niger
in Africa and wrote the New York Times column insisting there
was no Iraqi deal to purchase uranium for a nuclear weapons program.
In fact, however, Wlson had misrepresented his own findings,
and the Senate Intelligence Committee found there was additional
evidence of Iraqi attempts to buy uranium.
DiGenova
raises serious questions about the CIA role not only in the
Wilson mission
but in the referral to the Justice Department
that culminated in the appointment of a special prosecutor. At
this point in the media feeding frenzy over the story, the issue
of how the investigation started has almost been completely lost.
The answer is that it came from the CIA. Acting independently
and with great secrecy, the CIA contacted the Justice Department
with “concern” about articles in the press that included
the “disclosure” of “the identity of an employee
operating under cover.” The CIA informed the Justice Department
that the disclosure was “a possible violation of criminal
law.” This started the chain of events that is the subject
of speculative news articles almost every day.
The CIA’s
version of its contacts with the Justice Department was contained
in
a 4-paragraph letter to Rep. John Conyers, ranking
Democratic Member of the House Judiciary Committee. Conyers and
other liberal Democrats had been clamoring for the probe.
DiGenova
doubts that the CIA had a case to begin with. He says he would
like to
see what sworn information was provided to the
Justice Department about the status of Wilson’s CIA wife,
Valerie Plame, and what “active measures” the CIA
was taking to protect her identity. The implication is that her
status was not classified or protected and that the agency simply
used the stories about her identity to create the scandal that
seems to occupy so much attention these days.
But if the
purpose was not only to undermine the Iraq War policy but to
stop the
administration from reforming the agency, it
hasn’t completely worked. Indeed, the Washington Post ran
a long story by Dafna Linzer on October 19 about the “turmoil” in
the agency as personnel either quit or are forced out by CIA
Director Goss. Like so many stories about the CIA leak case,
this story reflected the views of CIA bureaucrats who despise
what Goss is doing and resist supervision or reform of their
operations. Members of the press do not want to be seen as too
close to the Bush Administration, but acting as scribblers for
the CIA bureaucracy, which failed America on 9/11, is perfectly
acceptable.
DiGenova’s
comments might be dismissed as just the view of an administration
defender.
But his comments reflect the facts
about the case that emerged when the Senate Intelligence Committee
conducted an independent investigation. Wilson, who became an
adviser to the Kerry for President campaign, had claimed his
CIA wife had no role in recommending him for the trip, but the
committee determined that was not true. Why would Wilson misrepresent
the truth about her if the purpose were not to conceal the curious
nature of the CIA role and its hidden agenda in his controversial
mission? And who in the CIA besides his wife was behind it?
In this
regard, Miller’s account of her testimony to
the grand jury disclosed that Fitzgerald had asked whether Libby
had complained about nepotism behind the Wilson trip, a reference
to the role played by Plame. This is the line of inquiry that
could lead, if Fitzgerald pursues it, to unraveling the CIA “covert
operation” behind the Wilson affair. There may be rogue
elements at the agency who are conducting their own foreign policy,
in contravention of the official foreign policy of the U.S. Government
elected by the American people. Like it or not, Bush is the President
and he is supposed to run the CIA, not the other way around.
Fitzgerald has the opportunity to break this case wide open.
Or else he can take the politically correct approach, which is
popular with the press, and go after administration officials.
One irony
of the case is that Miller is under strong attack by the left
as an administration
lackey when she didn’t
even write an article at the time noting Libby’s criticisms
of the CIA and the Wilson trip. Did her “other sources,” perhaps
in the CIA, persuade her to drop the story? We may never know
because she claims that she got Fitzgerald to agree not to question
her about them. But what she did eventually report, after spending
85 days in jail, amounts to an exoneration of the Bush Administration.
Libby, Karl Rove and others obviously believed they could not
take on the CIA directly but had to get their story out indirectly
through the press. They got burned by Miller and other journalists.
Goss’s CIA house-cleaning, of course, has come too late
to save the administration from being victimized in the Wilson/Plame
affair. Some officials could get indicted because of faulty or
inconsistent memories. It is also obvious that liberal journalists
are so excited over possible indictments of Bush officials that
they are willing to overlook the agency’s manipulation
of public policy and the press. But if the CIA has been out-of-control,
subverting the democratic process and undermining the president,
the American people have a right to know. If Fitzgerald doesn’t
blow the whistle on this, the Congress should hold public hearings
and do so. tRO
copyright
2005 Accuracy in Media
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