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Lawsuit
Threatened Over Wilson Affair
More fun in the Plame Game…
[by Cliff Kincaid] 11/10/05
Did
Joseph Wilson expose his own wife as a CIA
employee months before columnist Robert Novak
published that information? Fox News military
analyst and
retired Major General Paul E. Vallely is being threatened with a lawsuit
for saying that the answer is yes, and that he was there when Wilson confirmed
her CIA status.
What’s
more, Vallely tells Accuracy
in Media that
he is prepared if necessary to go to court
to prove it.
He
may have to. Wilson’s attorney, Christopher
Wolf, categorically rejects Vallely’s
claim. He tells AIM, “It never happened
I can assure you that. Vallely is making
it up for whatever reason. It’s false.
It’s libelous. It shouldn’t be
said. And that should be the end of it.” Wolf,
a partner at Proskauer Rose, is a specialist
in the areas of the First Amendment, defamation
and libel.
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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In an interview,
Vallely said that Wilson told him this in 2002 when they were
both
in a Fox News Channel “green room,” where
guests wait before going on network programs. As to why he waited
until now to come forward with this explosive charge, he indicated
that it was because of disappointment with Special Prosecutor
Patrick Fitzgerald’s investigation of the matter.
The growing
controversy suggests that the Wilson affair, which has resulted
in the
indictment of former vice presidential chief
of staff Lewis Libby, could take another important legal turn.
Vallely, however, said he is not worried about being sued. “I
have plenty of friends in Washington who will support my effort
to have the truth brought out and get these people under oath,” he
said.
A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Vallely
retired in 1991 from the U.S. Army as deputy commanding general,
U.S. Army, Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii. He served 32 years in
the Army.
While Vallely’s
charge was becoming a hot topic on the Internet, it was recalled
by some writers that one popular site
had reported a comment by historian Victor Davis Hanson that
he, too, had heard Wilson identify his wife as a CIA employee,
also in a Fox green room exchange. But Hanson tells Accuracy
in Media that he never heard Wilson make such a claim and wants
to set the record straight.
The disputed
Hanson comments about Wilson and his wife were reported on
Free Republic.com.
A posting by “FReethesheeples” had
a detailed account of Hanson supposedly saying that Wilson had
identified his own wife as a CIA employee.
The post
declared that “Based upon a personal conversation
(we were in a small group eating; it was NOT an ‘off the
record’) I had with eminent historian Victor Davis Hanson
(we were at a luncheon table together during a trip to Europe),
it appeared entirely possible that Joe Wilson himself was the
(or one source, if not the original one) possible source in revealing
his own wife’s status as a CIA agent or employee. Victor
Davis Hanson…said he (VDH) & Joe Wilson were both in
the same ‘Green Room’ before a televised debate-discussion
on Iraq, etc. and Joe first warned the TV make-up person not
to get powder on his $14,000 Rolex watch, then he bragged to
Victor about several things (possessions and trips to Aspen,
etc.), like his expensive car (I think it was a Mercedes), and
then bragged about his beautiful wife who, Joe Wilson said (braggingly)
was a CIA operative. I asked Victor Davis Hanson Why he didn’t
write up this account.(?) He replied that Joe Wilson would probably
simply deny it, since only he (VDH) & Joe Wilson were in
the Green Room together before the broadcast.”
Hanson told
AIM, “…I don’t
know who that was at a table or where, but most everything
he repeats about a supposed
conversation is inaccurate. I did meet with Joe Wilson in the
green room of Fox in 2003, and he did talk about himself and
his wife ad nauseam, but he didn't disclose she was a CIA agent,
and for most of the time he was introducing himself to David
Corn and discussing writing something for the Nation.”
AIM has expressed
serious misgivings about aspects of Wilson’s
account of his trip to Africa to investigate the Iraq-uranium
link, whether his wife was in any real sense a clandestine CIA
operative, and media coverage of the case. But the charge that
Wilson had personally identified his wife’s CIA affiliation
has taken the controversy to another level.
If the sensational
charge is true, then Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald’s
investigation, which is based on the belief that Valerie Wilson’s
CIA affiliation was first disclosed publicly by columnist Robert
Novak in July of 2003, was flawed from the start. It would also
mean that the investigation was based on a false declaration
from the CIA that her identity was a carefully guarded secret.
Vallely
first made his charge on the John Batchelor syndicated ABC
radio show
and later to WorldNetDaily (WND), a popular Internet
news site. Vallely said he was attempting to challenge the thoroughness
of the Fitzgerald investigation “because he had never brought
in under oath Joe Wilson, Valerie Plame, anybody at the CIA that
knew what her exact job was during that period of time. And we
knew she was not a covert agent.”
Vallely said another purpose of his appearance on the show
was to challenge various statements Wilson has made.
When Vallely
was asked whether he had ever met Wilson, he said that he had
done
so in the Fox News green room, and that this
is when his wife’s affiliation with the CIA had come up. “There
are some other people at Fox that knew that she had worked for
the agency,” he said.
The WND
story quoted Vallely at length on the matter but did not indicate
if a response
had been sought from Wilson. A follow-up
WND story, however, revealed that Wilson’s lawyer, Christopher
Wolf, a partner at Proskauer Rose, had demanded a retraction
of the charges from Vallely and WND and had threatened legal
action. This follow-up WND story said that WND had “attempted
to reach Wilson and Wolf for a phone interview,” but that
Wolf had renewed his demand for retraction of the allegedly false
and libelous statements.
Vallely,
in a telephone interview with Accuracy in Media, said he is
standing by his
charge. “We were talking about our
families,” Vallely said about his conversation with Wilson.
He said he remembered that he discussed his own wife’s
employment in Washington, D.C., and that Wilson then commented
that his wife worked at the agency, another term for the CIA.
“It was a casual conversation,” Vallely
said. He said that he did not remember the exact date of the
alleged exchange
with Wilson but that they were both at Fox News on the same day
more than once in 2002 when they were guests on various shows.
The Batchelor
Show returned to the subject on Monday evening. But Wolf, Wilson’s attorney, indicated concern about the
direction of the program. “Mr. Batchelor hasn’t contacted
me or Mr. Wilson,” he said. -one-
copyright
2005 Accuracy in Media
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