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The
Ashcroft-Rove Connection: The Ties That Blind
by
Amy Goodman, Jeremy Scahill and Democracy Now!
October
2, 2003
There's
an old saying that you should never let a fox guard the henhouse. The same
could be said of the investigation into the latest White House scandal.
Attorney General John Ashcroft is refusing to appoint an independent prosecutor
to investigate who in the administration leaked the name of a CIA operative to
journalists. This despite the fact that Ashcroft has long-standing ties to one
of the main suspects: President Bush's top political advisor Karl Rove.
"I
think it's very difficult on its surface for John Ashcroft to be taken
seriously as an investigator," said James Moore, author of Bush's Brain:
How Karl Rove Made George W Bush Presidential, in an interview with Democracy
Now!. "In this case, there is a close relationship between someone who is
a high profile suspect and the individual who is leading the investigation of
him. And it immediately goes to the question of credibility and validity of
that particular investigation."
Rove
has been accused of leaking the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, in
retaliation for her husband, veteran diplomat Joseph Wilson, blowing the
whistle on the Bush administration's charge that Saddam Hussein attempted to
import uranium for nuclear weapons from Niger.
Rove
is best known as the driving force behind Bush's taking of the presidency, but
he also worked for Ashcroft over the course of two decades.
"It
goes all the way back to the mid 1980's when John Ashcroft first ran for
governor and then when he ran for the United States Senate against Mel
Carnahan," says Moore. "Karl was so intimately involved."
Not
only did Rove work for Ashcroft in the 80s, but he was one of the main forces
behind Ashcroft's controversial appointment to the job he currently holds,
attorney general. Rove lobbied intensely for his former employer's nomination
after Ashcroft lost his senate seat to a dead man, the late Mel Carnahan.
While
Ashcroft was not Bush's first choice for attorney general, Rove reportedly told
Bush that spilling some blood over the nomination of the fiercely right-wing
Ashcroft was "a no-lose proposition."
Just
as George W. Bush profited handsomely from the building of a stadium for his
Texas Rangers baseball team, Karl Rove cashed in from the successful campaign
in St. Louis to get a stadium built. The governor who signed the legislation?
John
Ashcroft.
Now
attorney general, Ashcroft is refusing to hand over the reigns of the criminal
investigation of his political ally, former employee and longtime advisor, Karl
Rove.
For
the past several days, the White House has been besieged with questions on the
"burning" of CIA operative Valerie Plame. Scott McClellan, the press
secretary and other officials have offered only carefully worded and
non-specific responses to reporters' questions as to who leaked the identity of
Wilson's wife.
"It
is impossible for any of us to believe that this happened without Karl knowing
about it," says author James Moore. "When you cross this man in the
political arena, he gets even; and he gets even in a way that he doesn't just
defeat you, he is compelled to destroy you. He doesn't know how to do a
measured response when he is angry, and so he leaks information about people
that destroys them."
According
to the latest Washington Post-ABC poll, 69% of Americans believe there should
be a special counsel independent of the administration investigating the White
House leak. Yet, in his only news conference to date on the issue, Ashcroft
stood firm that his office will oversee the investigation. "The
prosecutors and agents who are and will be handling this investigation are career
professionals with extensive experience in handling matters involving sensitive
national security information and with experience relating to investigations of
unauthorized disclosures of such information."
At
the Justice Department news conference, a reporter attempted to question
Ashcroft further, "Can you at least say what assurances you can give
people that the matter will be handled independently without..."
Ashcroft
interrupted, "Are there other questions today?"
Yes
there are. But an independent counsel should be asking them.
Democracy Now! is a daily
national grassroots radio/tv newshour. Research assistance for this article was
provided by producers Mike Burke and Sharif Abdel Kouddous. www.democracynow.org.
* Does A Felon
Rove The White House?
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