Gonzales Withholding Plame E-Mails |
|||||||||
Sources
close to the investigation into the leak of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame
Wilson have revealed this week that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has
not turned over e-mails to the special prosecutor's office that may
incriminate Vice President Dick Cheney, his aides, and other White House
officials who allegedly played an active role in unmasking Plame Wilson's
identity to reporters.
Moreover, these sources said that in early 2004 Cheney was interviewed by
federal prosecutors investigating the Plame Wilson leak and testified that
neither he nor any of his senior aides were involved in unmasking her
undercover CIA status to reporters and that no one in the vice president's
office had attempted to discredit her husband, a vocal critic of the
administration's pre-war Iraq intelligence. Cheney did not testify under
oath or under penalty of perjury when he was interviewed by federal
prosecutors.
The
e-mails Gonzales is said to be withholding contained references to Valerie
Plame Wilson's identity and CIA status and developments related to the
inability to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Moreover, according
to sources, the e-mails contained suggestions by the officials on how the
White House should respond to what it believed were increasingly
destructive comments
Gonzales, who at the time of the leak was the White House counsel, spent
two weeks with other White House attorneys screening e-mails turned over
to his office by roughly 2,000 staffers following a deadline imposed by
the White House in 2003. The sources said Gonzales told Fitzgerald more
than a year ago that he did not intend to turn over the e-mails to his
office, because they contained classified intelligence information about
He is
said to have cited "executive privilege" and "national security concerns"
as the reason for not turning over some of the correspondence, which
allegedly proves Cheney's office played an active role in leaking Plame
Wilson's undercover CIA status to reporters, the attorneys said.
Aside
from the e-mails that have not been turned over, there are also e-mails
that Patrick Fitzgerald, the Special Prosecutor investigating the case,
believes were either "shredded" or deleted, the attorneys said.
In a
court document dated January 23, Fitzgerald says that during the course of
his investigation, he had been told that some e-mails from the offices of
President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney had not been saved. His
letter does not claim that any member of the Bush administration discarded
the e-mails, but sources close to the probe say that is what Fitzgerald
has been alleging privately.
"In an
abundance of caution," Fitzgerald's January 23 letter to Libby's defense
team states, "we advise you that we have learned that not all email of the
Office of the Vice President and the Executive Office of the President for
certain time periods in 2003 was preserved through the normal archiving
process on the White House computer system."
Spokespeople for Gonzales and the White House would not comment, citing
the ongoing investigation. Randall Samborn, a spokesman for Fitzgerald,
also wouldn't comment. A spokesman for Cheney did not return calls for
comment nor did Cheney's criminal attorney, Terrence O'Donnell.
Cheney
testified for a little more than an hour about his role in the leak in
early 2004. What he told prosecutors appears to be identical to testimony
his former chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, gave before a grand
jury during the same year. Libby was indicted on five counts of
obstruction of justice, perjury, and lying to investigators related to his
role in the Plame Wilson leak.
Two
weeks ago, additional court documents related to Libby's case were made
public. In one document, Fitzgerald responded to Libby's defense team that
Libby had testified before a grand jury that his "superiors" authorized
him to leak elements of the highly classified National Intelligence
Estimate to reporters in the summer of 2003 that showed
News
reports citing people familiar with Libby's testimony said Cheney had
authorized Libby to do so. Additionally, an extensive investigation during
the past month has shown that Cheney, Libby and former Deputy National
Security Adviser Stephen Hadley spearhead an effort beginning in March
2003 to discredit Plame Wilson's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson,
a vocal critic of the administration's intelligence related to Iraq, who
had publicly criticized the administration for relying on forged documents
to build public support for the war.
Cheney
did not disclose this information when he was questioned by investigators.
Cheney
responded to questions about how the White House came to rely on
Cheney
said he was unaware that
However, these attorneys said that witnesses in the case have testified
before a grand jury that Cheney, Libby, Hadley, the Pentagon, the Defense
Intelligence Agency, the State Department, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the
Justice Department, the FBI, and other senior aides in the Office of the
Vice President, the President, and the National Security Council had
received and read a March 9, 2002, cable sent to his office by the CIA
that debunked the Niger claims.
The
cable, which was prepared by a CIA analyst and based on Wilson's
fact-finding mission, did not mention Wilson by name, but quoted a CIA
source and Niger officials Wilson had questioned during his eight-day
mission, who said there was no truth to the claims that Iraq had tried to
purchase 500 tons of yellowcake uranium ore from Niger.
Several current and former State Department and CIA officials familiar
with the March 9, 2002, cable said they had testified before the grand
jury investigating the Plame Wilson leak that they had spoken to Libby and
Hadley about the cable, and that they were told Cheney had also read it.
Cheney
told investigators that when Wilson began speaking to reporters on
background about his secret mission to Niger to investigate Iraq's alleged
attempts to purchase uranium, he asked Libby to contact the CIA to "get
more information" about the trip and to find out if it was true, the
attorneys added.
Furthermore, Cheney told prosecutors that before he learned of
Moreover, Cheney said that he and his aide were concerned that reporters
had been under the impression that Cheney chose
"In
his testimony the vice president said that his staff referred media calls
about
Cheney
told investigators that he first learned about Valerie Plame Wilson and
her employment with the CIA from Libby. Cheney testified that Libby told
him that several reporters had contacted him in July to say that Plame
Wilson had been responsible for arranging her husband's trip to
Cheney
also testified that the next time he recalled hearing about Plame Wilson
and her connection to Joseph Wilson was when he read about her in a July
14, 2003, column written by syndicated columnist Robert Novak.
Jason Leopold is the author of the explosive memoir, News Junkie, to be released in April 2006 by Process/Feral House Books. Visit his website at www.jasonleopold.com for a preview. Copyright © 2006 by Jason Leopold Other Articles by Jason Leopold
*
Enron: The
Bush Administration's First Scandal
* Under
Cheney, Halliburton Helped Saddam Siphon Billions from UN Oil-for-Food
Prog. * White House Said In Jan. It Used Info From Iraqi Exiles In Bush’s State of Union Speech * CIA Probe Finds Secret Pentagon Group Manipulated Intelligence on Iraqi Threat * Tenet Tells Senators Wolfowitz Committee Gave White House Dubious Intelligence * Wolfowitz Committee Told White House to Hype Dubious Uranium Claims * “The Road to Hell is Paved With Good Intentions” * CIA Warned White House Last Oct. Iraq/Uranium Claims Based On Forged Docs * Wolfowitz Aimed to Undermine Blix So US Could Strike Iraq * White House Silenced Experts Who Questioned Iraq Intel Info Six Months Before War * Powell Denies Intelligence Failure * The Iraq War Was Always Based On Shaky Evidence and Bad Intel * Wolfowitz Admits Iraq War Was Planned Two Days After 9/11 * Despite Thin Intelligence Reports, US Plans To Overthrow Iranian Regime * Cheney’s Old Company Continues To Break Laws While Profiting From Terror * FERC and Wall Street: Conversations May Have Violated Federal Law
|