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Does
A Felon Rove The White House?
by
Amy Goodman, Jeremy Scahill and the Staff of Democracy Now!
September
30, 2003
First
Published in Democracy Now!
Allegations
are swirling that Karl Rove, senior political adviser to President George W.
Bush, may have committed a felony by blowing the cover of a CIA operative. CIA
Director George Tenet has called on the Justice Department to investigate but
the White House said Monday that “President George W. Bush has no plans to ask
his staff members whether they played a role.” And what makes this story even
more remarkable is how seriously the Bush family has viewed outing intelligence
operatives in the past.
The
man at the center of this firestorm is Joseph Wilson, the retired U.S. diplomat
who debunked the White House’s key evidence that Saddam Hussein was rebuilding
his nuclear program.
Two
weeks ago Democracy Now! aired Wilson’s comments before a suburban Seattle
audience that he believes Bush’s closest aide, Karl Rove, told reporters that
Wilson’s wife was a CIA agent.
At
the forum Wilson declared, “At the end of the day, it's of keen interest to me
to see whether or not we can get Karl Rove frog-marched out of White House in
handcuffs.” Wilson added, “And trust me when I use that name, I measure my
words.”
Wilson
told Democracy Now!, “I have reason to believe that it was the political office
that at a minimum confirmed it and the political office was Karl Rove…It was a
reporter who told me it was Karl Rove and that’s as far as I want to go right
now.”
The
whole scandal began in July a week after Wilson went public in an op-ed piece
in the New York Times saying he was the diplomat sent by the Bush
Administration to Niger to investigate whether Saddam Hussein tried to buy
uranium from the African country. His findings: the accusations were baseless.
Wilson
was not alone. The US ambassador to Niger, Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick, knew of
the allegations of uranium sales to Iraq and had already debunked them in her
reports back to Washington. Wilson’s conclusions also coincided with those of
Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the US Armed Forces four-star Marine Corps
General, Carlton Fulford, who had also researched the matter on the ground in
Niger. Wilson felt he had authoritatively debunked the Niger rumor and “the
matter was settled.”
But
the lie refused to die. In January 2003, Bush made his famous 16 word line in
his State of the Union address: "The British government has learned that
Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from
Africa."
In
July, soon after Wilson blew the whistle in The New York Times, the White House
was forced to admit that the accusation should not have been included in the
State of the Union.
A
few days later, conservative columnist Robert Novak wrote a column in which he
cited “two senior administration officials” and stated that Wilson's wife,
Valerie Plame, was a CIA operative dealing with weapons of mass destruction.
In
an extensive interview on Democracy Now!, Wilson said that the outing of his
wife as an alleged CIA operative and other attempts to discredit him “are
clearly intended to intimidate others from coming forward.”
But
it’s not just intimidation; it’s a felony. Until now, a crime the Bush family
has taken very seriously. According to Ray McGovern, a retired CIA analyst who
worked under Bush Sr. at both the CIA and the White House, “The Intelligence
Identities Protection Act was made draconian, it was made very, very specific,
automatic penalties that would accrue to both officials and
non-officials—anyone who knowingly disclosed the identity of a CIA agent or
officer.” The penalty: fines of up to $50,000 and imprisonment of up to 10
years.
Many
believe the law was passed in direct response to former CIA agent Philip Agee’s
blowing the whistle on CIA dirty tricks in his book Inside the Company. George
H.W. Bush, who was vice-president when the law was passed, said some of the
criticism of the Agency ruined secret U.S. clandestine operations in foreign
countries.
So
seriously did the Bushes take the crime of exposing CIA operatives that Barbara
Bush, in her memoirs, accused Agee of blowing the cover of the CIA Station
Chief in Greece, Richard Welch, who was assassinated outside his Athens
residence in 1975. Agee sued the former first lady and Mrs. Bush withdrew the
statement from additional printings of her book. Still, at a celebration
marking the fiftieth anniversary of the CIA, the elder Bush again singled out
Agee in his remarks, calling him “a traitor to our country.”
David
MacMichael worked as a CIA analyst at the time the law was passed. He told
Democracy Now!: “If former President Bush could define Philip Agee as a traitor
for exposing the identities of serving intelligence officers, if his son’s
political advisor has done the same…it is a very serious felony under the
current Act.”
(If
in fact it was Karl Rove who leaked or authorized the leak to Novak, it won’t
be the first time the two have worked in tandem. According to Esquire, in 1992,
Rove was fired from the Bush Sr. presidential campaign for leaking a negative
story. The difference is, whoever authorized this leak, committed a felony.)
Rather
than investigating who in the administration committed this alleged felony, the
White House spent months dodging reporters’ questions. “I'm telling you flatly,
that is not the way this White House operates…No one was certainly given any
authority to do anything of that nature,” declared White House spokesperson
Scott McClellan, careful legalistic language. Neither Bush nor Ashcroft has
publicly called for an investigation.
And
Vice President Dick Cheney’s only public comments on Joe Wilson have been when
questioned on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sept. 14, “I don't know Joe Wilson.
I’ve never met Joe Wilson” and “I have no idea who hired him.”
Cheney’s
comments strain credulity.
While
technically he may have never met Wilson, the investigation into Niger was done
at the request of the vice president’s office. Surely, Mr. Cheney learned of
this, if not before the request was made, then after, when, as the Washington
Post revealed, Cheney traveled repeatedly to the CIA during 2002.
“This
is not unusual. This is unprecedented,” retired CIA analyst Ray McGovern told
Democracy Now! “The Vice President of the United States never during [my] 27
years came out to the CIA headquarters for a working visit…. this is like
inviting money-changers into the temple.”
While
Cheney may not know Wilson, there is little doubt he knows of him. When Cheney
was helping run the Persian Gulf War, as secretary of defense, Wilson was one of
the key players. As the acting US ambassador on the ground in Baghdad in the
weeks leading up to the war, the White House consulted Wilson daily. In those
weeks, he was the only open line of communication between Washington and Saddam
Hussein. Cheney was the Secretary of Defense at the time and a key player in
the day-to-day operations and intelligence gathering. Furthermore, Wilson was
formally commended by the Bush administration for his bravery and heroism in
the weeks leading up to the war. In that time, Wilson helped evacuate thousands
of foreigners from Kuwait, negotiated the release of more than 120 American
hostages and sheltered nearly 800 Americans in the embassy compound.
“Your
courageous leadership during this period of great danger for American interests
and American citizens has my admiration and respect. I salute, too, your
skillful conduct of our tense dealings with the government of Iraq,” President
Bush wrote Wilson in a letter. “The courage and tenacity you have exhibited
throughout this ordeal prove that you are the right person for the job."
Wilson
says that he heard from people who were at meetings chaired by Bush in the lead
up to the Gulf War, “When people would come up with an idea, George Bush would
often lean forward and ask them, ‘What does Joe Wilson say about that? What
does Joe Wilson think about that?’ So at the highest level of our government
there was keen interest in knowing what the field was saying and Dick Cheney
was probably at those meetings.”
What’s
Cheney hiding? What’s the White House hiding?
There
is a scandal brewing at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue that if treated properly by
the Department of Justice and elected officials could prove to be one of the
clearest cases of documentable criminal conduct and blatant lies by an
administration since Watergate and the Iran-Contra scandal.
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.
* Related Link: Congress Members Call For Independent
Probe of White House Leak That Blew CIA Operative’s Cover After CIA Refers
Investigation To Justice Dept. Democracy Now interviews former CIA analyst Ray
McGovern (www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=03/09/29/152217)