WSJ, The Kerfuffle over Wilson's wife

2003-09-30 Thread Laurie Mylroie
The Wall Street Journal
REVIEW  OUTLOOK
Political Intelligence
The agenda behind the kerfuffle over Joe Wilson's wife.
Wednesday, October 1, 2003

We've been knocking our heads trying to figure out how a minor and
well-known story about an alleged CIA outing has suddenly blossomed into a
Beltway scandal-ette. The light bulb went off reading Monday's White House
press briefing.

Right out of the box, Helen Thomas asked if the President tried to find out
who outed the CIA agent? And has he fired anyone in the White House yet?
OK, the point of this exercise is to get President Bush to fire someone. But
whom? That answer became clear when the press corps quickly uttered, and
kept uttering for nearly an hour, the name Karl Rove.

Of course! The reason this is suddenly a story is because Mr. Rove, the
President's political strategist and confidant from Texas, has become the
main target. Joseph Wilson, the CIA consultant at the center of this
mini-tempest, had recently fingered Mr. Rove as the official who leaked to
columnist Robert Novak that Mr. Wilson's wife works for the CIA. Mr. Wilson
has offered no evidence for this, and he's since retreated to say only that
he now believes Mr. Rove had condoned it. The White House has replied that
the charge is simply not true. But no matter, the scandal game is afoot.

The media, and the Democrats now slip-streaming behind them, understand that
the what of this mystery matters much less than the who. It's no accident
that Tony Blair's recent and evanescent scandal over WMD evidence concerned
his long-time political aide and intimate, Alastair Campbell. We're also old
enough to recall what happened to Jimmy Carter's Presidency once his old
Georgia friend Bert Lance was run out of town. If they can take down Mr.
Rove, the lead planner for Mr. Bush's re-election campaign, they will have
knocked the props out of his Presidency.

The political goals must be paramount here because the substance of the
story is so flimsy. The law against revealing the names of covert CIA agents
was passed in 1982 as a reaction against leaks by Philip Agee and other
hard-left types whose goal was to undermine CIA operations around the world.
This case is all about a policy dispute over Iraq. The first outing here
was the one Mr. Wilson did to himself by writing an op-ed in July for the
New York Times.

An avowed opponent of war with Iraq, Mr. Wilson was somehow hired as a
consultant by the CIA to investigate a claim made by British intelligence
about yellowcake uranium sought in Niger by Iraqi agents. Though we assume
he signed the routine CIA confidentiality agreement, Mr. Wilson blew his own
cover to denounce the war and attack the Bush

Administration for lying. Never mind that the British still stand by their
intelligence, and that the CIA's own October 2002 National Intelligence
Estimate on Iraq, since partly declassified, lent some credence to the
evidence.

This is the context in which Mr. Novak was told that Mr. Wilson had been
hired at the recommendation of his wife, a CIA employee. This is hardly
blowing a state secret but is something the public had a right to know. When
an intelligence operative essentially claims that a U.S. President sent
American soldiers off to die for a lie, certainly that operative's own
motives and history ought to be on the table. In any event, Mrs. Wilson was
not an agent in the field but is ensconced at Langley headquarters. It
remains far from clear that any law was violated.
   

The real intelligence scandal is how an open opponent of the U.S. war on
terror such as Mr. Wilson was allowed to become one of that policy's
investigators. That egregious CIA decision echoes what has obviously been a
long-running attempt by anonymous intelligence sources quoted in the media
to undermine the Bush policy toward Iraq. Mr. Bush's policies of prevention
and pursuing state sponsors of terror overturned more than 30 years of CIA
anti-terror dogma, and some of the bureaucrats are hoping to defeat him in
2004.

As recently as Monday, the New York Times hung its lead story around a leak
that the Pentagon had somehow not got its money's worth from the $1 million
it had spent mining some of Ahmed Chalabi's intelligence tips. We'd love to
see a declassified bang-for-the-buck analysis of the tens of millions the
CIA has spent paying sources who claimed to have Saddam Hussein in their
sights. If CIA Director George Tenet can't control his bureaucracy, then
President Bush should find a director who can.


Which brings us back to the politics. The Democratic Presidential candidates
are naturally all over this pseudo-story, calling for a special counsel
and Congressional probe. They can suddenly posture as great defenders of the
CIA and covert operations, though some of them spent the decades before 9/11
assailing both. And if they can't get Mr. Bush to 

Clfford May, Was it really a secret that Wilson's wife worked for the CIA?, NRO

2003-09-30 Thread Laurie Mylroie





  
  

   National Review Online
   Clifford May
  


  
  September 29, 2003, 10:22 a.m.Spy GamesWas it 
  really a secret that Joe Wilson's wife worked for the CIA?
  It's the top story in the Washington 
  Post this morning as well as in many other media outlets. Who leaked 
  the fact that the wife of Joseph C. Wilson IV worked for the CIA?
  
  


  



 
   
  





  
  



  



  



  

  What 
  also might be worth asking: "Who didn't know?"
  I believe I was the first to publicly question the credibility of Mr. 
  Wilson, a retired diplomat sent to Niger to look into reports that Saddam 
  Hussein had attempted to purchase yellowcake uranium for his 
  nuclear-weapons program.
  On July 6, Mr. Wilson wrote an op-ed for the New York Times in 
  which he said: "I have little choice but to conclude that some of the 
  intelligence related to Iraq's nuclear weapons program was twisted to 
  exaggerate the Iraqi threat."
  On July 11, I wrote a piece for NRO 
  arguing that Mr. Wilson had no basis for that conclusion — and that his 
  political leanings and associations (not disclosed by the Times and 
  others journalists interviewing him) cast serious doubt on his 
  objectivity. 
  On July 14, Robert Novak wrote a column in the Post and other 
  newspapers naming Mr. Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, as a CIA 
operative.
  That wasn't news to me. I had been told that — but not by anyone 
  working in the White House. Rather, I learned it from someone who formerly 
  worked in the government and he mentioned it in an offhand manner, leading 
  me to infer it was something that insiders were well aware of. 
  I chose not to include it (I wrote a second NRO piece 
  on this issue on July 18) because it didn't seem particularly relevant 
  to the question of whether or not Mr. Wilson should be regarded as a 
  disinterested professional who had done a thorough investigation into 
  Saddam's alleged attempts to purchase uranium in Africa. 
  What did appear relevant could easily be found in what the CIA would 
  call "open sources." For example, Mr. Wilson had long been a bitter critic 
  of the current administration, writing in such left-wing publications as 
  The 
  Nation that under President Bush, "America has entered one of it 
  periods of historical madness" and had "imperial ambitions." 
  What's more, he was affiliated with the pro-Saudi Middle East Institute 
  and he had recently been the keynote speaker for the Education for Peace in Iraq Center, a 
  far-Left group that opposed not only the U.S. military intervention in 
  Iraq but also the sanctions and the no-fly zones that protected Iraqi 
  Kurds and Shias from being slaughtered by Saddam.
  Mr. Wilson is now saying (on C-SPAN this morning, for example) that he 
  opposed military action in Iraq because he didn't believe Saddam had 
  weapons of mass destruction and he foresaw the possibility of a difficult 
  occupation. In fact, prior to the U.S. invasion, Mr. Wilson told ABC's 
  Dave Marash that if American troops were sent into Iraq, Saddam might "use 
  a biological weapon in a battle that we might have. For example, if we're 
  taking Baghdad or we're trying to take, in ground-to-ground, hand-to-hand 
  combat."Equally, important and also overlooked: Mr. Wilson had no 
  apparent background or skill as an investigator. As Mr. Wilson himself 
  acknowledged, his so-called investigation was nothing more than "eight 
  days drinking sweet mint tea and meeting with dozens of people" at the 
  U.S. embassy in Niger. Based on those conversations, he concluded that "it 
  was highly doubtful that any [sale of uranium from Niger to Iraq] had ever 
  taken place."
  That's hardly the same as disproving what British intelligence believed 
  — and continues to believe: that Saddam Hussein was actively attempting to 
  purchase uranium from somewhere in Africa. (Whether Saddam succeeded or 
  not isn't the point; were Saddam attempting to make such purchases it 
  would suggest that his nuclear-weapons-development program was active and 
  ongoing.)
  For some reason, this background and these questions have been 
  consistently omitted in the Establishment media's reporting on Mr. Wilson 
  and his charges. 
  There also remains this intriguing question: Was it primarily due to 
  the fact that Mr. Wilson's wife worked