The Washington Post thinks Bush was right, or wold have been if he hadn't snuck 
around.


A Good Leak
President Bush declassified some of the intelligence he used to decide on war 
in Iraq. Is that a scandal?
Sunday, April 9, 2006; Page B06


PRESIDENT BUSH was right to approve the declassification of parts of a National 
Intelligence Estimate about Iraq three years ago in order to make clear why he 
had believed that Saddam Hussein was seeking nuclear weapons. Presidents are 
authorized to declassify sensitive material, and the public benefits when they 
do. But the administration handled the release clumsily, exposing Mr. Bush to 
the hyperbolic charges of misconduct and hypocrisy that Democrats are leveling.

Rather than follow the usual declassification procedures and then invite 
reporters to a briefing -- as the White House eventually did -- Vice President 
Cheney initially chose to be secretive, ordering his chief of staff at the 
time, I. Lewis Libby, to leak the information to a favorite New York Times 
reporter. The full public disclosure followed 10 days later. There was nothing 
illegal or even particularly unusual about that; nor is this presidentially 
authorized leak necessarily comparable to other, unauthorized disclosures that 
the president believes, rightly or wrongly, compromise national security. 
Nevertheless, Mr. Cheney's tactics make Mr. Bush look foolish for having 
subsequently denounced a different leak in the same controversy and vowing to 
"get to the bottom" of it.

 
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The affair concerns, once again, former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV and his 
absurdly over-examined visit to the African country of Niger in 2002. Each time 
the case surfaces, opponents of the war in Iraq use it to raise a different set 
of charges, so it's worth recalling the previous iterations. Mr. Wilson 
originally claimed in a 2003 New York Times op-ed and in conversations with 
numerous reporters that he had debunked a report that Iraq was seeking to 
purchase uranium from Niger and that Mr. Bush's subsequent inclusion of that 
allegation in his State of the Union address showed that he had deliberately 
"twisted" intelligence "to exaggerate the Iraq threat." The material that Mr. 
Bush ordered declassified established, as have several subsequent 
investigations, that Mr. Wilson was the one guilty of twisting the truth. In 
fact, his report supported the conclusion that Iraq had sought uranium.

Mr. Wilson subsequently claimed that the White House set out to punish him for 
his supposed whistle-blowing by deliberately blowing the cover of his wife, 
Valerie Plame, who he said was an undercover CIA operative. This prompted the 
investigation by Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald. After more than 2 1/2 
years of investigation, Mr. Fitzgerald has reported no evidence to support Mr. 
Wilson's charge. In last week's court filings, he stated that Mr. Bush did not 
authorize the leak of Ms. Plame's identity. Mr. Libby's motive in allegedly 
disclosing her name to reporters, Mr. Fitzgerald said, was to disprove yet 
another false assertion, that Mr. Wilson had been dispatched to Niger by Mr. 
Cheney. In fact Mr. Wilson was recommended for the trip by his wife. Mr. Libby 
is charged with perjury, for having lied about his discussions with two 
reporters. Yet neither the columnist who published Ms. Plame's name, Robert D. 
Novak, nor Mr. Novak's two sources have been charged with any wrongdoing.

As Mr. Fitzgerald pointed out at the time of Mr. Libby's indictment last fall, 
none of this is particularly relevant to the question of whether the grounds 
for war in Iraq were sound or bogus. It's unfortunate that those who seek to 
prove the latter would now claim that Mr. Bush did something wrong by releasing 
for public review some of the intelligence he used in making his most momentous 
decision.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/08/AR2006040800895.html

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