LOOK SAM LOOK:

Libby's grand jury testimony, described for the first time in legal papers 
filed this week, Cheney "specifically directed" Libby in late June or early 
July 2003 to pass information to reporters from two classified CIA documents: 
an October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate and a March 2002 summary of 
Wilson's visit to Niger.

One striking feature of that decision -- unremarked until now, in part because 
Fitzgerald did not mention it -- is that the evidence Cheney and Libby selected 
to share with reporters had been disproved months before.

United Nations inspectors had exposed the main evidence for the uranium charge 
as crude forgeries in March 2003, but the Bush administration and British Prime 
Minister Tony Blair maintained they had additional, secret evidence they could 
not disclose. In June, a British parliamentary inquiry concluded otherwise, 
delivering a scathing critique of Blair's role in promoting the story. With no 
ally left, the White House debated whether to abandon the uranium claim and 
became embroiled in bitter finger-pointing about whom to fault for the error. A 
legal brief filed for Libby last month said that "certain officials at the CIA, 
the White House, and the State Department each sought to avoid or assign blame 
for intelligence failures relating to Iraq's weapons of mass destruction."

It was at that moment that Libby, allegedly at Cheney's direction, sought out 
at least three reporters to bolster the discredited uranium allegation. Libby 
made careful selections of language from the 2002 estimate, quoting a passage 
that said Iraq was "vigorously trying to procure uranium" in Africa.

The first of those conversations, according to the evidence made known thus 
far, came when Libby met with Bob Woodward, an assistant managing editor of The 
Washington Post, on June 27, 2003. In sworn testimony for Fitzgerald, according 
to a statement Woodward released on Nov. 14, 2005, Woodward said Libby told him 
of the intelligence estimate's description of Iraqi efforts to obtain 
"yellowcake," a processed form of natural uranium ore, in Africa. In an 
interview Friday, Woodward said his notes showed that Libby described those 
efforts as "vigorous."

Libby's next known meeting with a reporter, according to Fitzgerald's legal 
filing, was with Judith Miller, then of the New York Times, on July 8, 2003. He 
spoke again to Miller, and to Time magazine's Matt Cooper, on July 12.

At Cheney's instruction, Libby testified, he told Miller that the uranium story 
was a "key judgment" of the intelligence estimate, a term of art indicating 
there was consensus on a question of central importance.

In fact, the alleged effort to buy uranium was not among the estimate's key 
judgments, which were identified by a headline and bold type and set out in 
bullet form in the first five pages of the 96-page document.

Unknown to the reporters, the uranium claim lay deeper inside the estimate, 
where it said a fresh supply of uranium ore would "shorten the time Baghdad 
needs to produce nuclear weapons." But it also said U.S. intelligence did not 
know the status of Iraq's procurement efforts, "cannot confirm" any success and 
had "inconclusive" evidence about Iraq's domestic uranium operations.

Iraq's alleged uranium shopping had been strongly disputed in the intelligence 
community from the start. In a closed Senate hearing in late September 2002, 
shortly before the October NIE was completed, then-director of central 
intelligence George J. Tenet and his top weapons analyst, Robert Walpole, 
expressed strong doubts about the uranium story, which had recently been 
unveiled publicly by the British government. The State Department's Bureau of 
Intelligence and Research, likewise, called the claim "highly dubious." For 
those reasons, the uranium story was relegated to a brief inside passage in the 
October estimate.

But the White House Iraq Group, formed in August 2002 to foster "public 
education" about Iraq's "grave and gathering danger" to the United States, 
repeatedly pitched the uranium story. The alleged procurement was a minor issue 
for most U.S. analysts -- the hard part for Iraq would be enriching uranium, 
not obtaining the ore, and Niger's controlled market made it an unlikely seller 
-- but the Niger story proved irresistible to speechwriters. Most nuclear 
arguments were highly technical, but the public could easily grasp the link 
between uranium and a bomb.

Tenet interceded to keep the claim out of a speech Bush gave in Cincinnati on 
Oct. 7, 2002, but by Dec. 19 it reappeared in a State Department "fact sheet." 
After that, the Pentagon asked for an authoritative judgment from the National 
Intelligence Council, the senior coordinating body for the 15 agencies that 
then constituted the U.S. intelligence community. Did Iraq and Niger discuss a 
uranium sale, or not? If they had, the Pentagon would need to reconsider its 
ties with Niger.

The council's reply, drafted in a January 2003 memo by the national 
intelligence officer for Africa, was unequivocal: The Niger story was baseless 
and should be laid to rest. Four U.S. officials with firsthand knowledge said 
in interviews that the memo, which has not been reported before, arrived at the 
White House as Bush and his highest-ranking advisers made the uranium story a 
centerpiece of their case for the rapidly approaching war against Iraq.

Bush put his prestige behind the uranium story in his Jan. 28, 2003, State of 
the Union address. Less than two months later, the International Atomic Energy 
Agency exposed the principal U.S. evidence as bogus. A Bush-appointed 
commission later concluded that the evidence, a set of contracts and 
correspondence sold by an Italian informant, was "transparently forged."


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/08/AR2006040800916_pf.html



or this:

The NIE's key judgments, made public by the White House days after they were 
leaked to Miller, said nothing about the alleged Niger uranium deal.

The only reference to Iraq's alleged bid to buy uranium is buried in the 
still-classified body of the NIE, and the State Department's intelligence 
bureau disputed the claim, according to a July 2004 report by the Senate 
Intelligence Committee.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/politics/14311361.htm

>> I do get it. It's not false and never was. 
>
>well... The administration itself seems to disagree with you.

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