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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (11911)7/15/2005 11:19:56 PM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
Plame Games Continue

Power Line

The Valerie Plame affair is shaping up as this summer's entertainment for bored news junkies. As noted below, an important issue in the "case" is whether Plame was a covert employee of the CIA. This morning's Washington Times includes this denial by one of Plame's former supervisors that she was a "covert agent":
    A former CIA covert agent who supervised Mrs. Plame early 
in her career yesterday took issue with her identification
as an "undercover agent," saying that she worked for more
than five years at the agency's headquarters in Langley
and that most of her neighbors and friends knew that she
was a CIA employee. "She made no bones about the fact
that she was an agency employee and her husband was a
diplomat," Fred Rustmann, a covert agent from 1966 to
1990, told The Washington Times.
   "Her neighbors knew this, her friends knew this, his 
friends knew this. A lot of blame could be put on to
central cover staff and the agency because they weren't
minding the store here. ... The agency never changed her
cover status."
    In addition, Mrs. Plame hadn't been out as an NOC since 
1997, when she returned from her last assignment, married
Mr. Wilson and had twins, USA Today reported yesterday.
The distinction matters because a law that forbids
disclosing the name of undercover CIA operatives applies
to agents that had been on overseas assignment "within
the last five years."
Beyond that, the story is pure entertainment value.

Yesterday the Senate Democrats tried to revoke Karl Rove's security clearance; every Senate Democrat joined in the buffoonish measure. Bill Frist responded by introducing an amendment to revoke the security clearances of Harry Reid and Dick Durbin, for improperly disclosing the contents of FBI reports, in Reid's case on a judicial nominee and in Durbin's on Guantanamo Bay.

I think it would have been funnier if the Republicans had tried to revoke Ted Kennedy's driver's license.

With luck, the Plame affair will continue to enertain us through the dog days of summer.

UPDATE: Stories in the New York Times and the Washington Post this morning have fueled more speculation about the underlying source of the information that Plame worked for the CIA, including, once again, the theory that Judith Miller is that source. We'll continue to pass along some of the better-reasoned speculation, but prefer to wait to hear from the prosecutor before reaching even tentative conclusions about how the information in question circulated.

FURTHER UPDATE: The current rumor, based on a grand jury leak, is that Rove learned about Plame's CIA employment from Robert Novak and another journalist (who presumably could have been Miller). If this testimony were accepted, it would mean that there could be no criminal liability on Rove's part. The broader question, of course, is whether Rove's supposed "outing" of Ms. Plame had any significance at all, given that Rove was apparently among the last to know.

By the way, one wonders: is this grand jury leak a "good leak," like the kind engaged in by the New York Times and the Washington Post, or a "bad leak," like the kind allegedly engaged in by Rove? Just asking.

powerlineblog.com

washtimes.com

nytimes.com

washingtonpost.com

slate.msn.com

justoneminute.typepad.com

apnews.myway.com
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