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View Full Version : Valerie Plame's Real Job...




mactastic
Sep 5, 2006, 05:22 PM
... Chief of Operations for the Joint Task Force on Iraq (http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060918/corn).
In the spring of 2002 Dick Cheney made one of his periodic trips to CIA headquarters. Officers and analysts were summoned to brief him on Iraq. Paramilitary specialists updated the Vice President on an extensive covert action program in motion that was designed to pave the way to a US invasion. Cheney questioned analysts about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction. How could they be used against US troops? Which Iraqi units had chemical and biological weapons? He was not seeking information on whether Saddam posed a threat because he possessed such weapons. His queries, according to a CIA officer at the briefing, were pegged to the assumptions that Iraq had these weapons and would be invaded--as if a decision had been made.

Though Cheney was already looking toward war, the officers of the agency's Joint Task Force on Iraq--part of the Counterproliferation Division of the agency's clandestine Directorate of Operations--were frantically toiling away in the basement, mounting espionage operations to gather information on the WMD programs Iraq might have. The JTFI was trying to find evidence that would back up the White House's assertion that Iraq was a WMD danger. Its chief of operations was a career undercover officer named Valerie Wilson.

...

The Novak column triggered a scandal and a criminal investigation. At issue was whether Novak's sources had violated a little-known law that makes it a federal crime for a government official to disclose identifying information about a covert US officer (if that official knew the officer was undercover). A key question was, what did Valerie Wilson do at the CIA? Was she truly undercover? In a subsequent column, Novak reported that she was "an analyst, not in covert operations." White House press secretary Scott McClellan suggested that her employment at the CIA was no secret. Jonah Goldberg of National Review claimed, "Wilson's wife is a desk jockey and much of the Washington cocktail circuit knew that already."

Valerie Wilson was no analyst or paper-pusher. She was an operations officer working on a top priority of the Bush Administration. Armitage, Rove and Libby had revealed information about a CIA officer who had searched for proof of the President's case. In doing so, they harmed her career and put at risk operations she had worked on and foreign agents and sources she had handled.

Another issue was whether Valerie Wilson had sent her husband to Niger to check out an intelligence report that Iraq had sought uranium there. Hubris contains new information undermining the charge that she arranged this trip. In an interview with the authors, Douglas Rohn, a State Department officer who wrote a crucial memo related to the trip, acknowledges he may have inadvertently created a misimpression that her involvement was more significant than it had been.

...

The JTFI found nothing. The few scientists it managed to reach insisted Saddam had no WMD programs. Task force officers sent reports detailing the denials into the CIA bureaucracy. The defectors were duds--fabricators and embellishers. (JTFI officials came to suspect that some had been sent their way by Ahmad Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress, an exile group that desired a US invasion of Iraq.) The results were frustrating for the officers. Were they not doing their job well enough--or did Saddam not have an arsenal of unconventional weapons? Valerie Wilson and other JTFI officers were almost too overwhelmed to consider the possibility that their small number of operations was, in a way, coming up with the correct answer: There was no intelligence to find on Saddam's WMDs because the weapons did not exist. Still, she and her colleagues kept looking. (She also assisted operations involving Iran and WMDs.)

When the war started in March 2003, JTFI officers were disappointed. "I felt like we ran out of time," one CIA officer recalled. "The war came so suddenly. We didn't have enough information to challenge the assumption that there were WMDs.... How do you know it's a dry well? That Saddam was constrained. Given more time, we could have worked through the issue.... From 9/11 to the war--eighteen months--that was not enough time to get a good answer to this important question."

When the Novak column ran, Valerie Wilson was in the process of changing her clandestine status from NOC to official cover, as she prepared for a new job in personnel management. Her aim, she told colleagues, was to put in time as an administrator--to rise up a notch or two--and then return to secret operations. But with her cover blown, she could never be undercover again. Moreover, she would now be pulled into the partisan warfare of Washington. As a CIA employee still sworn to secrecy, she wasn't able to explain publicly that she had spent nearly two years searching for evidence to support the Administration's justification for war and had come up empty.

...

(more)
If true, BushCo greatly damaged our nation and our ability to gather the very information we need desperately, for political gain.

And just for good measure, a quote from Bush's daddy:
“Even though I’m a tranquil guy now at this stage of my life, I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious, of traitors.”
- George H. W. Bush speaking at a dedication ceremony for the George Bush Center for Intelligence

Scum.



Dont Hurt Me
Sep 5, 2006, 05:32 PM
Scum,I can think of may other terms to use but iam sick of the spin and lies out of this administration. During Vietnam another travesty Cheney & Bush were no where to be found and here they are doing the same thing they were dodging and hiding under their desks from during Vietnam. Whatever happened to getting the guy who did 911? Bush /Cheney are a discrace to this country and the constitution they are "suppose to uphold and defend.

zimv20
Sep 5, 2006, 07:23 PM
holy crap, i thought she was working on iran stuff. this is beyond outrageous -- it's treason.

leekohler
Sep 5, 2006, 08:25 PM
holy crap, i thought she was working on iran stuff. this is beyond outrageous -- it's treason.

Agreed- absolutely insane. I can't believe this- oh wait, yes actually I can.

solvs
Sep 7, 2006, 01:42 PM
You'd think more people would care. If only somehow sex was involved. Or, like, the death and/or mysterious disappearance of a celebrity. Or pretty, young, newlywed or something. But no, so no one cares except those who already care. Though that number seems to be growing, so I'm not too disappointed yet.

Of course, the fact that no one is really that surprised about this tells me something that is a little sad.

nbs2
Sep 7, 2006, 05:17 PM
If true, BushCo greatly damaged our nation and our ability to gather the very information we need desperately, for political gain.
I thought Armitage was more of a political opponent of BushCo than a friend. I found this article (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/06/AR2006090601648_pf.html) in the Post (arch-rival to all things conservative) rather informative.

mactastic
Sep 7, 2006, 05:59 PM
I thought Armitage was more of a political opponent of BushCo than a friend. I found this article (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/06/AR2006090601648_pf.html) in the Post (arch-rival to all things conservative) rather informative.
Whether Armitage was the first person known to leak Plame's name, the fact remains that Cheney, Libby, and Rove were all willing to compromise the JTFI's work and Brewster Jennings, the front company that Plame worked for, for political gain. In my book, that comes very close to treason, if not crossing the line.

And while the Broder piece you linked to is technically an article, it is not a news article, but rather an opinion article.

Also, I'm not sure how you come to the conclusion that Armitage is a political opponent of Bush's. He was a signatory to the PNAC letter to Bill Clinton, worked for Bob Dole and Ronald Reagan in the '80s, entered the private sector in 1993, and served as a foreign policy advisor to Bush for his 2000 campaign.

Doesn't sound like an opponent to me...

nbs2
Sep 8, 2006, 11:01 AM
Doesn't sound like an opponent to me...
Not a direct opponent, but the two of them don't really see eye to eye, especially on major international issues (like Iraq). Stood up for what he thought rather than toeing the party line, sort of another Powell...

Thanatoast
Sep 8, 2006, 11:14 AM
And the impeachment hearings begin when?

Never. Neither party has the guts.

Don't panic
Sep 8, 2006, 11:15 AM
And the impeachment hearings begin when?

Never. Neither party has the guts.

it's just that they cannot decide for which of the many offenses they should impeach first...