[Mb-civic] COMMENTARY A Right-Wing Smear Is Gathering Steam LATimes
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Jul 21 15:28:52 PDT 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-wilson21jul21.story
COMMENTARY
A Right-Wing Smear Is Gathering Steam
Ex-envoy says the GOP has targeted him and his wife.
By Joseph C. Wilson IV
July 21, 2004
For the last two weeks, I have been subjected along with my wife, Valerie
Plame to a partisan Republican smear campaign. In right-wing blogs and on
the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal and the National Review, I've
been accused of being a liar and, worse, a traitor.
This is the latest chapter in a saga that began in 2002 when I was asked by
the CIA to investigate a report that Saddam Hussein had tried to purchase
several hundred tons of uranium yellowcake from the West African country of
Niger in order to reconstruct Iraq's nuclear weapons program.
I went to Niger, investigated and told the CIA that the report was
unfounded. Then, in July 2003, I revealed some details of my investigation
in a New York Times Op-Ed article. I did that because President Bush had
used the Niger claim to support going to war in Iraq to support his
contention that we could not wait "for the smoking gun to become a mushroom
cloud" even though the administration knew that evidence for it was all
but nonexistent. Shortly after that article was published, the attacks
began: Administration sources leaked to the media that my wife was an
undercover CIA operative an unprecedented betrayal of national security
and a possible felony.
In the last two weeks, since the Senate Intelligence Committee released its
report on intelligence failures, the smear attacks have intensified. Based
on distortions in the report, they appear to have three purposes: to sow
confusion; to distract attention from the fact that the White House used the
Niger claim even after CIA Director George Tenet told Bush that "the
reporting was weak"; and to protect whoever it was who told the press about
Valerie.
The primary new charge from the Republicans is that I lied when I said
Valerie had nothing to do with my being assigned to go to Niger. That's
important to the administration because there's a criminal investigation
underway, and if she did play a role, divulging her CIA status may be
defendable. In fact, though the Senate committee cites a CIA source saying
Valerie had a role in the assignment, it ignores what the agency told
Newsday reporters as early as July 2003, long before I ever acknowledged
Valerie's CIA employment.
"A senior intelligence officer," the reporters wrote, "confirmed that Plame
was a Directorate of Operations undercover officer who worked 'alongside'
the operations officers who asked her husband to travel to Niger.
"But he said she did not recommend her husband to undertake the Niger
assignment. 'They [the officers who did ask Wilson to check the uranium
story] were aware of who she was married to, which is not surprising,' he
said. 'There are people elsewhere in government who are trying to make her
look like she was the one who was cooking this up, for some reason,' he
said. 'I can't figure out what it could be.' " Last week, a CIA source
repeated this to CNN and the Los Angeles Times.
On another front, my enemies claim I based my conclusions about the Niger
claim on documents that the Senate report now suggests I couldn't have seen.
But the truth is that I made it clear in the New York Times article that I
had never seen the written documents concerning the alleged sale between
Iraq and Niger. By then, however, as I wrote, news accounts had already
"pointed out that the documents had glaring errors they were signed, for
example, by officials who were no longer in government and were probably
forged."
Finally, it has been suggested that my work for the CIA, rather than
debunking the Niger claim, supported it. Although some analysts continued to
believe that the Iraqis were interested in purchasing Niger uranium, that is
a far cry from Bush's claim in the State of the Union: "British intelligence
has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa." My report said there was no evidence that such a thing
occurred in Niger.
The attacks against me should not obscure the facts. The day after my
article in the Times appeared in July 2003, the president's spokesman
acknowledged that "the 16 words did not merit inclusion in the State of the
Union address."
The Senate report makes clear that senior leadership of the CIA tried
repeatedly to keep this unsubstantiated claim out of presidential addresses.
Three months before the State of the Union, on Oct. 6, 2002, the CIA sent a
fax to the White House stating that "the Africa story is overblown." Tenet
testified that on that day he told the deputy national security advisor the
"president should not be a fact witness on this issue" because "the
reporting was weak."
The right-wing campaign against me and Valerie does not alter the reality
that someone in the Bush administration exposed her identity and compromised
national security. I believe it was a malicious act meant to keep others
from crossing a vindictive administration.
Most important, when it comes to the Niger claim and so many other claims
underlying the decision to go to war in Iraq it is the Bush
administration, not Joe Wilson, who spoke the words that have cost us more
than 900 lives and billions of dollars and have left our international
reputation in tatters.
*
Joseph C. Wilson IV is the author of "The Politics of Truth" (Carroll &
Graff, 2004). He was in the diplomatic service for 23 years.
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