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House Judiciary: Statement of Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson, IV (ret.)

Today, the House Judiciary Committee holds this hearing beginning at noon EDT:

VIEW LIVE WEBCAST
Wednesday 07/11/2007 – 12:00 PM | 2141 Rayburn House Office Building
Full Committee Hearing on: The Use and Misuse of Presidential Clemency Power for Executive Branch Officials | By Direction of the Chairman
(List of Witnesses – also listed at the end of this post)

Statement of Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson, IV (ret.)

To the House Committee on the Judiciary

July 11, 2007

Mr. Chairman, Mr. Ranking member, members of the Committee,

Thank you for the invitation to appear before you at this hearing on the possible abuse of Presidential authority in the commutation of I. Lewis Libby, convicted on four counts of lying to federal investigators, perjury and obstruction of justice. I am not a lawyer, but I have understandably followed this case closely. This matter, after all, involves the betrayal of our national security, specifically the leaking of the identity of a covert officer of the Central Intelligence Agency, my wife, Valerie Wilson, as a vicious means of political retribution.

After it became apparent in Spring of 2003 that one of the key justifications for war in the President’s State of the Union address was not supported by the facts, I felt an obligation and a sense of responsibility to the American people and to our men and women in uniform to share my first-hand knowledge about the unsubstantiated allegations of uranium yellowcake sales from Niger to Iraq. Accordingly, In a New York Times article on July 6, 2003, I disclosed the deliberate deceptions surrounding the justification for the invasion, conquest, and occupation of Iraq. Eight days later Valerie’s status as a CIA operative was made public in a newspaper column by Robert Novak. We now know from testimony and evidence presented in the United States vs. I. Lewis Libby that Novak’s column was the end product of a process that was initiated by Vice President Cheney who directed his chief of staff, Scooter Libby to supervise it.

Never in my twenty-three years as a member of the diplomatic service of the United States did I ever imagine a betrayal of our national security at the highest levels.

Fifteen years ago this week, I was sworn in as George Herbert Walker Bush’s Ambassador to two African countries – Gabon and Sao Tome and Principe. Seventeen years ago I served as his acting Ambassador to Iraq in the first Gulf War. I was the last American diplomat to confront Saddam Hussein about his invasion of Kuwait prior to Desert Storm. As acting Ambassador, my embassy was responsible for the safe evacuation of over 2,000 Americans from Kuwait and Iraq and the release of close to 150 Americans held hostage by Saddam and his thugs.

I was proud to serve my country mostly overseas, for twenty-three years, in both Republican and Democratic administrations, and to promote and defend the values enshrined in our Constitution and Bill of Rights. I was honored to be then President Bush’s envoy to Iraq and to have been part of the foreign policy team that managed the international crisis created by Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait. Members of that foreign policy team remain among my closest colleagues and friends.

Given my service, it has been therefore disconcerting to see my family and my targeted in the crosshairs of a character assassination campaign launched by the Vice President and carried out by his chief of staff, and by the President’s chief political aide, Karl Rove, among others.

Ultimately, this concerted effort to discredit me, ruining my wife’s career along the way, has had a larger objective. This matter has always been about this administration’s case for war and its willingness to mislead the American people to justify it. In order to protect its original falsehoods, the Vice President and his men decided to engage in a further betrayal of our national security. Scooter Libby sought to blame the Press, yet another deception. He was willing even to allow a journalist to spend eighty-five days in jail in a most cowardly act to avoid telling the truth.

President Bush promised that if any member of the White House staff were engaged in this matter, it would be a firing offense. However, the trial of Scooter Libby has proved conclusively that Karl Rove was involved, and although he escaped indictment, he still works at the White House. We also know as a result of evidence introduced in the trial that President Bush himself selectively declassified national security material to attempt to support the false rationale for war. The President’s broken promise and his own involvement in this unseemly smear campaign reveal a chief executive willing to subvert the rule of law and system of justice that has undergirded this great republic of ours for over 200 years.

Make no mistake, the President’s actions last week cast a pall of suspicion over his office and Vice President Cheney. Mr. Libby was convicted of, among other crimes, obstruction of justice – a legal term used to describe a cover-up. The Justice Department’s Special Counsel, Patrick Fitzgerald, has said repeatedly that Mr. Libby’s blatant lying had been the equivalent of “throwing sand in the eyes of the umpire”, thereby ensuring that the umpire, the system of justice, cannot ascertain the whole truth. As a result, Fitzgerald has said, “a cloud remains over the Vice President.” In commuting Mr. Libby’s sentence, the President has removed any incentive for Mr. Libby to cooperate with the prosecutor. The obstruction of justice is ongoing and now the President has emerged as its greatest protector. The President’s explanation for his commutation that Mr. Libby’s sentence was excessive turns out to be yet another falsehood because the sentence was quite normal, as Special Counsel Fitzgerald noted. The President, at the very least, owes the American people a full and honest explanation of his actions and those of other senior administration officials in this matter, including, but not limited to the Vice President.

In closing, let me address the question of the underlying crime. Mr. Libby’s attorneys and his apologists have tried to downplay his conviction on the grounds that nobody was actually indicted for the leak of Valerie’s status as a covert CIA officer. Libby’s propaganda is an effort to distract from his crime – his obstruction of justice, his cover up. Who is he protecting?

I would like the committee members and all Americans to think about this matter in this way: If senior American officials take time from their busy schedules to meet with a foreign military attaché for the purpose of compromising the identity of a CIA covert officer, what would we call that? Although that scenario is hypothetical, the end result is no different from what happened in this case – the betrayal of our national security.

I look forward to answering any and all legitimate questions.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::

List of Witnesses

The Honorable Joseph C. Wilson IV

Former Ambassador

Rogert C. Adams

Office of the Pardon Attorney U.S. Department of Justice

David Rivkin

Baker & Hostetler LLP

Professor Douglas A. Berman

Moritz College of Law The Ohio State University

Tom Cochran

Assistant Federal Public Defender Middle District of North Carolina

  • diane

    I’d forgotten what Joe Wilson himself has done for our country.
    When will we, the people, wake up to how dangerous this VP and Pres. is for our country?

  • Leslie

    Will Bush’s advisers be asked to testify too, such as Fred Fielding, Joshua Bolten and Dan Bartlett? Rep. Conyers has asked Bush to waive executive privilege and allow his aides to testify. What do you want to bet Bush won’t?

    Conyers letter: http://www.examiner.com/a-820147~Conyers_Asks_Bush_to_Explain_Libby_Move.html

  • http://noquarter.typepad.com susanUnPC

    In case you tried listening and had trouble, the reason is that it just started. I’m listening to Conyers now, with video.

  • Phillip

    This Plame case and the firing of the federal judges should continue to be pursued. It should not be let to drop until someone is held responsible and the full truth has come out. This is way more serious than anything that the Republicans tried to pin on Clinton and frankly is more serious than Watergate. Both of these cases are the end result of the bigger issues: a corrupt adminstration that is only concerned with politically winning at any cost, and a contempt for the rule of law and this country’s basic principals. This adminstration has done absolutely nothing for the good of the American people. In fact, quite the opposite. They have damaged this company so much that it will take years to get the country back on track. These guys (Bush, Cheney, Libby, Rove, et al) are frankly borderline criminals.

  • http://profile.typekey.com/MaxPrejean/ MEP

    Phillip

    BORDERLINE?????

  • ybnormal

    As a side note, against the backdrop of the usual nonsensical illogical blabbering smac-talk that passes for authoritative political discourse from right-wing reactionaries, Joe Wilson’s clear and concise language comes across as…
    very refreshing.

  • shargash

    In terms of abuse of power, the Libby pardon is probably the most blatant and egregious example of the Bush administration. Firing the federal prosecutors was almost certainly abuse of power, but the way they did it, Bush maintained plausible deniability (barring a smoking gun of some sort) by arguing that he was just following the recommendations of his trusted underlings. In the case of the Libby pardon (oops, commutation and pardon-to-be) he’s taken it all on himself. He’s left himself no plausible deniability. Whether it comes back to bite him in the ass or not, that was a political blunder.

  • http://noquarter.typepad.com susanUnPC

    People at Daily Kos are live-blogging this, and commenting:

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/7/11/1235/79988

  • Mr.Murder

    FDL is too, and Congress has a feed live feed…

    http://judiciary.house.gov/

  • Leslie

    One drawback in today’s hearings: Wilson can’t testify on what lead to Bush’s decision to commute Libby’s sentence. Unless Bush’s aides are allowed to testify, TalkLeft asks, what good will these hearings do?

  • Mr.Murder

    Wilson addressed the underlying crime.

  • Leslie

    Yeah Mr. Murder,
    Wilson’s testimony is worth hearing. But Wilson’s testimony won’t “shed any light on Bush’s motives in granting the commutation.”

    http://www.talkleft.com/story/2007/7/11/113432/699

  • Mr.Murder

    Called my Sens. in support of Webb’s amendment, let’s see how it goes, some Reps. broke rank and voted down cloture…

  • http://noquarter.typepad.com susanUnPC

    Mr. Murder, I heard Jim Webb withdraw his amendment. But I haven’t had the TV on in the past hour (cuz my cat pulled the plug out of the wall!)

  • http://noquarter.typepad.com susanUnPC

    Ybnormal: “As a side note, against the backdrop of the usual nonsensical illogical blabbering smac-talk that passes for authoritative political discourse from right-wing reactionaries, Joe Wilson’s clear and concise language comes across as…
    very refreshing.”

    Doesn’t he?!

    He has a wonderful speaking voice and manner. And he’s very clear in how he expresses his thoughts.

  • Centrocitta

    Congressman Robert C. Scott remarked during the hearing that nobody came forward when Powell made his untruthful presentation (complete with photo of Head of Al-Qaeda in Iraq) to the United Nations Security Council.

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