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Chickens Come Home to Roost on Cheney

by
Ray McGovern

Indictments are expected to come down shortly as special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald completes the investigation originally precipitated by the outing of a C.I.A. officer under deep cover. In 21-plus months of digging and interviewing, Fitzpatrick and his able staff have been able to negotiate the intelligence/policy/politics labyrinth with considerable sophistication. In the process, they seem to have learned considerably more than they had bargained for. The investigation has long since morphed into size “extra-large,” which is the only size commensurate with the wrongdoing uncovered—not least, the fabrication and peddling of intelligence to “justify” a war of aggression.

The coming months are likely to see senior Bush administration officials frog marched out of the White House to be booked, unless the president moves swiftly to fire Fitzgerald—a distinct possibility. With so many forces at play, it is easy to lose perspective and context while plowing through the tons of information on this case. What follows is a retrospective and prospective, laced with some new facts and analysis aimed at helping us to focus on the forest once we have given due attention to the trees.

Background

In late May 2003, the Education for Peace in Iraq Center (EPIC) informed me that a former U.S. ambassador named Joseph Wilson would be sharing keynote duties with me at a large EPIC conference on June 14.

I was delighted—for two reasons. This was a chance to meet the “American hero” (per George H. W. Bush) who faced down Saddam Hussein, freeing hundreds of American and other hostages taken when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. More important, since Wilson had served as an ambassador in Africa, I thought he might be able to throw light on a question bedeviling me since May 6, when New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote an intriguing story about a mission to Niger by “a former U.S. ambassador to Africa.”

There Once Was an Ambassador in Niger…

According to Kristof, that mission was undertaken at the behest of Vice President Dick Cheney’s office to investigate a report that Iraq was seeking uranium from Niger. The report was an entirely convenient “smoking gun.” Since Iraq lacked any nonmilitary use for such uranium, it had to be for a nuclear weapons program, if the report were true. Or so went the argument. The former ambassador sent to Niger had found no basis for the report, pulling the rug out from under the “intelligence” the administration had used during the previous fall to conjure up the “mushroom cloud” that intimidated Congress into authorizing war.

Kristof’s May 6 column had caused quite a stir in Washington. The only one to have totally missed the story was then-National Security Adviser and now Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (assuming she is to be taken at her word). Rice claimed that the information did not come to her attention until more than a month later. Right. (And the celebrated aluminum tubes were for nuclear enrichment—not artillery. Right.)

This ostensibly nuclear-related “evidence” was no mere sideshow; it went to the very core of the disingenuous justification for war. The Iraq-Niger report itself was particularly suspect. The uranium mined in Niger is very tightly controlled by a French-led international consortium, and the chances of circumventing or defeating the well established safeguards and procedures were seen as virtually nil. On March 7, Mohammed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, announced to the U.N. Security Council that the documents upon which the Iraq-Niger reporting was based were “not authentic.” Colin Powell swallowed hard but took it as well as could be expected under the circumstances. A few days later he conceded the point entirely—with neither apology nor embarrassment, as befits the world’s sole remaining superpower.

The Sixteen Words

Powell had long since decided that the Iraq-Niger report did not pass the smell test. But he was apparently afraid to incur Cheney’s wrath by telling the president. Powell’s own intelligence analysts at the State Department had branded the story “highly dubious,” so he had chosen to drop it from the long litany of spurious charges against Iraq that he recited at the U.N. on February 5, 2003, a performance that Powell now admits constitutes a “blot” on his record. Asked to defend President George W. Bush’s use of the Iraq-Africa story in his state-of-the-union address in January 2003, the best Powell could do was to describe the president’s (in)famous “16 words” as “not totally outrageous,” a comment that did not help all that much.

Those in Congress who felt they had been misled by the story, which the White House PR machine had shaped into a “mushroom cloud,” were in high dugeon. For example, in the days before the attack on Iraq, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) wrote the president to complain that Waxman and his colleagues had been deceived out of their constitutional prerogative to declare or otherwise authorize war. None of this put the brakes on the intrepid Cheney, who three days before the war told NBC’s Tim Russert, “We believe he [Saddam Hussein] has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons.”

Cheney, of course, had been assured by the likes of neo-conservative armchair general Kenneth Adelman that the war would be a “cakewalk,” that U.S. forces would be greeted as “liberators,” and that in the glow of major victory, only the worst kind of spoilsport would complain that the “justification” was based largely on a forgery. By May 2003, however, it had become clear that the cakewalk was a pipedream and that no sign of a “reconstituted” nuclear weapons program was likely to be found. In this context, the information in Kristof’s May 6 op-ed was like pouring salt into an open wound.

Do You Know the Ambassador?

When introduced to former ambassador Wilson at the June 14 conference, I wasted no time asking him—rather naively, it turned out—if he knew who the former U.S. ambassador who went to Niger was. He smiled and said, “You’re looking at him.” I asked when he intended to go public; in a couple of weeks, was the answer.

Wilson then turned dead serious and, with considerable emphasis, told me the White House had already launched a full-court press in an effort to dredge up dirt on him. He added, “When I do speak out, they are going to go after me big time. I don’t know the precise nature the retaliation will take, but I can tell you now it will be swift and vindictive. They cannot afford to have people thinking they can escape unscathed if they spill the beans on the dishonesty undergirding this war.” (Sad to say, the White House approach has worked. There are perhaps a hundred of my former C.I.A. colleagues who know about the lies; none—not one—has been able to summon the courage to go public.)

Wilson’s tone was matter of fact; the nerves were of steel. Hardly surprising, thought I. If you can face down Saddam Hussein, you can surely face down the likes of Dick Cheney. Wilson’s New York Times op-ed of July 6, 2003, “What I Didn’t Find in Africa,” pulled no punches. Worse still from the administration’s point of view, Wilson then dropped the other shoe during an interview with the Washington Post also on July 6.

Consummate diplomats like Wilson typically do not speak of “lies.” So outraged was Wilson, though, that this bogus story had been used to “justify” an unprovoked war, that he made a point to note that the already proven dishonesty begs the question regarding “what else they are lying about.”

It was a double whammy. And, as is now well known, the White House moved swiftly—if clumsily (and apparently illegally)—to retaliate.

It was clear from the start that Vice President Dick Cheney and Kemosabe (Amer. Indian for “Scotter”) Libby, as well as Karl Rove, were taking the lead in this operation to make an object lesson of Wilson and his wife. And it is somewhat reassuring to notice that some newly tenacious mainstream pundits are now waking up to this. Better late than never, I suppose.

Still Good Advice: Fire Cheney

Watching matters unfold at the time, we Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity on July 14, 2003 issued a Memorandum for the President, with chapter and verse on how “your vice president led this campaign of deceit.” We pointed out that this was no case of petty corruption of the kind that forced Vice President Spiro Agnew out by the side door. It was, rather, a matter of war and peace, with thousands already killed and no end in sight. We offered the president the following suggestion:

“Recommendation #1: We recommend that you call an abrupt halt to attempts to prove Vice President Cheney “not guilty.” His role has been so transparent that such attempts will only erode further your own credibility. Equally pernicious, from our perspective, is the likelihood that intelligence analysts will conclude that the way to success is to acquiesce in the cooking of their judgments, since those above them will not be held accountable. We strongly recommend that you ask for Cheney’s immediate resignation.”

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0714-01.htm

President George W. Bush rejected our advice (not for the first time). But now the president may have to let Cheney go after all. Why? Because special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is taking his job seriously.

Frog Marching

During a speech in Seattle in August 2003, former ambassador Wilson imagined a scene in which police are frog marching presidential adviser Karl Rove out of the White House. This appeared a bit far-fetched at the time, but not now. Indeed, it seems there will be a need for multiple handcuffs and marshals.

From the beginning of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald’s investigation in January 2004, Wilson expressed confidence that the truth would emerge. And because of Fitzgerald’s professionalism and tenacity, we are about to see at least some of the perpetrators of this fraud get their comeuppance. Normally, Schadenfreude is exceedingly hard to resist in such circumstances. But it is harder still to allow oneself any joy at the misfortune of others, when the focus needs to be placed on the huge damage already done to our country, its values, and its reputation.

Fire the Special Prosecutor? Shades of Watergate

When the Watergate scandal reached a similar stage in October 1973, President Richard Nixon, ordered Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire the intrepid special prosecutor Archibald Cox. Richardson resigned rather than carry out Nixon’s order; and so did his deputy William Ruckleshaus. So Nixon had to reach farther down into the Justice department where he found Robert Bork, who promptly dismissed Cox in the so-called Saturday Night Massacre.

Fitzgerald is at least as vulnerable as Cox was. Indeed, in recent days some of the fourth estate, Richard Cohen in the Washington Post and John Tierney in The New York Times, for example, seem to have accepted assignments to help lay the groundwork for Fitzgerald’s dismissal.

Will the White House decide to fire special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, and simply absorb the PR black eye, as Nixon did? There is absolutely nothing to prevent it. Can you imagine Attorney General Alberto Gonzales refusing on principle an order from President Bush?

Could Bush himself be named an un-indicted co-conspirator? If that or something like it happens, we can expect a circling of the wagons and Fitzgerald cashiered.

If the case Fitzgerald has built, however, is not strong enough to implicate Bush personally, it seems likely that the president will acquiesce in wholesale frog marching of others from the White House and then go off for a Thanksgiving vacation in Crawford—opps, more likely, Camp David. For Cindy Sheehan is planning Thanksgiving in Crawford: she still hopes to see the president so that he can explain to her personally what the “noble cause” was for which her son died.

It promises to be an interesting autumn. By all means stay tuned.
———————–
Ray McGovern works for Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, DC. He was a C.I.A. analyst for 27 years, and is now on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.

  • Cervantes

    Thanks, Ray.

  • EasyRider

    Thanks Ray, this is a well written article and deserves to be read by all.

  • http://www.frontiernet.net/~jcrittenden/blog/ Jim C

    War Criminal can’t fire the grand jury. The wat I understand it, it is they, not the prosecutor, who hands down indictments.

    Thanks for your leadership these months and years.

  • http://atotallysecularmohammad.blogspot.com/ Mac Nayeri

    WoW!!!
    I like you Larry –

    Where is the Congress in all this?

    Who do they answer to if not the American people?

    Peace
    M

  • Toby Tobiason

    I didn’t know that Robert Bork was the person that ended up firing Aribald Cox. Robert Bork, the mythic right wing hero? He made his bones defending Nixon? Unbelievable. You couldn’t write novels with these sorts of plot lines; they just wouldn’t be believable.

  • Sandy

    That’s what I was afraid of – that Bush’s crony Gonzales fires Fitzgerald.

    Would there be a loud enough outcry?

    Surely they can’t make this all just disappear? Because they have the majority in the House, Senate, Executive and Judicial branches?

    What a scandal!

  • Mr.Murder

    Roberts is the new Bork.

    Anyways the Star Chamber could perhaps rule on the matter of an ongoing trial?

    Obstruction and conflict of interest should prevent Bush from being able to issue the pardons.

    Who exactly could Cheney insert, since he was Ford’s chief of Staff and Gerald R.Ford’s recent birthday party guest list was also subject to Subpoenae and has been held in what constitutes contempt under a claim of Executive Privilege?

    They’re a bunch of C.R.E.E.P.s in sheep’s clothing…
    By the way anyone else see the Iranian Liberation Front lately? The Paris-based group, a part of Iran/Contra and the October Surprise…

    They’ve been knee deep in the quagmire for quite some time. The ILF/INC ‘overlapse’ of Ledeen/Ghorbanifar contacts must be brought into the light of Justice.

    As for a noble cause… Let’s instead consider a Nobel cause… eu tu, Judith? Clearly the loophole of giving her clearance was a clever way to set up a patsy.

    But someone above her cleared material to Judy above and beyond the call. Senior Staffers take accountability. Including Senator Santorum’s Staffer, Mrs.Ledeen, and each Executive Cabinet position. Of course someone’s Goss should be cooked at the CIA. Hadley and Libby’s immediate bosses as well.

    Condi’s NSA and Cheney’s Veep office. They’ve had paws on the interior, the oil industry, the war lobby, and now foreign affairs with Condi at State and Liz Cheney in Mid East affairs for the same.

    Somewhere beneath the avalanche of RICO warrants is the next snowflake baby of the neocon empire war…

    One day soon, thanks to technology upgrades, our kids can fight for war of oil in Venezuela and other South American lands where OPEC has expanded, post peak. This after the media creates false scandals like they used on the Clintons before helping usher in AWOL and bring integrity back to government. Perhaps another terror attack’s warning go unheeded, or better yet false warning made and acted upon like in Oilraq.

    Diebold will be ready for that day…

    In the meantime, will AWOL be able to sit in Cheney’s lap again?

    “Who could have imagined?”

  • Mr.Murder

    Gonzales overheard other matters dealing with this previously, some of their renderings helped make this happen, one in Italy, to be exact. He should have to recuse self entirely just as Ashcroft had, his dealings with Gitmo proceedings alone can be considered a countenance of prejudice towards this action, it isn’t just about Plame and Bush its broader context would involve review of potential fixed testimony in the form of torture…

    A cleric was kidnapped and rendered with extreme prejudice. This to the point Italy put warrants out to distance self from backlash within the Muslim community of mid-south Europe. Or for Italian ambitions overseas in developing Muslim lands.

    People on payroll are listed in warrants. Clearly NATO members, coalition members, UN members, wish to put space between Bush’s abuse of human rights and their policies. Ashcroft already bungled one sure fire conviction of a terrorist linked to Atta’s 9-11 cell in Germany as one example of our failure to work with EU and UN/NATO countries against terror.

    The collateral damage effects everyone but Bush in real time terms.

  • http://whatdoiknow.typepad.com/what_do_i_know/2005/10/outsourcing_you.html What Do I Know?

    Outsourcing Your Reading Pleasure

    Cutting corners, but never quality, here at WDIK: Natalie at Philobiblon has compiled the Carnival of Feminists inaugural post. (These blog carnivals are popping up all over the place. For those of you not aware, they’re compilations of posts on

  • Manndibles

    With the unsurprising revelations that Cheney’s office had been conducting a concerted, team-effort to discredit and slander the Wilsons, I also wonder what exactly will come of the unprecedented case of espionage discovered, against a fmr. Marine who had been retrieving information from the said office, for the Filipino opposition in the police force.

    They seem to be under fire on all fronts, of which many of these scandals are of major proportions.
    Nothing less than the 22 indictments should satisfy us. This second term is going to be a long, painful one for Mr. Bush.

    Insha’alla. Thank you.

  • CK

    One wonders who gained what by outing Brewster Jennings & Associates. One wonders why Novak had to do two articles, the first outing Plame and then after a short delay a second specifically outing Brewster Jennings.
    One wonders if the flow of information was from Judith Miller not to Judith Miller.
    One wonders if Mrs. Wilson has been deposed. One wonders if Ms Miller knew of the work of Brewster Jennings & Assoc. through Ms. Miller’s foreign associates and/or through her association with Laurie Mylroie.
    One wonders why all the emphasis was on the IIPA instead of the Espionage acts 18 USC 793 and 794.
    One wonders how many other NOCs and foreign assets were burned or turned by the outing of Brewster Jennings & Assoc.
    One wonders if Judith Miller is actually an agent in place ( a NOC if you will or agent of influence ) of a foreign power.

  • http://profile.typekey.com/JerryinOmaha/ J i O

    Ray,

    Reading your commentary, it’s easy to see there’s a deep animus existing between the V.P. & CIA. Serious, long term animus.

    Which side, DI or DO, do you think feels most aggrieved?

    Knowing you probably can’t answer, do you have a counterpart in the DO we never hear from? How would you conjecture this person(s) has been contributing to CIA’s struggle with the V.P. now and in the past?

  • http://yohoyohoasailorslifeforme.blogspot.com Jonah D. Wail

    As Ray McGoven put it:

    > > The investigation has long since morphed into size “extra-large,” which is the only size
    > > commensurate with the wrongdoing uncovered—not least, the fabrication and peddling
    > > of intelligence to “justify” a war of aggression.

    And as Mr. Murder pointed out:

    > > They’ve been knee deep in the quagmire for quite some time. The ILF/INC ‘overlapse’ of
    > > Ledeen/Ghorbanifar contacts must be brought into the light of Justice.

    And that IS the real “worm in the oinment” ….

    Published today 10-20-05:

    From James Moore -

    James Moore is an Emmy-winning former television news correspondent and the co-author of the bestselling, “Bush’s Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential.” He has been writing and reporting from Texas for the past 25 years on the rise of Rove and Bush and has traveled extensively on every presidential campaign since 1976. He is currently writing a book on the long term consequences for America of Bush and Rove policies, which will be published next year.

    : : The Most Important Criminal Case in American History

    : : [snippet]
    : :
    : : Fitzgerald has reportedly asked for a copy of the Italian government’s investigation
    : : into the break-in of the Niger embassy in Rome and the source of the forged documents.
    : : The blatantly fake papers, which purported to show that Saddam Hussein had cut a deal
    : : to get yellowcake uranium from Niger, turned up after a December 2001 meeting in
    : : Rome involving neo-con Michael Ledeen, Larry Franklin, Harold Rhodes, and Niccolo
    : : Pollari, the head of Italy’s intelligence agency SISMI, and Antonio Martino, the Italian
    : : defense minister.
    : :
    : : Is Fitzgerald is examining the possibility that Ledeen was executing a plan to help his
    : : friend Karl Rove build a case for invading Iraq? Ledeen has long ties to Italian intelligence
    : : agency operatives and has spanned the globe to bring the world the constant variety of
    : : what he calls “creative destruction” to build democracies. He makes the other neo-cons
    : : appear passive. He brought the Reagan administration together with the Iranian arms dealer
    : : who dragged the country through Iran-Contra and shares with his close friend Karl Rove a
    : : personal obsession with Machiavelli. Ledeen, who is almost rabidly anti-Arab, famously
    : : told the Washington Post that Karl Rove told him, “Any time you have a good idea, tell me.”
    : :
    : : The federal grand jury has to at least consider whether Ledeen called Rove with an idea to
    : : use his contacts with the Italian CIA to hatch a plan to create the rationale for war. Ledeen
    : : told radio interviewer Ian Masters and his producer Louis Vandenberg, “I have absolutely
    : : no connection to the Niger documents, have never even seen them. I did not work on them,
    : : never handled them, know virtually nothing about them, don’t think I ever wrote or said
    : : anything about the subject.” It is strictly coincidence then that some months after he and
    : : his neo-con consorts and Italian intelligence officers met in Rome that the Niger embassy
    : : was illegally entered and nothing was stolen other than letterhead and seals. And equally
    : : coincident that forged papers under those letterheads were slipped to Elisabetta Burba, a
    : : writer for an Italian glossy owned by Silvio Berlusconi, Italy’s prime minister, and a backer
    : : of the Bush invasion scheme. Unfortunately for the pro-war neo-cons, even an Italian
    : : tabloid would not publish the fake documents and turned them over to the CIA and US
    : : government in Rome.
    : :
    : : (the entire article may be found at: http://tinyurl.com/9d9jf )

    Who’s elephant is that standing in the corner of the room?

  • Mr.Murder

    Cheney had multiple reasons to out Brewster.

    That Peter Jennings was allowed to travel with the African trip and be part of stories that had multiple overlapping talking points involving proliferation ,nuclear material, African politics, geopolitical trade, all led to Brewster’s existance for anyone searching the stories out from the trip.

    The White House should have vetted this better. Their attempt to give press passes in return for parroting war lies included a name that would allow inquisitive minds(and paid watchers of other INTEL agencies) to connect the dots.

    Why so?

    Halliburton and Bechtel and other Cheney/Rumsfeld interests were big parts of the Oil for Food scandal(which Judith also provided cover for). The ability to earmark oil through the Trans-Arabain pipeline after short transfer from Iraq kept the wall street investors in the dark about true post peak numbers. Most likely you’ll see a few corroborations on any google search satellite information for a visual archive of tankers in the region, something evidenced by the refusal to release naval logs that tracked the oil for food shipments which profited the Houston circle greatly.

    Halliburton was big in the network of nuclear subcontractors and has subsidiaries helping to proliferate through third parties. Especially the nation of Israel and their allied interests of South Africa where Cheney has vested business dealings.

    Aside from deceased Hussein Khamel’s suspiscious testimony that was integrated into Ghorbanifar’s burn list information the most likely sourcings would be from South Africa or Israel.

    Israel is not on the list of transparent nations dealing with Nuclear materials, the most likely accomplice to North Korea.

    South Africa has many strong ties to Israel and the Halliburton/Bechtel portfolios of Cheney/Rumsfeld. Look there most likely you’ll find the match(if any) for logisitical information and forgery links.

    Paging Mr. and Mrs. Ledeen…

  • http://casadelogo.typepad.com/factesque eRobin

    “But it is harder still to allow oneself any joy at the misfortune of others, when the focus needs to be placed on the huge damage already done to our country, its values, and its reputation.”

    Amen: http://casadelogo.typepad.com/factesque/2005/10/stop_with_the_s.html

  • Mr.Murder

    Cheney did an end run on sanctions in business with Saddam and other lands facing restrictions/sanctions.

    He also was close to Oil for Food, diverting it to Sauds who kept the Trans Arabain Pipeline flowing post peak. http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/7/6/43844/47575

    Halliburton provides nuclear well head penetrators and has several discrepencies in audits of them.

    Halliburton provides subcontracor or subsidiary assistance to many nuclear proliferation fields and other countries not compliant with full IAEA standards.

    The billing of military functions for Halliburton saw its shares double so outing Plame allowed the war to stay on a fast timetable.

    Brewster Jennings was too close to ARAMCO for Cheney and Condi’s liking. http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/5/26/479/57368 Especially the Afghan pipeline trail that GH Venture Partners placed initial bids on in the 90s. http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/7/31/2623/52967

    Also the Jennings contacts were too close to South Africa where OPEC’s focus was placed post peak, especially Venezuela. http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/7/3/92340/19627(Colin Powell was in South America on 9-11 meeting the deposed Afghan King and other OPEC/pan-arab sympathizers)

    All told the motivation for outing:
    1)Saud Peak Diversions
    2)Oil for Food billing discrepencies
    3)Saud Putsch in Northern/Central Africa
    4)OPEC’s South America expansion and attempted cessation of Venezuela
    5)Trans Afghan pipeline/UNOCAL
    6)Cheney’s sanctions runs in Iran(and other countries)over oil
    7)Sanctions runs with Iraq by Cheney’s company over oil
    8) Sanctions end runs involving nuclear materials for well head penetrators, subcontractor work, preproduction material, postproduction, hazardous waste.

    Multiple Motives, multiple contacts in the press to overwhelm initial opposition.

  • beth Murphy

    Waiting For The Valerie Plame Wilson Grand Jury (John Dean says indictments unlikely)
    findlaw ^ | Oct 21 05 | John Dean

    It is difficult to envision Patrick Fitzgerald prosecuting anyone, particularly Vice President Dick Cheney, who believed they were acting for reasons of national security. While hindsight may find their judgment was wrong, and there is no question their tactics were very heavy-handed and dangerous, I am not certain that they were acting from other than what they believed to be reasons of national security. They were selling a war they felt needed to be undertaken.

    In short, I cannot imagine any of them being indicted, unless they were acting for reasons other than national security. Because national security is such a gray area of the law, come next week, I can see this entire investigation coming to a remarkable anti-climax, as Fitzgerald closes down his Washington Office and returns to Chicago.

    In short, I think the frenzy is about to end — and it will not go any further. Unless, of course, these folks were foolish enough to give false statements, perjure themselves or suborn perjury, or commit obstruction of justice. If they were so stupid, Patrick Fitzgerald must stay and clean house.

  • beth Murphy

    Waiting For The Valerie Plame Wilson Grand Jury (John Dean says indictments unlikely)
    findlaw ^ | Oct 21 05 | John Dean

    It is difficult to envision Patrick Fitzgerald prosecuting anyone, particularly Vice President Dick Cheney, who believed they were acting for reasons of national security. While hindsight may find their judgment was wrong, and there is no question their tactics were very heavy-handed and dangerous, I am not certain that they were acting from other than what they believed to be reasons of national security. They were selling a war they felt needed to be undertaken.

    In short, I cannot imagine any of them being indicted, unless they were acting for reasons other than national security. Because national security is such a gray area of the law, come next week, I can see this entire investigation coming to a remarkable anti-climax, as Fitzgerald closes down his Washington Office and returns to Chicago.

    In short, I think the frenzy is about to end — and it will not go any further. Unless, of course, these folks were foolish enough to give false statements, perjure themselves or suborn perjury, or commit obstruction of justice. If they were so stupid, Patrick Fitzgerald must stay and clean house.

  • http://profile.typekey.com/CCK/ Sometime-CIA-Defender
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