Ocnus.Net
Bush Hides 'Plame-gate' Testimony
By Jason Leopold, Consortium 16/7/08
Jul 17, 2008 - 7:49:49 AM
Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, promptly
denounced the White House legal reasoning as “ludicrous,” noting that
executive privilege covers advice that an aide gives the President, not
responses to legal questions posed by a prosecutor about a possible
crime.
Bush applied his broad assertion of executive privilege Wednesday at
the request of Attorney General Michael Mukasey, who earlier had
rebuffed congressional requests for interviews conducted with both
Cheney and Bush about the disclosure of CIA officer Valerie Plame
Wilson’s identity.
“I am greatly concerned about the chilling effect that compliance with
the [House Oversight] Committee's subpoena would have on future White
House deliberations and White House cooperation with future Justice
Department investigations,” Mukasey wrote in a letter to Bush on
Tuesday.
Since becoming Attorney General in December 2007, Mukasey has balked at
investigating crimes allegedly committed earlier by Bush administration
officials – from torturing detainees to arranging political
prosecutions – a "no-look-back" approach that drew criticism from the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
In reaction to Bush’s assertion of executive privilege, Waxman said “we
are not seeking access to the communications between the Vice President
and the President. We are seeking access to the communications between
the Vice President and FBI investigators.”
The California Democrat also noted that special prosecutor Patrick
Fitzgerald told the committee in a July 3 letter that Cheney had met
with the FBI voluntarily and knew his answers could be disclosed at a
public trial.
“Mr. Fitzgerald told us that ‘there were no agreements, conditions and
understandings’ that limited Mr. Fitzgerald's use of the interview in
any way,” Waxman said. “This unfounded assertion of executive privilege
does not protect a principle; it protects a person.”
Waxman also accused Mukasey of applying a different standard for a
Republican administration than was applied to its Democratic
predecessors.
“Ten years ago,” Waxman said, “Attorney General Janet Reno, provided
the Committee the FBI interviews of both President Clinton and Vice
President Gore. Mr. Mukasey decided that a different rule should apply
to Republican presidents than to Democratic presidents."
Actually, the Bush administration’s resistance to releasing the
responses from a President and a Vice President in a criminal
proceeding contrasts with precedents for both parties, including the
appearances of Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton before
various special prosecutors.
Waxman’s committee was scheduled to vote Wednesday to hold Mukasey in
contempt for refusing to comply with the Cheney subpoena. However,
Waxman postponed the vote after Bush’s assertion of executive privilege.
Long-running Scandal
The “Plame-gate” affair dates back to 2003 when Valerie Plame Wilson’s
husband, former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson, went public with the
fact that he had undertaken a fact-finding trip to Niger which had
disproved President Bush’s claim that Iraq had sought to buy yellowcake
uranium from the African nation.
As Wilson was going public with his knowledge of the Niger falsehood,
Bush administration officials began leaking the fact that Wilson’s wife
worked at the CIA and had a hand in arranging Wilson’s trip to Niger.
The leakers included Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, White
House political adviser Karl Rove and I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby,
Cheney’s chief of staff.
Valerie Plame Wilson’s CIA employment was revealed in a July 14, 2003,
article by right-wing columnist Robert Novak, effectively destroying
her career. Two months later, a CIA complaint to the Justice Department
sparked a criminal probe into the identity of the leakers.
Initially, Bush professed not to know anything about the matter, and
several of his senior aides, including Rove and Libby, followed suit.
However, it later became clear that Rove and Libby had a hand in the
Plame leak and that Bush and Cheney had helped organize a campaign to
disparage Wilson by giving critical information to friendly journalists.
In a statement Wednesday, Wilson said the "fact that the Attorney
General is recommending the assertion of executive privilege reveals
that this Department of Justice is as beholden to the White House as
that run by former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.”
In October 2005, Libby was indicted on charges of perjury and
obstruction of justice. At Libby’s trial in 2007, his attorney,
Theodore Wells, told jurors that Fitzgerald had tried to build a case
of conspiracy against Cheney and Libby, and that the prosecution
believed Libby may have lied to federal investigators and to a grand
jury to protect Cheney.
“Now, I think the government, through its questions, really tried to
put a cloud over Vice President Cheney," Wells said.
Rebutting Wells, Fitzgerald told jurors: "You know what? [Wells] said
something here that we're trying to put a cloud on the Vice President.
We'll talk straight. There is a cloud over the Vice President. He sent
Libby off to [meet with New York Times reporter] Judith Miller at the
St. Regis Hotel. At that meeting - the two-hour meeting - the defendant
talked about the wife [Plame]. We didn't put that cloud there. That
cloud remains because the defendant obstructed justice and lied about
what happened."
Libby also told the FBI that it was "possible" that Cheney instructed
him to disseminate to the press information about Plame’s identity.
Cheney’s Notes
Copies of Cheney’s handwritten notes also appeared to implicate Bush in
the leak case.
Cheney's notes, which were introduced as evidence during Libby's trial,
called into question the truthfulness of Bush's insistence that he had
no prior knowledge of the sub rosa campaign against Wilson.
In an October 2003 note to then-press secretary Scott McClellan, Cheney
demanded that the press office add Libby to a list of White House
officials being cleared of any role in the Plame leak.
"Not going to protect one staffer + sacrifice the guy that was asked to
stick his head in the meat grinder because of incompetence of others,"
Cheney wrote. However, the note revealed that Cheney had originally
written "this Pres" before crossing that out and using the passive
tense, "that was."
In other words, the original version suggested that Bush had asked
Libby “to stick his head in the meat grinder,” an apparent reference to
dealing with the Washington press corps.
In 2007, Libby was convicted of four counts of perjury and obstruction
of justice and was given a 30-month jail sentence, but Bush commuted
the sentence to spare Libby any jail time.
The still-secret interviews with Bush and Cheney took place in 2004.
According to sources knowledgeable about the Vice President’s
interview, Cheney was specifically asked about conversations he had
with senior aides, including Libby, and queried about whether he was
aware of a campaign led by White House officials to leak Plame’s
identity.
It is unknown how Cheney responded to those questions.
Waxman said Wednesday that the FBI interview report could be the "key
document" that explains what Cheney’s role was in the leak.
"If there is one document that could pierce the cloud hanging over the
Vice President, this is it," Waxman said.
On June 24, 2004, Bush was interviewed by Fitzgerald for 70 minutes
about the Plame leak. The only other member of the Bush team in the
room during the meeting was Jim Sharp, the private lawyer whom Bush
hired, according to then-press secretary McClellan.
”The President … was pleased to do his part to help the investigation
move forward,” McClellan said. “No one wants to get to the bottom of
this matter more than the President of the United States.”
However, with his invocation of executive privilege on Wednesday, Bush
seems determined to make sure that the American public never gets to
know what sits at the bottom of the “Plame-gate” scandal.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008