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  Cheyneys staff a subject of Inquiry for 'outing' a CIA member

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Topic:   Cheyneys staff a subject of Inquiry for 'outing' a CIA member

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Mech
Commitees of Correspondence


The Minuteman State
6227 posts, Jun 2001

posted 02-06-2004 07:57 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mech   Visit Mech's Homepage!   Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

Cheney's staff focus of probe

By RICHARD SALE, UPI

Intelligence Correspondent

Federal law enforcement officials said that they have developed hard evidence of possible criminal misconduct by two employees of Vice President Dick Cheney's office related to the unlawful exposure of a CIA officer's identity last year.

The investigation, which is continuing, could lead to indictments, a Justice Department official said.

According to these sources, John Hannah and Cheney's chief of staff Lewis "Scooter" Libby were the two Cheney employees.

"We believe that Hannah was the major player in this," one federal law enforcement officer said.

Calls to the vice president's office were not returned. Hannah and Libby did not return calls.

The strategy of the FBI is to make clear to Hannah "that he faces a real possibility of doing jail time," as a way to pressure him to name superiors, one federal law enforcement official said.

The case centers on Valerie Plaine, a CIA operative then working for the weapons of mass destruction division, and her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson who served as ambassador to Gabon and as a senior American diplomat in Baghdad in the early 1990s. Under President Bill Clinton, he was head of African affairs until he retired in 1998, according to press accounts.

Wilson was sent by the Bush administration in March 2002 to check on an allegation made by Bush in his State of the Union address the previous winter, that Iraq had sought to buy uranium from the nation of Niger.

Wilson returned with a report that said the claim was "highly doubtful."

On June 12, Washington Post reporter Walter Pincus revealed that an unnamed diplomat had "given a negative report" on the claim and then on July 6, as the Bush administration was widely accused of manipulating intelligence to get American public opinion behind a war with Iraq, Wilson published an Op-Ed piece in the Washington Post, in which he accused the Bush administration of "misrepresenting the facts," asking, "What else are they lying about?"

According to one administration official, "The White House was really pissed, and began to contact six journalists in order to plant stories to discredit Wilson," according to New York Times and other accounts.

As Pincus said in a Sept. 29 radio broadcast, "The reason for putting out the story about Wilson's wife working for the CIA was to undermine the credibility of (Wilson's) mission for the agency in Niger. Wilson, as the last top diplomat in Iraq at the time of the Gulf War, had credibility beyond his knowledge of Africa, which was his specialty. So his going to Niger to check the allegation that Iraq had sought uranium there and returning to say he had no confirmation was considered very credible."

Eight days later, columnist Robert Novak wrote a column in which he named Wilson's wife and revealed she was "an agency operative on weapons of mass destruction." Since Plaine was working undercover, it exposed her and, in the opinion of some, ruined her usefulness and her career.

It also violated a 1982 law that prohibits revealing the identity of U.S. intelligence agents.

On Oct. 7, Bush said that unauthorized disclosure of an undercover CIA officer's identity was "a criminal matter" and the Justice Department had begun its investigation into the source of the leak

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Mech
Commitees of Correspondence


The Minuteman State
6227 posts, Jun 2001

posted 05-02-2004 06:44 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mech   Visit Mech's Homepage!   Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Exerpt: Interview with Ret.Col Don De Graand-Pre


DGP: Cheney is closest to the action. He was probably most involved in all of the details of September 11th and he'll be one of the first to fall. So I predict, I predict that Cheney will be out of here inside of, well prior to the election.

Scott: Is that because he knows exactly what happened or because ...

DGP: Yes, he knows exactly what happened.

Scott: You have to eliminate all those people.

DGP: Several, yes.

AJ: Now, again...

Scott: Wouldn't that serve as a warning to anybody who would serve them in the future?

DGP: Perhaps but these guys can only understand one ingredient and that is force. And that's why it has to emanate from the military. And military force in the persona of military tribunals will takeover. And Cheney, as I reiterate, is toast.

--Ret. Col. Don De Grand-Pre

Alex Jones show March 2004

*****


Pressure mounts on Cheney over smears against diplomat and 'outing' of CIA wife
Row that began with 'IoS' interview deepens as Vice-President's officials are accused of serious felony
By Andrew Buncombe in Washington

02 May 2004

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=517287


Vice-President Dick Cheney was under mounting pressure last night after he and his senior officials were accused of smearing a former ambassador and outing his wife as an undercover CIA officer in a deliberate act of revenge hatched inside the White House.

In a row which began with off-the-record comments he made to The Independent on Sunday last year, a former diplomat, Joe Wilson, said Mr Cheney oversaw a group of neo-conservatives who decided to try to damage his reputation. Because of Mr Wilson, the White House was forced to admit that a key claim in President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address - that Iraq was seeking uranium for nuclear weapons - should not have been made.

The controversy over what happened next could prove to be the most damaging yet to engulf the Bush administration. A criminal inquiry is investigating the unveiling in the press of Mr Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, as a CIA agent - a serious felony under US law. If one of Mr Cheney's senior officials were charged, the damage would be huge.

Should the Vice-President be personally implicated - which Mr Wilson believes he is - the outcome would be devastating for both Mr Cheney and Mr Bush as they campaign for re-election.

Mr Wilson has made his allegations in a newly published book, The Politics of Truth, subtitled "Inside the lies that led to war and betrayed my wife's CIA identity". In it he writes: "I am told ... that the Office of the Vice-President - either the Vice-President himself or more likely his chief of staff, Lewis 'Scooter' Libby - chaired a meeting at which a decision was made to do a work-up on me. As I understand it, this meant they were going to take a close look at who I was and what my agenda might be."

The former diplomat has claimed elsewhere that it was also at this meeting that the issue of his wife's identity and her role as a covert CIA operative was discussed. Mr Wilson said he believed it was very unlikely that Mr Cheney was not aware of this.

In an exclusive interview in his office in Washington, just a quarter of a mile from Mr Cheney's, he said: "I find it difficult to believe that a chief of staff would be undertaking something like this without - at a minimum - the Vice-President's knowledge." Mr Wilson stopped short of asking for Mr Cheney's resignation, but said: "If he [did not know] about it, he should be saying so. The leak took place at the nexus of national security, policy and politics."

His struggle with the White House dates to a mission in early 2002, at the request of Mr Cheney's office. He was sent to the west African state of Niger, where he was once ambassador, to investigate claims that Iraq was seeking to purchase uranium to develop nuclear weapons. The claims were based on a document obtained by Italian intelligence services, which had passed the information to Washington.

In less than a week Mr Wilson proved that the claim was false and that the document must be a fake. Returning to Washington, he reported this to a debriefer from the CIA. Later, experts from the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, confirmed the document was a crude forgery. But when Mr Bush and his senior officials continued to make the claim - first publicised in the British Government's September 2002 dossier on Iraq - he felt it was his duty to speak out. In an interview with The Independent on Sunday, in which he asked that he not be identified, and subsequently in a signed piece in The New York Times, Mr Wilson pointed out that it was inconceivable that senior US and British officials were not aware of his findings.

After he went public, his wife was identified as a CIA operative by the syndicated right-wing columnist Bob Novak, a veteran Washington journalist with close links to the Republicans. It was her suggestion to send Mr Wilson to Africa, claimed Mr Novak, who said in his column he had been provided with the information by "two senior administration officials".

The leaking of an intelligence officer's identity is a criminal offence. An FBI team is investigating the leak and has called a grand jury to hear evidence and question potential witnesses. Earlier this year it was reported that Mr Libby and numerous other officials from Mr Cheney's office had been questioned by the FBI. Mr Wilson alleges that it was Mr Bush's senior political adviser, Karl Rove, who was responsible for "pushing" the story of Ms Plame's CIA position, and that a senior national security council official, Elliott Abrams, may also have been involved.

The White House has been very careful in its remarks on the affair, insisting that Mr Rove, Mr Elliott and Mr Libby were "not involved in leaking classified information". It has stopped short of an outright denial. One reason the White House may have been keen to smear Mr Wilson is because it knew his allegations would be taken seriously. In the run-up to the first Gulf War he helped to secure the release of US citizens taken hostage by Saddam Hussein. He was the last US official to meet Saddam while he was in power.

Mr Wilson told the IoS that his wife still worked for the CIA, but that her work had been severely disrupted. He said that she might also be at risk from anyone who wished to harm her because of her previous undercover work.

"It has been irredeemably changed," he said, adding that his wife felt she had been a victim of the political ambitions of senior officials within the administration.



[Edited 2 times, lastly by Mech on 05-02-2004]

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increase 1776
Senior Member


Oregon
410 posts, Oct 2000

posted 05-04-2004 01:19 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for increase 1776     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Now we know why he's building that underground bunker.He lives in Wyoming,maybe all the tremors near Yellowstone were from another black budget bunker for the Satan worshipers.

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