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January 30, 2006

01-30-06

Gorilla Empire?
A Global State of Disunion
by Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch, January 29, 2006
Three years ago Bush said what in his State of the Union address?


A reader sent me this from a Gallup poll:
(Angus Reid Global Scan) – Many adults in the United States believe the coalition effort has been one of the major problems for the administration headed by George W. Bush, according to a poll by Harris Interactive. 63 per cent of respondents think the war in Iraq has been very or somewhat damaging for the federal government.
The responses to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita are next on the list with 57 per cent, followed by the revelation that the U.S. president authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to eavesdrop on U.S. citizens, the indictment if congressman Tom Delay, the leaks of Valerie Plame’s name and the indictment of Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and the investigation into deputy chief of staff Karl Rove....

January 29, 2006

01-29-06

Are Libby's lawyers teeing up a pardon? by Tim Grieve, Salon.com, January 23, 2006The request for classified documents certainly will help slow things down in order for the possiblity of a pardon. Tim Grieve makes the case.


Fitzgerald Eyes Plame-Niger Conspiracy by Jason Leopold, Truthout.org, January 23, 2006Leopold wrote that 'officials said Fitzgerald's interest is not in the the war's validity...'


Waivering By Rachel Smolkin, American Journalism Review, Rachel Smolkin is AJR's managing editor, February/March 2006 Preview Smolkin's article discusses the dangers of sources waiving their confidentiality. I still think there is a big difference between a leak that compromised national security and a leak that exposed a compromise to our constitution.

January 23, 2006

01-23-06

Libby Wants to Use Classified Evidence by Toni Locy, AP, January 23, 2006
Lawyers for a former top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney on Monday made their first request to use classified evidence at his trial, launching a highly secretive court process that could bog down the case.

January 22, 2006

01-22-06

Libby Team to Subpoena Media by Carol D. Leonnig, Washington Post Staff Writer, Saturday, January 21, 2006
Defense Plans to Go After Journalists' Notes in CIA Leak Case. ... ...In yesterday's court papers, Libby's attorneys hinted at two key elements of their defense strategy.

Lawyers in C.I.A. Leak Case Seek to Subpoena Journalists by David Johnston, New York Times, January 21, 2006
The New York Times version of the Subpoena story has a little more about... ..."The combative tone of the statements by Mr. Libby's defense team" among other things.

Scooter Libby says "everybody did it" by Knowsthings, Daily Kos January 21, 2006

PlameGate: Libby and the Government At Odds Over Discovery by www.Talkleft.com, January 20, 2006

Team Libby Tries a Stall Tactic by Reddhedd, Firedoglake, January 21, 2006

Libby Defense To Subpoena Journalists by Tom Maguire, Justoneminute, January 21, 2006


For Rove camp, the wait is a drag by Tim Grieve, War Room, Salon.com
January 21, 2006

We hate to give credence to the notion that men like to see others suffer, but we had a hard time shedding any tears as we read the Wall Street Journal's "Washington Wire" this morning. Noting that we haven't heard much from special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald lately, the Journal's John Harwood says that Karl Rove's camp is "frustrated by uncertainty over his status" in the Valerie Plame case.

My Plame Problem — And Yours By Timothy M. Phelps, Columbia Journalism Review
January, 2006

The forces unleashed by Robert Novak’s column unveiling the secret agent Valerie Plame have shaken the White House, helped destroy any pretense of a reporter’s privilege in federal criminal cases, and obliged at least ten Washington journalists, including me...

HARPER'S INDEX Harper's Magazine, Sunday, January 15, 2006
January, 2006

51: Percentage of Americans who said in November that the Valerie Plame leak scandal was of "great importance."
49: Percentage who said, two months before President Nixon resigned, that Watergate was "very serious."

Xyzzy www.defectiveyeti.com, January, 2006
This is my laugh out loud pick. Enjoy...
Iraqi Invasion: A Text Misadventure
Revision 88 / Serial number 54892

January 19, 2006

01-19-06

Fizzled Fitzmas? by GreyLion
Wed Jan 18, 2006

Does anyone out there know what's going on in the Fitzgerald investigation? Why is there total silence now? It angers me that these things just seem to disappear, and the GOP and Bush just get away with their malicious behavior because people get cold feet!
There's a good blog entry about the "Ghost of Joe Wilson" over at First Draft (Holden):
http://www.first-draft.com//modules.php?nme=News&file=article&sid=5010
where he points out a previously classified intelligence analysis memo that was overlooked.

Fitzmas in 2006? (w/poll) -Fitzmas in 2006? (w/poll) , by enthusiast
Tue Jan 17, 2006

Fitzgerald seems to be very slow and methodical, or a reluctant prosecutor. It's hard to tell which. What seems clear is that he is not an eager beaver, or that he is not rushing things. We had a kind of Fitzmas in 2005, to the extent that Libby was indicted, but nothing more seems to be happening, or nothing is being covered in the media. Is this a 2005 story? Will Libby fall on his sword and serve a very short sentence, being anointed as a right wing hero and resuscitated by the neocons in a future administration? Or will Fitzgerald persist in his investigation and get to the heart of the matter. It seems as though Bush Admin might have won on this front, at least in stalling & delaying Fitzgerald's investigation until it seems completely irrelevant.

Paging Little Miss Run Amok by Factesque
January 10, 2006

James Risen, NYT reporter and author of State of War, was on the Daily Show last night making some things about protecting sources perfectly clear:
Stewart: They make some hay out of the idea that isn't Scooter Libby, who famously gave the name of a CIA agent to Robert Novak - or whatever that case is - That he also should be protected by the actual laws or guidance that protects your sources. Do you see those as two separate cases?
Risen: I think actually this is the direct opposite of the whole Plame case. That case was more about the government trying to say bad things about a skeptic, Joe Wilson. This is actually real whistleblowers coming forward to talk about what they think was illegal or unconstitutional activity. I think they are polar opposite cases.
Well, that couldn't be more clear. I wonder if the Queen of All Iraq taped it.

A Crumb For The Plamaniacs by Tom Maguire
January 10, 2006

The WaPo teases us with a near non-story on Tim Russert's legal maneuverings in the Plame case:
Russert Resisted Testifying on Leak
Lawyers for NBC News reporter Tim Russert suspected in the spring of 2004 that his testimony could snare Vice President Cheney's top aide, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, in a lie and Russert resisted testifying at the time about private conversations with Libby, according to court papers released yesterday.
... ...Now, one might wonder, why did Russert suspect that his testimony might "snare" Libby in a lie? Did Russert have a sneak preview of the Libby story?

January 18, 2006

01-18-06

2002 Memo Doubted Uranium Sale Claim -By Eric lichtblau, New York Times, January 18, 2006
A high-level intelligence assessment by the Bush administration concluded in early 2002 that the sale of uranium from Niger to Iraq was "unlikely" because of a host of economic, diplomatic and logistical obstacles, according to a secret memo that was recently declassified by the State Department.

Is Print Media More Ethical than Broadcast News? You bet. -By David Fiderer, The Huffington Post, January 11, 2006
According to Joe Wilson, Chris Matthews is a guy who can't keep a secret or a promise. As Wilson told Newsweek two years ago, Matthews phoned him on July 21, 2003 (one week after Novak's column outed Wilson's wife) to say, "I just got off the phone with Karl Rove. He says, and I quote, 'Wilson's wife is fair game.'" A few hours later on Hardball, Matthews and Andrea Mitchell discussed Wilson's "accusation" of a White House smear campaign.

23 Administration Officials Involved In Plame Leak www.thinkprogress.org
The cast of administration characters with known connections to the outing of an undercover CIA agent:
Karl Rove
I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby
Condoleezza Rice
Stephen Hadley
Andrew Card
Alberto Gonzales
Mary Matalin
Ari Fleischer
Susan Ralston
Israel Hernandez
John Hannah
Scott McClellan
Dan Bartlett
Claire Buchan
Catherine Martin
Jennifer Millerwise
David Wurmser
Colin Powell
Karen Hughes
Adam Levine
Bob Joseph
Vice President Dick Cheney
President George W. Bush

January 12, 2006

PlamePage 1-11-06

Fitzgerald Maintains Focus on Rove -By Jason Leopold, Tuesday 10 January 2006
Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is said to have spent the past month preparing evidence he will present to a grand jury alleging that White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove knowingly made false statements to FBI and Justice Department investigators and lied under oath while he was being questioned about his role in the leak of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame's identity more than two years ago, according to sources knowledgeable about the probe.

Russert Resisted Testifying on Leak -By Carol D. Leonnig, Washington Post Staff Writer, Tuesday, January 10, 2006; A05
Lawyers for NBC News reporter Tim Russert suspected in the spring of 2004 that his testimony could snare Vice President Cheney's top aide, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, in a lie and Russert resisted testifying at the time about private conversations with Libby, according to court papers released yesterday.

January 07, 2006

Plame Page 01-07-06

Today's News:

Man of the Year: Patrick Fitzgerald - by Gerald Rellick
My nomination for Man of the Year in 2005 is Patrick Fitzgerald. Anyone who could flush out a sleazy journalist like Judy Miller and toss her in jail without blinking an eye gets my vote. More significantly, though, it was only after Fitzgerald’s tenacious investigation that the media woke from its stupor and discovered that the disclosure of Valerie Plame’s CIA identity was more than just another Washington scandal –


Fitz in Vanity Fair -by Firedoglake
I'm quite sympathetic to the plight of David Margolick, the author of the Vanity Fair piece on Patrick Fitzgerald. He's had to address the same problem I've been struggling with -- namely Fitzgerald is a very difficult person to get a grip on. A simple recitation of chronological facts is inherently uninteresting, and most people close to Fitz are unwilling -- or, as I came to believe, unable -- to give much insight into his character, despite my best attempts to cajole, charm, threaten and throttle them into doing so.


Fitz Declaring War on Press? --I don’t Think So…--by Tom Bevan at Realclearpolitics.com
Even if Foer considers the Plame leak a dirty trick and the NSA leak an act of heroism, that doesn't support the claim that investigating the latter is a declaration of war on the press but investigating the former wasn't. In fact, that sort of thinking is at least part of the reason for the New York Times' credibility problem --


Isn’t it the same thing? by Ted Barlow at CrookedTimer.org
Law professor Glenn Reynolds quotes law professor Ann Althouse:
I wonder if those who screamed loudest about the Plame leak and national security are equally outraged about this new leak?
Pointing out this vile hypocrisy must be the zingiest zinger that ever zinged a zingee. They’re right, in way. Few of us who are upset about the outing of Valerie Plame are viscerally upset about the NSA leak, which we tend to see as a classic whistleblower scenario. As a dedicated Plame screamer, let me try to reply.


Sole Arbiter of Secrets By Eli Lake, The New York Sun, January 6, 2006
In the coming months it is all but certain that more reporters will once again be called by Justice Department investigators to give up their anonymous sources. … …Conservatives in particular would do themselves a favor by resisting the urge to champion this all but inevitable prosecution. It is true that the disclosure of electronic surveillance meant to detect potential sleeper cells is a graver matter than the outing of a CIA officer turned analyst whose identity was confirmed by the CIA to the reporter who broke the story. But a greater principle is at stake.


Bush Spying on U.S. Citizens? With Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff
The former prosecutor who helped draft the law that Democrats say was violated when someone in the Bush administration leaked a CIA worker's name to columnist Robert Novak now says that no laws were broken in the case.

Sidebar issue:

Sharing our "secrets" with Osama by Glenn Greenwald
One of the most revealing aspects of the NSA scandal has been the way in which Bush followers have been running around shrieking that national security has been damaged and treason has been committed by the New York Times. All of that is based upon the Times' disclosure that Bush ordered the NSA to eavesdrop without judicial oversight (rather than with it). Now that the initial screaming and demands for hangings are dying down a little, his followers are confronted with the fact that this accusation makes no sense whatsoever, since whether we eavesdrop with judicial oversight or without it can’t possibly be of any use to terrorists.

January 06, 2006

PlamePage 1-06-06

Today's News:

Scooter Finds Fellowship at the Hudson Institute (The Washington Post)
By Al Kamen

I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby , chief of staff and national security adviser to Vice President Cheney until that indictment unpleasantness a few months......


Can You Say "Witness Tampering?"--Firedoglake.com
Today King George announced seventeen -- count 'em seventeen -- ... ...Amongst them -- .. .. Robert Lenhard, who is married to the Viveca Novak, the woman now providing the substantive part of Karl Rove's defense in the Plame matter.


So Plame was a Democrat or so it seems by her campaign contributions. Did this contribute to her fall from grace?


Sidebar issue:

Study Blames Many Iraq Deaths on Body Armor WASHINGTON (AP)
An unreleased Pentagon study of fatal torso wounds to Marines killed in Iraq found that most might have been prevented or minimized if they had been wearing improved body armor. The study last summer by the Office of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner looked at 93 fatal wounds from the start of the war in March 2003 through June 2005 and concluded that 74 of them were bullet or shrapnel wounds to shoulders or areas of the torso not protected by ceramic armor plating.

January 05, 2006

PlamePage 1-05-06

'Plame Platoon' is AWOL on new leaks - Los Angeles Times
IT SEEMS like only yesterday that every high-minded politician, pundit and professional activist was in high dudgeon about the threat posed to national ...


Stacking the Deck to Save the Administration - Christopher Deliso, balkanalysis.com
How a "random" judicial appointment may decide the Libby trial in advance


'NYT' Editorial Explains Difference Between Plame and NSA Spying Leaks - Editor and Publisher
Declaring, "this seems a good moment to try to clear away the fog around this issue," a New York Times editorial for Wednesday attempted to describe the difference between radically different types of leaks.


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