Sources close to the investigation into the leak of covert
CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson have revealed this week that Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales has not turned over emails to the special prosecutor's office
that may incriminate Vice President Dick Cheney, his aides, and other White
House officials who allegedly played an active role in unmasking Plame Wilson's
identity to reporters.
Moreover,
these sources said that, in early 2004, Cheney was interviewed by federal
prosecutors investigating the Plame Wilson leak and testified that neither he
nor any of his senior aides were involved in unmasking her undercover CIA
status to reporters and that no one in the vice president's office had
attempted to discredit her husband, a vocal critic of the administration's
pre-war Iraq intelligence. Cheney did not testify under oath or under penalty
of perjury when he was interviewed by federal prosecutors.
The
emails Gonzales is said to be withholding contained references to Valerie Plame
Wilson's identity and CIA status and developments related to the inability to
find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Moreover, according to sources, the
emails contained suggestions by the officials on how the White House should
respond to what it believed were increasingly destructive comments Wilson’s husband had been making about the
administration's pre-war Iraq intelligence.
Gonzales,
who at the time of the leak was the White House counsel, spent two weeks with
other White House attorneys screening emails turned over to his office by
roughly 2,000 staffers, following a deadline imposed by the White House in
2003. The sources said Gonzales told Fitzgerald more than a year ago that he
did not intend to turn over the emails to his office, because they contained
classified intelligence information about Iraq in addition to minor references
to Plame, the sources said.
He is
said to have cited "executive privilege" and "national security
concerns" as the reason for not turning over some of the correspondence,
which allegedly proves Cheney's office played an active role in leaking Plame
Wilson's undercover CIA status to reporters, the attorneys said.
Aside
from the emails that have not been turned over, there are also emails that
Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor investigating the case, believes
were either "shredded" or deleted, the attorneys said.
In a
court document dated January 23, Fitzgerald says that, during the course of his
investigation, he had been told that some emails from the offices of President
Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney had not been saved. His letter does not
claim that any member of the Bush administration discarded the emails, but
sources close to the probe say that is what Fitzgerald has been alleging
privately.
"In
an abundance of caution," Fitzgerald's January 23 letter to Libby's
defense team states, "we advise you that we have learned that not all
email of the Office of the Vice President and the Executive Office of the
President for certain time periods in 2003 was preserved through the normal
archiving process on the White House computer system."
Spokespeople
for Gonzales and the White House would not comment, citing the ongoing
investigation. Randall Samborn, a spokesman for Fitzgerald, also wouldn't
comment. A spokesman for Cheney did not return calls for comment nor did
Cheney's criminal attorney, Terrence O'Donnell.
Cheney
testified for a little more than an hour about his role in the leak in early
2004. What he told prosecutors appears to be identical to testimony his former
chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, gave before a grand jury
during the same year. Libby was indicted on five-counts of obstruction of
justice, perjury, and lying to investigators related to his role in the Plame
Wilson leak.
Two
weeks ago, additional court documents related to Libby's case were made public.
In one document, Fitzgerald responded to Libby's defense team that Libby had
testified before a grand jury that his "superiors" authorized him to
leak elements of the highly classified National Intelligence Estimate to
reporters in the summer of 2003 that showed Iraq to be a grave nuclear threat,
to rebut criticism that the administration manipulated pre-war Iraq
intelligence.
News
reports citing people familiar with Libby's testimony said Cheney had
authorized Libby to do so. Additionally, an extensive investigation during the
past month has shown that Cheney, Libby and former Deputy National Security
Adviser Stephen Hadley spearheaded an effort beginning in March 2003 to
discredit Plame Wilson's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, a vocal
critic of the administration's intelligence related to Iraq, who had publicly
criticized the administration for relying on forged documents to build public
support for the war.
Cheney
did not disclose this information when he was questioned by investigators.
Cheney
responded to questions about how the White House came to rely on Niger
documents that purportedly showed that Iraq had tried to purchase uranium from
the African country. Cheney said he had received an intelligence briefing on
the allegations in late December 2003 or early January 2004 and had asked the
CIA for more information about the issue.
Cheney
said he was unaware that Wilson was chosen to travel to Niger to look into the
uranium claims and that he never saw a report Wilson had given a CIA analyst
upon his return, which stated that the Niger claims were untrue. He said the
CIA never told him about Wilson's trip.
However,
these attorneys said that witnesses in the case have testified before a grand
jury that Cheney, Libby, Hadley, the Pentagon, the Defense Intelligence Agency,
the State Department, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Justice Department, the
FBI, and other senior aides in the Office of the Vice President, the President,
and the National Security Council had received and read a March 9, 2002, cable
sent to his office by the CIA that debunked the Niger claims.
The
cable, which was prepared by a CIA analyst and based on Wilson's fact-finding
mission, did not mention Wilson by name, but quoted a CIA source and Niger
officials Wilson had questioned during his eight-day mission, who said there
was no truth to the claims that Iraq had tried to purchase 500 tons of yellowcake
uranium ore from Niger.
Several
current and former State Department and CIA officials familiar with the March
9, 2002, cable said they had testified before the grand jury investigating the
Plame Wilson leak that they had spoken to Libby and Hadley about the cable, and
that they were told Cheney had also read it.
Cheney
told investigators that when Wilson began speaking to reporters on background
about his secret mission to Niger to investigate Iraq's alleged attempts to
purchase uranium, he asked Libby to contact the CIA to "get more
information" about the trip and to find out if it was true, the attorneys
added.
Furthermore,
Cheney told prosecutors that before he learned of Wilson's trip, his office
simply sought to rebut statements made by Wilson to reporters and the various
newspaper reports that said the Bush administration knowingly relied on flawed
intelligence to build a case for war.
Moreover,
Cheney said that he and his aide were concerned that reporters had been under
the impression that Cheney chose Wilson for the Niger trip, the attorneys said.
Cheney testified that he instructed Libby and other aides to coordinate a
response to those queries and rebut those allegations with the White House
press office.
"In
his testimony the vice president said that his staff referred media calls about
Wilson to the White House press office," one attorney close to the case
said. "He said that was the appropriate venue for responding to statements
by Mr. Wilson that he believed were wrong."
Cheney
told investigators that he first learned about Valerie Plame Wilson and her
employment with the CIA from Libby. Cheney testified that Libby told him that
several reporters had contacted him in July to say that Plame Wilson had been
responsible for arranging her husband's trip to Niger to investigate the Niger
uranium claims.
Cheney
also testified that the next time he recalled hearing about Plame Wilson and
her connection to Joseph Wilson was when he read about her in a July 14, 2003,
column written by syndicated columnist Robert Novak.
© 2006 Jason
Leopold
Jason Leopold is the author of the forthcoming
book NEWS JUNKIE, to be published in April by Process/Feral House Books. Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.