Woodward's Plame-leak Deep Throat
By Jason Leopold
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Mar 23, 2006, 01:17
He is referred to as "official one" and he is the
mysterious senior Bush administration official who unmasked the identity of an
undercover CIA operative to Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Bob Woodward in
mid-June 2003 and conservative columnist Robert Novak a month later.
The identity of this official is shrouded in secrecy. In
fact, his name, government status, and the substance of his conversation with
Woodward about the undercover officer are under a protective seal in US
District Court for the District of Columbia.
But Woodward tape-recorded the interview he had with
"official one." Woodward gave a copy of the tape to Special
Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, according to a
Feb. 24 federal court hearing, a transcript of which was obtained by this
reporter.
Woodward emerged as central figure in the leak of undercover
CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson in November. For the better part of two
years, Woodward had publicly discounted the importance of the Plame Wilson leak
and had referred to Fitzgerald as a "junkyard dog" prosecutor in
interviews during the course of the investigation. He then revealed in November
that he had been told about Plame Wilson's CIA employment in June 2003 --
before any other journalist.
Woodward wrote a first-person account in the Washington Post
in November about the individual who told him that Plame Wilson worked for the
CIA. He identified his source as a "senior administration official."
He also said that the interview with the official who told him about Plame
Wilson had been set up simply as "confidential background interviews for
my 2004 book 'Plan of Attack' about the lead-up to the Iraq war, ongoing
reporting for the Washington Post and research for a book on Bush's second term
to be published in 2006."
White
House officials who are sympathetic to I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Vice President
Dick Cheney's former chief of staff who is charged with perjury and obstruction
of justice for allegedly lying to a grand jury and FBI investigators about his
role in the Plame Wilson leak, say "official one" is former Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage.
But
numerous senior officials at the State Department, the CIA, and the National
Security Council have said that "official one" is National Security
Adviser Stephen Hadley. Hadley had been a source of information for Woodward
when he wrote Plan of Attack, according to the book's footnotes.
Hadley was also a
member of the White House Iraq Group (WHIG), which was formed in August 2002 by
Andrew Card, President Bush's chief of staff, to publicize the threat posed by
Saddam Hussein. WHIG operated out of Cheney's office. The group has become
wrapped up in Fitzgerald's investigation. The special prosecutor last year
subpoenaed the WHIG's emails and other documents.
But news reports
over the past week have given more weight to Armitage as Woodward's source,
based solely on the fact that former Washington Post Editor Ben Bradlee gave an
interview to Vanity Fair suggesting that it's fair to assume Armitage was
Woodward's source. Bradlee issued a statement a day after the article was
published saying he was misquoted and never mentioned Armitage.
One thing is for
sure, neither Hadley nor Armitage are commenting, not even to issue a denial.
Last week, Armitage's assistant at his lobbying firm, Armitage International,
said that Armitage would comment on the "rumors" once Fitzgerald
completed his investigation. Hadley's spokesman would not confirm or deny
anything related to the national security adviser's involvement in the leak.
It does appear,
however, that Libby's defense team is actively trying to shift the blame for
the leak onto other parts of the government, including the State Department,
the CIA and the National Security Council. They have engaged in a game of
semantics, saying that when Libby testified that he heard about Plame Wilson
from reporters his testimony wasn't limited to a specific reporter.
With Woodward's
tape-recorded interview now in the hands of the special counsel, the attorneys
representing Libby have zeroed in on three words "official one"
apparently uttered during his conversation with Woodward: "Everyone knows
it."
But one of the
attorneys on Libby's defense team wasn't supposed to mention the existence of
the tape-recorded interview in open court because it may cause the unknown
government official to come under intense media scrutiny.
"Your Honor,
there is one thing that I neglected to mention and again this is subject to
filings that have been made under seal but there is, in fact, a transcript of a
tape recording that involves official one," Libby's attorney William
Jeffress said during the two and a half hour hearing.
"In the
particular transcript there is, and the government filed something else
yesterday, there is a factual dispute as to what is said or what is meant by a
portion of the transcript wherein it appears the official saying,
"everyone knows it," referring to the wife's employment at the
CIA," Jeffress added. "We have not heard that tape. If, in fact, as
the transcript suggests that one official said, 'Everyone knows it,' who did he
mean by 'Everyone knows it?'"
Libby's attorneys
argued that those three words refer to reporters, meaning that it was common
knowledge among journalists that Plame Wilson was employed by the CIA, even
though her status was classified.
Fitzgerald
disagreed with the interpretation.
"Your Honor,
now that we have sort of burned what was sealed, my understanding of that conversation,
there are people talking over each other, my understanding is that was a
reference that everyone knows it, that Mr. Wilson is the unnamed
ambassador," Fitzgerald said. "Mr. Wilson didn't reveal himself as
the unnamed ambassador until July 6. This was prior to that time. We turned it
over in an abundance of caution but I don't believe that says it, and frankly
there is a very limited number of reporters that we found out who had known it.
I can't represent we know every reporter because we took seriously the attorney
general's guidelines."
"Official
one" faces no criminal charges in the ongoing investigation into the leak
of covert CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson and is said to be cooperating with
the special counsel's two-year-old probe.
But Libby's defense
attorneys suggested during the February 24 court hearing that "official
one" is responsible for the leak.
Jeffress and
Theodore Wells, another attorney on Libby's defense team, have argued that
Fitzgerald should provide the defense with all the evidence his investigation
has obtained regarding "official one," because it's crucial in
proving that Libby wasn't lying when he testified that he heard about Plame
Wilson's CIA work from reporters.
"Your Honor,
simply it is a fact that is key to this case to know what reporters out there
knew or had heard about Wilson's wife, what they were saying to each other,
what they were saying to government officials," Jeffress said. "And
here is a key person, the first person that we know of, according to the
evidence, actually discussed Mr. Wilson's wife's employment with a reporter and
not only did it then but did it again with a separate reporter later. This is
some person not in the White House."
At the February 24
court hearing, Jeffress, Libby's attorney, in arguing that the defense should
be provided with additional evidence such as handwritten notes, transcripts,
letters, emails and phone logs Fitzgerald collected during the investigation,
said "official one" discussed Plame Wilson's CIA status with at least
two reporters, one of whom told Libby that "official one" told him
that Plame Wilson was a CIA officer.
Sources close to
the case have identified Woodward and Novak as the reporters "official
one" spoke to about Plame Wilson.
Fitzgerald argued
that Libby's attorneys are routinely circumventing the facts surrounding the
case against Libby, which is about perjury not who first unmasked Plame
Wilson's identity.
"Your Honor,
the one thing that is clear is we should focus on what the allegations
are," Fitzgerald said. "The indictment alleges that on Monday Mr.
Libby told [former White House Press Secretary Ari] Fleischer this information
about Mr. Wilson's wife and indicated that it wasn't widely known, on a
Monday."
"On Wednesday
he claims to have learned it as if it were new for the first time from
["Meet the Press's" Tim] Russert in his conversation even though
we've alleged six different conversations, more than six conversations in the
month before he discussed it with everyone from the vice president to people at
the CIA, to ranking officials at the State Department," Fitzgerald added.
© 2006 Jason Leopold
Jason Leopold is the author
of the forthcoming memoir, NEWS JUNKIE, to be published in April on
Process/Feral House Books. Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview
and to read an excerpt.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor