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Tuesday, July 19, 20051121778900

Karl Rove v. Rogue CIA Agent Valerie Plame and Husband Joe Wilson

"Spy Valerie and the rogue CIA," by James Lewis, The American Thinker, 18 July 2005, http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4656 (from private email).

While some parts of the article are over-the-top, Lewis of American Thinker does a good job dissecting the / / brouhaha

Is it self-defense by apparatchiks at the Central Intelligence Agency?

 

Behind the scenes, the single most important reason for the Valerie Plame/Joe Wilson farce is that CIA Director Porter Goss has finally started to clean house at Langley. Goss's long-overdue shake-up is clearly backed by the White House, the top levels of the Pentagon and State Department, and the new National Director of Intelligence, John Negroponte.

Judging by Director Goss's remarks at his Senate confirmation hearings, those whose jobs are most in danger include the CIA "experts" in WMD proliferation – Valerie Plame's outfit – who completely failed to anticipate the Indian and Pakistani nukes, and just couldn't figure out what was going on with Iraqi WMDs. Valerie Plame's bosses are facing the axe for decades of failures.

 


Self-defense by the remnant of the Iron Triangle?

 

It could be a bloodbath, and the Permanent Establishment knows it.
The farcical Plame/Wilson assault on Karl Rove is a shot across the bow of the White House. The spook bureaucracy is fighting for its perks, hand-in-hand with the Democrats and the media. This is exactly the same iron triangle that destroyed Richard Nixon.

 


Government corruption, that required a whistle-blower?

 

Valerie Plame's CIA bosses took care not to ask Mr. Wilson to sign a confidentiality agreement, routine in such cases, almost as if they wanted him to make a public fuss. They were not surprised, one might think, when Mr.

Wilson promptly took his story to New York Times Op-Ed Editor Gail Collins, one of the great Bush-haters of all time. As Joseph DiGenova, former US Attorney for DC, recently said, "The CIA isn’t stupid. They wanted this story out."

 

Subversion? Or some other form of the CIA trying to control policy?

 

Telling lies to confirm somebody's paranoid beliefs is a classic disinformation gambit, right out of Spy School 101. But such gambits would be far more usefully employed against al Qaeda, our opponent in war. If the United States is attacked again by terrorists, one reason will be that our CIA has wasted time fighting the White House rather than the enemy.

 

Comments

Jeez, I have no idea what to think about the whole mess, and I'd be surprised if even those involved knew what was going on. I don't trust the CIA or the White House, and I especially don't trust Karl Rove.

Nothing Rove has done has made sense to me. Why all the secrecy and the denials by him and everyone in the Bush Administration that he had anything to do with it and then the 360 turnaround and all the attacks on everyone involved except himself? I'm surprised he hasn't gotten on TV and told reporters Joe Wilson might have an illegitimate black daughter.

Posted by: Adam | Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Adam, your point made me think:

"Nothing Rove has done has made sense to me. Why all the secrecy and the denials by him and everyone in the Bush Administration that he had anything to do with it and then the 360 turnaround and all the attacks on everyone involved except himself?"

To throw something out without necessarily believing it: maybe there is a real plan to make everyone "look away" from something more valuable.

Again, just throwing something out: if the Administration wished to generate a phony scandal, Rove might be the safest person to pretend-tar, as his position is both secure (a long time associate of Bush) and obscure (he is rarely on the news himself).

Posted by: Dan | Tuesday, July 19, 2005

That's true. After all, deflecting criticism is probably why Bush rejected Rumsfeld's resignation- he'd rather have Democrats blaming Rummie than himself.

Posted by: Adam | Tuesday, July 19, 2005

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