Press orders Filet of Rove...Well-done.


Some possible unexpected turns to the mystery of the Plame affair

National Review has a couple of interesting reads on the mystery that surrounds the Rove Plame affair, and dominates the minds of the Dems and the MSM.

- Byron York reports on how Time Magazine attempted to 'burn' Rove
"By any definition, he burned Karl Rove," Luskin said of Cooper. "If you read what Karl said to him and read how Cooper characterizes it in the article, he really spins it in a pretty ugly fashion to make it seem like people in the White House were affirmatively reaching out to reporters to try to get them to them to report negative information about Plame."

- John Podhoretz follwos up on York's piece and offers some interesting supposition on who might really bee the primary source
The presumption has thus far been in most quarters that the only people who could have known about this were administration officials.

But what if that's not right? What if the original source for the "Wilson got the job from his CIA wife" was, in fact, a reporter? After all, we know that the vice president's chief of staff, Lewis Libby, has testified he learned of Plame's identity from a journalist.

Wilson had gotten very cozy with a couple of them -- Walter Pincus of the Washington Post and Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times among them. What if he spilled the beans to enhance his own standing in the story somehow, to bolster his supposed findings?

What if -- and here's where it gets really interesting -- what if the real object of interest where Fitzgerald's investigation is concerned is now none other than the jailed Judith Miller of the New York Times?

Posted: Tue - July 12, 2005 at 11:35 PM          


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