| War Crimes ******************************************************************
From: "Kellie Gasink"
Date: Sun, 13 Jun 2004 12:17:18 -0400
Subject: [savpeace] Coup D'etat.htm
Please circulate
----- I found this pretty interesting and thought
you might too. It is from the From
the Wilderness aka copvcia website.
COUP D'ETAT:
The Real Reason Tenet and Pavitt Resigned
from the
CIA on June 3rd and 4th
Bush, Cheney Indictments in
Plame Case Loomingby Michael C. Rupper
additional reporting by Wayne Madsen from
Washington © Copyright 2004, From The Wilderness
Publications, www.fromthewilderness.com
All Rights Reserved. May be
reprinted, distributed or posted on an Internet
web site for non-profit purposes only.
JUNE 8, 2004 1600 PDT (FTW) -
Why did DCI George Tenet suddenly resign on June
3rd, only to be followed a day later by James
Pavitt, the CIA's Deputy Director of Operations
(DDO)?
The real reasons, contrary to
the saturation spin being put out by major news
outlets, have nothing to do with Tenet's role as
taking the fall for alleged 9/11 and Iraqi
intelligence "failures" before the
upcoming presidential election.
Both resignations, perhaps soon
to be followed by resignations from Colin Powell
and his deputy Richard Armitage, are about the
imminent and extremely messy demise of George W.
Bush and his Neocon administration in a coup
d'etat being executed by the Central Intelligence
Agency. The coup, in the planning for at least
two years, has apparently become an urgent
priority as a number of deepening crises threaten
a global meltdown.
Based upon recent developments,
it appears that long-standing plans and
preparations leading to indictments and
impeachment of Bush, Cheney and even some senior
cabinet members have been accelerated, possibly
with the intent of removing or replacing the
entire Bush regime prior to the Republican
National Convention this August.
FTW has been documenting this
Watergate-like coup for more than fifteen months
and almost everything we will discuss about
recent events was predicted by us in the
following pages: Please see our stories "The
Perfect Storm - Part I" (March 2003);
"Blood in the Water" (July 2003);
"Beyond Bush - Part I" (July 2003);
"Waxman Ties Evidentiary Noose Around Rice
and Cheney" (July 2003); and "Beyond
Bush - Part II" (October 2003).
There were two things we didn't
get right. One was the timing. We predicted the
developments taking place now as likely to happen
after the November election, not before.
Secondly, we did not foresee the sudden
resignations of Tenet and Pavitt. Understanding
the resignations is the key to understanding a
deteriorating world scene and that America is on
the precipice of a presidential and
constitutional crisis that will ultimately dwarf
the removal of Richard Nixon in 1974.
So why did Tenet and Pavitt
resign? We'll explain why and we will provide
many clues along the way as we make our case.
HIGH CRIMES AND REALLY STUPID
MOVES
Shortly after the
"surprise" Tenet-Pavitt resignations,
current and former senior members of the U.S.
intelligence community and the Justice Department
told journalist Wayne Madsen, a former Naval
intelligence officer, that they were directly
connected to the criminal investigation of a 2003
White House leak that openly exposed Valerie
Plame as an undercover CIA officer. What received
less attention was that the l! eak also destroyed
a long-term CIA proprietary intelligence
gathering operation which, as we will see, was of
immense importance to US strategic interests at a
critical moment.
The leak was a vindictive
retaliation for statements, reports and actions
taken by Plame's husband, former Ambassador
Joseph Wilson, which had deeply embarrassed the
Bush administration and exposed it to possible
charges for impeachable offenses, including lying
to the American people about an alleged (and
totally unfounded) nuclear threat posed by Iraq's
Saddam Hussein. Conservative columnist Robert
Novak, the beneficiary of the leak, immediately
published it on July 14, 2003 and Valerie Plame's
career (at least the covert part) instantly
ended. The actual damage caused by that leak has
never been fully appreciated.
Wilson deeply embarrassed
almost every senior member of the Bush junta by
proving to the world that they were consciously
lying about one of their most important
justifications for invading Iraq: namely, their
claim to have had certain knowledge, based on
"good and reliable" intelligence, that
Hussein was on the brink of deploying a nuclear
weapon, possibly inside the United States. It was
eventually disclosed that the
"intelligence" possessed by the
administration was a set of poorly forged
documents on letterhead from the government of
Niger, which described attempts by Iraq to
purchase yellowcake uranium for a nuclear weapons
program.
It has since been established
by Scott Ritter and others that Iraq's nuclear
weapons program had been dead in the water and
non-functioning since the first Iraq war.
Wilson was secretly dispatched
in February 2002, on instructions from Dick
Cheney to the CIA, to go to Niger and look for
anything that might support the material in the
documents. They had already been dismissed as
forgeries by the International Atomic Energy
Agency, the CIA, and apparently everyone else who
had seen them. The CIA cautioned the
administration, more than once, against using
them. Shortly thereafter, Wilson returned and
gave his report stating clearly that the
allegations were pure bunk and unsupportable.
In spite of this, unaware of
the booby traps laid all around them, the entire
power core of the Bush administration jumped on
the Niger documents as on a battle horse and
charged off into in a massive public relations
blitz. Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Powell,
Wolfowitz and others - to varying degrees -
insisted, testified, and swore that they knew,
and had reliable, credible and verified
intelligence that Saddam was about to deploy an
actual nuclear device built from the Niger
yellowcake.
It was full court media press
and they successfully scared the pants off of
most Americans who believed that Saddam was going
to nuke them any second.
George Bush made the charge and
actually cited the documents in his 2003
State-of-the-Union address, even after he had
been cautioned by George Tenet not to rely on
them. In a major speech at the United Nations,
Colin Powell charged that Iraq was on the verge
of deploying a nuke and had been trying to
acquire uranium. Dick Cheney charged in several
speeches that Saddam was capable of nuclear
terror. And shortly before the invasion, when
asked in a television interview whether there was
sufficient proof and advance warning of the Iraqi
nuclear threat, a smug and confident Condoleezza
Rice quipped, "If we wait for a smoking gun,
that smoking gun may be a mushroom cloud over an
American city." Rice was lying through her
teeth.
By July of 2003, as the Iraqi
invasion was proving to be a protracted and
ill-conceived debacle, executed in spite of
massive resistance from within military,
political, diplomatic and economic cadres, there
was growing disgust within many government
circles about the ! way the Bush administration
was running things. The mention of Wilson's
report came in July though his name was not
disclosed. It suggested corroborative evidence of
criminal, rather than stupid, behavior by the
administration. The San Francisco Chronicle
reported:
A senior CIA official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity, said the
intelligence agency informed the White House on
March 9, 2002 - 10 months before Bush's
nationally televised speech - that an agency
source who had traveled to Niger could not
confirm European intelligence reports that Iraq
was attempting to buy uranium from the West
African country.
Note the reference to an Agency
source.
It was inevitable that Wilson
would move from no comment, to statements given
on condition of anonymity, and finally into the
public spotlight. That he did, in a July 6th New
York Times Editorial titled "What I Didn't
Find in Africa." Soon he was giving
interviews everywhere.
On July 14th Novak published
the column outing Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame.
As a result, any criminal investigation of the
Plame leak will also go into the Niger documents
and any crimes committed which are materially
related to Plame's exposure.
Instead of retreating, Wilson
advanced. In Septmeber he went public, writing
editorials and granting interviews which
thoroughly exposed the Bush administration's
criminal use of the documents, Cheney's lies
about the mission, and all the other lies used to
deceive the American people into war.
At the moment he went on the
record, Wilson became another legally admissible,
corroborative evidentiary source; a witness
available for subpoena and deposition, ready to
give testimony to the high crimes and
misdemeanors he has witnessed.
First Clue: James Pavitt was
Valerie Plame's boss. So was George Tenet.
HOW THE TRAP W! AS SET
Conflicting news reports
suggest that perhaps several sets of the
documents were delivered simultaneously to
several recipients. I could find only one news
story (out of almost 60 I have reviewed) which
indicated just when the Niger papers were first
put into play. One of the most fundamental
questions in journalism, "when?" was
omitted from every major press organization's
coverage except for a single story from the
Associated Press on July 13th.
[T]he forged Niger government
documents, showing attempts by Iraq to purchase
yellowcake, were delivered by unknown sources to
a journalist working for Italy's Corriere della
Sera which then gave them to the Italian
intelligence service. She then reportedly gave
them to Italian intelligence agents who gave them
to the US embassy. Seymour Hersh of the New
Yorker also offered this version indicating that
the documents had surfaced in Italy in the fall
of 2001.
The fall! of 2001. That means
that the documents were created no more than
three and a half months after September 11th.
The earliest press report
mentioning the documents was a March 7, 2003
story in The Financial Times. On that day,
Mohammed El Baradei, head of the International
Atomic Energy Agency reported to the UN Security
Council that the documents were forgeries. The
story contained a revealing paragraph.
"The allegation about the
uranium purchase first surfaced in a UK
government dossier published on September 24 last
year about Iraq's alleged weapons programmes,
though it did not name Niger. Niger was first
named when the US State Department elaborated on
the allegations on December 19 [2002]
Canada's Globe and Mail
reported on March 8, 2003:
[T]he forgeries were sold to an
Italian intelligence agent by a con man some time
ago and passed on to French authorities, but the
scam was uncovered by the IAEA [International
Atomic Energy Agency] only recently, according to
United Nations sources familiar with the
investigation. The documents were turned over to
the IAEA several weeks ago.
"In fact, the IAEA says,
there is no credible evidence that Iraq tried to
import uranium ore from the Central African
country in violation of UN resolutions.
"Based on thorough
analysis, the IAEA has concluded, with the
concurrence of outside experts, that these
documents, which formed the basis for the reports
of these uranium transactions between Iraq and
Niger, are, in fact, not authentic," Mr. El
Baradei told the UN Security Council Friday .
The Chicago Tribune reported on
March 13, 2003, "Forged documents that the
United States used to build its case against Iraq
were likely written by someone in Niger's embassy
in Rome who hoped to make quick money, a source
close to the United Nations investigation said.
The Washington Post gave yet a
different story, also on March 8, 2003:
Knowledgeable sources familiar
with the forgery investigation described the
faked evidence as a series of letters between
Iraqi agents and officials in the central African
nation of Niger. The documents had been given to
the U.N. inspectors by Britain and reviewed
extensively by U.S. intelligence. The forgers had
made relatively crude errors that eventually gave
them away - including names and titles that did
not match up with the individuals who held office
at the time the letters were purportedly written,
the officials said "
The CIA, which had also
obtained the documents, had questions about
"whether they were accurate," said one
intelligence official, and it decided not to
include them in its file on Iraq's program to
procure weapons of mass destruction.In a
follow-up story on March 13th the Post reported:
It's somethi! ng we're just
beginning to look at," a senior law
enforcement official said yesterday. Officials
are trying to determine whether the documents
were forged to try to influence U.S. policy, or
whether they may have been created as part of a
disinformation campaign directed by a foreign
intelligence service...
The phony documents - a series
of letters between Iraqi and Niger officials
showing Iraq's interest in equipment that could
be used to make nuclear weapons - came to British
and U.S. intelligence officials from a third
country. The identity of the third country could
not be learned yesterday.
What if it wasn't a foreign
intelligence service? I had been suspicious that
a Watergate-like coup was forming immediately
after reading the first few stories about the
documents. I was convinced when the AP reported
on March 14, 2003 (just days before the Iraqi
invasion) that the ranking Democrat on the Senate
Intelligence Committee had called for an FBI
investigation of the documents' origins. The
Boston Globe reported two days later that the
Senator was specifically seeking to determine
whether administration officials had forged the
documents themselves to marshal support for the
invasion.
The request was not nearly as
significant to me as who it had come from - Jay
Rockefeller of the Standard Oil Rockefellers. An
oil dynasty was calling for an investigation of a
bunch of oil men. Somebody was screwing up big
time.
Seymour Hersh dropped a major
bombshell that went virtually unnoticed, 54
paragraphs deep into an October 27, 2003 story
for the New Yorker titled "The
Stovepipe."
Who produced the fake Niger
papers? There is nothing approaching a consensus
on this question within the intelligence
community. There has been published speculation
about the intelligence services of several
different countries. One theory, favored by some
journalists in Rome, is that [the Italian
intelligence service] Sismi produced the false
documents and passed them to Panorama for
publication.
"Another explanation was
provided by a former senior C.I.A. officer. He
had begun talking to me about the Niger papers in
March, when I first wrote about the forgery, and
said, 'Somebody deliberately let something false
get in there.' He became more forthcoming in
subsequent months, eventually saying that a small
group of disgruntled retired C.I.A. clandestine
operators had banded together in the late summer
of last year and drafted the fraudulent documents
themselves. [emphasis added]
Hersh's revelation provided
corroboration for something I and others, like
the renowned political historian Peter Dale
Scott, had been suspecting for a long time. The
CIA was fighting back. This was a well
orchestrated, long-term covert operation -
exactly what the CIA does all over the world.
POINT OF NO RETURN
Willing disclosure of the
identity of a covert operative is a serious
felony under Federal law, punishable by fine
and/or imprisonment. The Intelligence Identities
Protection Act of 1982 makes it a crime for
anyone with access to classified information to
intentionally disclose information identifying a
covert operative. The penalties get worse for
doing it to a deep cover Direcorate of Operations
(DO) case officer (as opposed to an undercover
DEA Agent).
After John Ashcroft was forced
to recuse himself from the case, Patrick
Fitzgerald, the U.S. Attorney in Chicago, was
transferred to Washington and appointed special
prosecutor in the Plame case.
Robert Novak, rightly standing
by the journalistic code of ethics, has
steadfastly refused to identify his White House
source. We would do the same thing in his shoes.
The investigation is nearing a climax with
pending issuance of criminal indictments. Press
repor! ts citing sources close to the
investigation have directly and indirectly
pointed fingers at Dick Cheney and his Chief of
Staff, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, as
suspects.
Second clue: The criminal
investigation of the Plame leak was investigated
after a September 2003 formal request from the
CIA, approved by George Tenet.
Not only was Plame's cover
blown, so was that of her cover company,
Brewster, Jennings & Associates. With the
public exposure of Plame, intelligence agencies
all over the world started searching data bases
for any references to her (TIME Magazine). Damage
control was immediate, as the CIA asserted that
her mission had been connected to weapons of mass
destruction.
However, it was not long before
stories from the Washington Post and the Wall
Street Journal tied Brewster, Jennings &
Associates to energy, oil and the Saudi-owned
Arabian American Oil Company, or ARAMCO. Brewster
Jennings had been a founder of Mobil Oil company,
one of Aramco's principal founders.
According to additional sources
interviewed by Wayne Madsen, Brewster Jennings
was, in fact, a well-established CIA proprietary
company, linked for many years to ARAMCO. The
demise of Brewster Jennings was also guaranteed
the moment Plame was outed.
It takes years for Non-Official
Covers or NOCs, as they are known, to become
really effective. Over time, they become
gradually more trusted; they work their way into
deeper information access from more sensitive
sources. NOCs are generally regarded in the
community as among the best and most valuable of
all CIA operations officers and the agency goes
to great lengths to protect them in what are
frequently very risky missions.
By definition, Valerie Plame
was an NOC. Yet unlike all other NOCs who fear
exposure and torture or death from hostile
governments and individual targets who have been
judged threa! ts to the United States, she got
done in by her own President, whom we also judge
to be a domestic enemy of the United States.
Moreover, as we will see below,
Valerie Plame may have been one of the most
important NOCs the CIA had in the current
climate. Let's look at just how valuable she was.
ARAMCO
According to an April 29, 2002
report in Britain's Guardian, ARAMCO constitutes
12% of the world's total oil production; a figure
which has certainly increased as other countries
have progressed deeper into irreversible decline.
ARAMCO is the largest oil group
in the world, a state-owned Saudi company in
partnership with four major US oil companies.
Another one of Aramco's partners is
Chevron-Texaco which gave up one of its board
members, Condoleezza Rice, when she became the
National Security Advisor to George Bush. All of
ARAMCO's key decisions are made by the Saudi
royal family while US oil expertise, personnel
and technology keeps the cash coming in and the
oil going out. ARAMCO operates, manages, and
maintains virtually all Saudi oil fields - 25% of
all the oil on the planet. All of ARAMCO's key
decisions are made by the Saudi royal family
while US oil expertise, personnel and technology
keeps the cash coming in and the oil going out.
ARAMCO operates, manages, and maintains virtually
all Saudi oil fields - 25% of all the oil on the
planet.
It gets better.
According to a New York Times
report on March 8th of this year, ARAMCO is
planning to make a 25% investment in a new and
badly needed refinery to produce gasoline. The
remaining 75% ownership of the refinery will go
to the only nation that is quickly becoming
America's major world competitor for
ever-diminishing supplies of oil: China.
Almost the entire Bush
administration has an interest in ARAMCO.
The Boston Globe reported that
in 2001 ARAMCO had signed a $140 million
multi-year contract with Halliburton, then
chaired by Dick Cheney, to develop a new oil
field. Halliburton does a lot of business in
Saudi Arabia. Current estimates of Halliburton
contracts or joint ventures in the country run
into the tens of billions of dollars.
So do the fortunes of some
shady figures from the Bush family's past.
As recently as 1991 ARAMCO had
Khalid bin Mahfouz sitting on its Supreme Council
or board of directors. Mahfouz, Saudi Arabia's
former treasurer and the nation's largest banker,
has been reported in several places to be Osama
bin Laden's brother in law. However, he has
denied this and brought intense legal pressure to
bear demanding retractions of these allegations.
He has major partnership investments with the
multi-billion dollar Binladin Group of companies
and he is a former director of BCCI, the infamous
criminal drug-money laundering bank which
performed a number of very useful services for
the CIA before its 1991 collapse under criminal
investigation by a whole lot of countries.
As Saudi Arabia's largest
banker he handles the accounts of the royal
family and - no doubt - ARAMCO, while at the same
time he is a named defendant in a $1 trillion
lawsuit filed by 9/11 victim families against the
Saudi government and prominent Saudi officials
who, the suit alleges, were complicit in the 9/11
attacks.
Both BCCI and Mahfouz have
historical connections to the Bush family dating
back to the 1980s. Another bank (one of many)
connected to Mahfouz - the InterMaritime Bank -
bailed out a cash-starved Harken Energy in 1987
with $25 million. After the rejuvenated Harken
got a no-bid oil lease in 1991, CEO George W.
Bush promptly sold his shares in a pump-and-dump
scheme and made a whole lot of money.
Knowing all of this, there's
really no good reason why the CIA should be too
ups! et, is there? It was only a long-term
proprietary and deep-cover NOC - well established
and consistently producing "take" from
ARAMCO (and who knows what else in Saudi Arabia).
It was destroyed with a motive of personal
vengeance (there may have been other motives) by
someone inside the White House.
From the CIA's point of view,
at a time when Saudi Arabia is one of the three
or four countries of highest interest to the US,
the Plame operation was irreplaceable.
Third clue: Tenet's
resignation, which occurred at night, was the
first "evening resignation" of a
Cabinet-level official since October 1973 when
Attorney General Elliott Richardson and his
deputy, William Ruckelshaus, resigned in protest
of Richard Nixon's firing of Watergate special
prosecutor Archibald Cox. Many regard this as the
watershed moment when the Nixon administration
was doomed.
SAUDI ARABIA
Given that energy is becoming
the most important issue on the planet today, if
you were the CIA, you might be a little pissed
off at the Plame leak. But there may be
justification to do more than be angry. Anger
happens all the time in Washington. This is
something else.
One of the most important
intelligence prizes today - especially after
recent stories in major outlets like the New York
Times reporting that Saudi oil production has
peaked and gone into irreversible decline - would
be to know of a certainty whether those reports
are correct. The Saudis are denying it vehemently
but they are being strongly refuted by an
increasing amount of hard data. The truth remains
unproven. But the mere possibility has set the
world's financial markets on edge. Saudi Oil
Minister Ali Naimi came to Washington on April
27th to put out the fires. It was imperative that
he calm everybody's nerves as the markets were
screaming, "Say it ain't so!"
Naimi said emphatically that
there was nothing to worry about concerning
either Saudi reserves or ARAMCO's ability to
increase production. There was plenty of oil and
no need for concern.
FTW covered and reported on
that event. Writer and energy expert Julian
Darley noted that there were some very important
ears in the room, listening very closely. He also
noted that Naimi's "scientific" data
and promises of large future discoveries did not
sit well many who are well versed in oil
production and delivery.
(See FTW's June 2nd story,
"Saudi's Missing Barrels" and our May
2003 story, "Paris Peak Oil Conference
Reveals Deepening Crisis." In that story FTW
editor Mike Ruppert was the first to report on
credible new information that Saudi Arabia had
possibly peaked.)
If anybody has the real data on
Saudi fields it is either ARAMCO or the highest
levels of the Saudi royal family.
The answer to the Saudi peak
question will determine whet! her Saudi Arabia
really can increase production quickly, as
promised. If they can't, then the US economy is
going to suffer bitterly, and it is certain that
the Saudi monarchy will collapse into chaos. Then
the nearby US military will occupy the oilfields
and the U.S. will ultimately Balkanize the
country by carving off the oil fields - which
occupy only a small area near the East coast.
That U.S. enclave would then provide sanctuary to
the leading members of the royal family who will
have agreed to keep their trillions invested in
Wall Street so the US economy doesn't collapse.
So far the Saudis haven't had
to prove that they could increase production due
to convenient terror attacks at oil fields, and
more "debates" within OPEC.
Fourth clue: Bush and Cheney
have both hired or consulted private criminal
defense attorneys in anticipation of possible
indictments of them and/or their top assistants
in the Plame investigation. On June 3, just hours
before Tenet suddenly resigned, President Bush
consulted with and may have retained a criminal
defense attorney to represent him in the Plame
case.
According to various press
reports Bush has either retained or consulted
with powerhouse attorney Jim Sharp, who
represented Iran-contra figure retired Air Force
Major General Richard Secord; Enron's Ken Lay;
and Watergate co-conspirator Jeb Stuart Magruder.
All three were facing criminal rather than civil
charges. Either way, a clear signal has been sent
that Bush expects to be either called to testify
(which was a precursor in Watergate to a criminal
indictment of Richard Nixon) or be named as a
defendant. Either way, the President's men are
falling faster than their counterparts fell in
Watergate, and the initial targets are much
higher up the food chain.
Cheney's attorney is Terrence
O'Donnell, a partner of the Williams and Connolly
law firm. O'Donnell worked for then White House
chief of staff Cheney in the Ford administration
and as General Counsel for the Pentagon when
Cheney was Defense Secretary under the first
President Bush. He has been representing the Vice
President in criminal and civil cases involving
Cheney's chairmanship of Halliburton. These
include a Justice Department investigation of
Halliburton for alleged payment of bribes to
Nigerian political leaders and a stockholders'
fraud law suit against Halliburton. O'Donnell
also represented former CIA director John Deutch
when he was accused of violating national
security by taking his CIA computer home and
surfing the Internet while it contained hundreds
of highly-classified intelligence documents.
SPRINGING THE TRAP
Now, seemingly all of a sudden,
Bush and Cheney are in the crosshairs. Cheney has
been questioned by Fitzgerald within the last
week.
The CIA Director's job by
definition, whether others like it or not, is to
be a! ble to go to his President and advise him
of the real scientific data on foreign resources
(especially oil); to warn him of pending
instability in a country closely linked to the US
economy; and to tell him what to plan for and
what to promise politically in his foreign
policy. In light of her position in the CIA's
relationship with Saudi Aramco, the outing of
Valerie Plame made much of this impossible. In
short, the Bush leak threatened National
Security.
Former White House Counsel and
Watergate figure John Dean, writing for the
prestigious legal website findlaw.com on June 4th
made some very ominous observations that appear
to have gone unnoticed by most.
This action by Bush is a rather
stunning and extraordinary development. The
President of the United States is potentially
hiring a private criminal defense lawyer.
Unsurprisingly, the White House is doing all it
can to bury the story, providing precious little
detail or context for the President's action
But from what I have learned
from those who have been quizzed by the
Fitzgerald investigators it seems unlikely that
they are interviewing the President merely as a
matter of completeness, or in order to be able to
defend their actions in front of the public.
Asking a President to testify - or even be
interviewed - remains a serious, sensitive and
rare occasion. It is not done lightly. Doing so
raises separation of powers concerns that
continue to worry many
If so - and if the person
revealed the leaker's identity to the President,
or if the President decided he preferred not to
know the leaker's identity. - Then this fact
could conflict with Bush's remarkably broad
public statements on the issue. He has said that
he did not know of "anybody in [his]
administration who leaked classified
information." He has also said that he
wanted "to know the truth" about this
leak.
If Bush is called before t! he
grand jury, it is likely because Fitzgerald
believes that he knows much more about this leak
than he has stated publicly.
Perhaps Bush may have knowledge
not only of the leaker, but also of efforts to
make this issue go away - if indeed there have
been any. It is remarkably easy to obstruct
justice, and this matter has been under various
phases of an investigation by the Justice
Department since it was referred by the CIA last
summer
On this subject, I spoke with
an experienced former federal prosecutor who
works in Washington, specializing in white collar
criminal defense (but who does not know Sharp).
That attorney told me that he is baffled by
Bush's move - unless Bush has knowledge of the
leak. "It would not seem that the President
needs to consult personal counsel, thereby
preserving the attorney-client privilege, if he
has no knowledge about the leak," he told
me.
What advice might Bush get from
a private defense counsel? The lawyer I consulted
opined that, "If he does have knowledge
about the leak and does not plan to disclose it,
the only good legal advice would be to take the
Fifth, rather than lie. The political fallout is
a separate issue.."
I raised the issue of whether
the President might be able to invoke executive
privilege as to this information. But the
attorney I consulted - who is well versed in this
area of law - opined that "Neither 'outing'
Plame, nor covering for the perpetrators would
seem to fall within the scope of any executive
privilege that I am aware of."
That may not stop Bush from
trying to invoke executive privilege, however -
or at least from talking to his attorney about
the option. As I have discussed in one of my
prior columns, Vice President Dick Cheney has
tried to avoid invoking it in implausible
circumstances - in the case that is now before
the U.S .Supreme Court. Rather he claims he is
beyond the need for the privilege, and simply
cannot be sued. [Emphasis added]
Suffice it to say that whatever
the meaning of Bush's decision to talk with
private counsel about the Valerie Plame leak, the
matter has taken a more ominous turn with Bush's
action. It has only become more portentous
because now Dick Cheney has also hired a lawyer
for himself, suggesting both men may have known
more than they let on. Clearly, the investigation
is heading toward a culmination of some sort. And
it should be interesting.
Last and final clue: Under
Executive Privilege, a principle intended to
protect the constitutional separation of powers,
officials in the Executive Branch cannot give
testimony in a legal case against a sitting
President. The Bush administration has invoked or
threatened to invoke the privilege several times.
Dick did it over the secret records of his energy
task force and George Bush tried to use it to
prevent Condoleezza Rice from testifying before
the "Independent" Commission
investigating September 11th.
Former officials of the
Executive Branch are, however, free to testify if
they are no longer holding a government office
when subpoenaed or when the charges are brought.
[To learn more about Executive
Privilege visit www.findlaw.com]
The Bush administration has
proved itself to be an insular group of inept,
dishonest and dangerous CEO's of the corporation
known as America. They have become very bad for
business and the Board of Directors is now taking
action. Make no mistake, the CIA works for
"The Board" - Wall Street and big
money. The long-term (very corrupt and unethical)
agenda of the Board, in the face of multiple
worsening global crises, was intended to proceed
far beyond the initially destructive war in Iraq,
toward an effective reconstruction and a
strategic response to Peak Oil. But the neocons
have stalled at the ugly stage: killing hundr!
eds of thousands of people; destroying Iraq's
industrial and cultural infrastructure as their
own bombs and other people's RPGs blow everything
up; getting caught running torture camps; and
making the whole world intensely dislike America.
These jerks are doing real
damage to their masters' interests.
But (not surprisingly) Tenet
and the CIA were and remain much better at covert
operations and planning ahead than the Bush
administration ever was. Tenet and Pavitt
actually prepared and left a clear, irrefutable
and incriminating paper trail which not only
proves that they had shunned and refused to
endorse the documents, the CIA also did not
support the nuke charges and warned Bush not to
use them.
Where are those documents now?
They're part of the Justice Department Plame
investigation - and they're also in the hands of
the Congressman who will most likely introduce
and manage the articles of impeachment, if that
becomes necessary: Henry Waxman (D), of
California. If you would like to see how tightly
the legal trap has been prepared, and how
carefully the evidence has been laid out, I
suggest taking a look around Waxman's web site
at: http://www.house.gov/waxman/.
THE SWARM
There are a multitude of signs
that the Bush administration is being
"swarmed" in what is becoming a feeding
frenzy as opposition is surfacing from many
places inside the government, including the
military. The signs are not hard to find.
The June 3rd issue of Capitol
Hill Blue, the newspaper published for members of
Congress, bore the headline "Bush Knew About
Leak of CIA Operative's Name". That article
virtually guaranteed that the Plame investigation
had enough to pursue Bush criminally. The story's
lead sentence described a criminal, prosecutable
offense: "Witnesses told a federal grand
jury President George W. Bush knew about, and
took no action to stop, the release of a covert
CIA operative's name to a journalist in an
attempt to discredit her husband, a critic of
administration policy in Iraq."
A day later, on June 4th
Capitol Hill Blue took another hard shot at the
administration. Titled "Bush's Erratic
Behavior Worries White House Aides", the
story's first four paragraphs say everything.
President George W. Bush's
increasingly erratic behavior and wide mood
swings has the halls of the West Wing buzzing
lately as aides privately express growing concern
over their leader's state of mind.
In meetings with top aides and
administration officials, the President goes from
quoting the Bible in one breath to obscene
tantrums against the media, Democrats and others
that he classifies as "enemies of the
state."
Worried White House aides paint
a portrait of a man on the edge, increasing! ly
wary of those who disagree with him and paranoid
of a public that no longer trusts his policies in
Iraq or at home.
"It reminds me of the
Nixon days," says a longtime GOP political
consultant with contacts in the White House.
"Everybody is an enemy; everybody is out to
get him. That's the mood over there."
The attacks have not stopped.
On June 8th, the same paper followed with another
story headlined, "Lawyers Told Bush He Could
Order Suspects Tortured".
Journalist Wayne Madsen, a
Washington veteran with excellent access to many
sources has indicated for this story that the
Neocons have few remaining friends anywhere. All
of this is consistent with a CIA-led coup.
Ahmed Chalabi
Madsen reported that the Plame
probe comes amid another high-level probe of
Pentagon officials for leaking classified
National Security Agency cryptologic information
to Iran via Iraqi National Congress head Ahmed
Chalabi. FBI agents have polygraphed and
interviewed a number of civilian political
appointees in the Pentagon in relation to the
intelligence leak, said to have severely
disrupted the National Security Agency's ability
to listen in on encrypted Iranian diplomatic and
intelligence communications.
Chalabi's leak has once again
forced Iran to change equipment, resulting in
impaired U.S. intelligence gathering of Iran's
sensitive communications. The probe into the
Chalabi leak is centering on Pentagon officials
who have been close to Chalabi, including Office
of Net Assessment official Harold Rhode, Director
of Policy and Plans officials Douglas Feith and
William Luti, Undersecretary for Intelligence
Stephen Cambone, and Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz. In addition, some former Pentagon
advisers are also targeted in the probe.
Many press reports throughout
2003 indicated that Chalabi, distrusted and
virtually discarded by the CIA, had been
resurrected and inserted into the Iraqi political
mix on the orders of Donald Rumsfeld, Paul
Wolfowitz and the other Neocons listed above.
Abu Ghraib and Torture
A former CIA official told
Madsen that between the Plame leak and the Abu
Ghraib torture affair, the Bush administration is
facing something that will be "worse than
Watergate."
PLANNING FOR SUCCESSION
If both Bush and Cheney are
removed or resign, what happens? Madsen reported
that lobbyists and political consultants in
Washington are dusting off their copies of the
Constitution and checking the line of
presidential succession
One lobbyist said he will soon
pay a call on Alaska Republican Senator Ted
Stevens, who, as President pro tem of the Senate,
is second in line to House Speaker Dennis Hastert
to become President in the event Bush and Cheney
both go.
It is one of the greatest
ironies of the Plame affair that the Bush
administration, spawned and nurtured by oil,
might have committed suicide by vindictively,
cruelly and unthinkingly exacting personal
retribution on an intelligence officer who had
committed no offense, and who was, quite
possibly, providing the administration with
critical oil-related intelligence which the
President needed to manage our shaky economy and
affairs of state for a while longer to squeak
through to re-election. In our opinion, nothing
better epitomizes the true nature of the Neocons.
That being said, they have to
go. FTW wishes that it was as certain that what
will come after them will be better.
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