Forward by Fredric Rice:
Scientology's web site claims that people who discuss and expose
their written policy of "Fair Game" lie about
it "often intentionally," claiming that the term
"Fair Game" is "misinterpreted and used by
apostate Scientologists and other critics to unfairly tarnish the
Church." (As if their criminal history wasn't enough
to "tarnish" the criminal enterprise.) And yet everybody
understands the term; there is no misunderstanding -- deliberate or
otherwise.
Take a look at a member of the George Bush Administration's use
of the term. Bush's people use the term the same way Scientology
does, the same way everyone else does: to designate a target for
harassment and/or destruction for a perceived wrong.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A11208-2003Sep27.html
Bush Administration Is Focus of Inquiry
CIA Director George J. Tenet wants to know whether officials
in the White House broke federal law.
By Mike Allen and Dana Priest
At CIA Director George J. Tenet's request, the Justice Department
is looking into an allegation that administration officials leaked
the name of an undercover CIA officer to a journalist, government
sources said yesterday.
The operative's identity was published in July after her husband,
former U.S. ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, publicly challenged
President Bush's claim that Iraq had tried to buy "yellowcake"
uranium ore from Africa for possible use in nuclear weapons. Bush
later backed away from the claim.
The intentional disclosure of a covert operative's identity is a
violation of federal law.
The officer's name was disclosed on July 14 in a syndicated column
by Robert D. Novak, who said his sources were two senior
administration officials.
Yesterday, a senior administration official said that before
Novak's column ran, two top White House officials called at
least six Washington journalists and disclosed the identity
and occupation of Wilson's wife. Wilson had just revealed that
the CIA had sent him to Niger last year to look into the uranium
claim and that he had found no evidence to back up the charge.
Wilson's account touched off a political fracas over Bush's
use of intelligence as he made the case for attacking Iraq.
"Clearly, it was meant purely and simply for revenge," the
senior official said of the alleged leak.
Sources familiar with the conversations said the leakers were
seeking to undercut Wilson's credibility. They alleged that
Wilson, who was not a CIA employee, was selected for the Niger
mission partly because his wife had recommended him. Wilson
said in an interview yesterday that a reporter had told him that
the leaker said, "The real issue is Wilson and his
wife."
A source said reporters quoted a leaker as describing Wilson's
wife as "fair game."
The official would not name the leakers for the record and would
not name the journalists. The official said there was no indication
that Bush knew about the calls.
It is rare for one Bush administration official to turn on another.
Asked about the motive for describing the leaks, the senior
official said the leaks were "wrong and a huge miscalculation,
because they were irrelevant and did nothing to diminish Wilson's
credibility."
Wilson, while refusing to confirm his wife's occupation, has
suggested publicly that he believes Bush's senior adviser, Karl
C. Rove, broke her cover. Wilson said Aug. 21 at a public forum
in suburban Seattle that it is of keen interest to him "to
see whether or not we can get Karl Rove frog-marched out of the
White House in handcuffs."
White House press secretary Scott McClellan said yesterday that
he knows of no leaks about Wilson's wife. "That is not the
way this White House operates, and no one would be authorized to
do such a thing," McClellan said. "I don't have any
information beyond an anonymous source in a media report to
suggest there is anything to this. If someone has information
of this nature, then he or she should report it to the Department
of Justice."
McClellan, who Rove had speak for him, said of Wilson's
comments: "It is a ridiculous suggestion, and it is simply
not true." McClellan was asked about Wilson's charge at a
White House briefing Sept. 16 and said the accusation is
"totally ridiculous."
Administration officials said Tenet sent a memo to the Justice
Department raising a series of questions about whether a leaker
had broken federal law by disclosing the identity of an
undercover officer. The CIA request was reported Friday night
by MSNBC.com. Administration sources familiar with the matter
said the Justice Department is determining whether a formal
investigation is warranted.
An intelligence official said Tenet "doesn't like leaks."
The CIA request could reopen the rift between the White House
and the intelligence community that emerged this summer when
Bush and his senior aides blamed Tenet for the inclusion of
the now-discredited uranium claim -- the so-called "16
words" -- in the State of the Union address in January.
Tenet issued a statement taking responsibility for the CIA's
approval of the address before it was delivered, but made clear
the CIA had earlier warned the White House not to use the
allegations about uranium ore. After an ensuing rush of leaks
over White House handling of intelligence, Bush's aides said
they believed in retrospect it had been a political mistake to
blame Tenet.
The Intelligence Protection Act, passed in 1982, imposes maximum
penalties of 10 years in prison and $50,000 in fines for
unauthorized disclosure by government employees with access
to classified information.
Members of the administration, especially Vice President Cheney
and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, have been harshly
critical of unauthorized leakers, and White House spokesmen
are often dismissive of questions about news reports based on
unnamed sources. The FBI is investigating senators for possibly
leaking intercept information about Osama bin Laden.
The only recipient of a leak about the identity of Wilson's wife
who went public with it was Novak, the conservative columnist,
who wrote in The Washington Post and other newspapers that
Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, "is an agency operative
on weapons of mass destruction." He added, "Two senior
administration officials told me that Wilson's wife suggested
sending him to Niger."
When Novak told a CIA spokesman he was going to write a column
about Wilson's wife, the spokesman urged him not to print her
name "for security reasons," according to one CIA
official. Intelligence officials said they believed Novak
understood there were reasons other than Plame's personal
security not to use her name, even though the CIA has declined
to confirm whether she was undercover.
Novak said in an interview last night that the request came at
the end of a conversation about Wilson's trip to Niger and his
wife's role in it. "They said it's doubtful she'll ever
again have a foreign assignment," he said. "They said
if her name was printed, it might be difficult if she was
traveling abroad, and they said they would prefer I didn't use
her name. It was a very weak request. If it was put on a stronger
basis, I would have considered it."
After the column ran, the CIA began a damage assessment of
whether any foreign contacts Plame had made over the years
could be in danger. The assessment continues, sources said.
The CIA occasionally asks news organizations to withhold the
names of undercover agents, and news organizations usually
comply. An intelligence official told The Post yesterday that
no further harm would come from repeating Plame's name.
Wilson was acting U.S. ambassador to Iraq during the run-up
to the Persian Gulf War of 1991. He was in the diplomatic
service from 1976 until 1998, and was the Clinton
administration's senior director of African affairs on the
National Security Council. He is now an international business
consultant. Wilson said the mission to Niger was unpaid
except for expenses.
Wilson said he believes an inquiry from Cheney's office launched
his eight-day mission to Niger in February 2002 to check the
uranium claim, which turned out to be based at least partly on
forged documents. "The way it was briefed to me was that
the office of the vice president had expressed an interest in
a report covering uranium purchases by Iraq from Niger,"
Wilson said in a telephone interview yesterday.
He said that if Novak's account is accurate, the leak was part
of "a deliberate attempt on the part of the White House to
intimidate others and make them think twice about coming
forward."
Sources said that some of the other journalists who received the
leak did not use the information because they were uncomfortable
with unmasking an undercover agent or because they did not
consider the information relevant to Wilson's report about
Niger.
Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), who has been pushing the FBI
to investigate the disclosure since July, said yesterday that
it "not only put an agent's life in danger, but many of
that agent's sources and contacts."
Staff writer Richard Leiby contributed to this report.
2003 The Washington Post Company
Bush Administration declares whistleblower's wife "fair game"
28 Sep 2003
CIA Agent's Identity Was Leaked to Media
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, September 28, 2003; Page A01
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