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Libby perjury trial puts spotlight on US Vice President Cheney
By Patrick Martin
31 January 2007
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Testimony in the opening week of the perjury trial of former
top White House official I. Lewis Libby has focused attention
on the central role played by Vice President Dick Cheney in the
Bush administrations efforts to suppress political opposition
to the war in Iraq.
Cheney himself will take the stand later in the trial, the
first time that a sitting vice president has testified under oath
in a criminal proceeding. Despite the best efforts of special
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and Judge Reggie Walton to narrow
its focus, the trial has already begun to shed light on the gangster-like
methods of the Bush administration.
The opening statement by the defense has already raised the
claim that Libby is being used as a scapegoat to protect more
politically powerful members of the administration, particularly
Bushs chief political aide, Karl Rove. Attorney Theodore
Wells, Jr. read an excerpt from a note handwritten by Cheney,
declaring that he was not going to protect one staffer
[i.e., Rove] and sacrifice the guy [i.e., Libby] that was
asked to stick his neck in the meat grinder because of the incompetence
of others. And the first few witnesses have painted a picture
of Cheney as the directing force in the administrations
efforts to use the media to smear and discredit critics of the
war.
The mounting political pressure on the administration, and
on Cheney in particular, has been expressed in a series of increasingly
intemperate outbursts from the vice president, particularly his
interview with Wolf Blitzer of CNN last week. Cheney declared
that the US intervention in Iraq had produced enormous successes,
while dismissing as hogwash any suggestion that the
administration had lost credibility because of its false claims
about weapons of mass destruction and its constantly shifting
rationale for the war.
Libby was Cheneys long-time chief of staff until he resigned
in late 2005 after being indicted on charges of perjury and obstruction
of justice. He was one of the most powerful behind-the-scenes
figures in official Washington, serving as Cheneys enforcer
on foreign policy matters, the area of greatest interest to the
vice president, who plays an outsized role within the Bush administration.
The motive of the alleged perjury was to conceal the role of
the White House, and Cheney in particular, in an effort to punish
public opposition to the war. Federal prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald
charged that Libby repeatedly lied to a federal grand jury investigating
the leak of the identity of a covert CIA operative, Valerie Wilson,
whose husband, former ambassador Joseph A. Wilson, became a vocal
critic of the Bush administrations war propaganda.
Wilson wrote an op-ed column published by New York Times
on July 6, 2003, revealing that the White House had incorporated
lies about Iraqi efforts to obtain uranium in Africa into Bushs
January 2003 State of the Union speech. Wilson had been dispatched
by the CIA to Niger to investigate these allegations the previous
year and had found no evidence to support them. His findings were
subsequently ignored by the administration in manufacturing its
case for war with Iraq.
Eight days after Wilsons opinion piece, right-wing pundit
Robert Novak published a column revealing that Wilsons wife
was employed by the CIA, and giving her maiden name, Valerie Plame,
which she still used as a covert operative in the field of weapons
proliferation. Novaks column claimed that Plames role
at the CIA made Wilsons selection for the Niger trip a case
of nepotism.
The suggestion that a week-long visit to the Sahara amounted
to a junket or political perk was preposterous. Landlocked and
largely desert, Niger is one of the poorest countries in the world.
It was the scene of mass starvation in 2005, hit by a combination
of drought and crop failure. The clear purpose of the Novak column
was to punish Wilson by blowing his wifes cover and putting
an end to her CIA career. This was its effect in practice, as
Plame left the agency within months.
The Wilson/Plame affair was significant, both for what it revealed
about the tensions within the Washington eliteall the various
political and media figures involved are pillars of the bourgeois
political establishmentand the viciousness of the Bush administration.
If this was how the White House was prepared to treat its critics
within official circles, what will its reaction be to mounting
opposition to the war from masses of working people?
The exposure of Plames CIA role touched off inter-agency
warfare in Washington. CIA officials demanded an investigation
into who leaked the information to Novak. An initial probe by
the Department of Justice was turned over to Fitzgerald, the US
Attorney in Chicago, acting as a special prosecutor, because of
the possibility that top Bush administration figures could be
targeted.
Court documents filed by Fitzgerald indicate that the two sources
of the Novak column were Richard Armitage, deputy secretary of
state in the first term of the Bush administration, and Karl Rove,
Bushs top political aide, who was for several years the
main focus of media speculation about the case.
Fitzgerald did not charge either man with violating the Intelligence
Identities Protection Act, the reactionary legislation passed
in the 1980s and directed against the activities of former CIA
agent Philip Agee and others who sought to forestall CIA subversion
overseas by publicly unmasking covert CIA operatives. Press reports
suggested that Fitzgerald could not prove that either Armitage
or Rove was aware that Plame had covert status at the agency,
one of the requirements of the law.
Instead, the prosecutor brought charges against Libby for lying
to the grand jury and thus obstructing the investigation. Libby
was not the source for Novaks report, but he had leaked
the same information to other journalists and then tried to cover
it up. He testified under oath that he learned about Plames
CIA status from the NBC newsman Tim Russert, and that he had only
passed on this information to other journalists.
Libbys account was contradicted by numerous witnesses,
including Russert, who said he never discussed the Wilson affair
with Libby, by the journalists to whom Libby leaked the information
(Judith Miller, then of the New York Times, and Matt Cooper
of Time), and several current and former Bush administration
and intelligence officials who have said they had discussed Plames
CIA role with Libby well before he claims to have learned of it
from Russert.
Fitzgerald has sought to focus the case exclusively on the
obvious conflict between Libbys account and the testimony
of every other witness to the events, while excluding any broader
consideration of the lies used to justify the invasion of Iraq
or the smear campaign waged by the Bush administration against
its critics. Judge Walton has largely backed this approach.
With little to argue on the facts of the case, Libbys
attorneys have sought to change the subject, claiming that Libby
was so deeply involved in high-level foreign policy issues that
he simply misremembered the details of the Wilson/Plame affair
when he testified before the grand jury three months after it
erupted.
The defense of forgetfulness is both desperate
and implausible, given the testimony of the initial witnesses
that the Wilson affair had preoccupied Cheneyand his chief
of staff Libbyduring the months of May, June and July 2003.
One witness, former Cheney press aide Cathie Martin, described
several conversations in which Cheney or Libby raged against the
press coverage of Wilsons criticism and discussed ways to
respond.
Cheney dictated detailed talking points for Libby
to use, as well as authorizing him to leak a classified document
on the administrations Iraq war strategy. The discussion
included suggestions about the use of favored media outlets, including
a Cheney appearance on Russerts Meet the Press
program, or selective leaks to journalists like David Sanger of
the New York Times and Walter Pincus of the Washington
Post, frequent conduits for administration disinformation.
Former White House press spokesman Ari Fleischer dealt a severe
blow to the defense with testimony about his conversations with
Libby, in which Libby volunteered information about Valerie Plame
Wilson at least a week before he claims to have found out her
CIA identity in the conversation with Tim Russert. Two days after
that conversation, Fleischer himself relayed the information on
Ms. Wilson to two reporters, David Gregory of NBC and John Dickerson
of Time magazine.
These witnesses confirm both the cynical skullduggery of the
Bush administration and the complacent collaboration of the major
media outlets. This is a government which threatens prosecution
of those who leak classified information about the crimes being
committed at Guantánamo Bay and secret CIA prisons, while
simultaneously engaging in its own leaks of classified information
to the media to serve its own political purposes.
As Tim Rutten, media columnist of the Los Angeles Times,
wrote January 27, The lesson to take away from this weeks
unintended seminar in contemporary journalism is that the vice
president and his staff, acting on behalf of the Bush administration,
believe that truth is a malleable adjunct to their ambitions and
that they have a well-founded confidence that some members of
the Washington press corps will cynically accommodate that belief
for the sake of their careers.
Despite the apparent conviction on the part of the White House
and its media apologists that intimidation of critics, message
discipline and spin can sustain a bankrupt and
reactionary policy indefinitely, the Libby trial itself has shown
that these methods have definite limits. The process of jury selection
revealed the deep and widespread popular hostility to this government
and the war in Iraq.
Dozens of prospective jurors declared that they could not be
impartial, had nothing but distrust or contempt for the Bush administration
and Cheney in particular, and strongly opposed the war in Iraq.
Nearly every juror who expressed a hostile attitude to the Bush
administration or its policies was excluded from the panel, resulting
in the selection of jury, consisting of 12 members and four alternates,
which is three-quarters white, although the citys population
is majority black.
Meanwhile, the ultra-right press has found it difficult to
determine an effective axis for attack, as all the main players
in the Libby case are Bush-Cheney loyalists, now divided by the
prospect of felony conviction and jail terms. The Wall Street
Journal suggested that no one in the Libby case had actually
been charged with leaking Valerie Plames name in violation
of the Intelligence Identities Protection Act. In the most
important sense, this is a case without a crime, the Journal
editorial board argued, while conceding, Yes, Mr. Libby
is charged with perjury and obstruction of justice, which are
serious offenses.
It was, of course, the Journal that was most vehement
in demanding the prosecution of President Bill Clinton for perjury
and obstruction of justice before a grand jury, dismissing the
argumentperfectly legitimate in Clintons casethat
the Lewinsky affair did not involve any underlying crime, and
that Clinton private sexual relations had been leveraged by special
prosecutor Kenneth Starr to manufacture a pretext for impeachment.
See Also:
Pentagon official witch-hunts Guantánamo
detainees lawyers
[22 January 2007]
Bush administration gets secret courts
sanction for illegal spying operation
[19 January 2007]
Military, CIA prying into Americans
financial records
[16 January 2007]
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