|
National Security Council,
White House and State Department discussed Ms.
Wilson
Time
When They Knew
By MASSIMO CALABRESI
Jul. 31, 2005
As the investigation tightens into the leak of the identity of
covert CIA operative Valerie Plame, sources tell TIME some White
House officials may have learned she was married to former
ambassador Joseph Wilson weeks before his July 6, 2003, Op-Ed
piece criticizing the Administration. That prospect increases the
chances that White House official Karl Rove and others learned
about Plame from within the Administration rather than from media
contacts. Rove has told investigators he believes he learned of
her directly or indirectly from reporters, according to his
lawyer.
The previously undisclosed fact gathering began in the first
week of June 2003 at the CIA, when its public-affairs office
received an inquiry about Wilson's trip to Africa from veteran
Washington Post reporter Walter Pincus. That office then
contacted Plame's unit, which had sent Wilson to Niger, but
stopped short of drafting an internal report. The same week,
Under Secretary of State Marc Grossman asked for and received a
memo on the Wilson trip from Carl Ford, head of the State
Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. Sources
familiar with the memo, which disclosed Plame's relationship to
Wilson, say Secretary of State Colin Powell read it in mid-June.
Deputy Secretary Richard Armitage may have received a copy then
too.
When Pincus' article ran on June 12, the circle of senior
officials who knew about the identity of Wilson's wife expanded.
"After Pincus," a former intelligence officer says, "there was
general discussion with the National Security Council and the
White House and State Department and others" about Wilson's trip
and its origins. A source familiar with the memo says neither
Powell nor Armitage spoke to the White House about it until after
July 6. John McLaughlin, then deputy head of the CIA, confirms
that the White House asked about the Wilson trip, but can't
remember exactly when. One thing he's sure of, says McLaughlin,
who has been interviewed by prosecutors, is that "we looked into
it and found the facts of it, and passed it on." --By Massimo
Calabresi. With reporting by Timothy J. Burger, Michael Duffy and
Viveca Novak
|
|