TERROR WATCH
Michael Isikoff and
Mark Hosenball
Closing the Door
An unusual new privilege claim shields Cheney in Plame probe.
The Bush administration today unveiled a set of novel and controversial legal arguments in refusing to disclose key details about Vice President Dick Cheney's role in the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity.
In two letters released Wednesday, the Justice Department revealed that, upon the recommendation of Attorney General Michael Mukasey, President Bush had invoked executive privilege rather than turn over to Congress a never-released FBI report (known as a "302") recounting a confidential 2004 interview with Cheney about his knowledge of the Plame affair.
The White House move effectively closes the door on the last chance for the public to learn answers to a swirl of questions that have surrounded Cheney's actions from the outset of the Plame case. Indeed, in his summation to the jury last year in the trial that led to the conviction of the vice president's top aide, I. Lewis (Scooter) Libby, special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald repeatedly pointed to Cheney's actions, telling the jury at one point that "there is a cloud over what the vice president did."
The decision by the White House to refuse to honor the subpoena from Democratic Rep. Henry Waxman's House Oversight and Government Reform Committee for Cheney's interview was hardly unexpected, given the administration's history of fiercely protecting presidential prerogatives. What was surprising to some legal scholars was the basis for shielding the FBI interview report. It was covered, Mukasey said, by what he called "the law-enforcement component of executive privilege."
"As far as I know, this is an utterly unprecedented executive-privilege claim," said Peter Shane, an Ohio State University law professor who is an expert on executive privilege and separation-of-powers issues. "I've never heard this claim before."
Normally, claims of executive privilege are invoked to protect the disclosure of the president's communications with his top advisers. But in this case, the White House invoked the claim to keep secret Cheney's responses to FBI agents (hardly what anybody would call his advisers), who were grilling him as part of the now-closed criminal investigation headed by Fitzgerald.
Fitzgerald's probe focused on whether any administration officials broke the law when they disclosed to members of the press that Plame, an undercover CIA operative who was the wife of Iraq War critic Joseph Wilson, worked for the agency. The disclosures were allegedly made as part of a White House attempt to discredit Wilson by suggesting that a trip he took for the agency to investigate claims about Saddam Hussein's nuclear-weapons program was arranged by his wife. Evidence in the case showed that Libby—who was convicted of lying and obstruction—first learned about Plame's CIA work from Cheney and was later directed by the vice president to meet with reporters on an off-the-record basis to rebut criticism by Wilson.
What makes the decision to withhold the Cheney interview all the more unusual was the fact that the White House had already agreed to permit congressional investigators to inspect the FBI 302 reports of other top White House aides in the Plame case, including Karl Rove.
So what was different about Cheney?
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Member Comments
Posted By: Krohn @ 10/06/2008 6:01:57 PM
Comment: The Antichrist!:
When George Soros failed to obtain the election of his candidate, John Kerry, in 2004, he brooded for a while, even said he might get out of politics altogether, but he just couldn???t stop himself. He has stated publicly that he wishes to burst the ???bubble of American supremacy,??? because he says our preeminence in the world is a detriment to global ???equilibrium.??? So far, he has failed, but he keeps on trying.
And Mr. Soros has made no secret either of the fact that he sees the shortest way to effect political shake-ups, what he terms ???regime changes,??? is through very difficult economic conditions.
America has not yet felt the full force of Soros style economic shock treatment. But others have.
Soros made his first billion in 1992 by shorting the British pound with leveraged billions in financial bets, and became known as the man who broke the Bank of England. He broke it on the backs of hard-working British citizens who immediately saw their homes severely devalued and their life savings cut drastically in comparative worth almost overnight.
When the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 threatened to spread globally, George Soros was right in the thick of it. Soros was accused by the Malaysian Prime Minister of causing the collapse with his monetary machinations, and he was branded in Thailand as an ???economic war criminal??? who ???sucks the blood from the people.??? Right in the middle of this crisis, Soros dashed off his book, The Crisis of Global Capitalism, which demanded a ???third way??? toward economic stability.
Wake up, America, before it is too late!!!!
Posted By: Krohn @ 10/05/2008 8:25:50 PM
Comment: he ACORN does not fall from the tree:
http://justsaynodeal.com/acorn.html
Posted By: Krohn @ 10/05/2008 12:58:54 AM
Comment: This is one of the few Democrats that I am proud of!:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZR5ekEuGyvk