A lot of ink has spilled over Bob Woodward’s revelation that he knew about Valerie Plame before Judy Miller, and that his source was neither Karl Rove nor Scooter Libby, but it seems the number of helpful, accessible facts are far and few between.
The WaPo, among others, suggests the new information could be a boon to Libby, the only person indicted in the scandal (so far).
Legal experts said Woodward provided two pieces of new information that cast at least a shadow of doubt on the public case against Libby, Vice President Cheney’s former chief of staff, who has been indicted on perjury and obstruction of justice charges.
Woodward testified Monday that contrary to Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald’s public statements, a senior government official — not Libby — was the first Bush administration official to tell a reporter about Plame and her role at the CIA. Woodward also said that Libby never mentioned Plame in conversations they had on June 23 and June 27, 2003, about the Iraq war, a time when the indictment alleges Libby was eagerly passing information about Plame to reporters and colleagues.
A lot of speculation, but little else. Fitzgerald, as Josh Marshall noted, said “Libby’s was the earliest instance he’d found of an official leaking Plame’s identity,” so it’s not as if Fitzgerald’s conclusion was wildly off base.
Regardless, I’m not entirely clear on why any of this matters. Reading Fitzgerald’s indictment, Libby concocted an entirely bogus narrative involving him learning about Plame from reporters. He repeated the story to the FBI and the grand jury, and according to Fitzgerald, none of it was true. Libby’s leak to Miller may not have been the first-ever Plame leak, but that doesn’t seem to have much of an effect on the indictment’s bottom line.
For that matter, the WaPo piece suggested Libby could have told Woodward about Plame directly, but didn’t. That’s great except it has nothing to do with the other leaks and falsehoods Libby is alleged to have repeated.
Then there’s the matter of Woodward’s still unknown source. The New York Times seems to have helped narrow things down a bit.
Yesterday, Rove and Libby were eliminated from the Woodward sweepstakes and the NYT crossed several more names off the list today.
A senior administration official said that neither President Bush himself, nor his chief of staff, Andrew H. Card Jr., nor his counselor, Dan Bartlett, was Mr. Woodward’s source. So did spokesmen for former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell; the former director of central intelligence, George J. Tenet; and his deputy, John E. McLaughlin.
A lawyer for Karl Rove, the deputy White House chief of staff who has acknowledged conversations with reporters about the case and remains under investigation, said Mr. Rove was not Mr. Woodward’s source.
Mr. Cheney did not join the parade of denials.
In fact, as Kevin noted, the NYT reporters seem to think Cheney was the source, “but they can’t just say so.” On the other hand, before we read too much into the VP’s lack of a denial, it’s worth remembering that The Note reported yesterday that a senior Administration official, speaking to ABC News’ Jessica Yellin, “laughed” at the suggestion that Cheney was Woodward’s source.
And what of our friend Stephen Hadley? The NYT mentioned him in passing today as one several “administration officials known to have been interviewed by investigators.” Steve Soto, however, picks up the Hadley ball and runs with it.
If Hadley came forward to tell Fitzgerald that he was releasing Woodward from any pledge of confidentiality, what and who prompted Hadley to do this? Did Scooter or Cheney force Hadley’s hand, knowing that Libby wasn’t the first to talk with reporters about Plame’s identity? […]
If Hadley was in fact the first administration official to talk to a member of the media about Plame’s identity, and knowingly revealing that she was a possible covert operative due to her assignment in the Directorate of Operations, how plausible is it that his boss at the time didn’t know about this either. You know, his boss, the current Secretary of State?
So many questions…