When the vice president sat down with Fox News’ Brit Hume yesterday, the political world waited to see what, exactly, Dick Cheney might say about having shot a man last weekend. Looking forward, however, the most interesting exchange may have come near the end, on a subject that has nothing to do with Harry Whittington.
Hume: Let me ask you another question. Is it your view that a Vice President has the authority to declassify information?
Cheney: There is an executive order to that effect.
Hume: There is.
Cheney: Yes.
Hume: Have you done it?
Cheney: Well, I’ve certainly advocated declassification and participated in declassification decisions. The executive order —
Hume: You ever done it unilaterally?
Cheney: I don’t want to get into that. There is an executive order that specifies who has classification authority, and obviously focuses first and foremost on the President, but also includes the Vice President.
True? Maybe not. Steve Clemons, ReddHedd, Georgia10, and Liberal Oasis did pretty thorough reviews of said executive order and found that Cheney’s claim doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. The VP has some fairly broad authority to classify materials, but the VP can’t be his own declassification machine. Cheney wouldn’t respond to the question yesterday about whether he has unilaterally exercised this power, but it’s clear the VP was arguing that he could. He appears to be wrong — and it warrants some follow-up.
In context, of course, this matters enormously. Last week, we learned that Scooter Libby told a grand jury that he was authorized by his “superiors” to disclose classified information to reporters about Iraq’s weapons capability in June and July 2003. And Libby, of course, also helped expose the identity of an undercover CIA agent.
Was the Hume-Cheney exchange the first hint of Libby’s defense? He wasn’t actually leaking classified information because his boss was unilaterally declassifying the information along the way? It sure sounds like it.