How broad are Patrick Fitzgerald’s interests? This broad.
The CIA leak inquiry that threatens senior White House aides has now widened to include the forgery of documents on African uranium that started the investigation, according to NATO intelligence sources.
This suggests the inquiry by special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald into the leaking of the identity of undercover CIA officer Valerie Plame has now widened to embrace part of the broader question about the way the Iraq war was justified by the Bush administration.
Depending on the extent to which Fitzgerald pursued this, what he found, the overall accuracy of this UPI report, it suggests the Plame scandal may end up encompassing quite a number of Bush-related program activities.
…NATO sources have confirmed to United Press International that Fitzgerald’s team of investigators has sought and obtained documentation on the forgeries from the Italian government.
Fitzgerald’s team has been given the full, and as yet unpublished report of the Italian parliamentary inquiry into the affair, which started when an Italian journalist obtained documents that appeared to show officials of the government of Niger helping to supply the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein with Yellowcake uranium. This claim, which made its way into President Bush’s State of the Union address in January, 2003, was based on falsified documents from Niger and was later withdrawn by the White House.
This opens the door to what has always been the most serious implication of the CIA leak case, that the Bush administration could face a brutally damaging and public inquiry into the case for war against Iraq being false or artificially exaggerated.
Obviously, there are plenty of questions to which there is no publicly-available answer, not the least of which is what the unpublished report of the Italian parliamentary inquiry actually says.
Nevertheless, it’s important to note that Fitzgerald isn’t in a position to start charging White House officials for their possible role in the Niger fiasco. The UPI report says this angle “opens the door” into Bush lying his way into a war, but if so, the door is only open a crack. As Mark Kleiman notes today, “the charges themselves will have to be limited to blowing Plame’s cover and covering it up, because that’s the limit of Fitzgerald’s terms of reference.”
At a minimum, it suggests that a) Fitzgerald is being extremely thorough; and b) he’s getting a complete picture of the Bush gang’s motivations for smearing Joseph Wilson in the first place. Stay tuned.