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Removing All Doubt

You can see why Bob Novak’s lawyers have told him to keep his mouth shut. Today he writes a column “defending” himself that opens up one big ole can of worms again.

Novak’s original column opened with this paragraph:

The CIA’s decision to send retired diplomat Joseph C. Wilson to Africa in February 2002 to investigate possible Iraqi purchases of uranium was made routinely at a low level without Director George Tenet’s knowledge. Remarkably, this produced a political firestorm that has not yet subsided.

Had Novak left it at that there would have been no repercussions. But he went on to reveal that Wilson’s wife was the one who suggested him for the mission. And we know that it was the “wife” part of this story that was being spread all over town, not the fact that the decision to send Wilson to Niger was made in the bowels of the CIA.

This would have been a fairly standard issue character assassination if it hadn’t been for the fact that Plame was undercover. But she was, and the CIA told Novak that. Bill Harlow, former spokesman for the CIA, recently went on the record with the Washington Post and said that he had warned Novak off the story using the only language the CIA can use without revealing classified information. Novak claims in his column today that this simply wasn’t good enough:

So, what was “wrong” with my column as Harlow claimed? There was nothing incorrect. He told the Post reporters he had “warned” me that if I “did write about it, her name should not be revealed.” That is meaningless. Once it was determined that Wilson’s wife suggested the mission, she could be identified as “Valerie Plame” by reading her husband’s entry in “Who’s Who in America.”

Except he could have easily written the story without revealing that Wilson’s wife allegedly sent him on the mission at all. It was a colorful detail that didn’t mean anything unless you were Joe and Valerie Wilson and your careers and reputations were being destroyed. The substance of Novak’s story was that Cheney knew nothing of the mission, not who sent Wilson. It appears to me that this is exactly how Harlow assumed Novak would handle it when he warned him not to use Plame’s name if he wrote the story.

Why did Novak think Plame’s alleged involvement was important in the first place? He certainly didn’t spell it out in his column. He just dropped it out there. In fact, there has still not been, to this day, any satisfactory explanation from him or anyone else involved as to why it was so significant that Plame allegedly suggested her husband for the job. Other than casting aspersions on Wilson’s manhood, creating the impression that he wasn’t qualified or sending a message to critics, I can’t conceive of any legitimate reasons why it would be considered worth reporting — particularly since the CIA had not given him an unequivocal green light. Reporting her involvement can only be seen for what it was: character assasination and political retribution.

Novak knew what Rove and Libby wanted him to do and, alone among his peers, he ran with the petty little detail they were working hard to get into the papers. And now he has the nerve to get indignant when he gets called on it. Douchebag For Liberty doesn’t even begin to describe it.

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