The president can’t hijack anything. The vice president can’t hijack anything, except the Oval Office — and he hasn’t done that. All of this is patently absurd. So the Plame leak was to discredit Wilson. The whole thing here was to destroy Cheney — and I’m going to tell you this, too. I don’t care… If this independent prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, if there are no indictments, it isn’t going to matter. If there are no indictments, that story will be on page A-22, and we will continue with: “There were no weapons of mass destruction. Joe Wilson found out about it and the White House set out to destroy Joe Wilson and his wife.” There were no weapons of mass destruction. The administration lied! They’ve already got themselves convinced that’s what Fitzgerald’s investigation is all about anyway, and they don’t know diddly-squat just like they didn’t know what was going on in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and just like they all told us, “Michael Jackson slam-dunk, guilty; going to be in jail,” just like they’re telling us the same thing about Tom DeLay. Now, here’s the New York Times story: “Cheney Told Aide of C.I.A. Officer, Lawyers Report — I. Lewis Libby Jr., Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, first learned about the C.I.A. officer at the heart of the leak investigation in a conversation with Mr. Cheney weeks before her identity became public in 2003…” Go to the Novak column, folks. Novak says her identity was widely known when he wrote about it. But so what? There’s no crime here. Cheney found out? I mean, he’s entitled to know what’s going on at the CIA. He’s entitled to know who’s there.
It still it doesn’t matter though because even when Cheney found out, you know, the law requires that this babe has to be covert in the last five years. She wasn’t. Cheney didn’t know that she was covert when he told Libby anything. This is just absolutely worthless information. It is a non-story.
It catalogs his lies, catalogs his misstatements, catalogs what does Senate intelligence committee has been saying. Why run that story now? I’m saying it’s a CYA in case Wilson’s indicted! How about that? What if Wilson and Plame are indicted? What if I’ve been going on the radio for the last three months saying: “Wilson and Plame, I’ve heard, they’re going to be indicted. I’ve got lawyers. I know lawyers. My dad was a lawyer. I know a lot of lawyers. I’ve got some cousins and uncles who are judges, and they told me they think it could be Wilson and Plame.” That’s about what the media is doing here. Wilson and Plame! Anyway, the Washington Post is doing something here because why run this story that basically trashes Wilson? The New York Sun today has a great story (laughing), and I tell you, folks… I will get this story to you in detail in just a second, but — they have a fabulous story in the New York Sun about all of this infighting at the New York Times. Everybody… Maureen Dowd has got Judy Miller down on the mat, gouging her eyes out. You’ve got the editor over there, Bill Keller, piling on. It’s a tag-team. It’s Mo Dowd and Bill Keller beating up Judy Miller. What they’re doing is basically saying is, “She didn’t tell us the truth. She lied through her teeth.” Maureen Dowd’s trying to say Judy Miller slept her way to all these sources, slept her way with Scooter Libby, slept her way with Pinch Sulzberger back in the 70s. Yeah, that’s what Mo Dowd is saying!
Let me finish this New York Times story on Cheney, because one-fifth of the way in, you say to yourself, Why is there a story here? “Mr. Libby’s notes indicate that will Mr. Cheney had gotten his information from George Tenet. Well, how can Cheney be the leak? If Cheney got the news from Tenet and Tenet’s at the CIA and Tenet is her boss, how can any of this be a leak? That’s still not the point. But they contain, those notes — Libby’s notes contain “contain no suggestion that either Mr. Cheney or Mr. Libby knew at the time of Ms. Wilson’s undercover status or that her identity was classified. Disclosing a covert agent’s identity can be a crime, but only if the person who discloses it knows the agent’s undercover status.” Well, that’s where you say, Where’s the story? Why did you guys bother writing this? “Libby’s notes contain no suggestion that either Cheney or Libby knew of Ms. Wilson’s undercover status or that her identity was classified, and if you have to know that to be guilty of a crime,” and you didn’t know that, we will take a break.
We will be back. Now, AP tried their version of this after the New York Times story came out and it’s utterly irresponsible and the AOL.com, AOL online, whatever. America Online, is that what it is? Moscow Online! Change the name! Moscow Online, Beijing Online. At any rate, they’ve got this story, and a picture of Cheney snarling with his upper lip. You know how sometimes when Cheney smiles, half of his mouth moves, the other half doesn’t, and they’ve got inning pictures of (shutter sound) auto winder took and they’ve taken one of these pictures in mid-smile making Cheney look like he’s snarling at you, to go along with this story.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
“According to Ms. Miller and others who have testified before the grand jury investigating the leak, Mr. Fitzgerald has shown significant interest in whether Mr. Libby or other White House officials testified truthfully about their involvement in an alleged effort to discredit a vocal critic of President Bush,” the self-styled raconteur, “Joseph Wilson. “The prosecutor’s…” Oh, by the way, in that Washington Post story that I talked about, it also alludes to the fact that Wilson really was instrumental in getting her identity and name out there. Ye-e-es! If I didn’t know better I’d say the Washington Post, rather, transcribed one of my monologs yesterday and rewrote it with two different guys, because it’s amazing. I haven’t seen this anywhere else in the media — and it’s not there by accident. They’re covering their bases. It means they’re not sure what’s coming here, folks, bottom line, despite all the certitude that you hear from them in their reporting. Now… “The prosecutor’s intense interest in Mr. Libby may be related to an alleged discrepancy about how he came to learn that Mr. Wilson’s wife worked at the CIA…. The notes do not indicate that Mr. Cheney … knew that the operative, Valerie,” Flame…
Well, that’s Judith Miller’s name for her. “I thought her name was ‘Flame,’ judge. That’s what my notes say.”
Anyway Paul Rosenzweig, former federal prosecutor, said, “‘If it’s going to be a perjury case,'” if that’s where they’re headed, here, Fitzgerald has “‘got a hard case because his key witness is Judy Miller [and] she has some issues as a witness.’ Last week, the Times published a lengthy story containing unflattering anecdotes about Ms. Miller, including a claim that she referred to herself as ‘Miss Run Amok.’ On Friday, the newspaper’s managing editor, Bill Keller, sent a memo to his staff asserting that Ms. Miller ‘seems to have misled’ the paper’s Washington bureau chief, Philip Taubman, regarding her knowledge about Mr. Libby’s alleged campaign against Mr. Wilson,” and don’t forgot you’ve got Maureen Dowd in her column on Saturday pretty much alleging here that Judith Miller slept her way to these sources and it was carefully, cleverly disguised with a word you’d have to go to dictionary to look up. I don’t even remember the word right now but the word means “openness with powerful men.” (Laughing.) That’s exactly what the dictionary says. “Her willingness to be open (ahem — think eagle) with powerful men.” Well, there is a word. I forget the word, but it was clear what Maureen Dowd’s implication was. Then you’ve got Bill Keller out there writing this CYA memo.
“On Saturday, a Times columnist, Maureen Dowd, questioned Ms. Miller’s candor and suggested that she no longer be allowed to write for the newspaper. Mr. Rosenzweig, who worked on the independent counsel investigation of President Clinton, said the attacks on Ms. Miller would complicate any attempt to present her as a witness. ‘Can you imagine a defense attorney saying, “So, I understand they call you Miss Run Amok?”‘… A law professor at George Washington University, Jonathan Turley, said the storm surrounding Ms. Miller adds a layer of complexity to Mr. Fitzgerald’s decision about how to proceed.” So it would be just juicy as it can be, just ironically juicy as it could be if the New York Times beating itself up in public in an effort to cover itself, forever trusting this horrible run-amuck reporter, does such a great job of discrediting her credibility that nobody wants to use her as a star witness in any kind of a criminal proceeding. This is the kind of thing we may never know, too. I mean, if there are no indictments of these figures, we’ll not know why. So much is unknown here, and it’s just going to be sort of like waiting for Christmas. It just takes a lot of patience there, when you are a kid.
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