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Home » News » Politics

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Cheney to FBI: No idea on Plame leak

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28-page summary is released

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  • AP **FILE**
Former Vice President Dick Cheney

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By Pete Yost ASSOCIATED PRESS

Then-Vice President Dick Cheney told the FBI in 2004 he had no idea who leaked to the news media the fact that Valerie Plame, wife of a Bush administration critic, worked for the CIA.

An FBI summary of Mr. Cheney's interview from that year reflects that the vice president had deep concerns about Mrs. Plame's husband, Joseph C. Wilson IV, a former U.S. ambassador in Africa who said the administration had twisted prewar intelligence on Iraq.

Mr. Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby Jr., was convicted of perjury, obstruction and lying to the FBI in the probe of who leaked Mrs. Plame's identity to the news media. At the end of Libby's trial, prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald said that "there is a cloud over the vice president" regarding the leaking of Mrs. Plame's identity.

In the FBI interview, the vice president's memory of key events appeared hazy.

Mr. Cheney said he did not recall discussing Mr. Wilson's wife with Libby before her CIA employment was publicly revealed by conservative columnist Robert Novak on July 14, 2003. Libby's own notes produced at his trial reflect that Mr. Cheney told him about the CIA employment of Mr. Wilson's wife in mid-June 2003, a month before Mrs. Plame's CIA job became public knowledge.

Following Libby's conviction, President George W. Bush commuted Libby's 30-month prison sentence but rejected Mr. Cheney's vehement appeals to pardon Libby.

The 28-page FBI interview summary was released Friday to a watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which sued to get the material under the Freedom of Information Act.

In the interview, whose participants included Mr. Fitzgerald, the vice president said the identity of Mrs. Plame and her employment were not high on his radar screen and that her employment with the CIA and relationship to Mr. Wilson did not figure prominently in his thinking. Mr. Cheney also told agents that he did not recall having a conversation about either Mrs. Plame or her husband with Mr. Bush.

The vice president said he probably discussed Mr. Wilson with Mr. Bush's top political adviser Karl Rove, but he told the FBI he would not have talked to Mr. Rove about Mr. Wilson's wife.

Mr. Cheney's occasional denials that he talked about Mrs. Plame to various people at the White House are among the few things in the lengthy interview with the FBI that Mr. Cheney appeared certain about.

According to courtroom testimony, Mr. Rove was one of Mr. Novak's sources for his column disclosing Mrs. Plame's CIA identity, and Mr. Rove and Libby were sources for Time magazine reporter Matt Cooper, who also wrote a story identifying Mrs. Plame.

Mr. Cheney said he was not aware of any discussions Libby may have had with Mr. Rove about Mr. Wilson or Mr. Wilson's wife, and Mr. Cheney said Libby did not tell him about any such discussions.

The vice president advised the agents that he had no idea what Libby knew in the days before Mrs. Plame's CIA identity was publicly revealed. Mr. Cheney said he did not recall whether Libby revealed to the vice president his independent knowledge about the fact that Mr. Wilson's wife worked at the CIA.

In a New York Times opinion piece on July 6, 2003, Mr. Wilson accused the Bush administration of twisting intelligence about Iraq's efforts to buy uranium "yellowcake" in the African nation of Niger. Mr. Bush referred to the yellowcake during his Jan. 28, 2003, "State of the Union" speech to Congress as he was trying to rally support for going to war with Iraq. Yellowcake is a powdered form of uranium that could be used in a nuclear weapon if purified and enriched.

The previous year, the CIA had sent Mr. Wilson to Niger to determine the accuracy of the uranium reports. Mr. Wilson brought back denials of any sale and argued such a sale was not likely to happen.

In his FBI interview, Mr. Cheney said his initial reaction to the Wilson article was his sense that it was "amateur hour" at the CIA.

Mr. Cheney said the New York Times piece was disturbing. He said he was most disturbed because it was now being made to look as though the vice president had personally sent Mr. Wilson on the trip. The vice president said that all he had done was to make a legitimate inquiry of a CIA briefer in February 2002 about Niger and Iraq.

Mrs. Plame was named in Mr. Novak's column as a CIA employee eight days after Mr. Wilson attacked the administration in the New York Times piece.

Mr. Cheney said it was then-CIA Director George Tenet who told him sometime before the July 6, 2003, publication of Mr. Wilson's opinion piece in the New York Times that Mr. Wilson's wife worked at the CIA, but Mr. Cheney said he was uncertain when that was.

Mr. Cheney said he could not recall whether he mentioned the content of his conversation with Mr. Tenet to Libby, but the vice president said that if he would have shared it with anyone, it would have been Libby.

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