Saturday, September 23, 2006

Bartlett

More Bartlett

In a White House meeting that week, communications director Dan Bartlett, just back from Africa, talked about redirecting coverage away from Wilson and his wife--and stopping the Wilson bashing. It was unproductive and demeaning, he suggested. Bartlett, according to Adam Levine, was "against the idea of the wife as a talking point."

[...]

"Scooter and Rove are out of control," Levine told Bartlett at the meeting. "You've got to rein these guys in." Barlett rolled his eyes and looked exasperated, but agreed. "I know, I know," he said, according to Levine.
Hubris Pg 291

Walter Pincus



In Progress

Background

Walter Pincus is a reporter at The Washington Post.

A White House official called Pincus [1] on July 12, 2003 and told him that the WH had not paid attention to Wilson's trip because "it was set up as a boondoggle by his wife, an analyst with the agency working on weapons of mass destruction."

Pincus reported that "a Post reporter" received the leak in his 10/12/03 WaPo article entitled "Probe Focuses on Month Before Leak to Reporters". Pincus later acknowledges that he was the reporter who received the leak.

Pincus Deposition

It was first reported that Pincus had been contacted by Fitzgerald on May 15, 2004 in the Washington Post. "Leak Prosecutor Seeks To Question Reporters"

The Washington Post reported on August 10, 2004 that Pincus was served with a subpoena on August 9, 2004. The details of the Pincus subpoena are unknown.

Pincus intially resisted the subpoena and his case was under consideration with Judge Hogan as of 9/3/04, according to the September 3, 2004 Associated Press article entitled "Confidentiality is 'essential,' news media tell judge".

The 8/27/04 Fitzgerald affidavit likely refers to Pincus.

Pincus Source Comes Forward

It is likely that Pincus's source came forward between 9/3/04 and 9/15/04 as Pincus's case was still with the court on 9/3/04 and he gave his deposition on 9/15/04.


Meanwhile, a Bush administration official who was a confidential source for a Washington Post story about Plame and Wilson has come forward to speak with investigators.

As a result, Post reporter Walter Pincus, who had refused to reveal his source's name to prosecutors, provided a deposition in the case on Sept. 15. Pincus did not, however, name the administration official.

[...]

"I understand that my source has already spoken to the special prosecutor about our conversation on July 12, and that the special prosecutor has dropped his demand that I reveal my source.
AP 9/17/04


Pincus was interviewed for the Janurary/February 2005 issue of the Columbia Journalism Review. According to CJR 2005 Pincus "agreed to give a deposition in which he confirmed the time, date, and length of his conversation with the source but would not reveal the source's identity".



Additional Information about Pincus Source from Waas

  • Pincus and Novak likely share a White House Source.
  • Pincus's source has testified to telling Pincus and others.
  • Pincus talked to Fitzgerald about more than one source.



Waas interviewed Pincus for this March 22, 2005 article. Waas has additional information from attorneys familiar with the testimony of the WH official who told Pincus.

The WH official who told Pincus may have also talked to Novak about Plame.

Two days before columnist Robert Novak named Valerie Plame as a covert CIA operative, a Bush administration official told a reporter for The Washington Post that Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson IV, had been sent to Niger on a sensitive diplomatic mission only because his wife recommended him for the job. The administration official admitted his role to federal prosecutors during their investigation into the leak of Plame's identity.

The Bush administration official, according to attorneys familiar with his testimony, told a federal grand jury that he made the claim to the Post reporter and others in an effort to undermine Wilson's credibility, who was alleging at the time that the Bush administration was relying on faulty intelligence to bolster its case to go to war with Iraq. But the official just as adamantly denied to the federal investigators that he had ever told the Post reporter, Novak, or anyone else that Plame was a clandestine CIA operative.

[...]

Pincus told me in an interview that he did not use the information offered up by his source because he did not believe it to be true. He also said that he cooperated with prosecutors only at the instructions of sources who wanted to clear their names.

[...]

Later, when administration officials, such as the one who spoke to Pincus, admitted to investigators that they had told reporters that Wilson had been sent to Niger only as a result of his wife's purported nepotism -- but did not know she had ever been a clandestine operative -- the investigators came to believe that Novak and his sources might be misleading them.
Waas 4/22/05






[1] Pincus NPR Interview 10/23/05

Transcript

NRP: In Pincus's earliest interviews with officials in the Vice President's office and at the CIA and the State Department, Valerie Plame's involvement never came up.

Pincus: Nobody ever mentioned Wilson's wife playing any role at all and one of the people I talked to then on background and I've since been released to say his name was Scooter Libby who described how the thing came about to the Vice President's office, but never once mentioned Wilson's wife as being a participant.

[...]

Pincus: On July 8th, somebody talks to Robert Novak and mentions Wilson's wife's alleged role in setting up the trip. By then that same day there is a conversation between New York Times correspondant Judy Miller and Scotter Libby and the two of them had already talked about this and he had mentioned Wilson's wife.

You then had other reporters being contacted, Matt Cooper was contacted by Karl Rove and given the same story and then I was called on July 12th and a WH source in effect asked why I was still writing about Joe Wilson's trip, didn't I know that his wife had arranged it. And it - since at least two people are invloved in talking about it, those things in this WH - it's assumed don't happen independently.
NRP 10/23/05

Note: Pincus is talking about early interviews with Libby, the CIA, and State in the 1st section of the NPR interview, before Wilson's op-ed


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I still have Rove, Hadley, Fleischer, Bartlett, and Martin on my list of suspects for the Pincus source. In that order.

On 7/12/03 the Pincus source wanted to know why Pincus was still writing about Wilson.

According to Hubris

That same day [7/12/03], Walter Pincus was working on a his latest story on the Niger controversy, and he had a scoop the White House wouldn't like: that Tenet had personally intervened with the White House to keep the Niger claim out of the Cincinnati speech.
Hubris Pg 277


Pincus published a story on 7/13/03 entitled " CIA Got Uranium Reference Cut in Oct" that was pointing directly at Hadley.

Tenet argued personally to White House officials, including deputy national security adviser Stephen Hadley, that the allegation should not be used
WaPo 7/13/03


Pincus was writing that Hadley was told by Tenet not to use the Niger uranium allegation in the October 2002 speech. I'm sure he asked Hadley for comment and since Pincus doesn't say Hadley had no comment nor does he attribite any quote to Hadley, it's likely Hadley did talk to Pincus and is probably one of the anonymous sources in the Pincus article.

Pincus attributes one quote to Bartlett in the article. Here are the other quotes which likely come from the WH.

"We followed the NIE and hoped there was more intelligence to support it," a senior administration official said yesterday. When told there was nothing new, White House officials backed off, and as a result "seeking uranium from Niger was never in drafts," he said.

[...]

Senior Bush aides [note Pincus has aides plural] said they do not believe they have a communication problem within the White House that prevented them from acting on any of the misgivings about the information that were being expressed at lower levels of the government.

[...]

"I'm sure there will have to be some retracing of steps, and that's what's happening," White House communications director Dan Bartlett said

[]

A senior administration official said Bush's chief speechwriter, Michael J. Gerson, does not remember who wrote the line that has wound up causing the White House so much grief.

Officials said three speechwriters were at the core of the State of the Union team, and that they worked from evidence against Iraq provided by the National Security Council. NSC officials dealt with the CIA both in gathering material for the speech and later in vetting the drafts.

Officials involved in preparing the speech said

Pincus 7/13/03 WaPo





I don't think Barlett would be considered "senior".

Rove and/or Libby could be one of the "Senior Bush aides", it sounds like them. they both like to point to "lower levels of the government."




Hubris has this on Bartlett

In a White House meeting that week, communications director Dan Bartlett, just back from Africa, talked about redirecting coverage away from Wilson and his wife--and stopping the Wilson bashing. It was unproductive and demeaning, he suggested. Bartlett, according to Adam Levine, was "against the idea of the wife as a talking point."

[...]

"Scooter and Rove are out of control," Levine told Bartlett at the meeting. "You've got to rein these guys in." Barlett rolled his eyes and looked exasperated, but agreed. "I know, I know," he said, according to Levine.
Hubris Pg 291

George Tenet

In Progress



Tenet's Statement

Tenet released a statement on the evening of 7/11/03 in response to Wilson's 7/6/03 New York Times op-ed. In his statement Tenet assumes responsibility for the inclusion of the "sixteen words" the the 2003 State of the Union Address delivered on January 28, 2003.

First, CIA approved the PresidentÂ’s State of the Union address before it was delivered. Second, I am responsible for the approval process in my Agency. And third, the President had every reason to believe that the text presented to him was sound. These 16 words should never have been included in the text written for the President.
Tenet Statement 7/11/03


Two days later, The CIA had a very different story out in the 7/13/03 WaPo article by Pincus entitled " CIA Got Uranium Reference Cut in Oct"

Tenet argued personally to White House officials, including deputy national security adviser Stephen Hadley, that the allegation should not be used [In a October 2002 speech] because it came from only a single source, according to one senior official.
WaPo 7/13/03


On 7/22/03 Barlett and Hadley admitted the White House had received memos showing Tenet had personally told the White House to remove the Niger claims from the earlier October 2002 speech.


The latest turn came Tuesday, when deputy national security adviser Stephen J. Hadley and White House communications director Dan Bartlett revealed the existence of two previously unknown memos showing that Director of Central Intelligence George J. Tenet had repeatedly urged the administration last October to remove a similar claim that Iraq had tried to buy uranium in Africa.
WaPo 7/24/03




Background

The are two accounts in the public record regarding the development of Tenet's statement, both appear in July 2005. Earlier in July, Rove's conversations with Matt Cooper and Novak were first reported along with front page articles on the INR Memo in the NYT and the WaPo.

The first account appeared on 7/21/05 in the NYT

People who have been briefed on the case said the White House officials, Karl Rove and I. Lewis Libby, were helping prepare what became the administration's primary response to criticism that a flawed phrase about the nuclear materials in Africa had been in Mr. Bush's State of the Union address six months earlier.

They had exchanged e-mail correspondence and drafts of a proposed statement by George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, to explain how the disputed wording had gotten into the address. Mr. Rove, the president's political strategist, and Mr. Libby, the chief of staff for Vice President Dick Cheney, coordinated their efforts with Stephen J. Hadley, then the deputy national security adviser, who was in turn consulting with Mr. Tenet.
NYT 7/21/05


The CIA pushback was published on 7/27/05 in the WaPo.

On July 9, Tenet and top aides began to draft a statement over two days that ultimately said it was "a mistake" for the CIA to have permitted the 16 words about uranium to remain in Bush's speech. He said the information "did not rise to the level of certainty which should be required for presidential speeches, and the CIA should have ensured that it was removed."

A former senior CIA official said yesterday that Tenet's statement was drafted within the agency and was shown only to Hadley on July 10 to get White House input. Only a few minor changes were accepted before it was released on July 11, this former official said. He took issue with a New York Times report last week that said Rove and Vice President Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, had a role in Tenet's statement
WaPo 7/27/05


Tenet's Role in the Investigation

It was initially reported in the 9/28/03 WaPo that the Justice Department's investigation into the leak was at Tenet's request, however the WaPo published a different account one week later on 10/05/03 and the NYT still another.

At CIA Director George J. Tenet's request, the Justice Department is looking into an allegation that administration officials leaked the name of an undercover CIA officer to a journalist, government sources said yesterday
WaPo 9/28/03


sources close to Tenet say the director himself was not responsible for initiating the leak investigation
WaPo 10/5/03


But Mr. Tenet was aware of the Novak column, and was not pleased, the C.I.A. official said. As required by law, the agency notified the Justice Department in late July that there had been a release of classified information; it is a felony for any official with access to such information to disclose the identity of a covert American officer. It is unclear when Mr. Tenet became aware of the referral, but when he did, he supported it, the C.I.A. official said, even though it was clearly going to cause problems for the White House. ''I don't think he lost any sleep over it,'' the official said.
NYT 10/5/03


The origins of the DOJ investigation are detailed in a CIA letter dated 1/30/04. The letter from the CIA was in response to a letter from Conyers dated 9/29/03.

By letter dated 16 September 2003 and in accordance with standard practice, the CIA informed DOJ that the Agency's investigation into this matter was complete, provided DOJ a memorandum setting forth the results of the investigation, and requested that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) undertake a criminal investigation of this matter. In a 29 September 2003 letter, DOJ advised that the Counterespionage Division of DOJ had requested that the FBI initiate an investigation of this matter.
CIA Letter 1/30/04


Tenet's Resignation

Tenet's resignation was unexpected.

Bush Consults Lawyer About CIA Name Leak
WAPO Thursday, June 3, 2004

CIA Director Tenet Resigns
WAPO Thursday, June 3, 2004

Cheney Said Questioned On CIA Leak
CBS Saturday, July 5, 2004