/ 2 November 2005

Plamegate: A ‘perfect storm’

Now the United States has its own David Kelly affair — the British weapons expert murdered in 2003. There is no corpse — unless you count the US troops killed in Iraq — but all the other elements are in place. A complex saga, turning on the unwanted outing of a government servant; a media organisation rocked by accusations of sloppy editorial processes; and a judicial investigation zeroing in on the charge that the government cooked up the case on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction. It will reach its climax any moment now.

It has become known as Plamegate — with CIA agent Valerie Plame the nominally central player. Nominal because, though she is very much alive, she, like Kelly, is a silent star. The details are just as arcane as they were in the British version, but a summary is possible.

In February 2002 the CIA dispatched Joseph Wilson, a former US ambassador, to Niger to check claims that Saddam Hussein had been shopping in the country for nuclear material. He concluded that Hussein had not.

Nevertheless, nearly a year after his mission, Wilson was alarmed to hear President George W Bush and others repeat the Niger claims as if they were true. His patience stretched, Wilson finally wrote a trenchant piece in The New York Times headlined ”What I didn’t find in Africa”. He wrote that if his verdict had been ”ignored because it did not fit certain preconceptions about Iraq, then a legitimate argument can be made that we went to war under false pretences”.

A furious White House promptly briefed- against Wilson. A column appeared mentioning that Wilson’s wife, Plame, was a CIA agent — implying that she had engineered his mission to Africa, and that his appointment owed more to nepotism than to expertise. That set people wondering. To knowingly expose an undercover agent is to break the law. The columnist said he had two sources in the Bush administration. If so, they were potentially guilty of a serious crime. The White House denied any of its people were involved.

So began an investigation which is now due to bear fruit. Special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald could bring indictments against one or both of Karl Rove, the political supremo known as Bush’s Brain, and ”Scooter” Libby, chief of staff to Vice-President Dick Cheney. Chances are, they won’t be charged under the agent-naming- rule — but perhaps with perjury, obstruction of justice or conspiracy to obstruct justice. As so often with scandals, it will not be the initial crime but the subsequent cover-up that does the damage.

To lose high-ranking officials like Rove or Libby would be trouble enough, but the Republicans fear it won’t end there. This week The New York Times reported that Libby was told about Plame by none other than the vice- president in June 2003. That’s tricky, since Libby has testified under oath that it was journalists who first tipped him off about the CIA agent. The revelation makes a liar of Libby and perhaps Cheney: he went on TV in September 2003 saying he didn’t know Wilson or who had sent him to Niger. At the very least, there is now proof that the effort to take on Wilson went all the way to the vice-president — if not further.

So this is the story — along with a sideshow about the conduct of The New York Times reporter Judith Miller, who may have got too close to her White House sources — which has Washington gripped in the scandal fever that has become a perennial feature of every presidential second term. It was Watergate for Nixon, Iran-contra for Reagan, Monica for Clinton, and now Valerie Plame for Bush.

How damaging will it be? If it was purely a matter of hardball tactics by his aides, Bush would be able to ride it out. But there is the question of motive. In the words of former presidential candidate and current Democratic party chairperson Howard Dean: ”This is not so much about Scooter Libby and Karl Rove.This is about the fact that the president didn’t tell us the truth when we went to Iraq, and all these guys are involved in it.” It is this which makes Plame-gate the US’s Kelly affair. For just as the Hutton process put the honesty of British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s case for war on trial, so the naming of Plame has shone a light on the way war was sold to the American public.

For the Niger story, and the determination to keep it alive, was part of a wider effort by Cheney’s office, with allies in Donald Rumsfeld’s defence department, to cherry-pick the intelligence that would support the case for military action against Iraq. All through the summer of 2002, Cheney put pressure on CIA analysts to come up with anything which might cast Hussein as a maniac bent on nuking the US. In speeches, Cheney presented Baghdad as an imminent, lethal danger to the US. He persisted in claiming a link between Hussein and al-Qaeda, even when the evidence was non- existent. He recycled the wholly discredited claim that Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers, had met an Iraqi agent in Prague. He and his White House Iraq group, which included Rove and Libby, were engaged in a campaign not merely to sex up the case for war — but to make it up altogether.

Rove and Libby had differing motives. Rove was convinced that branding Bush a ”war president” would ensure re-election in 2004 — but that required a war; Afghanistan was wrapped up, so Iraq would be the necessary sequel. Libby was part of the ideological neocon set that had long dreamed of an Iraq invasion as the first step to remaking the Middle East and which seized on 9/11 as the opportunity.

Now all this is getting an airing, one that will carry an extra charge if key players face criminal charges. Nor will it feel like an academic debate about the past. American soldiers are dying in a war that policymakers seem unable either to win or to end. With each passing day, more Americans will want to know how they got into this mess.

What’s more, Plamegate comes as Bush is especially vulnerable. Hurricane Katrina exposed his administration as careless, cronyish and incompetent. In a blistering speech last week, Colin Powell’s former chief of staff, Colonel Laurence Wilkerson, warned that if the US was struck by another terror attack or a major pandemic ”you are going to see the ineptitude of this government in a way that will take you back to the Declaration of Independence”.

The president is assailed from all sides; from Democrats over his plans to privatise the pensions system, and from conservatives who wanted a rightwing titan nominated to the Supreme Court — and who feel insulted by the choice of Harriet Miers, a personal lawyer to Bush who has never been a judge.

It adds up to a moment of exceptional weakness, a ”perfect storm” for Democrats plotting a comeback in next year’s elections. But it’s more important than that. Now there is a chance to discredit not only Bush’s presidency, but also the ideology that led to the disastrous adventure in Iraq. Plamegate itself may seem arcane, but that outcome is one in which we all have a stake. — Â