Congressional Record: July 14, 2004 (Senate)
Page S8059-S8060]
CLASSIFIED LEAK INVESTIGATION
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, today we observe a sad milestone in the
scandal and tragedy that some have labeled ``leakgate.'' It has been
exactly 1 year, July 14, since two senior White House officials leaked
Valerie Plame's identity as a covert operative at the Central
Intelligence Agency.
Last July 14, 2003, 8 days after Ms. Plame's husband published an op-
ed in the New York Times which questioned information in the
President's 2003 State of the Union message regarding a supposed effort
by Iraq to purchase uranium from Africa, her identity was revealed in
print by columnist Robert Novak. This illegal act should have outraged
everyone at the White House. It should have moved President Bush
immediately to demand the identity of the perpetrators.
Instead, in his only public statement about this act of betrayal, Mr.
Bush smiled--yes, he smiled--and said:
This is a town that likes to leak. I don't know if we are
going to find out the senior administration official. Now,
this is a large administration, and there's a lot of senior
officials. I don't have any idea.
Again, he said it with kind of a smirk and a wry smile on his face.
I consider that statement to be disingenuous. The number of senior
White House officials with the appropriate clearances and access to
knowledge about Ms. Plame's identity can probably be counted on one
hand, two at the most. If Mr. Bush was serious about identifying the
perpetrators, those officials could have been summoned to the Oval
Office and this matter would have been resolved in 24 hours.
Now, we are not talking about some little thing happening. This is an
illegal action under the law.
Mr. Bush did not question his staff in the Oval Office. There was no
outrage at the White House. There were no internal investigations.
There was no angry President Bush demanding answers from his senior
aides. There was only a cavalier dismissal, followed by a year of
virtual silence.
Three decades ago, a previous occupant of the Oval Office, President
Nixon, was recorded on audiotape saying to a senior White House
official:
I don't give an [expletive] what happens. I want you to
stonewall it, let them plead the Fifth Amendment, cover up or
anything else, if it'll save it, save this plan. That's the
whole point. We're going to protect our people if we can.
That was Richard Nixon almost 30 years ago. This White House has now
delayed any accountability for this damaging and illegal leak for a
full year. White House officials who committed this act of treachery
presumably are still exercising decisionmaking power.
Who is the White House protecting? Why? Do we now have a modern day
Richard Nixon back in the White House?
And what was the cost of exposing Ms. Plame? Not only her job. As
Vincent Cannistraro, former Chief of Operations and Analysis at the CIA
Counterterrorism Center, told us:
The consequences are much greater than Valerie Plame's job
as a clandestine CIA employee. They include damage to the
lives and livelihoods of many foreign nationals with whom she
was connected, and it has destroyed a clandestine cover
mechanism that may have been used to protect other CIA
nonofficial cover officers.
Valerie Plame's cover was blown to discredit and retaliate against
her husband Joseph Wilson. The recent report by the Senate Intelligence
Committee provides some insight. It states that back in 2002 when the
CIA was searching for someone with connections to Niger to find out
about a possible purchase or attempt to purchase uranium by Iraq, she
suggested that her husband, former Ambassador Wilson, go as a
factfinder. Mr. Wilson was sent there. He reported the claim's lack of
credibility to the CIA.
Later that year, the President was to give a speech in Cincinnati
mentioning the claim. On October 6, CIA Director Tenet personally
called Deputy National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley to outline the
CIA's concerns that this claim was not real. And it was then deleted
from the President's Cincinnati speech.
Between October 2002 and January 2003, concerns about the claim
increased. In January, the State Department sent an e-mail to the CIA
outlining ``the reasoning why the uranium purchase agreement is
probably a hoax.''
Here is the troubling aspect: The same official, Stephen Hadley, who
spoke with George Tenet and took the claim out of the October speech in
Cincinnati, was also in charge of vetting the State of the Union
Address. Amazing. If he knew it was a problem and took it out in
October, why was it put in for the State of the Union message?
A lot of questions need to be answered. Mr. Bush seemingly does not
want to know the identity of the leakers. The White House occupies a
small area. The number of employees who are suspect in this matter is
small. This should not be like trying to find nonexistent weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq.
One year has passed. Perhaps the President and others have already
told Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald who is responsible. Perhaps that has
happened. If not, I believe it is clear that the President and the Vice
President should be put under oath. They need to tell the special
prosecutor and the American public who committed these acts. They
should be put under oath, questioned, and filmed. Remember, this
happened just a few years ago when another President, President
Clinton, was put under oath and questioned by the special prosecutor,
on film, which we witnessed right here on the Senate floor.
Also, by putting the President and the Vice President under oath and
questioning them as they should be questioned, it sends another
powerful message to the people of this country: No President, no Vice
President, is above the law. President Clinton was not above the law.
This President should not be above the law.
I call upon the special prosecutor: Put the President under oath. Put
the Vice President under oath. Question them about their knowledge of
this incident and let's get this matter cleared up. Find those
responsible and prosecute them to the full extent of the law.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
[[Page S8060]]
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I want to follow up on what my colleague
from Iowa has had to say. I thank him for his strength and leadership
on this issue.
As was mentioned, it is a year ago that Robert Novak published a
column outing a covert CIA agent. The next day I called for an
investigation.
For about a month not much happened. Then, and I think the record
should underscore this, George Tenet, head of the CIA, publicly and
privately asked for an investigation, and one began.
I don't have any complaints with the investigation. I think both Mr.
Comey and Prosecutor Fitzgerald have done a fine job. I have faith in
what they are doing, at least from everything I have heard. But the
bottom line is very simple. First, this was a dastardly crime. This is
a crime of a serious nature committed by someone in the White House. We
know that much. Unfortunately, the attitude of the White House has not
been what it should be. There ought to be an attitude there that says
this was a terrible crime. To reveal the name of an agent jeopardizes
that agent's life and the lives of many others with whom they came in
contact. There ought to be every effort to turn over every stone to
find out who did this.
There is a lot of speculation it was done for vengeance, to get at
Ambassador Wilson. It doesn't matter what the reason is, the bottom
line is there is a rule of law in America, and this crime is a lot
worse than a lot of crimes that we get prosecutions for. The bottom
line is simple. I believe if the President wanted it to come out, and
said, It doesn't matter where the chips fall, we are going to find out
who did it and bring them to justice, it would have come out already as
to who did it.
Instead, we first had stonewalling--no investigation. Now we have an
investigation, but everyone is hiding behind the shield laws and other
types of things that say this gets in the way of the sanctity of
freedom of the press.
That is not true. If the President insisted that every person in the
White House sign a statement--not just asked them to do it, insisted--
under oath, that they did or did not, and then released the journalists
they might have talked to, we would know who did it.
Ultimately, as Harry Truman always reminded us, the buck stops with
the President. This is lawbreaking. This is not just political
intrigue, this is not just payback, this is lawbreaking of a serious
crime. Right now, as we speak, we are trying to build up human
intelligence, which fell too far in the CIA. Right now, as we speak,
there are American men and women risking their lives in these
undercover activities. They know that somebody who did the same has
been put at risk, and there is no strong rush to find out who did it
and punish them.
That hurts our intelligence gathering. It hurts our soldiers. It
hurts the rule of law. On this first anniversary we make a plea to the
President: It is not too late. Make every person who worked in the
White House during the time of the leak sign a statement under oath
either that they did or did not talk to them. If they will not sign it,
they should not be in the White House anymore. This is too serious to
treat as everyday politics.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I have spoken with the manager of the bill,
the Senator from Texas. He has agreed to allow Senator Kennedy to speak
for 5 minutes, and Senator Reed to go next.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
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