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Wednesday, January 31, 2007 12:00 AM

What Scooter Libby said, what Matt Cooper wrote

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007 01:58 PM

After Miller and Cooper's testimony

I think I understand now why members of the mainstream media are so reluctant to criticize members of the Bush administration for incompetence. Yikes.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007 02:19 PM

Upon Further Cross-Examination

Jeffress: Have you ever seen someone in the street that you haven't seen in a long time, but when you stop them you realize it's someone who only superficially resembles your old friend?

Cooper: Uh. Yeah.

Jeffress: I see. And have you ever waved at someone you thought was waving at you only to realize that they were waving at the person behind you?

Cooper: Who hasn't?

Jeffress: Just answer the question, please.

Cooper: Yes.

Jeffress: So by your own admission you've mis-recognized people as well as their intentions to communicate with you. How can you be sure that it was even Mr. Libby to whom you were talking when you took those notes? Or even that this individual was talking to you and not someone behind you?

Fitzgerald: Now wait a minute - your honor!

Jeffress: Question retracted. Now Mr. Cooper, taking into account that Delta x times Delta p is equal to or greater than the quotient of Planck's Constant divided by 2pi divided by 2, would you say that light a wave or a particle?

Wednesday, January 31, 2007 03:02 PM

groucho marxists

what a pity that a matter of critical national importance (establishing that the Bushistas knowingly lied us into Iraq) turns into a non-comedy of ennor, ur, um ,irrons, I mean errors. Having, thank God, retired from human resources, I can tell you that the typical college graduate cannot write. But, boy, can they type. And typo. LIbby is a stooge, no doubt, and The Dick and others are up to their bloodstained asses in perjury, treason, and war crimes. But let's concentrate on our spelling, shall we, class? Jeez Louise.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007 03:22 PM

"Cheney's Handwritten Notes Implicate Bush in Plame Affair"

Thanks to the Randi Rhodes Show on Air America (http://www.therandirhodesshow.com/live/)

This page at Truthout http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/013107Z.shtml

includes pics of the handwritten notes as well as the article below...

Cheney's Handwritten Notes Implicate Bush in Plame Affair

By Jason Leopold and Marc Ash

t r u t h o u t | Report Wednesday 31 January 2007

Copies of handwritten notes by Vice President Dick Cheney, introduced at trial by defense attorneys for former White House staffer I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, would appear to implicate George W. Bush in the Plame CIA Leak case.

Bush has long maintained that he was unaware of attacks by any member of his administration against [former ambassador Joseph] Wilson. The ex-envoy's stinging rebukes of the administration's use of pre-war Iraq intelligence led Libby and other White House officials to leak Wilson's wife's covert CIA status to reporters in July 2003 in an act of retaliation.

But Cheney's notes, which were introduced into evidence Tuesday during Libby's perjury and obstruction-of-justice trial, call into question the truthfulness of President Bush's vehement denials about his prior knowledge of the attacks against Wilson. The revelation that Bush may have known all along that there was an effort by members of his office to discredit the former ambassador begs the question: Was the president also aware that senior members of his administration compromised Valerie Plame's undercover role with the CIA?

Further, the highly explicit nature of Cheney's comments not only hints at a rift between Cheney and Bush over what Cheney felt was the scapegoating of Libby, but also raises serious questions about potentially criminal actions by Bush. If Bush did indeed play an active role in encouraging Libby to take the fall to protect Karl Rove, as Libby's lawyers articulated in their opening statements, then that could be viewed as criminal involvement by Bush.

Last week, Libby's attorney Theodore Wells made a stunning pronouncement during opening statements of Libby's trial. He claimed that the White House had made Libby a scapegoat for the leak to protect Karl Rove - Bush's political adviser and "right-hand man."

"Mr. Libby, you will learn, went to the vice president of the United States and met with the vice president in private. Mr. Libby said to the vice president, 'I think the White House ... is trying to set me up. People in the White House want me to be a scapegoat,'" said Wells.

Cheney's notes seem to help bolster Wells's defense strategy. Libby's defense team first discussed the notes - written by Cheney in September 2003 for White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan - during opening statements last week. Wells said Cheney had written "not going to protect one staffer and sacrifice the guy that was asked to stick his head in the meat grinder because of incompetence of others": a reference to Libby being asked to deal with the media and vociferously rebut Wilson's allegations that the Bush administration knowingly "twisted" intelligence to win support for the war in Iraq.

However, when Cheney wrote the notes, he had originally written "this Pres." instead of "that was."

During cross-examination Tuesday morning, David Addington was asked specific questions about Cheney's notes and the reference to President Bush. Addington, former counsel to the vice president, was named Cheney's chief of staff - a position Libby had held before resigning.

"Can you make out what's crossed out, Mr. Addington?" Wells asked, according to a copy of the transcript of Tuesday's court proceedings.

"It says 'the guy' and then it says, 'this Pres.' and then that is scratched through," Addington said.

"OK," Wells said. "Let's start again. 'Not going to protect one staffer and sacrifice the guy ...' and then what's scratched through?" Wells asked Addington again, attempting to establish that Cheney had originally written that President Bush personally asked Libby to beat back Wilson's criticisms.

"T-h-i-s space P-r-e-s," Addington said, spelling out the words. "And then it's got a scratch-through."

"So it looks like 'this Pres.?'" Wells asked again.

"Yes sir," Addington said.

Thus, Cheney's notes would have read "not going to protect one staffer and sacrifice the guy this Pres. asked to stick his head in the meat grinder because of the incompetence of others." The words "this Pres." were crossed out and replaced with "that was," but are still clearly legible in the document.

The reference to "the meat grinder" was understood to be the Washington press corps, Wells said. The "protect one staffer" reference, Wells said, was White House Political Adviser Karl Rove, whose own role in the leak and the attacks on Wilson are well documented.

Furthermore, Cheney, in his directive to McClellan that day in September 2003, wrote that the White House spokesman needed to immediately "call out to key press saying the same thing about Scooter as Karl."

McClellan had publicly stated in September 2003 that Rove was not culpable in the leak of Valerie Plame's covert CIA identity, nor was he involved in a campaign to discredit her husband, but McClellan did not say anything to the media that exonerated Libby, which led Cheney to write the note. A couple of weeks later, in October 2003, McClellan told members of the media that it was "ridiculous" for them to suggest Libby and Rove were involved in the leak, because he received personal assurances from both men that they had nothing to do with it.

(continued....)

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