Thursday, September 07, 2006

Tell Rove you are sorry

Liberals went nuts about the Wilson/Plane non-story. The worst part of it was all the lying Wilson did. As usual, liberals are wrong and they don't care. As long as they hurt Bush, that is all that matters...

Here are the comments of a life-long liberal:
Conspiracy theories flourish in politics, and most of them have no more basis than spring training hopes for the Chicago Cubs.
Whenever things turn dicey for Republicans, they complain about the "liberal media" sabotaging them. And when Democrats get in a jam, they take up Hillary Clinton's warnings about a "vast right-wing conspiracy."
For much of the past five years, dark suspicions have been voiced about the Bush White House undermining its critics, and Karl Rove has been fingered as the chief culprit in this supposed plot to suppress the opposition.
Now at least one count in that indictment has been substantially weakened -- the charge that Rove masterminded a conspiracy to discredit Iraq intelligence critic Joseph Wilson by "outing" his CIA-operative wife, Valerie Plame.
I have written almost nothing about the Wilson-Plame case, because it seemed overblown to me from the start. Wilson's claim in a New York Times op-ed about his memo on the supposed Iraqi purchase of uranium yellowcake from Niger; the Robert D. Novak column naming Plame as the person who had recommended Wilson to check up on the reported sale; the call for a special prosecutor and the lengthy interrogation that led to the jailing of Judith Miller of the New York Times and the deposition of several other reporters; and, finally, the indictment of Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Cheney's chief of staff -- all of this struck me as being a tempest in a teapot.
No one behaved well in the whole mess -- not Wilson, not Libby, not special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and not the reporters involved.
The only time I commented on the case was to caution reporters who offered bold First Amendment defenses for keeping their sources' names secret that they had better examine the motivations of the people leaking the information to be sure they deserve protection.
But caution has been notably lacking in some of the press treatment of this subject -- especially when it comes to Karl Rove. And it behooves us in the media to examine that behavior, not just sweep it under the rug.
Sidney Blumenthal, a former aide to President Bill Clinton and now a columnist for several publications, has just published a book titled, "How Bush Rules: Chronicles of a Radical Regime." It is a collection of his columns for Salon, including one originally published on July 14, 2005, titled "Rove's War."
It was occasioned by the disclosure of a memo from Time magazine's Matt Cooper, saying that Rove had confirmed to him the identity of Valerie Plame. To Blumenthal, that was proof that this "was political payback against Wilson by a White House that wanted to shift the public focus from the Iraq War to Wilson's motives."
Then Blumenthal went off on a rant: "While the White House stonewalls, Rove has license to run his own damage control operation. His surrogates argue that if Rove did anything, it wasn't a crime. . . . Rove is fighting his war as though it will be settled in a court of Washington pundits. Brandishing his formidable political weapons, he seeks to demonstrate his prowess once again. His corps of agents raises a din in which their voices drown out individual dissidents. His frantic massing of forces dominates the capital by winning the communications battle. Indeed, Rove may succeed momentarily in quelling the storm. But the stillness may be illusory. Before the prosecutor, Rove's arsenal is useless."
In fact, the prosecutor concluded that there was no crime; hence, no indictment. And we now know that the original "leak," in casual conversations with reporters Novak and Bob Woodward, came not from the conspiracy theorists' target in the White House but from the deputy secretary of state at the time, Richard Armitage, an esteemed member of the Washington establishment and no pal of Rove or President Bush.
Blumenthal's example is far from unique. Newsweek, in a July 25, 2005, cover story on Rove, after dutifully noting that Rove's lawyer said the prosecutor had told him that Rove was not a target of the investigation, added: "But this isn't just about the Facts, it's about what Rove's foes regard as a higher Truth: That he is a one-man epicenter of a narrative of Evil."
And in the American Prospect's cover story for August 2005, Joe Conason wrote that Rove "is a powerful bully. Fear of retribution has stifled those who might have revealed his secrets. He has enjoyed the impunity of a malefactor who could always claim, however implausibly, deniability -- until now."
These and other publications owe Karl Rove an apology. And all of journalism needs to relearn the lesson: Can the conspiracy theories and stick to the facts.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Scorpion says---
It'll take more than a conspiracy
for the Cubs to ever do anything. Of course, the Cubs have a better chance of competency than some of the responses I've seen here lately.

Jim said...

David Broder is a life-long liberal? Then so was Jesse Helms. You are really way off.

By the way, it was the CIA that requested the investigation of the exposure of their covert agent, which fact was CLASSIFIED. The fact that someone else spilled it first, did not give Rove the clearance to confirm the CLASSIFIED information. It was still a CLASSIFIED secret and unpublished by NOVAK until Rove confirmed the CLASSIFIED information.

Karl Rove is one of the most ruthless and unprincipled political operatives in history. He gets no apology from me nor from anybody I respect.

Marshal Art said...

"Karl Rove is one of the most ruthless and unprincipled political operatives in history."

Yeah, I've heard it said many times, but I've never seen it supported. (Here's where you can list your lefty links as your source.)

Anonymous said...

If you have never seen it supported, Marshall, then you are never looking anywhere it exists. There is a plethora of evidence going back to the early days with Queen Bush, and further.

Regardless, Pub or Dems, there is always going to be underlings taking the fall. It means only one of two things. Either the boss was really responsible, and the underling takes the bullet hoping for eventual reprieve...OR...the boss is ignorant and incompetent, and doesnt have any idea what is going on around him. Which do you believe Rove, the insecure, manipulating micromanager falls?

Anonymous said...

I believe you haven't presented anything but opinion. I'll take a chance on any links you might provide. Anything to hear just one incident that does more than weakly alluding to proof of his evil side.

Generally speaking, the left is satisfied with accusations. One can say anything about a conservative and it is taken right off as true, assuming someone has proof somewhere. They are all too willing to believe the worst about the right, it's typically assumed that the accusation is truth. As such, these are things I mostly ignore. If it is indeed true, there will be proof. In the case of Rove, I've never seen anything, but I constantly hear accusations.

Marshal Art said...

That last was mine. I don't know why it says anonymous.

Jay Bullock said...

I just don't follow why people think the confirmation of Armitage as a source suddenly evaporates all the questions surrounding the investigation. And, anyway, speculation on the left was that Armitage was a source months ago, after Wooward's revelations. But questions remain:

Who gave Novak the name "Plame"? Who gave Miller the name "Plame"? Why was there a concerted effort--reports no one denies of two senior administration officials calling at least six reporters with the Wilson-Plame connection--to get the media to out her as an operative? What was Libby covering up that he lied, repeatedly, to the FBI?

Did any of that have to do with her work leading the Iraq WMD task force, a task force not producing evidence that Iraqi WMDs were real and a threat?

Armitage went to the FBI in late 2003, before the Justice Department handed the investigation over to Fitzgerald. So Fitz has known all along, and still found enough smoke to keep looking for fire.

I think it's your side that's still in denial about this one.

Anonymous said...

Like I said, marshall, you arent looking.

Dedanna said...

Believing that ignorance is bliss, of course.

Jim said...

Watch the movie Bush's Brain or read the book.

Dedanna said...

You mean there's actually proof that he has one?

I have got to see this.