Posted by
Cutty on Tuesday, July 31, 2007 5:09:59 PM
Scooter Libby's sentence was commuted by President Bush nearly a month ago, and the left is still in an uproar. The Daily Kos, Huffington Post and other left wing blogs are full of obscenity laden comments claiming that this action was a coverup and a travesty of injustice. Senator Hillary Clinton regularly uses the issue in campaign speeches, dubbing the action "cronyism," (which I find absolutely laughable considring all of her husband's pardons). Cindy Sheehan has threatened to run against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi if she doesn't try to impeach the President.
This obsession with the whole Valerie Plame affair and Scooter Libby has even infected the local paper here in Reidsville, GA. Last week, one of the columnists wrote a scathing column, charging that the President somehow skirted the law. It was full of inaccuracies and misconceptions that were primarily regurgitations of Democrat talking points. I couldn't help but respond, and yesterday I sent the paper a rather lengthy response. I won't know until Thursday whether they'll run it, but I wanted to share it with my readers. I basically compiled facts and details that are easily obtainable, but glossed over or outright ignored by the mainstream media. I hope you find this information useful if you ever find yourself in a discussion with someone who thinks Bush's action was a travesty. .
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.In her July 26th column in The Tattnall Journal, Melinda Huling accuses the President of “circumventing” the law when he commuted the sentence of Scooter Libby, the former Chief of Staff to the Vice President. How can that be, when his action complies with the highest law in the land -- the U.S. Constitution?
Let’s not forget that President Bill Clinton pardoned 147 people on his last day in office, including his step brother, former White Water Partner Susan McDougal, and tax fraud fugitive Marc Rich, whose ex-wife contributed millions of dollars to Clinton’s presidential library.
One of Mrs. Huling’s major criticisms is that Mr. Libby will spend no time in prison, and essentially gets off with paying a $250,000 fine. I don’t remember her being upset when former Clinton National Security Advisor Sandy Berger received no jail time and a paltry $50,000 fine for stealing and destroying classified documents during the 9-1-1 investigation.
I agree with Mrs. Huling that “it’s serious when classified information is leaked.” But I don’t remember her complaining when the New York Times printed sensitive national security information on its front page.
As for Mr. Libby, there are many reasonable people, including former Senator Fred Thompson (R-Tennessee) and the editors of The Wall Street Journal, who believe he should receive a full pardon. Let’s look at a few details about the investigation that liberals and their media allies conveniently overlook.
Ambassador Joe Wilson claims the White House leaked the identity of his wife, CIA analyst Valerie Plame, to retaliate for his July 2003 New York Times column. In fact, White House officials were simply trying to set the record straight about what they saw as misinformation in the column, especially Mr. Wilson’s statement that Vice President Cheney had sent him to Niger. That’s how Ms. Plame’s name came up.
It turns out that the officials were justified to challenge the veracity of Mr. Wilson. In fact, two major statements in Mr. Wilson’s column that have been proven false… not by right wing radio, but by The Washington Post and a bipartisan Senate intelligence panel. In an article dated July 10, 2004, the Post reported that the panel concluded that Plame had recommended her husband for the trip in memos to her superiors.
Concerning Iraq’s attempts to buy yellowcake, the Post article states, “The panel found that Wilson's report (to the CIA), rather than debunking intelligence about purported uranium sales to Iraq, as he has said, bolstered the case for most intelligence analysts.”
According to political reporter Robert Novak, whose column about Ms. Plame sparked the investigation, the Justice and State Departments knew very early on who had supplied the identity of Mr. Wilson’s wife -- then-Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage.
Mr. Fitzgerald pursued the investigation anyway. Why? One theory was that he was trying to justify his job. Another is that he bought the accusation that Bush Administration officials illegally leaked Ms. Plame’s identity to punish the Wilsons. Bush haters and anti-war activists were salivating with the thought of presidential advisor Karl Rove being marched off to prison. .
Unfortunately for them, after two years and hundreds of hours of interviews and grand jury testimony, Mr. Fitzgerald found no actual violation of the official secrets act or the law banning the outing of covert CIA operatives. In fact, he could not determine that Ms. Plame held covert status at the time her name was revealed, nor could he prove White House officials knew her identity was classified when they talked with reporters.
The investigation, however, did catch one big fish. Mr. Libby was tried and convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice. (Which begs the question: How does one obstruct justice when no actual crime was committed?)
In a July 3, 2007 editorial, The Wall Street Journal described the investigation as “an obsessive exercise” and “a perjury net that we continue to believe trapped an innocent man who lost track of what he said, when he said it, and to whom,”
The bottom line: Mr. Libby’s “crimes” occurred in the course of an investigation that never should have been launched in the first place and clearly was the victim of a rogue prosecutor and a toxic political climate. It’s only fair and just that Scooter Libby receive a full pardon.