[Mb-civic] Magazine: Bradlee Knows Woodward's Source on Plame - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Mar 14 03:55:29 PST 2006
Magazine: Bradlee Knows Woodward's Source on Plame
By Jim VandeHei
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 14, 2006; A02
Vanity Fair is reporting that former Washington Post executive editor
Ben Bradlee says it is reasonable to assume former State Department
official Richard L. Armitage is likely the source who revealed CIA
operative Valerie Plame's name to Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob
Woodward.
In an article to be published in the magazine today, Bradlee is quoted
as saying: "That Armitage is the likely source is a fair assumption."
Armitage was deputy secretary of State in President Bush's first term.
In an interview yesterday, Bradlee said he does know the identity of
Woodward's source but does not recall making that precise statement to a
Vanity Fair reporter. He said he has no interest in unmasking the
official who first told Woodward about Plame in June 2003.
"I don't think I said it," Bradlee said. "I know who his source is, and
I don't want to get into it. . . . I have not told a soul who it is."
The identity of Woodward's source emerged as one of the big mysteries of
the CIA case after he disclosed last year that a government official
with no ax to grind had told him about Plame, an undercover operative, a
month before her name was revealed by columnist Robert D. Novak. Since
then, guessing Woodward's source has been a Washington parlor game.
Plame is at the center of an investigation by a special prosecutor into
whether White House officials knowingly disclosed her name to the media
to discredit allegations made by her husband, former ambassador Joseph
C. Wilson IV, that the administration twisted intelligence in the run up
to the Iraq war. The probe has resulted in charges of perjury, making
false statements and obstructing justice against I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, Vice President Cheney's former chief of staff.
Beth Kseniak, spokeswoman for Vanity Fair, said the reporter who wrote
the story, Marie Brenner, was traveling in India and was unavailable for
comment.
Bradlee, currently Post vice president at large, said he learned the
source's name from someone other than Woodward. Woodward said he did not
reveal the source to his friend and former boss.
"He is not in the management loop on this," Woodward said. "Maybe he was
alerted from somebody else, if he in fact did learn" the source's name.
Woodward and Bradlee refused to disclose the source's name. Armitage did
not return phone calls requesting comment.
Bradlee's brief comments about the source are included in a lengthy
article about the Plame case. Bradlee is the longtime Post editor who
rose to prominence when his reporting team of Woodward and Carl
Bernstein broke the Watergate story. Woodward and Bradlee refused for
many years to reveal the identity of Deep Throat, a key source.
Bradlee defended Woodward after thejournalist disclosed in November that
a senior Bush administration official had told him about Plame and her
CIA ties a month before her identity was revealed.
At the time, Woodward was criticized by Leonard Downie Jr., The Post's
executive editor, and others for not telling the newspaper about his
knowledge of Plame until after Libby was indicted.
In the course of writing a book on Bush, Woodward said, he had
discovered mention of Plame in his notes just as the grand jury in the
leak case was expiring last October. Woodward contacted prosecutor
Patrick J. Fitzgerald and later testified under oath about his
conversations with the source, whom he has refused to name publicly.
Woodward's testimony changed key elements in the chronology Fitzgerald
laid out in his investigation and announced when indicting Libby. It
made Woodward's source -- not Libby -- the first known government
official to disclose Plame's CIA employment to a reporter. Woodward has
said he does not recall ever discussing Plame with Libby.
It also apparently made Woodward the first reporter to learn about Plame
from a government source. Libby's legal team has cited Woodward's
testimony as evidence that there are holes in Fitzgerald's version of
events and hinted it might call the reporter to testify at the trial.
The identity of Woodward's source is one of several mysteries that
remain in the leak case. Lawyers involved in the case have suggested
Woodward's source and Novak's source are the same person. Novak has
refused to discuss the sources for his column but suggested in a speech
in December that he and Woodward shared the source. Novak and his lawyer
declined to comment yesterday.
Fitzgerald has not concluded his investigation, but people involved in
the case said he has not shown interest in Woodward or his source since
Woodward testified last year.
Fitzgerald has not closed the investigation of whether White House
Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove provided false statements about his role
in the disclosure of Plame's identity, according to lawyers in the case.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/13/AR2006031301904.html?nav=hcmodule
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