By Justin Raimondo10/19/05 "Antiwar" --
-- Amid all the
brouhaha over whether
I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby,
Karl Rove, or any number of Bush administration
insiders had a hand in
leaking the name of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame,
the essential crime at the core of the investigation –
and its probable starting point – often gets lost in the
shuffle. The "outing" of Plame was not an end in itself:
the outers didn't just one day decide that they were
going to go after her and Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson,
her husband, because they were in a vindictive mood.
They were out to get them because Wilson drew attention
to the provenance of the
infamous "16 words"
uttered by President Bush in his 2003 state of the
union address, in which Bush claimed that Iraq had
sought out uranium in "an African country" in order to
make a nuclear bomb. Perhaps without knowing it, Wilson
– in taking an interest in this subject – was getting
too close to the
enormous fraud at the center of the War Party's
propaganda campaign.
The African country Bush spoke of is
Niger, where
much of the world's uranium is mined under the
watchful eye of a
French consortium – and where it would be extremely
difficult, if not close to impossible, for the Iraqis to
walk off with the tons of uranium required to produce
weapons-grade materials. This accountability issue was
no doubt a major reason for the skepticism the Niger
uranium story engendered in Ambassador Wilson, who was
sent to Niger
by the CIA to check out the facts – and came back
with a negative report. Wilson was therefore shocked to
hear the president reiterate a claim that had been
previously and definitively debunked, and
went public with his mission and its results – but
not before the source of that claim had been
brutally and publicly refuted by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
In early October 2002, Italian journalist
Elisabetta Burba, a writer for Italy's
Panorama magazine, delivered some
documents
to the U.S. embassy in Rome: a cache of letters and
other papers purporting to be correspondence between
officials of the Niger government and the Iraqis
relating to the acquisition of uranium "yellowcake."
The documents soon found their way to Washington, D.C.,
where key administration officials were quick to
incorporate them into their "talking
points" for war with Iraq – and into Bush's Jan. 28,
2003 speech.
When the IAEA asked to see evidence of the
administration's contentions, they were
put off, until finally the Niger uranium documents
were handed over. It took IAEA scientists just a few
hours to demonstrate that
the
documents were not only
forgeries, but were
particularly crude ones at that – an amateur could
have debunked them using Google. As the Washington
Post reported, one administration official's
response was "We
fell for it."
And how! – but that wasn't the end of it, by
any means. After all, someone had deliberately set up
the American government with false information and badly
embarrassed George W. Bush, who had taken the Niger
uranium canard and run with it in a very public way. An
investigation was
launched just as Robert Novak's
column outing Plame appeared – mid-July 2003.
Whoever leaked Plame's name and CIA affiliation was
trying to scare off any further inquiries into the whole
Niger uranium funny business, underscoring the key
question in all this: who was behind the Niger uranium
forgeries?
Even as the FBI was
following the trail of the forgers, the Italians
were looking into the matter from their end. A
parliamentary committee was charged with investigating,
and they issued a heavily redacted report: now, I am
told by a former CIA operations officer, the report has
aroused some interest on this side of the Atlantic.
According to a source in the Italian embassy,
Patrick J. "Bulldog" Fitzgerald asked for and "has
finally been given a full copy of the Italian
parliamentary oversight report on the forged Niger
uranium document," the former CIA officer tells me:
"Previous versions of the report were redacted and
had all the names removed, though it was possible to
guess who was involved. This version names Michael
Ledeen as the conduit for the report and indicates that
former CIA officers Duane Clarridge and Alan Wolf were
the principal forgers. All three had business interests
with Chalabi."
Alan Wolf died about a year and a half ago of
cancer. He served as chief of the CIA's Near East
Division as well as the European Division, and was also
CIA chief of station in Rome after
Clarridge. According to my source, "he and Clarridge
and Ledeen were all very close and also close to
Chalabi." The former CIA officer says Wolf "was
Clarridge's Agency godfather. Significantly, both
Clarridge and Wolf also spent considerable time in the
Africa division, so they both had the Africa and Rome
connection and both were close to Ledeen, closing the
loop."
A veteran of the
Iran-Contra scandal, Ledeen played an important role
in the "arms for hostages" scheme by
setting up meetings between the American government
and the Iranian arms dealer
Manucher Ghorbanifar. Not all that unexpected coming
from a
self-proclaimed
advocate of
Machiavelli's amoralism. Today, Ledeen is among the
most visible and
radical neoconservative ideologues whose passion for
a campaign of serial "regime-change" in the Middle East
is undiminished by the Iraqi debacle. Just as the Roman
senator Cato the Elder finished his perorations with the
command "Carthage
must be destroyed," so Michael "Creative
Destruction" Ledeen closes his hopped-up
warmongering essays with "Faster,
please!," an exhortation presumably addressed to his
confreres in the Bush administration.
Ledeen has kept the neocon faith – and the same
friends – for all these years. He's still buddies with
Ghorbanifar. In December 2001,
he had a meeting in Rome with Ghorbanifar in the
company of the Pentagon's top Iran specialist,
Larry Franklin, and
Harold Rhode, assigned to the
Office of Net Assessment, a Pentagon think tank.
Also at the Rome conclave: a number of Ghorbanifar's
Iranian friends, including a former senior official of
the Revolutionary Guard. Rounding out the distinguished
guest list, we have the Italian delegation, consisting
of SISMI
head honcho
Nicolo Pollari, the head of Italy's military
intelligence agency, and Italian Defense Minister
Antonio Martino, a neocon favorite. Once again,
Ledeen plays the middleman – but what kind of a deal was
he trying to negotiate?
Franklin, we now
know, was busy spying for Israel
during this period, handing over classified
information to AIPAC officials
Steve Rosen and
Keith Weissman: he has been indicted and has turned
state's evidence: the trial is set to begin in January.
To this day, Franklin
maintains he was just trying to get AIPAC's
assistance in moving a more pro-Israel agenda in
policymaking circles.
Rhode is an ideologue of a
similar coloration. Together with Franklin,
Rhode helped set up the Defense Department's
Office of Special Plans, which
stove-piped phony "intelligence"
provided by
Ahmed Chalabi's
Iraqi National Congress and hyped the case for war.
Rhode and Franklin worked hand in hand with Chalabi,
and, as United Press International intelligence
correspondent Richard Sale
reports, they had certain interests in common:
"According to one former senior U.S. intelligence
official who maintained excellent contacts with serving
U.S. intelligence officials in the Coalition Provisional
Authority in Baghdad, 'Rhode practically lived out of
(Ahmed) Chalabi's office.' This same source quoted the
intelligence official with the CPA as saying, 'Rhode was
observed by CIA operatives as being constantly on his
cell phone to Israel,' and that the information that the
intelligence officials overheard him passing to Israel
was 'mind-boggling,' this source said. It dealt with
U.S. plans, military deployments, political projects,
discussion of Iraq assets, and a host of other sensitive
topics, the former senior U.S. intelligence official
said."
No wonder my source tells me that "Fitzgerald asked
the Italians if he could share the report with Paul
McNulty," the prosecutor in the AIPAC case. There are
plenty of links between the two investigations: they
are, in a sense,
the same investigation, since many of the same
people are involved. McNulty is delving into a single
aspect of the cabal's activities, while Fitzgerald seems
to have broadened his probe to include not only the
outing of Plame, but also the origin of the Niger
uranium forgeries and
other instances of classified information leakage
via the vice president's office.
I am hardly the first to implicate Ledeen in
connection with the Niger uranium forgeries. Former CIA
counterterrorism officials
Vince
Cannistraro and
Larry
Johnson have pointed the finger in Ledeen's
direction. As the latter
put it:
"Italy's SISME [sic] also reportedly had a hand in
producing the forged documents delivered to the U.S.
embassy in Rome in early October 2003 that purported to
show a deal with Iraq to buy uranium. Many in the
intelligence community are convinced that a prominent
neocon with long-standing ties to SISME played a role in
the forgery. The truth of that proposition remains to be
proven. This much is certain, either SISME or someone
with ties to SISME, helped forge and circulate those
documents which some tried to use to bolster the case to
go to war with Iraq."
Cannistraro, asked by an interviewer if Ledeen was
involved with the forgers, said "you'd be very close."
The cast of characters involved in Niger-gate is like
old home week in the government scandal sweepstakes.
Aside from Ledeen, whose storied (or is that
checkered?) history is well-known, we have
Clarridge, first head of the Counterterrorism Center
set up by
Bill Casey under Reagan, who deserves a column all
by himself. His
close relationship with Ledeen dates from his time
as chief of station in Rome in the late 1970s. Clarridge
was indicted for lying to prosecutors during the
Iran-Contra imbroglio, but given a presidential
pardon. His book,
A Spy for All Seasons, was the first real
"tell-all" book about the Agency. During the Reagan
administration, he
purportedly was the intellectual author of the
notorious "Psychological Operations in Guerilla
Warfare," a CIA how-to manual instructing
the Nicaraguan contras in the fine art of terrorism,
including bombings, assassinations, and violence
directed at noncombatants. It was
Clarridge who came up with the bright idea of mining
Nicaragua's harbors, which led to the unprecedented
condemnation of the U.S. government's actions in the
World Court. He was reportedly slated to become a top
counterterrorism official in the National Security
Council, but was
nixed. He now lives in San Diego, Calif., and
pursues a number of business and
ideological
interests,
including
Dax Resources Corp., which runs a 24-hour Global
Response Center and advertises its facility at kidnap
prevention and counterterrorism, noting that "we
can also undertake special operations, including
technical countermeasures."
The
Niger uranium forgeries surely qualify as "technical
countermeasures," popping up as they did just as the
administration's
assertions about Iraq's alleged
nuclear ambitions and capability were being
questioned. As Seymour Hersh
pointed out, CIA director George Tenet appeared at a
crucial congressional briefing, on the eve of the vote
on authorizing the war, and
"Declared, as he had done before, that a shipment
of high-strength aluminum tubes that was intercepted on
its way to Iraq had been meant for the construction of
centrifuges that could be used to produce enriched
uranium. The suitability of the tubes for that purpose
had been disputed, but this time the argument that Iraq
had a nuclear program under way was buttressed by a new
and striking fact: the CIA had recently received
intelligence showing that, between 1999 and 2001, Iraq
had attempted to buy five hundred tons of uranium oxide
from Niger, one of the world's largest producers."
The story of how the Niger uranium forgeries got past
all the safeguards, how the actual documents were never
seen by the CIA
until after the president's 2003 speech, and who was
pushing to include a reference to Saddam's alleged
efforts to procure uranium in "an African nation" as one
of the president's major talking points – these are all
subjects of interest to a prosecutor attempting to prove
charges of conspiracy to lie us into war. There must be
a special law that covers government employees,
including high officials, who transmit tainted
information and poison the well of U.S.
intelligence-gathering efforts. I'm sure
Fitzgerald will have no trouble finding it.
Fitzgerald's reported interest in the Italian
parliamentary report indicates just how his
investigation is broadening. The forgeries, the lies fed
to us by
Ahmed Chalabi and his fellow "heroes
in error," the leakage of
vital U.S. secrets to the Iranians – all point to
the existence of the conspiracy the prosecutor is tasked
with uncovering. In the course of their campaign of
deception, the conspirators not only outed a CIA agent
who was
working in the vital area of nuclear proliferation,
they also passed on classified information to foreign
nationals, including the Israelis and the Iranians. They
committed forgery and God knows what other crimes.
Before Fitzgerald is done, we'll see the warlords of
Washington hauled before a court of the people. We'll
hear the whole sordid story of how
a band of exiles,
at least
two foreign intelligence agencies, and
a cabal of
neoconservatives inside
the
Pentagon and
the
vice president's office bamboozled Congress and the
American people into going to war. As the indictments
come down, so will the elaborate narrative so carefully
constructed by the War Party in the run-up to war be
exposed as a tissue of fabrication, forgery, and fraud.
– Justin Raimondo