Author Topic: Fair Game  (Read 1414 times)

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Lanya

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Fair Game
« on: October 22, 2007, 01:00:51 PM »
Books of The Times
Her Identity Revealed, Her Story Expurgated

   
By JANET MASLIN
Published: October 22, 2007

Valerie Plame Wilson begins her memoir, ?Fair Game,? on a note of toughness: She describes paramilitary drills in which she participated as a C.I.A. trainee. Her book also includes a photograph of her as a 2 ?-year-old at Shaw Air Force Base in South Carolina, sitting in the cockpit of an airplane with her feisty little hands on the controls.


Needless to say, the story of how her career was derailed and her C.I.A. cover blown also has its combative side. But the real proof of Ms. Wilson?s fighting spirit is the form in which her version of events has been brought into the light of day. ?Anyone not living in a cave for the last few years knew I had a career at the C.I.A.,? writes Ms. Wilson (who has gone by that name since she married former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV in 1998). Once that career was destroyed, she wrote this account of her experiences as a means of both supporting herself and settling scores. She was contractually obligated to submit a draft of the book to the Central Intelligence Agency?s Publications Review Board. That draft came back heavily expurgated. She was then expected to rewrite her book so that it made sense despite many deletions.

But Ms. Wilson and her publisher, Simon & Schuster, contend that much of the censored information is in the public domain ? and that the suppression of information is itself part of Ms. Wilson?s story. So ?Fair Game? has been published with the censor?s marks visible as blacked-out words, lines, paragraphs or pages. The publisher amplifies the book with an 80-page afterword by Laura Rozen, a reporter, who uses matters of public record to fill in some of the gaps.

What emerges is a sense of Ms. Wilson as an ambitious, gung-ho professional, dedicated to her work yet colorful in ways no Hollywood storyteller would dare to make up. (Asked during her training what she would do if caught meeting an agent in a foreign hotel room, her proposed solution was to take off her blouse and jump into bed. ?This could be fun,? she remembers thinking.) While Ms. Wilson?s text creates a guessing game about where she was educated and stationed (Which country has this proverb: ?The goat?s hair needs a fine-tooth comb??), the afterword places her in Bruges, Belgium, and a particularly fraught Athens.

She met Mr. Wilson in Washington at the Turkish ambassador?s residence though even that detail is excised from her version. The book is at its weirdest when, after Ms. Wilson mentions a woman in a Chanel suit who wheeled two Burberry-wearing pug dogs in a baby carriage, there?s a blackout of seven and three-quarters lines. After that, ?Joe? has unaccountably become part of her life.

Ms. Wilson of course pays great attention to the circumstances that sent her husband to Niger in 2002. She assails claims that the trip was either a boondoggle or her idea. Beyond denying that the assignment involved nepotism, she maintains that she would have been derelict in her duty had she not relayed to Mr. Wilson the C.I.A.?s request that he go to investigate the claim that Iraq had sought yellowcake uranium in that impoverished African nation. In her own professional capacity Ms. Wilson did not find clear-cut evidence that Iraq had stockpiled weapons of mass destruction. Nor did she decide otherwise. She assumed that the weapons might exist because more highly placed C.I.A. officials had information to which she was not privy.

Since ?Fair Game? is both a personal and political memoir, Ms. Wilson brings up one overlooked aspect of the Niger trip: It left her home with the couple?s twins, then 2 years old, and she had experienced acute postpartum depression when they were born. (?I was so high-strung, I swear that I could hear their fingernails grow.?)

Similarly, great domestic stress accompanied the news that the columnist Robert Novak had blown Ms. Wilson?s cover by publicly identifying her as a C.I.A. agent. As to precisely how that bombshell affected the Wilson household, Ms. Wilson says that her husband gave her the morning newspaper and a mug of coffee and said grimly, ?Well, the S.O.B. did it,? and left the room.

?Fair Game? ? which takes its title from Karl Rove?s phrase about the legitimacy of blowing Ms. Wilson?s professional camouflage ? describes how intense stress wrought havoc on the Wilsons? marriage, not to mention Ms. Wilson?s state of mind. ?It got to the point where I thought if one more person suggested that I take up yoga I would run screaming from the room,? she writes. If she enjoyed anything at all about her new notoriety, it was the part about being labeled a beautiful blonde. (?I suppose that was better than an ?ugly blonde? ? I do have an ego.?) But she powerfully evokes the disbelief, fury and uncharacteristic terror that came with being outed.

The book describes how both Wilsons found themselves professionally adrift after their ?Swift-boating.? (Ms. Wilson uses that term to suggest that the smear campaign against her family was a dry run for the attacks on Senator John Kerry that soon followed.) However horrified she was to become a target of dirty tricks from the right, she felt even more betrayed when Senator Evan Bayh, a Democrat, identified himself as ?agnostic? on Ms. Wilson.

How dirty did the tricks get? Ms. Wilson describes being denied protection by the C.I.A., fearing for her children?s safety, finding out that her tax returns were being audited and having been lucky enough to discover that some bolts holding the Wilsons? outdoor deck, high above the ground, had disappeared. The Wilsons were pushed to the point of looking at ads for real estate in New Zealand. They went on a ski trip rather than witness the festivities surrounding President Bush?s second inauguration. They have since moved to New Mexico and have left Washington behind.

?My days of spelling ?P-L-A-M as in Mary-E? over the phone would be over,? she writes in what is this book?s biggest understatement. But however widely known she has become, Ms. Wilson has not previously revealed what it was like for her to follow the trial of I. Lewis Libby Jr., known as Scooter; to be infuriated that Judith Miller, then of The New York Times, and Matthew Cooper of Time tried to protect secret sources at Ms. Wilson?s expense (?These reporters were allowing themselves to be exploited by the administration and were obstructing the investigation?); and to learn that Ms. Miller, in her notebook, had gotten her name wrong, calling her Valerie Flame (?my exotic-dancer stage name,? Ms. Wilson joked to friends). She was outraged by the extent to which she had become fodder for the gossip mill.

Citing the dismay voiced by Ari Fleischer, the White House press secretary, that such loose talk about an undercover agent might actually be criminal, she writes angrily: ?If he was so surprised that his actions might have adverse national security implications, then he?s not smart enough to work in the White House. That goes for all the officials who thought that using my name as catnip was just playing the Washington game as usual.?

That idea of gamesmanship gives ?Fair Game,? the book?s already stinging title, an even harsher meaning.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/22/arts/22masl.html?_r=1&ref=washington&oref=slogin
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sirs

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #1 on: October 22, 2007, 01:08:08 PM »
Boy, if only Fitzgerald, head of the investigation into if a covert agent had been outed and if so by whom, had actually desginated her a covert agent and indicted Armitage for outing her as such, things might have been different
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2007, 01:10:34 PM »
   
Valerie Plame, Telling the (Edited) Inside Story

By Alan Cooperman
senior editor for non-fiction at Book World
Monday, October 22, 2007; Page C01

FAIR GAME

My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House
   

(Via Bloomberg News)
By Valerie Plame Wilson

Simon & Schuster. 411 pp. $26

Mothers who are spies, it turns out, face the same juggling act as other working moms.

After a year at home following the birth of twins, Valerie Plame Wilson returned to work in April 2001 in the Iraq branch of the CIA's Counterproliferation Division. "When I had to deal with pressing operational issues I had no choice but to bring the toddlers into my office on a Saturday," she writes in her memoir, published this week. "Making decisions on how much money to offer a potential asset while handing crayons to my daughter who sat under my desk was strange indeed, but not without humor."

Since senior administration officials whispered "Valerie Plame" and "CIA" in the same breath to half a dozen journalists in 2003, some people have not very subtly suggested that her work couldn't really have been all that hush-hush if she had an office job, not to mention blond hair and little kids. "She was not involved in clandestine activities," Robert D. Novak, the syndicated columnist who first published her name, wrote earlier this year in his dueling memoir. "Instead, each day she went to CIA headquarters in Langley where she worked on arms proliferation."

There are lots of she said-he said moments in the Plame affair, matters on which an impartial observer can only conclude that, well, both sides have a point. But this is not one of them.

Before her retirement in 2006, Wilson spent more than 20 years in the CIA, including six years, one month and 29 days of overseas service. We know this because the agency, in a bureaucratic blunder, put it in an unclassified letter about her pension eligibility that it later tried desperately to recall, and that she has included as an appendix to "Fair Game."

We also know that she worked on the operations side, the part of the CIA that runs agents and covert activities, rather than on the analytical side, which tries to make sense of all the information flowing in. From her former CIA "classmates," we know that she went through the agency's elite Career Trainee program, including paramilitary training at the classified location known as the Farm, and was one of just three in her class of 50 who were chosen to be NOCs (pronounced "knocks"), or non-official cover officers, the most clandestine in the agency. And from her memoir, we now know how deeply secrecy was ingrained in her.

Imagine when, in her mid-20s, after a first CIA tour in Greece under diplomatic cover as a junior State Department official, she gave up her diplomatic passport and any public affiliation with the U.S. government and switched to being a NOC. Part of the transition involved coming home to the United States, ostensibly jobless, and moving back into her parents' house while studying French. How many 20-somethings still living with Mom and Dad fantasize about saying, "Actually, I work for the CIA"? In young Valerie Plame's case, it was true -- and she apparently didn't tell a soul. When she became famous a decade later, her dearest friends were stunned, and she feared they might not forgive her for all those years of lying.

True, the CIA recalled her from Europe in 1997, fearing that her name might have been passed to the Russians by the mole Aldrich Ames. But, she writes, she still took different routes to work each day, "traveled domestically and abroad using a variety of aliases" and continued to hope for another foreign posting.

There is no reason to doubt that Wilson wrote "Fair Game" herself. To put it kindly, the memoir lacks the sheen of a ghostwriter's work and has the voice of an ordinary person caught up in extraordinary events. It doesn't help that the CIA redacted the manuscript heavily before approving it for publication. Each time she is about to launch into a juicy anecdote, it seems, lines are blacked out, sometimes for pages on end.

The book is, however, greatly assisted by an afterword by Laura Rozen, a reporter for the American Prospect. Rozen faithfully echoes Wilson's point of view but fills in many of the censored dates, places and other details from published sources. Readers would be smart to turn to the afterword first, before tackling Wilson's disjointed narrative.

The outlines of the story are familiar: In 2002, the CIA sent her husband, former U.S. ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, on an unpaid, eight-day fact-finding trip to Niger. Within hours of his return, he told eager CIA debriefers (while Valerie Wilson was ordering takeout Chinese food for them) that there was no evidence that Iraq had tried to buy yellowcake uranium from the African nation.

When President Bush nevertheless included the uranium allegation in a State of the Union address, Joe Wilson wrote an op-ed for the New York Times accusing the administration of misleading the American people. Both of the Wilsons firmly believe that she was outed, in retaliation, by White House officials who sought to discredit him by telling reporters that his trip was arranged by his wife, who worked for the CIA. Tapped to investigate the leak of her name, special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald put that theory before a jury, which never got to the heart of the matter but did convict the vice president's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, of perjury and obstruction of justice. Bush then commuted Libby's 30-month prison sentence.

The question remains: Was she behind her husband's trip to Niger? "Fair Game" gives a nuanced answer that is largely, but not entirely, in her favor.

She says that when the vice president's office asked the CIA about the uranium allegation, a "midlevel reports officer" suggested in a hallway conversation that the agency could send Joe Wilson to investigate. The suggestion made sense because Wilson had served as an ambassador in Africa, was the top Africa expert on the National Security Council in the Clinton administration and made a previous trip to Niger at the CIA's request in 1999. She and the midlevel officer brought the idea to their boss, who liked it and asked her to send an e-mail up the chain of command. "My husband has good relations with both the PM [prime minister] and the former Minister of Mines (not to mention lots of French contacts), both of whom could possibly shed light on this sort of activity," she wrote.

Thus, by her own account, Valerie Wilson neither came up with the idea nor approved it. But she did participate in the process and flogged her husband's credentials. When Joe Wilson learned about her e-mail years later, she says, he was "too upset to listen" to her explanations.

"Fair Game" reveals some intimate details of the Wilsons' lives, including her battle with postpartum depression. Sudden fame and withering political attacks made Washington so "toxic" to them that they began fantasizing about moving to New Zealand and ultimately decamped to New Mexico. Relatives came forward, and, like Madeleine Albright, Valerie Wilson discovered she was part Jewish. But the book is less forthcoming about her politics; she does not mention, for example, that she made a $1,000 contribution to Al Gore's campaign in 1999.

One other matter begs clarification. As Rozen notes in the afterword, there is "an undeniable irony to Valerie Wilson later being exposed by the White House in a subterranean tussle" over prewar intelligence because "Valerie was not one of the intelligence community dissidents arguing against the threat posed by Saddam Hussein."

Quite the contrary: Wilson makes clear in "Fair Game" that she and her colleagues in the Counterproliferation Division were very worried that Iraq would use chemical or biological weapons on U.S. forces. They were dumbfounded when no weapons of mass destruction were found, and, in a telling passage, she says their spirits were "briefly buoyed" when coalition forces in northern Iraq discovered curious flatbed trailers that the CIA thought, at first, might be mobile bio-weapons labs.

Yet, in one of the memoir's deeper insights, "Fair Game" suggests that if you knew what she knew at the time, you would have feared both that Saddam Hussein had WMDs and that the Bush administration was overstating the case for war. In the bowels of the CIA, she and her colleagues clustered around a TV as Secretary of State Colin Powell laid the evidence before the United Nations on Feb. 5, 2003. "It was a powerful presentation," she writes, "but I knew key parts of it were wrong."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/21/AR2007102101630.html?hpid=topnews
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Plane

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #3 on: October 22, 2007, 04:37:32 PM »
Note to self ;

      Don't  draw attention to self while members of family are covert agents.



[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]


   Novack asked "Why Joe Wilson?" What should he have been told?

Lanya

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #4 on: October 22, 2007, 06:40:35 PM »
Plane,
Note to self?  You have to write, now, a note to self to not attract the attention of your OWN government to you because they might out your CIA undercover spouse?  You have to keep quiet about something they sent you to find out that they LIED about? 

What country is this, because it sure as hell isn't America anymore.  The sooner we have this lot in jail the better.   It's a great way to run a gulag, hell of a way to run a country. 

GEORGE H.W. BUSH: ?I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious of traitors.? [Speech at CIA, 4/26/99]

As to what you tell Novakula, you tell him "He was a former ambassador to several countries and has good relations with Niger, knows people there, can find out what we want to know." 

 Note to self: Never forget this administration or anyone in it or anyone who supported it.   Never let it happen again.
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sirs

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #5 on: October 22, 2007, 07:29:08 PM »
I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious of traitors

And of course you realize those who "betrayed" & "exposed" Plame were Amitage & hubby Joe Wilson, right?  Your anger is rationally directed at them, correct?  You were paying attention to the Fitzgerald investigation, right?


Note to self: Never forget this administration or anyone in it or anyone who supported it.   Never let it happen again.

Note to Lanya; Yea, let's not let the truth and facts get in the way of an already predisposed hatred of anything & everything, Bush
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #6 on: October 22, 2007, 09:45:15 PM »
I realize you believe some weird things, and you can go right ahead.  I'm not going to argue with you about it.  The old adage about pigs and mud comes to mind.
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sirs

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #7 on: October 22, 2007, 09:56:31 PM »
I realize you believe some weird things

In this case, those "weird things" are called FACTS


I'm not going to argue with you about it. 

How could you.  You neither have the truth nor the facts on your side
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

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Re: Fair Game
« Reply #8 on: October 22, 2007, 11:13:17 PM »
Plane,
Note to self?  You have to write, now, a note to self to not attract the attention of your OWN government to you because they might out your CIA undercover spouse?  You have to keep quiet about something they sent you to find out that they LIED about? 

What country is this, because it sure as hell isn't America anymore.  The sooner we have this lot in jail the better.   It's a great way to run a gulag, hell of a way to run a country. 

GEORGE H.W. BUSH: ?I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious of traitors.? [Speech at CIA, 4/26/99]

As to what you tell Novakula, you tell him "He was a former ambassador to several countries and has good relations with Niger, knows people there, can find out what we want to know." 

 Note to self: Never forget this administration or anyone in it or anyone who supported it.   Never let it happen again.

Not the attention of the Government , the attention of the public.

Wilson started makeing his accusations public , with no expectation that the public would look at him?