<<This continued spinning your wheels simply deepens the whole your debate tire is stuck in>>
Well, it doesn't hurt to examine the issue, especially when a very simple and basic question remains unanswered. Is there or is there not a statute or Executive Order in existence that designated the information about Plame's employment as requiring a specific degree of protection?
Seems to me that if Fitzgerald did in fact conduct an "exhaustive investigation" of the subject, and if Plame's being a covert agent were a factor of such crucial importance to the outcome, that the presence or absence of a statute or an Executive Order fulfilling one of the necessary criteria for being a covert agent would have been (a) a very simple matter to determine and (b) noted clearly in the report itself. Yet what I gather from your last post is that there is no specific finding on that very simple matter in Fitzgerald's report. We have only your speculation - - that Fitzgerald "must" have concluded there was no such statute or Executive Order because . . . Quite frankly, that is ridiculous. The question was basic, simple, and easily capable of being answered. The number of statutes and Executive Orders is finite and they are all publicly available and searchable. An issue of such importance to the outcome of the inquiry and so easily answered would NEVER be left to speculation, it would be dealt with directly and answered directly in any honest report.
At this point, I have to say that I am not satisfied that Plame was not a covert agent when she was "outed" and I have been shown nothing that would convince me otherwise. Speculation on what Fitzgerald "must" have concluded is utterly unacceptable, given the importance of that particular question to the outcome of the inquiry and the easy availability of all the material needed to answer it.