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Broder : Media owes apology to Karl Rove
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Mac Elite
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Sep 7, 2006, 09:23 AM
 
One Leak and a Flood of Silliness



One Leak and a Flood of Silliness
By David S. Broder
Thursday, September 7, 2006; A27

Conspiracy theories flourish in politics, and most of them have no more basis than spring training hopes for the Chicago Cubs.

Whenever things turn dicey for Republicans, they complain about the "liberal media" sabotaging them. And when Democrats get in a jam, they take up Hillary Clinton's warnings about a "vast right-wing conspiracy."

For much of the past five years, dark suspicions have been voiced about the Bush White House undermining its critics, and Karl Rove has been fingered as the chief culprit in this supposed plot to suppress the opposition.

Now at least one count in that indictment has been substantially weakened -- the charge that Rove masterminded a conspiracy to discredit Iraq intelligence critic Joseph Wilson by "outing" his CIA-operative wife, Valerie Plame.

I have written almost nothing about the Wilson-Plame case, because it seemed overblown to me from the start. Wilson's claim in a New York Times op-ed about his memo on the supposed Iraqi purchase of uranium yellowcake from Niger; the Robert D. Novak column naming Plame as the person who had recommended Wilson to check up on the reported sale; the call for a special prosecutor and the lengthy interrogation that led to the jailing of Judith Miller of the New York Times and the deposition of several other reporters; and, finally, the indictment of Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Cheney's chief of staff -- all of this struck me as being a tempest in a teapot.

No one behaved well in the whole mess -- not Wilson, not Libby, not special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and not the reporters involved.

The only time I commented on the case was to caution reporters who offered bold First Amendment defenses for keeping their sources' names secret that they had better examine the motivations of the people leaking the information to be sure they deserve protection.

But caution has been notably lacking in some of the press treatment of this subject -- especially when it comes to Karl Rove. And it behooves us in the media to examine that behavior, not just sweep it under the rug.

Sidney Blumenthal, a former aide to President Bill Clinton and now a columnist for several publications, has just published a book titled, "How Bush Rules: Chronicles of a Radical Regime." It is a collection of his columns for Salon, including one originally published on July 14, 2005, titled "Rove's War."

It was occasioned by the disclosure of a memo from Time magazine's Matt Cooper, saying that Rove had confirmed to him the identity of Valerie Plame. To Blumenthal, that was proof that this "was political payback against Wilson by a White House that wanted to shift the public focus from the Iraq War to Wilson's motives."

Then Blumenthal went off on a rant: "While the White House stonewalls, Rove has license to run his own damage control operation. His surrogates argue that if Rove did anything, it wasn't a crime. . . . Rove is fighting his war as though it will be settled in a court of Washington pundits. Brandishing his formidable political weapons, he seeks to demonstrate his prowess once again. His corps of agents raises a din in which their voices drown out individual dissidents. His frantic massing of forces dominates the capital by winning the communications battle. Indeed, Rove may succeed momentarily in quelling the storm. But the stillness may be illusory. Before the prosecutor, Rove's arsenal is useless."

In fact, the prosecutor concluded that there was no crime; hence, no indictment. And we now know that the original "leak," in casual conversations with reporters Novak and Bob Woodward, came not from the conspiracy theorists' target in the White House but from the deputy secretary of state at the time, Richard Armitage, an esteemed member of the Washington establishment and no pal of Rove or President Bush.

Blumenthal's example is far from unique. Newsweek, in a July 25, 2005, cover story on Rove, after dutifully noting that Rove's lawyer said the prosecutor had told him that Rove was not a target of the investigation, added: "But this isn't just about the Facts, it's about what Rove's foes regard as a higher Truth: That he is a one-man epicenter of a narrative of Evil."

And in the American Prospect's cover story for August 2005, Joe Conason wrote that Rove "is a powerful bully. Fear of retribution has stifled those who might have revealed his secrets. He has enjoyed the impunity of a malefactor who could always claim, however implausibly, deniability -- until now."

These and other publications owe Karl Rove an apology. And all of journalism needs to relearn the lesson: Can the conspiracy theories and stick to the facts.




posted cause I found this article interesting and was wondering what others thought of it?
     
Mac Elite
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Sep 7, 2006, 09:33 AM
 
The media will never apologize for it's "innacuracies".
The "media" is under the impression the public wants solutions reporting.

Assault reporting. That's all the "news" has become.
All men are created equal, but what they do after that point puts them on a sliding scale.
     
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Sep 7, 2006, 09:42 AM
 
"The media", whoever they are, owe Karl Rove an apology in this particular case. But there is a reason why this particular conspiracy theory was so enduring: it fits perfectly with what many people (even his friends) think Karl Rove would be capable of doing. Just because he's innocent in this one instance doesn't mean that he's totally clean. After all, Dubya himself calls him "Turd Blossom"!

As I've said in another thread recently, I also think that the prosecution of Libby is justified, if only by a technicality -- he probably did not know for sure who the first leaker was, and thought it might be himself. Faced with that dilemma, I can see how he might have tried to hinder the investigation, and could justifiably be guilty of perjury. Never mind the fact that he was obstructing an investigation into conduct that ultimately he was innocent of; if he thought he might have been guilty, and lied under oath, it's still perjury. Rove did not get indicted because he probably told the truth when it mattered: in front of the Grand Jury. He's not stupid.
     
Posting Junkie
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Sep 7, 2006, 06:27 PM
 
Keep hope alive.
     
Clinically Insane
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Sep 7, 2006, 10:07 PM
 
Originally Posted by Dork.
"The media", whoever they are, owe Karl Rove an apology in this particular case. But there is a reason why this particular conspiracy theory was so enduring: it fits perfectly with what many people (even his friends) think Karl Rove would be capable of doing. Just because he's innocent in this one instance doesn't mean that he's totally clean. After all, Dubya himself calls him "Turd Blossom"!
Evidence? Or failing that, probable cause at least?
You are in Soviet Russia. It is dark. Grue is likely to be eaten by YOU!
     
Posting Junkie
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Sep 7, 2006, 10:28 PM
 
You'd think that after dozens of alleged scandals and all sorts of investigations - none of which has ever turned up any wrongdoing - that folks would see the Bush administration as the most honest administration in US history.

But then, some folks just aren't too bright.
     
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Sep 8, 2006, 07:45 AM
 
Originally Posted by Spliffdaddy
You'd think that after dozens of alleged scandals and all sorts of investigations - none of which has ever turned up any wrongdoing - that folks would see the Bush administration as the most honest administration in US history..
Listen...I'm not sure I'd go that far, even though I agree with the broader point.

After being hit with scandal after scandal during the Clinton administration the far left have tried as hard as they can to show that "they all do it" in regards to the dirty dealing that went on during the Clinton administration, with little to show for their efforts. No administration is as pure as the driven snow, and when you're dealing with that much power and prestige at stake, people are going to play fast and loose with the rules. The difference between the Clintons and most other administrations have been the utter lack of discretion and self control they used. The final straw was the President diddling interns not far out of their teens while in the midst of a lawsuit alledging he used employees to satisfy his sexual desires.

Phony land deals.
Disappearing, then reappearing legal documents when convenient
Illegal gathering of FBI files on political opponents
Use of a government agency for direct political gain (Commerce)
Directly selling access to the White House grounds (price tags for anyone who'd give them cash)
Lying about their political opponents

Now..I'm not saying that Bush et. al haven't engaged in any less than honorable behavior. But, they've at the very least been discreet and used a little self control to the point where they've at least got some form of "plausible deniability" that doesn't force them to use "no controlling legal authority" excuses after they've been caught red handed taking illegal donations and the like. That sort of thing is pretty embarassing.

I remember getting a laugh several years back when some Bush haters tried to make a big deal about Bush inviting long term friends and campaign workers (who also happened to have made political donations) to stay in the Lincoln bedroom...trying as hard as they could to make some kind of connection between that and the Clinton's letting people off the street who they'd never met stay for the price of a high-end donation. I think even the far left in the press had a hard time swallowing when they reported on that one. :lol
     
   
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