Thursday, November 03, 2005

At Least Somebody On The Right Gets It!

I am so sick of people brushing off the outing of Valerie Plame as though it was no big deal! How dense are these pundits and Bush apologists that they cannot see that it was clearly wrong - and possibly dangerous - to blow the secret cover of an agent. I am still totally perplexed by what would possess Bob Novak to publish such a thing and his current "hiatus" from television came none too soon for me. William Buckley, at least, is willing to speak out about the seriousness of outing Valerie Plame. The fact that the Bush administration has sunk so low that they don't even have regard for the sanctity of our secret agencies if it interferes with their nefarious plans is telling indeed!

We have noticed that Valerie Plame Wilson has lived in Washington since 1997. Where she was before that is not disclosed by research facilities at my disposal. But even if she was safe in Washington when the identity of her employer was given out, it does not mean that her outing was without consequence. We do not know what dealings she might have been engaging in which are now interrupted or even made impossible. We do not know whether the countries in which she worked before 1997 could accost her, if she were to visit any of them, confronting her with signed papers that gave untruthful reasons for her previous stay that she was there only as tourist, or working for a fictitious U.S. company. In my case, it was 15 years after reentry into the secular world before my secret career in Mexico was blown, harming no one except perhaps some who might have been put off by my deception.

The great question here is Robert Novak. It was he who published, in his column, that Mrs. Joseph Wilson was a secret agent of the CIA. I am too close a friend to pursue the matter with Novak, and his loyalty is a postulate. What was going on? If there are mysteries in town, that surely is one of them, the role of Novak.

The importance of the law against revealing the true professional identity of an agent is advertised by the draconian punishment, under the federal code, for violating it. In the swirl of the Libby affair, one loses sight of the real offense, and it becomes almost inapprehensible what it is that Cheney/Libby/Rove got themselves into. But the sacredness of the law against betraying a clandestine soldier of the republic cannot be slighted.

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