Dick Cheney told FBI investigators he wasn't happy when Scott McClelllan, then the White House press secretary, publicly told reporters that Karl Rove wasn't the source of the Plame leak.
From the just-released documents:
The Vice President was not happy about it, as it appeared that the White House press office was putting down markers for some individuals and not for others. Specifically, Vice President Cheney believed that fairness dictated that similar disqualifying statements should be made to the media on behalf of Libby and Elliot Abrams of the NSC, both of whom were the speculative targets of leak allegations by the media that week.
In other words, Cheney wanted Libby and Abrams exonerated in addition to Rove.
Of course, we now know that both Rove and Libby did leak Plame's name to reporters, though not to Novak.
Scott McClellan isn't offering much in the way of new revelations about the Plame affair during his testimony on Capitol Hill today but there has been a moment or two of good political theater.
Rep. Steve King (R-IA) asked whether McClellan's very presence today was poisoning the relationships between all future presidents and their press secretaries.
"What is your advice to your successor secretaries, White House press secretaries, as to how they should handle themselves and how a president might want to handle them - and there's two parts to this question - what would you say to the succeeding secretaries on whether, at what point they should step up and tell the world in the middle of their job perhaps, and how will the president handle this from this point? Does he have to then put the next press secretary into a cubicle and slide press releases to him under the door for fear that he'll be coming, either write a book or come before the judiciary committee and divulge information that I believe was at least from a national security- not national security but from the integrity standpoint, could you not have taken some of this to the grave with you and done this country a favor?"
For those who've read McClellan's book, we not hearing much new. He's talking about the "permanent campaign" and how the Bush Administration was "less than truthful" in selling the Iraq invasion to the public in 2002 and 2003.
About Bush and Iraq: "I think his driving motivation was this idealistic and ambitious vision that he could transform the Middle East...that Iraq would be a lynch pin for democracy in the Middle East."
Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) was looking for more.
Should the president be impeached?
"I do not support impeachment based on what I know," McClellan said.
The Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee seemed eager to extract something new from McClellan, asking him for all sorts of the details about the administration's inner workings.
Steve Cohen (D-TN) asked McClellan what he knew about Iran.
"I think the views of the people in the administration are pretty well know in terms of what we ought to do to confront Iran," McClellan said.
As for Republican National Committee email accounts, Cohen asked: "Are you aware of any particular policy to use those to avoid government oversight?"
"No," McClellan said.
Cohen finally asked: Is there anything else that your editor 'edited out?'
"I don't think there is anything that would be of interest to this committee that was, as you say, edited out," McClellan said.
Rep Hank Johnson (D-GA) asked about the commutation of Scooter Libby's prison sentence.
"There are some who believe that he did that so that he could make sure that Scooter Libby would not at some point spill the beans on the VP or someone else."
"I don't know," McClellan said. "I can understand why people view it that way."
"It sends a terribly message... and I think that the president should not have made that decision. But that is his right to do it."
The repeated mention of impeachment seemed to irritate some Republicans.
"You didn't come here believing someone ought to be impeached did you?"
Dan Lungren (R-CA) asked.
"I am not here for that purpose," McClellan said.
"I have heard my colleagues here refer to impeachment four times, yet we've been told by the leadership on the Democratic side that impeachment is off the table," Lungren said. "Is what we are doing here Kucinich like?"
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
McClellan Testimony UnderwayScott McClellan's testimony is underway before the House Judiciary Committee.
He was asked early on about President Bush's involvement in the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity.
"I do not think the president in any way had knowledge of it," McClellan said.
Also, we heard he got a $75,000 advance for the book.
Read more for the text of his opening statement.
Late Update: The Judiciary Committee recessed for the House debate on the compromise bill on the federal wiretapping law. That debate is underway and will last one hour.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Bush, Cheney's FBI Interviews SubpoenaedAt first Rep. Henry Waxman asked politely.
But today the chairman of the House Government Oversight and Reform Committee issued subpoenas for the FBI's paperwork stemming from interviews of Vice President Cheney and President Bush regarding the outing of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson.
What are the odds Attorney General Michael Mukasey turns them over?
Meanwhile, we can expect former White House press secretary Scott McClellan to be on Capital Hill testifying about the same matter on Friday.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (20) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)
McClellan to Testify in CongressScott McClellan will go to Capitol Hill to testify next week about his allegation that Vice President Cheney "directed" him to lie about who leaked CIA a operative's identity.
From AP:
McClellan's lawyers said he has accepted House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers' invitation to testify June 20. The attorneys said McClellan will appear and be sworn during the proceedings.PERMALINK | COMMENTS (16) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)McClellan said he was misled by others, possibly including Cheney, about the role of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby in the leak and has said publicly that Bush and Cheney "directed me to go out there and exonerate Scooter Libby."

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