Valerie Plame said to leave job at CIA (AP) Updated: 2005-12-10 16:28
Valerie Plame, the CIA officer whose exposure led to a criminal investigation
of the Bush White House, spent her last day at the spy agency Friday.
Neither the agency nor Plame's husband would confirm her departure, but two
people who have known Plame for a number of years confirmed she was leaving.
Married to Bush administration critic and former U.S. Ambassador Joseph
Wilson, Plame was working at agency headquarters in Langley, Va., in 2003 when
her CIA status was disclosed by conservative columnist Robert Novak. That
triggered a probe that led to the recent indictment of Vice President Dick
Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby.
Plame had served for many years at overseas postings for the CIA, and her
employment remained classified when she took a headquarters desk job, traveling
overseas periodically.
She was an employee in the CIA's Counterproliferation Division.
Valerie Plame pulls out of her driveway on her
way to work on Friday, Dec. 9, 2005 in Washington.
[AP] | "Her career was arbitrarily and whimsically
destroyed by a mean political trick," said Vincent Cannistraro, a former chief
of operations for the CIA's Counterterrorism Center.
Plame's CIA connection was disclosed eight days after her husband accused the
Bush administration of twisting prewar intelligence to exaggerate the Iraqi
threat.
In the preface to the paperback edition of his book, "The Politics of Truth,"
Wilson says that he and his wife were the focus of a "Republican smear machine."
Deputy White House chief of staff Karl Rove, President Bush's top political
adviser, remains under investigation in the Plame probe. Libby, who resigned
from the government the day of his indictment, has pleaded not guilty to five
counts of perjury, obstruction of justice and lying to the FBI.
Plame has been cast by Bush administration defenders as "just a desk jockey
at the CIA, someone who wasn't really undercover and a manipulative Mata Hari
who aspired to bring down the Bush administration. All of that is false," said
former CIA officer Larry Johnson, a friend of Plame. "At the end of the day, she
was betrayed by her own government and they show no signs of
remorse."
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