The White House faced a barrage of questions Friday over the timing of
President Bush's decision to declassify intelligence that was then leaked to the
press by Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff.
White House Press
Secretary Scott McClellan responds to questions, Friday, April 7, 2006,
about recent assertions that President Bush authorized the leaks of
intelligence information to counter administration critics on Iraq. Papers
filed by the prosecutor in the CIA leak case against I. Lewis Scooter
Libby said Bush authorized Libby to disclose information from a classified
prewar intelligence report. [AP] |
In a tense briefing, White House spokesman Scott McClellan was asked
repeatedly to explain his statement from three years ago that portions of a
prewar intelligence document on Iraq were declassified on July 18, 2003.
Ten days earlier, Cheney's top aide, I. Lewis Libby, had leaked snippets of
intelligence from the document to New York Times reporter Judith Miller to rebut
allegations by Bush administration critic Joseph Wilson, Libby told prosecutors,
according to documents revealed this week.
Libby, Cheney's former chief of staff, said he had passed the information to
Miller after being told to do so by Cheney, who advised Libby that Bush had
authorized it, said a court filing by Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald.
McClellan told reporters July 18, 2003, that the material being released on
Iraq "was officially declassified today." On Friday, McClellan interpreted his
own words to mean that's when the material was "officially released."
Asked when it was declassified, McClellan refused to answer, saying the
matter was part of Fitzgerald's ongoing CIA leak probe that has resulted in
Libby's indictment.
Libby faces charges of perjury, obstruction and lying to the FBI regarding
the disclosure that Valerie Plame, Wilson's wife, worked for the CIA. He is
accused of making false statements about how he learned of her CIA employment
and what he told reporters about her.
Plame's CIA employment was disclosed by conservative columnist Robert Novak
eight days after her husband, Wilson, accused the Bush administration of
manipulating prewar intelligence to exaggerate the Iraqi threat from weapons of
mass destruction.
The declassification issue marks the second time in the CIA leak probe that
the White House's previous public statements have been called into question.
After checking with Libby and presidential adviser Karl Rove, McClellan said
in 2003 that neither aide was involved in the leak of the CIA identity of
Wilson's wife. Rove remains under investigation in the leak probe.
John Podesta, a former chief of staff in the Clinton White House, said,
"Scott McClellan's credibility isn't just in tatters. It is more like confetti."
Administration critics said Bush's actions were a misuse of the
declassification process.
Bush's "selective declassification of highly sensitive intelligence for
political purposes is wrong," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
Pelosi said a presidential executive order requires a uniform system for
classifying, declassifying and safeguarding national security information and
asked, "Why didn't President Bush follow this protocol before authorizing the
selective leak of highly sensitive intelligence?"
Rep. Rush Holt (news, bio, voting record), D-N.J., called for a House
Intelligence Committee investigation and for the president to explain his
actions in person to Congress.
Last year, a commission appointed by Bush to look into the failure to find
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq cautioned against leaks for political
purposes.
"Policymakers who leak intelligence to the press in order to gain political
advantage ... may do so without fully appreciating the potential harm that can
result to sources and methods," the commission said.
It said the intelligence community should consider implementing "a
widespread, modern-day equivalent of the `Loose Lips Sink Ships' campaign to
educate individuals about their legal obligations and possible penalties to
safeguard intelligence information."
On Friday, McClellan said there's a difference between providing declassified
information when it's in the public interest, and leaking classified information
that could jeopardize national security.
"Now, there are Democrats out there that fail to recognize that distinction
or refuse to recognize that distinction," said McClellan. "They are simply
engaging in crass politics."
The intelligence Libby was authorized to leak to Miller stated that Iraq was
"vigorously trying to procure" uranium. Administration officials said in the
run-up to the war they were concerned about Iraq building a nuclear weapon.