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Remember Armitage? By David Frum National Review Online March 6, 2007 Here's a fun contest: Can you our readers find any example of denunciations of Richard Armitage's leak of Valerie Plame's name by a) Democratic officeholders or b) MSM columnists or c) left-wing bloggers? I did some Google searching this evening and came up pretty much blank. So here's the paradox: We hear on the one hand that this leak represents a cloud over the vice presidency - a scandal - a threat to national security - possible grounds for impeachment. And then on the other hand: not one word of condemnation of the person who actually did the leaking! Here is David Corn of the Nation, who along with Michael Isikoff broke the Armitage story, grudgingly trying to avoid acknowledging the glaringly obvious
No, it sure does not fit. In fact, it smashes the framework to splinters. In case you have not read it, here's a transcript of the Armitage leak, as taken from Bob Woodward's own tapes.
And here's an mp3 file recording. This conversation took place on June 13, 2003. About a month later, Armitage had a similar conversation with Robert Novak. And it was that conversation that led to the printing of Plame's name. Yet that conversation seems to excite the ire of precisely no one. Not Harry Reid. Not Chuck Schumer. Not the leftie bloggers. Not Paul Krugman. Not even the Wilsons themselves. And doesn't this utter collapse of interest before the actual facts of the scandal imply ... well ... a certain bad faith on the part of the Plameologists? If the secret mattered, should it not matter whoever spilled it? But no - when it was imagined that the secret was spilled by Karl Rove, then it was the biggest national-security scandal since the Rosenberg case. When the culprit was exposed as Richard Armitage - well then, an embarrassed silence descended on the scandal. Armitage? That's no use! And so we have this elaborate pretense, culminating in Patrick Fitzgerald's charge to the jury, that Armitage never existed at all. |
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