http://www.slate.com/id/2170318/nav/tap2/Bush's Latest, Lame Libby Excuse
The president and Karl Rove find a scapegoat.
By John Dickerson
Posted Thursday, July 12, 2007, at 7:12 PM ET
After four years of saying very little about the CIA leak investigation, George Bush and Karl Rove are finally speaking up, and they're blaming former deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage.
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Five days before Bush highlighted Armitage, Karl Rove did, too. At an Aspen Institute forum last Saturday, Walter Isaacson asked him about his role in the case and unlike previous instances in which he declined to speak, Rove answered: "The record pretty well shows that it is one
used her name … Armitage."
During the audience questioning period afterward, none other than Colin Powell himself rose to defend his longtime friend, relating how Armitage had come forward, talked to the FBI investigators and how they told the news to White House counsel Alberto Gonzales. (Though in Powell's telling Armitage never used Plame's actual name.) Then, Powell seemed to turn it back on Rove. The special prosecutor's investigation continued, Powell asserted, despite Armitage's confession, because "there were others involved—a lot of others—and couldn't get all of the answers they needed to get resolution. If everybody who had talked with reporters during that period had done what Armitage had done, I think this would have ended early on and not dragged out."
Patrick Fitzgerald had to call Rove so many times to the grand jury in part because he thought Rove wasn't telling him the whole story. It was only in October 2004, eight months after his first grand jury visit, that Rove told Fitzgerald he remembered that in addition to talking to Robert Novak he'd also talked to Time reporter Matt Cooper about Joe Wilson's wife.
And Rove is still trying to minimize and revise his Plamegate history. In the Aspen interview Rove forgot about Cooper again. He told Isaacson, "my contribution to this was to say to a reporter—and this tells you something about talking to reporters—the words: 'I heard that too.' " He was referring to his conversation with Bob Novak, only one part of his contribution to the drama. Rove's lawyer has said that Rove told Cooper that Wilson's wife worked at the CIA, but when Isaacson mentioned Cooper in a follow-up, Rove talked about everything but that. "I don't remember the conversation with Matt Cooper," he said. "But even his own notes of it are that it's an off-the-record conversation on Friday morning when I know that Novak's column has been written and is going to be published, and that the CIA is coming out with a statement that says Joe Wilson was not sent at the direction of the CIA or the CIA director, or the Vice President, and is not dispositive, not conclusive, in fact added to the case, didn't detract from the case and was suspect because of the methods he used to collect the data, and I'm trying to tell Matt Cooper—by his own notes—don't get ahead of yourself on this, don't be writing about this thing for Time magazine."
The Plame scandal broke four years ago this month, and now it is finally ending. In his press conference, President Bush encouraged the country to move on from Libby—but before they do, the president and Karl Rove wanted to make sure they got the last word.