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Time: "Inside Bush and Cheney's Final Days" (Bush Concludes Libby Lied)

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Stephanie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 11:14 AM
Original message
Time: "Inside Bush and Cheney's Final Days" (Bush Concludes Libby Lied)
Edited on Fri Jul-24-09 11:31 AM by Stephanie


http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1912297,00.html

Inside Bush and Cheney's Final Days
By Massimo Calabresi and Michael Weisskopf

Hours before they were to leave office after eight troubled years, George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney had one final and painful piece of business to conclude. For over a month Cheney had been pleading, cajoling, even pestering Bush to pardon the Vice President's former chief of staff, I. Lewis (Scooter) Libby. Libby had been convicted nearly two years earlier of obstructing an investigation into the leak of a covert CIA officer's identity by senior White House officials. The Libby pardon, aides reported, had become something of a crusade for Cheney, who seemed prepared to push his nine-year-old relationship with Bush to the breaking point — and perhaps past it — over the fate of his former aide. "We don't want to leave anyone on the battlefield," Cheney argued.

***

And there was a darker possibility. As a former Bush senior aide explains, "I'm sure the President and Josh and Fred had a concern that somewhere, deep in there, there was a cover-up." It had been an article of faith among Cheney's critics that the Vice President wanted a pardon for Libby because Libby had taken the fall for him in the Fitzgerald probe. In his grand-jury testimony reviewed by TIME, Libby denied three times that Cheney had directed him to leak Plame's CIA identity in mid-2003. Though his recollection of other events in the same time frame was lucid and detailed, on at least 20 occasions, Libby could not recall details of his talks with Cheney about Plame's place of employment or questions the Vice President raised privately about Wilson's credibility. Some Bush officials wondered whether Libby was covering up for Cheney's involvement in the leak of Plame's identity.

***

(At a pardon meeting in mid-January 2009)

Cheney replied that the conviction for obstruction of justice was based on what amounted to a case of "he said, he said," a disagreement between his longtime aide and a journalist. Libby had told the grand jury he remembered first hearing Plame's name from NBC's Tim Russert. But notes obtained by prosecutors indicated that Cheney had been the first to identify her to Libby. And Russert denied at Libby's trial that he had mentioned Plame to the defendant. The jury sided with Russert. Cheney, however, considered it an open question. "Who do you believe, Scooter or Russert?" he asked Bush.

And Cheney went further. Even if Russert was right, Libby may have honestly forgotten what was said during a single conversation in a typically busy day. Memories are fallible. Only an overzealous prosecutor and a liberal Washington jury would criminalize a bad one, he argued.

***

A few days later, about a week before they would become private citizens, Bush pulled Cheney aside after a morning meeting and told him there would be no pardon. Cheney looked stricken. Most officials respond to a presidential rebuff with a polite thanks for considering the request in the first place. But Cheney, an observer says, "expressed his disappointment and disagreement with the decision ... He didn't take it well."

***

While packing boxes in the upstairs residence, according to his associates, Bush noted that he was again under pressure from Cheney to pardon Libby. He characterized Cheney as a friend and a good Vice President but said his pardon request had little internal support. If the presidential staff were polled, the result would be 100 to 1 against a pardon, Bush joked. Then he turned to Sharp. "What's the bottom line here? Did this guy lie or not?"

The lawyer, who had followed the case very closely, replied affirmatively.

Bush indicated that he had already come to that conclusion too.

"O.K., that's it," Bush said.






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Stephanie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 11:25 AM
Response to Original message
1. The conclusion - Cheney "outmanned and outgunned"


It is an increasingly lonely fight. But as Democrats edge closer to probing the Bush-era practices, perhaps including CIA interrogators, Justice Department lawyers and Cheney's closest aides, it appears his darkest fears may be coming true. Since Cheney was often the man responsible for the policies that are now under scrutiny, it is perhaps no surprise that he is leading the counterrevolt. "I think it is very, very important that we have a clear understanding that what happened here was an honorable approach to defending the nation," Cheney said on May 10. "There was nothing devious or deceitful or dishonest or illegal about what was done."

This is the case Dick Cheney made for years in the Bush White House, prevailing for a long time, until he was outnumbered and outgunned. And it is one he seems prepared to make, without Bush at his side, for a long time to come.

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rocktivity Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 11:34 AM
Response to Original message
2. TORO TURD--Cheney did EXACTLY what he wanted, and when.
Edited on Fri Jul-24-09 11:34 AM by rocktivity
Now I'm supposed to believe that on the "last day of school," he starts taking orders from Georgie? ROFL! I believe that Libby wasn't pardoned for a specific reason--something having to do with protecting the Bush oval office legally.

:headbang:
rocktivity
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Javaman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 11:58 AM
Response to Original message
3. "We don't want to leave anyone on the battlefield," Cheney argued.
fuck that piece of shit 5 deferment motherfucker.
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Stephanie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 12:29 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Libby lied to protect Cheney. Judy Miller went to jail to protect Cheney.
Big Dick Cheney is an established coward, a frightened little man, who hides behind his underlings and lets a woman go to jail for him. May he live long enough to face justice.
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Stephanie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-24-09 02:51 PM
Response to Original message
5. kick for Octafish and H20man
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