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Plame Day

I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby Jr., chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, indicted today on five counts. Obstruction, false statement and perjury charges. Lied, the prosecutor contends, about his role in leaking the identity of a CIA agent.

"Never sought limelight," the Washington Post writes in an online news-feature.

Part of a small neo-conservative group that started plotting at the end of 2002 to get the U.S. into war with Iraq, investigative reporter Sy Hersh just told the Associated Press Managing Editors conference in California, where I am today. "The republic may be saved by a prosecutor," Hersh said, blaming the press for failing to do its job.

Which sounded a lot like what Carl Bernstein - of Woodward and Berstein - told Editor and Publisher:

What the Plame leak investigation has unveiled is what the press should have been focusing on long before and without let up—how we went to war, the dishonesty involved in that process in terms of what the president and vice-president told the American people and the Congress, and the routine smearing by members of the Bush administration of people who questioned their actions and motives.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Karl Rove, the president's top political presidential adviser, has been told he's not out of the woods, legally; he was told Thursday evening "that he may not be charged today but remains in legal jeopardy."

Special Prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald spoke at a 2 p.m. news conference. Billmon at Whiskey Bar had found it noteworthy that the prosecutor's Web site mentioned criminal investigations. Plural.

The leak probe is not over, the prosecutor said. Here's a transcript of his news conference.

He's been probing who in the White House leaked to reporters the identity of Valerie Plame, a CIA operative married to Joseph C. Wilson 4th, the former ambassador who was critical of the administration's reasons for invading Iraq.

Christian Science Monitor's primer on the Plame case.

Wikipedia entry on Valerie Plame.

Wikipedia entry on Plame Affair.

A New York Times leak timeline from July.

Time reporter Matthew Cooper's "What I Told The Grand Jury."

Conservative columnist Robert Novak outs Plame in July, 2003. Calls BS and storms off CNN set in August 2005.

Wilson traveled to Africa in 2002 on a C.I.A.-sponsored mission to probe claims that Iraq had tried to buy material there for its nuclear weapons program. He wote in a New York Times op-ed piece that the White House had "twisted" the intelligence to justify invading Iraq.

The New York Time's piece on the Judith Miller Case. Miller's own account of her four hours of testimony.

Still confused? So is Michael Kinsley:

Confused? Sure. Who isn't? One entertaining aspect of the story that is expected to reach some sort of climax today is the struggle of the media to summarize or label it. Once upon a time someone went to Niger, which is not Nigeria, and off we go in time and space. Even Fox News has been driven to compound sentences.

Taking his lead from Tom DeLay, blogger Lou Antosh thinks the proper reaction at the White House would be a kegger:

DeLay, who beamed like an Amway rookie during his recent mug shot, understands the new dynamic regarding perceived crime and punishment in this great nation. The key is this: Be Bold and Brave, Your Fans Will Rave. We're not talking fake chutzpah here, no twerpy little "Courage" signoff as the feds take you away. No sir. This is looking straight in the camera, raising your most sincere finger high, and crooning like the world's most powerful lounge lizard: I did not share a leak with that humanoid."