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Reply #29: Madsen wrote this in June 2004 - no doubt he had a good source then! [View All]

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Zen Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-20-05 08:10 AM
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29. Madsen wrote this in June 2004 - no doubt he had a good source then!
"The special prosecutor has been focusing on Bush, Cheney, presidential counselor Karl Rove, Cheney's chief of staff Lewis I. ("Scooter") Libby, Cheney assistants David Wurmser and John Hannah, and National Security Council officials Elliott Abrams and Stephen Hadley.

Recently, CIA Director George Tenet and Plame's ultimate boss, Deputy Director of Operations James Pavitt, suddenly resigned within hours of one another. Intelligence sources have said the two have been cooperating with Fitzgerald's investigation of the Plame/Brewster-Jennings leak and the damage to U.S. clandestine operations which globally track the flow of WMDs.

Sensitive CIA operations that were compromised by the leak included companies, government officials, and individuals associated with the nuclear smuggling network of Pakistan's chief nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. In addition, the identities of U.S. national and foreign agents working within the headquarters of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, North Korea's nuclear laboratory in Yongbyon, Pakistan's Kahuta uranium enrichment plant, banks and export companies in Dubai, Islamabad, Moscow, Cape Town, Tel Aviv, Liechtenstein, Cyprus, and Kiev, and Kuala Lumpur, and government agencies in Libya, Pakistan, Malaysia, and Iran were severely compromised. The CIA has reportedly given Fitzgerald highly classified details on the damage done to the CIA's WMD tracking network.

According to Department of Justice insiders, the length of Fitzgerald's 70 minute interview of Bush was significant. Only one other prosecutor's interview of a sitting president lasted as long, that of Iran-contra prosecutor Lawrence Walsh's questioning of the late Ronald Reagan. However, in that case, Walsh concluded after the interview that Reagan actually did not know what had transpired in his administration with respect to the scandal. Today’s officials may not be so fortunate."

http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/062504_grand_jury.shtml

I'm no expert on Madsen, but he certainly has a source feeding him some accurate information. Remember, word on the street was that Fitzgerald had essentially finished the investigation last summer, but was holding out for Cooper and Miller to testify. Their refusal, and subsequent appeal to the Supreme Court, dragged this thing out through the election until they lost the appeal and Miller went to jail. It seems that Libby and Rove were not providing waivers just to get this thing beyond the 2004 elections.
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