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09/12/06
Armitage
says he was source in CIA leak
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The former No. 2 State Department official
said he inadvertently disclosed the identity of CIA employee
Valerie Plame in conversations with two reporters in 2003.
Confirming that he was the source of a leak that triggered
a federal investigation, former Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage said he never intended to reveal Plame's
identity. He apologized for his conversations with syndicated
columnist Robert Novak and Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward.
I. "Scooter" Libby, a former top aide to Vice President
Dick Cheney, is the only administration official charged in
the leak.
For almost three years, an investigation led by Special Prosecutor
Patrick Fitzgerald has tried to determine whether Bush administration
officials intentionally revealed Plame's identity as covert
operative as a way to punish her husband, former ambassador
Joseph Wilson, for criticizing the march to war with Iraq.
"I made a terrible mistake, not maliciously, but I made
a terrible mistake," Armitage said in a telephone interview
from his home Sept. 7.
He said he did not realize Plame's job was covert.
Armitage's admission suggested that the leak did not originate
at the White House as retribution for Wilson's comments about
the Iraq war. Wilson, a former ambassador, discounted reports
that then-Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had tried to buy yellowcake
uranium from Niger to make a nuclear weapon — claims
that wound up in President Bush's 2003 State of the Union
address.
Armitage said he was not a part of a conspiracy to reveal
Plame's identity and did not know whether one existed.
He described his June 2003 conversation with Woodward as an
afterthought at the end of a lengthy interview.
"He said, 'Hey, what's the deal with Wilson?' and I said,
'I think his wife works out there,'" Armitage recalled.
He described a more direct conversation with Novak, who was
the first to report on the issue: "He said to me, 'Why
did the CIA send Ambassador Wilson to Niger?' I said, as I
remember, 'I don't know, but his wife works out there.'"
Armitage, whose admission was first reported by CBS News earlier
Sept. 7, said he cooperated fully with Fitzgerald's investigation.
He was never a target of the investigation and did not hire
a lawyer. He agreed to speak to reporters after Fitzgerald
released him from a promise of confidentiality.
Armitage said he considered coming forward in late August
when a flurry of news reports identified him as the leak.
But he said he did not want to be accused of trying to get
the story out during the summer's slow news cycle.
"I did what I did," Armitage said. "I embarrassed
my president, my secretary, my department, my family and I
embarrassed the Wilsons. And for that I'm very sorry."
Libby faces trial in January on charges he lied to authorities
about conversations he had with reporters about Plame.
Armitage said he assumed Plame's job was not a secret because
it was included in a State Department memo.
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