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FBI opens probe of Bush staff on
CIA leak
By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent
Washington -
The FBI began a full-scale criminal investigation Tuesday
into whether White House officials illegally leaked the identity of an
undercover CIA officer, and President Bush ordered his
staff to cooperate with the first major probe of his administration.
Democrats demanded the appointment of
a special outside counsel but Bush resisted. "I'm absolutely confident
that the Justice Department can do a good job," he said on a
re-election fund-raising stop in Chicago.
"If somebody did leak classified
information, I'd like to know it and we'll take the appropriate
action," Bush said. "And this investigation is a good thing."
Democratic leaders said Attorney
General John Ashcroft was too close to the White House to
conduct an impartial investigation. "We don't have confidence in John
Ashcroft ... and we know without a doubt that somebody broke the
federal law," Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said.
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi
said, "If there ever was a case for the appointment of a special
counsel, this is it."
With pressure building, the Justice
Department alerted the White House late Monday of the decision to move
from a preliminary inquiry into a full investigation, a step rarely
taken with complaints involving leaks of classified information.
The investigation is aimed at finding
who leaked the name of the CIA operative, possibly in an attempt to
punish the officer's husband, former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson, who
had accused the administration of manipulating intelligence to
exaggerate the threat from Iraq .
Most White House employees discovered
the probe was under way when they turned on their computers and found
an e-mail timed at 8:46 a.m. that said: PLEASE READ: Important Message
From Counsel's Office. It alerted the staff to keep all documents that
could be related to the investigation.
"I want to know the truth," Bush
said. Anyone with information, inside or outside the administration,
should step forward, he said.
Although Bush said he welcomed the
investigation, it was an embarrassing development for a president who
promised to bring integrity and leadership to the White House after
years of Republican criticism of the Clinton administration.
While the administration appeared
cool toward naming a special counsel, Ashcroft has not ruled out that
possibility, a senior law enforcement official said.
That decision will depend on a number
of factors, such as whether a suspect is identified who presents a
potential conflict for the Justice Department. For now, the
investigation is being done by FBI agents in the counterintelligence
division, based at the FBI Washington field office, and overseen by 11
career prosecutors in the counterespionage section of the Justice
Department's criminal division.
In a follow-up staff message late
Tuesday, White House counsel Alberto Gonzales ordered the preservation
of any documents such as phone logs, memos, notes and calendar entries
from Feb. 1, 2002, and later that relate to Wilson, his fact-finding
trip to Africa in February 2002 and his wife's purported relationship
with the CIA and any contacts with the anyone in the news media about
those subjects.
In particular, Gonzales cited any
contacts with columnist Robert Novak and Timothy M. Phelps, Washington
bureau chief for Newsday newspaper, and Knut Royce, a staff writer for
the paper.
"You must preserve all documents
relating, in any way, directly or indirectly, to these subjects, even
if there could be a question whether the document would be a
presidential or federal record or even if its destruction might
otherwise be permitted," Gonzales said.
Newsday Editor Howard Schneider said
Tuesday evening his newspaper has had no contact with the White House
or Justice Department about the memo. He said, however, that Newsday
was probably singled out because the newspaper was the first to report
that a CIA officer revealed in a Novak column was an undercover
operative.
Republicans said Democrats were
playing politics. "Surprise, surprise, they are calling for a special
counsel. My goodness," House Majority Leader Tom DeLay said. "It must
be in their political handbook, their campaign handbook."
Democrats tried to attach a
resolution calling for a special counsel to a spending bill for the
District of Columbia but Republicans ruled it was not relevant.
Federal law prohibits the
unauthorized disclosure of a covert agent's name, punishable by up to
10 years in prison. The CIA officer's name was published in July by
Novak, who said he based his report on two senior administration
officials.
Ashcroft, at a news conference, said
the CIA also had been instructed to tell employees to preserve
relevant information.
"Such requests are standard
procedures in investigations of this type," Ashcroft said. He declined
to say why he hadn't sought an outside investigation. "Because of an
ongoing investigation of criminal violations, I will not be making any
further comment at this time," Ashcroft said.
News executives expressed concern
that the investigation could lead to subpoenas of reporters' notes and
phone records — and the journalists themselves. "The question really
comes down to whether there are other ways to do this that do less
damage to the idea of the First Amendment, said Bill Felber, editor of
The Manhattan (Kan.) Mercury, who handles freedom of information
issues for the Associated Press Managing Editors. "This ought to be
last resort, not a first resort."
Bush spent the day in Chicago and
Cincinnati raising money for his re-election campaign.
"Leaks of classified information are
a bad thing ... There's too much leaking in Washington," he said. "I
want to know who the leakers are."
A day earlier, spokesman Scott
McClellan said it was "ridiculous" to suggest Karl Rove, Bush's chief
political strategist, had played any role in disclosing the name of
the CIA officer, who is the wife of former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson
IV.
It was Wilson who traveled to Niger
in 2002 to investigate allegations of uranium sales to Iraq. He
concluded the allegations were not credible.
Wilson said Monday, referring to the
leaking of his wife's name, that people in whom he had confidence have
"indicated to me that he (Rove), at a minimum, condoned it and
certainly did nothing to put a stop to it for a week after it was out
there." In an interview with ABC's "Nightline," Wilson said he would
tell the FBI, if asked, the names of "everybody who called me and told
me" about conversations with Rove.
The focus on Rove brought an odd
twist to Bush's travels. When the president boarded Air Force One at
Andrews Air Force Base outside of Washington, he walked up the steps
and waved — and not a single camera followed. He looked perplexed. All
lenses were trained on Rove at the bottom of the steps. --
Associated Press
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