Leaking the names of CIA agents is not politics; it
is a crime. Lying to congress about evidence for a war is not
politics; it is a crime. Failing to tell a grand jury that you met
with a reporter and talked about the CIA agent is not forget fullness;
it is a crime. Deceiving your entire nation and frightening children
and adults with images of nuclear explosions in order to get them to
support a bloody invasion of another country is not politics; it is a
crime. Anyone other than Karl Rove and Lewis Libby and Tom Delay who
does not get this, please raise your hand. The three of you will need
to stay after class for further instruction in civics.
Fortunately,
as the leaves of the Aspens continue to turn in Colorado the suspects
are also turning in Washington. Targets will be pleading and dealing
and soon will be singing. We are, hopefully, seeing the beginning of
an investigation that will broaden until it disabuses the final few
million Bush supporters of their naivete. Special counsel Patrick
Fitzgerald must surely just be at the beginning of rendering justice.
An indictment or two will hardly serve to answer the critical
questions. The leak and any lies to the grand jury were most likely
motivated by a deep and abiding fear that a much greater crime was at
risk of being uncovered. Karl Rove is vindictive, yes. But he is not
stupid. Rove would never risk treason unless he thought it served a
political purpose. And this was the most important political purpose
of all: protecting his most precious asset, George W. Bush. Ethics
have never been a consideration of Rove's and he sees the law as only
marginally instructive. Karl might have been more concerned about the
leak and talking to reporters if somewhere along the line he had been
held accountable for any of his other political tricks.
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