Karma
One wonders if Karl Rove ever reflects on the last days of Lee Attwater, who spent his dying days apologizing for the nasty ways he conducted his clients' political campaigns.
Um. Probably not.
I know, I know. Rove will likely walk free of this latest atrocity, sliming an opponent by revealing the identity of a covert CIA expert on weapons of mass destruction. There is no congressional oversight of this crew, Bush wouldn't fire a loyal aide if it were found he was a pedophile. And, even if Fitzgerald does find Rove played fast and obstructively loose with the FBI, Bush will simply pardon him. But, knowing Rove's past -- the lies and cruel personal attacks -- and the way he has led the marketing campaign to launch a war of choice that has actually limited our choices, you can understand our desire to see him fall very, very hard.
Um. Probably not.
Most fertile - and apparently ground zero for Mr. Fitzgerald's investigation - is the period at the very outset when those plotting against Mr. Wilson felt safest of all: those eight days in July 2003 between the Wilson Op-Ed, which so infuriated the administration, and the retaliatory Novak column. It was during that long week, on a presidential trip to Africa, that Colin Powell was seen on Air Force One brandishing the classified State Department memo mentioning Valerie Plame, as first reported by The New York Times.
That memo may have been the genesis of an orchestrated assault on the Wilsons. That the administration was then cocky enough and enraged enough to go after its presumed enemies so systematically can be found in a similar, now forgotten attack that was hatched on July 15, the day after the publication of Mr. Novak's column portraying Mr. Wilson as a girlie man dependent on his wife for employment.
On that evening's broadcast of ABC's "World News Tonight," American soldiers in Falluja spoke angrily of how their tour of duty had been extended yet again, only a week after Donald Rumsfeld told them they were going home. Soon the Drudge Report announced that ABC's correspondent, Jeffrey Kofman, was gay. Matt Drudge told Lloyd Grove of The Washington Post at the time that "someone from the White House communications shop" had given him that information.
Mr. McClellan denied White House involvement with any Kofman revelation, a denial now worth as much as his denials of White House involvement with the trashing of the Wilsons. Identifying someone as gay isn't a crime in any event, but the "outing" of Mr. Kofman (who turned out to be openly gay) almost simultaneously with the outing of Ms. Plame points to a pervasive culture of revenge in the White House and offers a clue as to who might be driving it. As Joshua Green reported in detail in The Atlantic Monthly last year, a recurring feature of Mr. Rove's political campaigns throughout his career has been the questioning of an "opponent's sexual orientation."
I know, I know. Rove will likely walk free of this latest atrocity, sliming an opponent by revealing the identity of a covert CIA expert on weapons of mass destruction. There is no congressional oversight of this crew, Bush wouldn't fire a loyal aide if it were found he was a pedophile. And, even if Fitzgerald does find Rove played fast and obstructively loose with the FBI, Bush will simply pardon him. But, knowing Rove's past -- the lies and cruel personal attacks -- and the way he has led the marketing campaign to launch a war of choice that has actually limited our choices, you can understand our desire to see him fall very, very hard.
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