Cheney’s Lawyer Already Leaked the Content of Cheney’s “Privileged” Interview

You know how Obama’s DOJ claims that we can’t see Cheney’s interview with Patrick Fitzgerald because it’s privileged? Well, Dick Cheney’s own lawyer already leaked the so-called privileged content three years ago.

It appears that Dick Cheney’s lawyer, Terry O’Donnell, attended the interview. When Ted Wells asked David Addington at the Libby trial when he realized he was going to be a witness in the case, Addington explained that he was not permitted to attend Cheney’s interview, but Cheney’s lawyer was.

The point at which I knew I was likely to be a witness in the case was when the government went to interview the Vice President and indicated they would prefer I didn’t come and that only his private attorney come.

I’m interested in that because we know that Terry O’Donnell spread a cover story on the NIE leak–precisely the content DOJ now claims is privileged–to Michael Isikoff.

One of the details that most surprised me in Scott McClellan’s account of the CIA Leak investigation and aftermath was his description of the White House response to the confirmation–on April 5, 2006–that Libby had testified he had leaked the NIE with the authorization of the President.

Now the fact that he himself had authorized the selective leaking of national security information to reporters made him look hypocritical.

[snip]

In time, we would learn that the president’s penchant for compartmentalization had played an important role in the declassification story. The only person the president had shared the declassification with personally was Vice President Cheney. Two days after the Fitzgerald disclosure, Cheney’s lawyer told reporters that the president had "declassified the information and authorized and directed the vice president to get it out" but "didn’t get into how it would be done." Then the vice president had directed his top aide, Scooter Libby, to supply the information anonymously to reporters. [my emphasis]

[snip]

But it all made sense when someone pointed me to the one piece of journalism he could find repeating that citation–would you believe it, a Michael Isikoff piece?

A lawyer familiar with the investigation, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter, told NEWSWEEK that the "president declassified the information and authorized and directed the vice president to get it out." But Bush "didn’t get into how it would be done. He was not involved in selecting Scooter Libby or Judy Miller." Bush made the decision to put out the NIE material in late June, when the press was beginning to raise questions about the WMD but before Wilson published his op-ed piece. [my emphasis]

I double checked with McClellen to make sure that’s the public statement he meant, and he said,

Dan Bartlett volunteered to me that the vice president’s lawyer was telling at least some reporters anonymously what I reference on page 295, which is specifically referring to the Newsweek article …

In other words, yes, Cheney’s lawyer was the one spreading that story to–of all people–Michael Isikoff.

So O’Donnell attended Cheney’s interview, and when Cheney’s role in the leak began to blow up, O’Donnell told Isikoff a story that distracted from the implications of Cheney’s role and reinforced the cover story.

Now, I’m skeptical that O’Donnell told a completely truthful story to Isikoff. There are reasons to doubt both O’Donnell’s claims about the date of the purported declassification and that Bush was not involved in selecting Libby to leak this. That’s the luxury of being an anonymous source for O’Donnell–Fitzgerald had no easy way of calling Isikoff’s anonymous source on any inaccuracies. But O’Donnell may well have been repeating lies Cheney told to Fitzgerald–we won’t know whether he accurately represented what Cheney said until we see Cheney’s interview materials.

In any case, it appears that O’Donnell spread this story after witnessing Cheney’s responses to questions from Fitzgerald about the NIE story. So presumably, the general story is what Cheney told Fitzgerald.

There are two or three references in Cheney’s interview to this issue.

Description of a confidential conversation between the Vice President and the President. (Page 12, lines 9-11) [Also, FBI notes on "apparent communication between Vice President and President" on interview outline] 

Vice President’s description of his role in resolving disputes about whether to declassify certain information. (Page 25, line 39 – page 26, line 1)

Vice President’s description of government deliberations involving senior officials regarding whether to declassify portions of the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate. (Page 26, lines 8-10, 14-17, 24-26)

And according to Cheney’s own lawyer, who witnessed the interview, here’s how Cheney answered those questions.

… the "president declassified the information and authorized and directed the vice president to get it out." But Bush "didn’t get into how it would be done. He was not involved in selecting Scooter Libby or Judy Miller." Bush made the decision to put out the NIE material in late June,

Obama’s DOJ wants to claim this conversation is covered by executive privilege. But we know that Cheney’s own lawyer has already spread the contents of that conversation.

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  1. alabama says:

    Really, it all goes back to Bush–including, I believe, all key decisions involving torture.

    The picture of Bush as a hands-off, detached sort of half-executive is somewhat wide of the mark: in the two or three matters that really obsessed him (torture, most prominently) he was a control-freak absolutely determined to get a regular fix of his drug-of-choice. And torture has always been his drug-of-choice–especially after going dry.

    • tjbs says:

      Torture / Murder / Treason and my money is still on live “real time ” feeds to these creeps and them cheerleading the torturers from their dark headquarters. I think they are that creepy. I bet someone was in the viewing room w/ black boots, ect..

      Nuremburg 2.0 n0w

  2. bobschacht says:

    I’ll bet that just warms the cockles of the CIA Director’s heart to know that the president can out one of his secret agents at any time, without any warning, whenever he wants to achieve a partisan political gain!

    Apparently, being president means you never have to say you’re sorry, and you never have to be held responsible for anything.

    Bob from HI

    • james says:

      I remember how violently Barbara Bush attacked Phil Agee when his book on the CIA came out naming numerous agents throughout South America. His book was one of the reasons the law protecting identities was written and Bush Sr. was DCI when it went through.

      But as long as your partisan agenda is served nothing is sacred to these treasonous criminals.

  3. MrWhy says:

    Your story is being linked from HuffPo. Can’t provide link because it comes right here.

  4. JThomason says:

    Bush also said during his interview with prosecutors that he had never directed anyone to disclose the identity of then-covert CIA officer Valerie Plame, Wilson’s wife. Bush said he had no information that Cheney had disclosed Plame’s identity or directed anyone else to do so.

    Scott Horton, Harper’s, Nov. 2007: Did McClellan Accuse Bush of Lying to Federal Prosecutors?

    • klynn says:

      The “meat grinder” note will never go away. It implicates both Cheney and Bush.

      EW,

      The Exec Priv claims on Cheney’s interview, as you beautifully map out,appears to be unfounded now.

      Pres. O’s DOJ appears to need a cup of java jive.

    • JThomason says:

      Horton is quoting Murray Wass. “The substance of Bush’s statement to Fitzgerald was revealed only in July 2006 by Murray Waas…”

  5. FormerFed says:

    Keep digging Marcy, it’s the only way the Bushies will ever be held accountable. The ObamaBush DOJ is going to cover this up as long as they can.

    • Phoenix Woman says:

      I was hoping that Holder would be dumping out the Regent and Federalist Society hacks, but it looks like he’s so stupid that they can game him.

      • FormerFed says:

        I have to eat crow on Holder with bmaz and others on this blog – he has been my biggest disappointment so far with the Obama administration.

        • quake says:

          I have to eat crow on Holder with bmaz and others on this blog – he has been my biggest disappointment so far with the Obama administration.

          Holder is just doing what the WH wants him to. Be disappointed in Obama, not Holder.

        • FormerFed says:

          True enough, but I had thought that Holder would have the cajones to stand up to the Pres – I was wrong.

        • Leen says:

          what indicators were there to demonstrate that Holder would stand up to any President Seems he had all ready clearly demonstrated how willing he was to roll over and play dead. All the while repeating “no one is above the law”

          http://www.salon.com/opinion/c…..16/holder/
          Jan. 16, 2009 | From beginning to end, the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Eric Holder’s nomination as attorney general observed the ban on candid discussion of the main objection to confirming him. The forbidden topic: the real reason behind the pardon of Marc Rich eight years ago, a controversial action that Holder reviewed as deputy attorney general — and that he failed to oppose for reasons he did not mention.

          In an editorial that appeared on the morning of the hearings, the Washington Post urged the Senate to question Holder “closely” on the Rich matter. But it is difficult for senators (and editorial writers) to ask pertinent questions when they are completely ignorant of the real background and motivations of the players in the case. Even now, the true machinations behind the Rich pardon cannot be discussed honestly — perhaps because they implicate the government and the security services of the state of Israel.

        • Leen says:

          I sat in on Holder’s nomination hearing in D.C. He repeated “no one is above the law” so many times that I stopped counting.

          when Obama, Holder, Leahy, Whitehouse etc etc say “no one is above the law” how in the hell do they expect the peasants to believe if they allow Cheney and Team to out an undercover agent and then allow these thugs to walk? How can we believe?

          We’re not talking about lying under oath about blow jobs here, we are talking about purposely outing someone whose job it was was to follow the path of WMD’s.

          Will the public ever have access to the investigation of how much damage the thugs who outed Plame had on U.S. National Security?

      • Arbusto says:

        Gaming Holder or Holder doing Obamas bidding, looking forward (no accountability) and what’s past is past. Anyway we cut it, the Administration is covering Bushcos ass.

  6. bobschacht says:

    So, what of Cheney’s testimony to Fitz is still unknown, or is presently misrepresented? Or, thanks to your sleuthing, do we know it all now?

    Bob from HI

    • emptywheel says:

      What don’t we know? Two things in particular. What he claims transpired in the conversation with George Tenet–particularly whether Tenet told him that Plame was covert–and what he said to Condi during leak week.

      But there are also details that I would love to have in hand.

  7. JThomason says:

    Bush said publicly in October 2003 that he had no idea who was responsible for unmasking Plame Wilson to columnist Robert Novak and other reporters. The president said that he welcomed a Justice Department investigation to find out who was responsible for it.

    Jason Leopold, Truthout, Apr. 2006: Bush and Cheney Discussed Plame Prior to Leak.

    • emptywheel says:

      He would still have the same problems he had in 2007. First, the only witness to Cheney ordering Libby to leak Plame’s ID is Libby, who might have been willing to talk had he actually done jail time, but as it happened, did no time. Also, if Bush insta-declassified Plame’s ID for Libby to leak, it’d be hard to indict Cheney; if Cheney insta-declassified it himself, you might be able to do so when the WHCO was still arguing over whether or not Cheney had the ability to insta-declassify. But not since 2007, when Fred Fielding said he did.

      Now, if he could get beyond those two problems, Fitz would no longer have the question of whether or not you can indict a sitting VP for things he did in office (Agnew got indicted for stuff he did before he became VP). But there are still those two problems.

  8. alinaustex says:

    This might be a little off topic but I have had someone formerly in gwb 43 exective position state that both Scott McClellan & the former CIA employee Kirakou have testified to the Durham grand jury – re on whom & why the torture media was destroyed -evidently it was a lot more then just “tapes”,,,,
    And to formerfed @ 6 – I have also been told b this purpoted ex bushies white house minion that its harder to get rid of the bushie “left behinds’ then might first be thought -but like you sure wish more of the Monica Goodlings had been ferrted out and fired by now -at least US Attorney Buchanan has resigned.

    • FormerFed says:

      If they have weaseled themselves into career civil service positions it is a little harder. But the old bureaucratic ploy of moving them to a “dumping ground job” is still useful even with career people.

  9. NorskeFlamethrower says:

    AND THE KILLIN’ GOEZ ON AND ON AND…

    Citizen emptywheel and the Firepup Freedom Fighters:

    The festering sores that make up America in the last 63 years are goin’ septic…but before it gets too far along and the corpse starts to rot, I would like to remind folks that the fascist oligarchy that is our ruling power structure got a twofer in the Plame leak. That is, they distracted the public from the issue of WMD and disparaged Joe Wilson but in addition they got rid of our country’s mechanism for monitoring nuclear proliferation and weapons development. The dismantling of our intelligence structure for information on nuclear proliferation and development was part of an effort to loose the hounds of hell of a world wide nuclear arms race which would destablize the world and make the folks who own the world’s uranium reserves and nuclear technology and stockpiles into the masters of all they surveyed.

    And will someone please tell my why we have an agent for Iraeli intelligence as our President’s Chief of Staff?

    KEEP THE FAITH AND PASS THE AMMUNITION, THE WAR IS RIGHT HERE WHERE IT BELONGS!!

    • ghostof911 says:

      And will someone please tell my why we have an agent for Iraeli intelligence as our President’s Chief of Staff?

      Likewise with his dual citizenship. Ditto for the dual citizenship of many members of both Houses of Congress. Dual citizenship with other countries is not permitted for anyone, but for Israel it is not only permitted but is also a ticket to the highest reaches of government?

      How the hell did that happen? Who the hell’s in charge here, anyway?

    • NMvoiceofreason says:

      While I agree that the outing of a Non-Official Cover CIA agent, a secret soldier of the Republic, is treason and has damages we can’t even begin to contemplate, her loss was far from being “The dismantling of our intelligence structure for information on nuclear proliferation and development”. The IAEA has not been disbanded, the NNPT has not been “unsigned” yet, nor has the DOE NNSA been disbanded. While the Office of Special Plans HAS been shut down, we don’t know how many “deep cover moles” the Bush Administration left behind to do the dismantling you say is underway. Despite our disagreement on the current state, it is a subject I agree bears watching.

      As for RahmBo being a Mossad agent, it is far more likely that he is in fact a deep cover ballerina:

      Emanuel was encouraged by his mother to take ballet lessons as a boy and is a graduate of the Evanston School of Ballet. He won a scholarship to the Joffrey Ballet but turned it down to attend Sarah Lawrence College, a liberal arts school with a strong dance program.

      Wikipedia on Rahm-bo

      The thought of him co-opting Obama into a production of “Swan Lake” is simply terrifying!

  10. ART45 says:

    I think the Obama Administration will argue O’Donnell couldn’t waive executive privilege, because he had no authority to do so.

  11. earlofhuntingdon says:

    A lovely aspect of this piece is that O’Donnell is apparently not repeating what his client told him occurred at a meeting. He’s not repeating what Cheney said he said; he’s repeating what he personally heard and witnessed.

    Ordinarily, the lawyer isn’t such a witness; s/he’s relying on accounts of others. If O’Donnell lied about it, he’s the liar, not his client. But since he learned about what he saw and heard as Cheney’s lawyer, he could only repeat it with Cheney’s permission. If he didn’t have that permission, he violated client confidentiality and could be sanctioned by his bar.

    That doesn’t mean it’s fact, though, because it’s just the perspective Cheney – on advice of his counsel – put on his retelling of events. That perspective conveniently lays liability on his boss, the opposite of what a good bureaucrat normally does. But then Cheney’s the master of bureaucrats; he doesn’t imagine himself to be one.

    • emptywheel says:

      Yeah, this is so delicious on so many levels.

      First, it’s precisely what they were doing with the Plame leak–leaking it anonymously to journalists and then claiming it was classified.

      Second, what you point out about O’Donnell’s ethical obligations. He’s not going to want to fight this, bc it’d reflect on Williams & Connolly. But there’s also a possibility that the statement will be released and it’ll be clear that O’Donnell was not entirely forthcoming (though I suspect he was).

      And, it’s an Isikoff source. Isikoff has already revealed his source in past litigation (the Hatfill case), so he’d have a hard time not doing so here if it ever went to court. But you wouldn’t necessarily need it, because you’d have Bartlett.

  12. earlofhuntingdon says:

    The privilege isn’t Cheney’s to assert, it’s Obama’s. Asserting it now, after the events appear to have been fully disclosed, denies the public the ability to confirm or deny, to verify those events or challenge their authenticity. Obama is defending something, but it’s not the rights or prerogatives of his office.

    • emptywheel says:

      To be fair to Obama, they don’t seem to know the details of this case very well, and even I had not put two plus two together until I wrote this post.

      The question is, what will they do now that it’s clear that Cheney of his own accord was leaking this stuff?

      Also, there is a bit of problem–for CREW at least–bc this is hearsay. So I don’t know whether they can put this in their filing. So hopefully, Sullivan will hear about it separately.

      • earlofhuntingdon says:

        That might be a problem to prove “the truth” of what was said. It may be admissible for other purposes, for example, to refute other inconsistent statements by O’Donnell.

        Why is everyone fighting so hard to prevent us from knowing what our government did in our name, and who did it? Where’s the open representative government in that?

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          It would also be useful if Cheney denies having said it or claims O’Donnell misheard or misreported what he said. Among other things, that would raise the credibility issue of why Cheney waited so long to make those claims.

          It would be ever so useful if Obama stopped acting like a criminal defense attorney for Bush’s government and started acting like his job was enforce the laws and to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution.

        • bobschacht says:

          Why is everyone fighting so hard to prevent us from knowing what our government did in our name, and who did it? Where’s the open representative government in that?

          The “everyone” you’re referring to is the Power Elite. Secrecy is important for their control, just as it is toxic to a democratic republic. We need to remind Obama about his open government promises and hold him to it.

          Bob from HI

        • ghostof911 says:

          Why is everyone fighting so hard to prevent us from knowing what our government did in our name…

          Because everyone has become complicit. That’s the strategy of the professional criminal, to drag everyone into the net so that no one dares try to escape.

        • quake says:

          I have to eat crow on Holder with bmaz and others on this blog – he has been my biggest disappointment so far with the Obama administration.

          Because it’s not “our” govt, it’s the Village’s govt.

  13. STTPinOhio says:

    OT, and apologies if this has already been shared around here, but good and bad news re: Dan Froomkin.

    As per Glenn, it’s looks like Dan’s gonna land at the HuffPo.

    I guess that’s the good news.

    The bad news as I see it is he’s only gonna do a couple of columns per week since he’ll be adding Washington Bureau Chief to his responsibilities.

    Selfish I know, but I preferred the good old days of Daily Dan, and all the linky goodness that came with it.

    • NMvoiceofreason says:

      The good news is he’s training a whole new cadre of HuffPo pups to do on-line journalism the right way from the first day.

  14. LabDancer says:

    Ms E Wheel –

    Maybe I’m taking this too narrowly, but I understand the key point you’re trying to make here has to do with engaging the concept of waiver, with the shots at Isikoff — though nutritious and delicious — included as an incident of relating the narrative.

    This engages an interesting wonky point, in an area — privilege claims — which is itself a comparatively wonky area of the law [Face it, my dear: you have the gift.], which I’m going to offer up as follows, while conceding there appear to be lots of ways to pose it:

    WHEN — if ever — can a claim of privilege asserted in response to a FOIA demand be overcome by waiver expressed in a technically-anonymously-sourced but actual-source-traceable publication?

    This situation is categorically different in several ways from what Fitz used to justify contempt proceedings against Miller, Cooper and Russert. For one thing, I would think the assignment is over and done just in terms of time, with the product now being little more than a base for someone else under the AG charging acts of obstruction or perjury alleged to have occurred in course of the investigation which Fitz both failed to notice and could not reasonably have noticed beforehand. For another, this isn’t at all like taking out contempt proceedings to obtain raw evidence, such as forcing Judy to testify as to what Scootzie spoonfed her for breakfast; the raw evidence is what Cheney said, or at least what the best evidence is of what he said based on notes and records, and that’s still around. And the powers are different: Fitz was exercising executive branch investigative powers, where CREW is exercising private litigant rights plus whatever powers the court adds to put teeth into contempt proceedings or otherwise to enforce the court’s process.

    And those differences ordinarily would threaten to derail the scenario, such that we don’t get to point, except for you and your — I don’t know how a technically neutral judge would describe it adequately: argument for sure at first; proof? I would hope so — of exactly how compelling to irresistible is the conclusion that the source Isikoff superficially asserts as anonymous is — must be — O’Donnell.

    Now, the nature of the privilege being asserted itself presents some problems. Is it supposed to be personal to Cheney? If so then his own personal lawyer yakking about it stands a good chance of being ruled waiver; if not, or if some-and-some, then this gets a bit thornier. And particularly so given the murky state of the vee-pee-ency left behind on January 20th of this year.

    Insofar as privilege goes, the privilege is always that of the client, not the lawyer. If the client is “the executive”, then I would think that’s clearly intended as the president, meaning Bush [With these two, I think it’s important not to presume and to try to be as precise as possible.].

    Ah, but then we get into the nature of the process itself: Fitz is there because the executive — the president; Bush — has, directly or indirectly, as it were ‘commissioned’ him to investigate. And in the course of the execution of that commission, Fitz advised, and Bush allowed, such investigation to include questioning of the president — and the vice-president [not “his”, but “the”, at least once sworn into office, following Cheney’s point on this, and indeed that of the Constitution].

    [One envisions the technical protocol of the president actually having to ask the vice president to kindly submit to answering the questions of his commissioned investigatory.]

    But if the court gets THIS far, then we’re clearly past the point you’re raising and into the Nixon case, replete with 4th branch distractions.

    Given the weak-assitude of the government’s positions at this point, maybe it’s not necessary [As I understand, the judge is actually looking at the stuff, or to do so soon.], but I do think there’s an opening down the side on this, so it could be fun to watch CREW scamper up onside to accept your pass.

    • NMvoiceofreason says:

      Thanks for the analysis. I get my doses of this regularly over at TalkLeft but so rarely get to see it applied to Marcy’s excellent work. Bravo!

    • emptywheel says:

      Yeah, the biggest problem with this is, IMO, that it’s hearsay. It might be different even if Bartlett had reported this directly, but McClellan is reporting what Bartlett reported about O’Donnell. So if I were CREW, I might think twice about making this comment central to my argument.

      But I think Sullivan is predisposed to let this stuff out anyway, and if he gets a good reason to do so–and I do think this is a good reason–then I think he will let the stuff out.

      • LabDancer says:

        I’m not going to try to shake up your bottom line on this: it’s well put, you’re mostly right, and entirely right on the most important stuff. But IMO the hearsay aspect isn’t a deal breaker.

        A lot of folks, including a lot of lawyers not directly, frequently, regularly involved in evidence, have in mind both basic and particular practical misconceptions about the law on hearsay.

        Without getting into the weeds on this here [I suspect you in particular would have no problem with that, and in any event quite possibly know of or could guess at the limits of a lot of them.], the body of law on hearsay starts out with a general principle against it, then splits mostly down two big pathways:

        one having to do with how to identify and deal with hearsay that’s worked itself into the evidence, where the evidence itself should properly be considered, such as by innoculating it, or otherwise saved, if possible;

        and the other having to do with a fairly lengthy — and growing, and frankly never necessarily exhaustive — list of ad hoc and “principled” exceptions to the general principle, that for one reason or another somehow works and reconciles to the point of the general principle and to any parts of the Constitution that might apply

        [some of them adopted from English common law;
        some found in legislation;
        some found in rules and rulings set down and enforced by the courts;
        and some extrapolated from one or more of the first three –
        all of which leaves aside the additional trend towards developing and permitting forms of hearsay essentially ‘tailored’ to the “practicalities” and “realities” — really the policy goals, IMO — of the particular forum: the currently slow-cooking discussion on national security detention being an example].

        If CREW really needed to go this route — if the point were vital enough to the public interest and there were no better alternatives to getting to it — the law properly interpreted would allow the use of what your analysis shows to work to force out a more precise and particularized claim — to the point where it stands a better chance of being exposed for its impropriety or even being withdrawn.

        Which suggests to me a lawyer sharper tham me, as sharp as O’Donnell I have no doubt is, would certainly have realized this at the time; and further suggests it would have been the subject of discussion with HIS client — also with counsel for the OTHER client [THE client, insofar as at least some of the subjects of the interview are concerned];

        which in turn suggests at least one of those clients, possibly both [over time and changes in personnel in the White House counsel office, it’sincreasingly probable] deliberately, consciously instructed this leak — more properly, pleak — eyes-wide-open to the risks.

        • emptywheel says:

          I guess I’m confused about what we’re trying to do.

          In my mind, the immediate goal is to convince Judge Sullivan that DOJ’s claim that this is immune from FOIA is bogus. He seems inclined to buy that anyway, and CREW ought to be able to argue that most of the purportedly privileged info was already released at trial.

          But then there’s this–which I think you’re arguing suggests Cheney, with the knowledge of the Bush WH, already decided to waive privilege on this, which would mean the FOIA claim is particularly bogus.

          I originally saw it as supporting a weaker claim–basically supporting the larger case that this is already in the public record and therefore not privileged. does that make sense?

        • LabDancer says:

          “does this make sense?”

          Yes. You had it right in your response to my first comment.

          I went off on a tangent, mostly I think. If the thrust occurs to me in a more relevant way and I can avoid hijacking the thread, I’ll give it another stab.

        • LabDancer says:

          And furthermore …

          WARNING TO THE INNOCENT: long, weedy, potentially confusing, at worst just confused.

          Your exchange with JThomason may have arrived at as good or better a spot than I was seeking.

          I was trying to work it out from the stand point of how the legal process is supposed to work in FOIA reviews, including onuses and presumptions, because if there’s theoretical legal differences between the approaches, there’s just got to be a practical difference. But ach, maybe not: on reflection, it’s the design of the FOIA itself that may not allow for any such difference be emerge as practical. FOIA doesn’t, for example, provide anything like the scope Judge Sirica had back during Watergate.

          Apart from that, I still find this tough to articulate, and when something’s tough to articulate, often it lies between dubious and spurious.

          But there is something in here, maybe like Mary’s expressions back a few threads on a related subject. So for what it may be worth, here goes.

          I start by taking 2 small bites from your comment at #42:

          [1] You: “I think you’re arguing suggests Cheney, with the knowledge of the Bush WH, already decided to waive privilege on this, which would mean the FOIA claim is particularly bogus.”

          I am suggesting exactly that, both as to the attitude Cheney had toward the process, and as to the potential legal effect O’Donnell would have to have advised him about, because O’Donnell’s role, better practices, prudence and his duties to Cheney would make it plain, and there’s nothing either obvious or apparent that suggests otherwise.

          The distinction may be little more than quibble: that such forethought wouldn’t so much render a subsequent claim to withhold “particularly bogus” – adding bogosity like oil additive – as it would render ANY claim to withhold ANY part of the interview bogusae ab initio.

          [I’d love for that to be an actual Latin maxim. AFAIK it’s not. What I mean is: ‘bogus from the get go’.]

          I envision an approach to the process of scepticism rooted in evidence relevant to the controversy – which potentially might open up the process beyond what might come from ‘merely’ [using that word with respect for all the work you put into this, and not at all prejoratively] examining each claim of privilege against any public record about the same content from this interview.

          Not that a judge can’t do both. If it’s present IMO a judge OUGHT to do both, due to the potential for review on appeal.

          [2] You: “I originally saw it as supporting a weaker claim–basically supporting the larger case that this is already in the public record and therefore not privileged.”

          I can’t tell what you intend by as “a weaker claim”. Is it possible you meant to refer to this line of attack on the privilege claim as being “weaker”?

          I won’t go far down this line, because we may already be in eddies of confusion – my own, at least mostly – but I do venture this:

          Characteristically, you’ve shown a greater sensibility and related gifts than me on what can be drawn reliably from public reports.

          [At least I have company; nobody does it better.]

          Plus, my approach may suffer from that paucity inherent in the drier language of legal theory, in addition to limits of my own making [maybe more the latter].

          So — back to basics:

          What’s at stake here is the investigator’s record of an interview, conducted by a duly authorized commissioned officer of an executive branch agency, of a material witness who:

          [a] also happens to be a public official,

          [b] holds an office the Constitution specifically associates in two respects with the executive branch [election, succession], and in two others with the legislative branch [budget, breaking Senate tie votes],

          [c] would have known his materiality involved using authority, actual or assumed, different from and not at all necessarily incidental to those the Constitution grants his office, and

          [d] variously had some control over parts of the process that involved him directly.

          [I’m not convinced Cheney would argue point [c]. He might ‘dispute’ it, or get his daughter or that repulsive Bush apologist lawyer to dispute and argue it; none of that makes it less true.]

          So the only sense for O’Donnell being there is due to Cheney’s personal liability, criminal and/or civil – NOT the liability of office, which, if that was involved, would allow for Addington, or at least someone in his stead.The only person who could assert executive privilege for the subject matter of what Cheney did from office is the person who held the authority he was using: Bush [now Obama, another issue].

          Meaning what to Judge Sullivan? Well …

          [A] One possible meaning to that ‘someone’ decided [the Decider?] Cheney was not being questioned on anything Bush expected to assert privilege over.

          That’s where any judge should go to first. The law should, generally does, and in many specifics has been found to presume that the most likely thing among several possibilities, is the most lawful and orderly one – and particularly against others that are illegal or smelly or messy or scuzzy
          [Judges tend to use more nuanced words. Reference: freepatriot.]

          That means to me Judge Sullivan would first have to note the assertion of executive privilege at the FOIA stage flies in the face the appearance of the context in which the material in controversy was produced – and by operation of ‘presumption of regularity’ would force the government to come up with additional materials to support the its position – because just reading the materials from the interview, which Judge Sullivan has to the power to do to resolve even garden variety controversies, does not appear capable of cutting the mustard for the government in these circumstances.

          [As you point out this appears to be where we are anyway, to which I respond with an emphatic: … could be…]

          [B] Another possible meaning is Bush may have decided, at the time by actual or implied reservation, or subsequently based on how things turned out, to assert privilege at some point after the proceedings appeared to have closed – certainly after the trial of Libby where Cheney so robustly did not testify.

          We have bases for doubting Bush would have worried himself about it, or that Cheney would have shared his true intentions with Bush going in, even if Cheney was earnestly willing to testify. But even Cheney could not absolutely foretell on the possibility or none of his testifying, in some form, in some forum, and in some respect; such investigations bear too much inherent uncertainty. And surely one of the many lawyers constantly hanging paper around Bush would realize this, and mention it to him; Hadley if not his WH counsel.

          We can point to some of Fred Fielding’s correspondence in support of the latter variation on this approach – but still, Sullivan’s approach could possibly be subtly yet importantly different from that for [A].

          Among other things, you wouldn’t expect the DoJ, particularly one under a new president of the opposing party, to have to work so hard at putting up new materials on the point.

          And without all the additional material, you wouldn’t expect an attitude of bogusea ab initio, like what seems to have happened with Judge Walker in the al Haramain litigation.

          So I think this is less likely.

          No matter which of these approaches, we see avoidable risk taken on by the WH – but the WH approach on this at every stage reeks of avoidable risk, which is why this one can’t be entirely discounted.

          [C] Another possible meaning is the idea of O’Donnell being present and Addington being ‘denied access’ represents a misreading of the process, or the presence of a gambit.

          Whatever the reasoning at the time, it certainly turns out to have been prescient not to let Addington sit in, so I think that part may well have come from Fitz, who by then had more than enough from and about Addington to indicate something like a probability of his being a witness if case went ahead.

          But the implication of no one being allowed in for the WH? That’s got some hoohah in it. How exactly would Fitz enforce against that? He could argue HIMSELF as the administration’s lawyer”.

          My take is this had to have been the subject of discussion and negotiation between Fitz and O’Donnell, with Fitz ending up with at least an unsullied ‘record’, an unsullied Addington, a heads up on Cheney’s testimony if he were to attend any hearing, possibly more; and Cheney ending up with mere appearances and otherwise faith in his own bureaucratic skills to control the situation no matter what might happened, despite objective signs it had already spun out of control.

          So [C] is my choice for what happened.

          It’s not the picture being presented or argued — but the conclusion may be irresistible.

          Taking this to the practical:

          no matter whether the conclusion, [A], [B] or [C], FOIA means Judge Sullivan has to look at the information that is the subject of the controversy, within the context of further materials submitted as supposedly in support of the privilege claims — “facts” in the form of affidavits and supporting documents, sealed and unsealed.

          However, the nature and degree of deference he ought to apply in that look-see process can vary based on good faith or bad faith of the parties involved, and through that may have effects on the outcome.

        • bmaz says:

          I have always felt that privilege of this type was waived in the agreement to debrief with Fitzgerald. Privilege must be affirmatively asserted and protected, lest it is waived. Fitzgerald mad blindingly clear there were no such reservations or protections. 6(e) does not apply either. This stuff is bogus. I actually think we ahd a discussion on this a long time back with the same conclusion. Still holds; you are right.

        • LabDancer says:

          Well I think you’re right, too; but it does tend to cause problems when neither of Fitz’ bosses agrees with either of us.

          Wonder what Dawn Johnson would think …

        • LabDancer says:

          At least something came of it.

          I started out hoping to add a little value to all that fab work you did for the poor downtrodden in the MSM, maybe even a bit for CREW and Judge Sullivan; but it fizzled. This is really your world and the rest of us are just fortunate to watch.

          [tho I did think you’d like that Atin-lay it-bay].

  15. ModerateRep says:

    Cheney was the evil mastermind behind everything, he was the most partisan railroader in Political history. His book should be stocked in the ‘Fiction’ section at book stores…right next to copies of The Wizzard of Oz. Him and air-head Palin are the main reason both sides of our family have abandoned our Republican roots, that party has become a bunch of hateful prejudice war-mongers. Good riddens to Palin, Cheney, and Bush. No wonder latest stats show that only 19% of Americans consider themselves Republicans.

  16. JThomason says:

    So the narrow narrative that emerges here is one of misunderstanding. Cheney as bureaucratic bull takes Bush’s instructions to logical extremes even if not intended. Cheney sees a broad authorization where Bush authorizes the release of classified information for the sake of bolstering intelligence assessments contrary to Wilson’s objections maybe with a final “do what is necessary.”

    I suppose the real question then is whether the narrative being established is just another example of a tacitly understood mutually exculpating rhetorical tension,like that explored with regard to legal counsel yesterday in the “ping” dialogues, or whether, though the transcripts apparently set up this two ships passing in the night narrative, there is a more complete back story that is inferred by McClellan’s admissions that is the unexpected wild card in the roll back to the truth. You all may have been saying this but I just needed to get it out of my head in these terms for the sake of attempting to understand whether any progress toward breaking beyond the fiction that the facile narrative of “scope of authorization” seems to present.

    • emptywheel says:

      I’d state it differently.

      I’d say that Cheney’s narrative sustains the legality of the leak without implicating Bush directly in it (notwithstanding teh three pieces of evidence that say he was directly involved). What Cheney was preparing to do was form a second firewall behind Libby to protect Bush.

      But Cheney was also doing one more thing. He was telling new details that fixed a problem with Libby’s story. I believe that Cheney and Libby have focused on the NIE to give an explanation for Libby’s note reflecting Cheney’s order to leak something to Miller that draws away from Plame entirely. That story didn’t make sense because of all the other NIE leaking Libby had done–and he would have figured out that his story was falling apart by March 24 at the latest. So when Cheney spoke with Fitz on May 8, he fixed taht story by bringing the declassificaiton date back.

      But ultimately, the goal of this NIE story is to serve as cover for the order Cheney gave to leak Plame’s ID.

  17. Neil says:

    It’s great that Scott McClellan linked to your story (this thread) from HuffPo.

    What I don’t understand is why he doesn’t credit you, the author, in any way. To the contrary, it appears as though he is crediting himself for writing it. PIC

    • Leen says:

      http://thinkprogress.org/2008/…..s-idenity/

      Transcript

      McCLELLAN: But the other defining moment was in early April 2006, when I learned that the President had secretly declassified the National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq for the Vice President and Scooter Libby to anonymously disclose to reporters. And we had been out there talking about how seriously the President took the selective leaking of classified information. And here we were, learning that the President had authorized the very same thing we had criticized.

      VIERA: Did you talk to the President and say why are you doing this?

      McCLELLAN: Actually, I did. I talked about the conversation we had. I walked onto Air Force One, it was right after an event we had, it was down in the south, I believe it was North Carolina. And I walk onto Air Force One and a reporter had yelled a question to the President trying to ask him a question about this revelation that had come out during the legal proceedings. The revelation was that it was the President who had authorized, or, enable Scooter Libby to go out there and talk about this information. And I told the President that that’s what the reporter was asking. He was saying that you, yourself, was the one that authorized the leaking of this information. And he said “yeah, I did.” And I was kinda taken aback.

  18. JThomason says:

    More Murray Waas via Scott Horton:

    President Bush told the special prosecutor in the CIA leak case that he directed [Cheney] to personally lead an effort to counter allegations made by former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV that his administration had misrepresented intelligence information to make the case to go to war with Iraq, according to people familiar with the president’s interview.

    Bush also told federal prosecutors … that he had directed Cheney, as part of that broader effort, to disclose highly classified intelligence information that would not only defend his administration but also discredit Wilson, the sources said.

    Uh now that you mention it this is coming across in way where O’Donnell’s recollections and Waas’ sources are painting a picture where the reported testimony of Cheney conflicts with the reported testimony of Bush with regard to the timeline for authorizing the disclosure and declassification of the NIE. Thanks again for spelling it out for me. I can see why you would want to revisit O’Donnell’s recollection and this story is catching fire.

  19. Coyoteville says:

    Response to FormerFed @ 53.

    The word is “cojones” (w/ an O). Cajones means boxes. Minor point, but since Spanish is my first language …

  20. Leen says:

    http://www.thewashingtonnote.c…..001253.php
    Can Cheney be His Own Declassification Machine?
    Executive Order 12958 on “Classified National Security Information” was promulgated by President Clinton on April 17, 1995.

    This Executive Order “prescribes a uniform system for classifying, safeguarding, and declassifying national security information.”

    In this 1995 Executive Order, the VICE PRESIDENT is mentioned only one time — and only in such a way that the automatic, 25-year declassification of historically important documents can be preempted if declassification would “impair the ability of responsible United States Government officials to protect the President, the Vice President, and other individuals.”

    Now, let’s move to the March 25, 2003 Executive Order by President Bush, No. 13292, that amends President Clinton’s Executive Order on National Security Information.

    The Vice President’s “presence” in the Executive Order increased by 1000%. Instead of just one mention in the Executive Order, Cheney’s office is referred to eleven times.

  21. johnhkennedy says:

    So IF it is already de-classified…..

    WHY isn’t Cheney already under an indictment?

    Keep the pressure on AG Holder and Obama


    SIGN THE PETITION

    calling for a special prosecutor

    http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG

    .