http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05222/551137.stmThe latest episode in the saga of columnist Robert Novak, "outed" CIA operative Valerie Plame, jailed journalist Judith Miller and possible leakers in the Bush administration like Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove, makes clear the need to wrap up this now-two-year-old affair with decisive legal action.
Mr. Novak blew his top Thursday under sharp questioning on CNN from Democratic provocateur James Carville and, with an expletive, stalked off the set. CNN responded by suspending Mr. Novak, temporarily or permanently -- which it is, the network has not yet revealed.
Special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald was assigned the case, which originated in July 2003 after columnist Novak put in print the name of CIA officer Plame. The leak of her identity could have been part of a Bush administration enterprise to punish her husband for revealing the lack of accuracy in a statement the president made in his State of the Union speech. Mr. Bush had reported that Iraq had tried to buy nuclear material from Niger; Ms. Plame's husband said it wasn't so. Mr. Fitzgerald managed to drag action on the case past the 2004 elections and now past the two-year point. He has had a journalist, the New York Times' Judith Miller, imprisoned, but taken no action against anyone else.
Since Ms. Miller was locked up because she wouldn't tell a federal grand jury who had contacted her with the information about Ms. Plame and since Robert Novak had cited two administration sources in printing her name, it should be assumed either that Mr. Novak gave up their names or that he had invented his sources. Whatever it is, he hasn't been charged or jailed for protecting his sources from the special prosecutor.
Note - this is Not the Scaife paper.