I've just been reading a piece aimed at debunking this article, which throws doubt on the author's probity (from a progressive blog which has been good on the Plame saga, not a conservative source, you understand!) at
http://www.needlenose.com/node/view/1723Morris wrote a book attacking the Clintons, for involvement in Whitewater, and in cocaine smuggling via Mena airport - the piece includes quotes from a review of that book (
Partners in Power) which shows how facts were abused:
. . . Several of the lurid charges in The Clinton Chronicles which resurface in Partners in Power were comprehensively refuted in an article by Carrie Rengers in the Republican Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on October 30, 1994. . . . Other claims made by Morris, including his almost phantasmagoric account of Bill Clinton's alleged cocaine use and his participation in a CIA-sponsored drug-smuggling plot, were also made in The Clinton Chronicles, and were previously subjected to withering analysis by none other than David Brock, the author of The Real Anita Hill and "Troopergate," in the Winter 1995 issue of the Forbes Media Critic.
. . . Almost every sentence regarding Whitewater in Partners in Power is similarly irresponsible. "Afterward," Morris writes, "there could be no doubt how much and how currently the Clintons knew the business habits of their intimates, knew the essence of what was happening at Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan." But the Clintons swore under oath to their ignorance of McDougal's machinations and the Pillsbury Report supported them 100 percent. The Clintons, it concluded, were passive investors, and were not informed about the affairs of the Whitewater Development Corporation, and were even deceived about them.
. . . But there's an even more elementary problem with L. D. Brown's story about flying in Barry Seal's C-123 from Mena, Arkansas, to Managua, Nicaragua, and back on October 23, 1984. This trip provides the basis for Roger Morris's thunderous conclusion that Bill Clinton and Dan Lasater were involved in a CIA-sponsored cocaine-smuggling ring. Seal's airplane did in fact make a flight that day, one of the two days it left the ground that year —- as Arkansas State Police files no doubt revealed to the troopers who looked into them. But it turns out Seal had a different passenger: a TV newsman, John Camp, of WBRZ in Baton Rouge, was making a film on Seal's activities as a smuggler-turned-DEA informant. This program was shown in November 1984. Camp, now a correspondent with CNN "Special Reports," had flown up from Baton Rouge with Seal before dawn that morning, spent the entire day with him, and returned with him to Louisiana late that night.
This will probably not discourage either L. D. Brown or Roger Morris from making up more stories; but the publishers, editors, and reporters who have been taking them seriously should be asking themselves why they have been had.
About the Rice allegations, the article says many of the assertions in Morris' article are dubious. Here's four paragraph's worth of dubiety:
-- In late February 2002, "in late February, with the concurrence of CIA Director George Tenet as well as Rice and Powell, Wilson flies to Niger." Neither Wilson nor anyone else has suggested that his trip was approved at such high levels.
-- In March 2002, "Wilson returns from Niger and gives CIA officers, as they request, an oral report which is the basis for a CIA-written memo on his trip then forwarded to Rice and Powell..." Again, Morris seems to be tacking Rice and Powell's name onto previously reported facts without any evidence.
-- In June 2003, the State Dept. memo addressed to Marc Grossman "is also sent to Undersecretary for Arms Control and International Security (and future UN Ambassador-designate) John Bolton." Maybe Bolton did receive it, but no one has reported it besides Morris.
-- In July 2003, when Joseph Wilson goes public, "Ford simply pulls out the previous June 10 memo with its reference to Wilson's wife (her name now corrected from Wilson to Plame), addresses it to Powell, and forwards the memo to Rice to be passed on to Powell..." Both the mention of Plame and Rice as a conduit are contradicted by published reports.
The article concludes that Morris' technique seems to be to take events reported in the media, and add Rice's name onto them with apparently no justification.
That doesn't prove Rice wasn't involved, of course, but it would seem Morris' article doesn't prove that she
was, either. There's more than I can quote and paraphrase here in the blog entry, which is at
http://www.needlenose.com/node/view/1723