...was a CIA agent?"
see Aug. 18 Salon article based on this premise, and WHY the media has refused to entertain this possiblity, which means that he knew about it before the Novak column, and, therefore should be forced to talk about what he knew and when he knew it
Reporters have asked President Bush if he believed the Justice Department could conduct an independent investigation of the Plame leak. They've asked him if he believed any of his staffers would be found guilty of a crime in the affair. They've asked him if he would fire anyone found to be involved. And they have repeatedly asked him about Rove's role.
In response to all of these questions, Bush has deferred giving complete answers until the conclusion of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's criminal investigation.
But the media refuses to ask two questions that President Bush could not delay answering until he "finds out the facts": Mr. President, prior to July 14, 2003 (the day Robert Novak's column appeared), were you aware that Valerie Wilson was a CIA agent? And did you discuss her role with any other member of your administration?
The media is so far sticking with the idea that President Bush was an innocent bystander. Fitzgerald doesn't seem to share its perspective. Bush was interviewed by the special prosecutor for more than an hour. Floyd Abrams, an attorney who represented Time magazine in the case, said, "It's hard to believe the special prosecutor would be burdening the president with an interview unless they had testimony to the effect that the president had information."
cached
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:2dJjwaUK0QQJ:www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2005/08/17/bush_plame/print.html+salon+the+president+always+knows&hl=enregular
http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2005/08/17/bush_plame/index_np.htmlalso good history on super loyalty to both Bush juntas...not new, but puts this fiasco into perspective