Valerie Plame was a covert Central Intelligence Agency case officer whose identity was publicly outed by the Bush administration in 2003 in retaliation for her husband Joseph Wilson publicly debunking the administration’s Yellowcake Niger forgery claim. Per John Kiriakou, her career was effectively destroyed the day her cover was blown.[1][2]
The retaliation chain
Kiriakou’s account: after Wilson flew to Niger at CIA request to investigate the administration’s yellowcake claim and concluded — and then published in the New York Times — that no such Iraqi approach to Niger had occurred, “Dick Cheney was so enraged that they would call him on the carpet like this that he had the deputy secretary of state leak Valerie Plame’s name to a syndicated columnist, Novak, who said, ‘Joe Wilson — nobody knows Joe Wilson — Joe Wilson’s wife works for the CIA, and the CIA doesn’t want to fight Iraq so they’re covered up for the Iraqis.’”[2][3]
Career-ending effect
Per Kiriakou: “Now Valerie Plame can never travel again. She can never take an overseas assignment ever again. She’s been outed in the media, and so her career is done. Just like that. They did it on purpose. Nobody was ever prosecuted for it. Scooter Libby was prosecuted for lying about it after the fact, but nobody was ever prosecuted for leaking her name.”[3][4]
See also
- Joseph Wilson
- Yellowcake Niger forgery
- Leon Panetta — Kiriakou’s go-to example of another senior official who leaked covert CIA names without prosecution