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Plame's Book Faults Bush, Journalists

Attorney Robert Luskin said Wednesday he would not discuss the book because Plame's comments "shed no light on the public record."

Though the book represents the first time Plame has publicly discussed the scandal in detail, few revelations were left after the monthlong trial, countless news articles and her congressional testimony.


This photo, supplied by CBS News, shows Valerie Plame Wilson, left, the former covert CIA officer whose leaked identity resulted in a national scandal that reached all the way to the White House, speaking to Katie Couric in Sept. 2007. Plame will appear on
This photo, supplied by CBS News, shows Valerie Plame Wilson, left, the former covert CIA officer whose leaked identity resulted in a national scandal that reached all the way to the White House, speaking to Katie Couric in Sept. 2007. Plame will appear on "60 Minutes" in her first interview, Sunday, Oct. 21, 2007. Plame also writes about the scandal, including the trial of former White House aide Lewis Libby, in her memoir, "Fair Game: My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House." which is due out next week. (AP Photo/Graham Messick ,CBS News) (Graham Messick - AP)
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Some of the details Plame had planned to offer, including discussion of her CIA career and her job responsibilities, are redacted from the book. Sometimes that means whole pages of blacked-out text. The CIA objected to the material's release and Plame lost a court fight to include it.

As a solution, journalist Laura Rozen recounts Plame's early years in the agency as part of the book's lengthy afterword. Rozen, who writes for the conservative American Spectator and the liberal Mother Jones, is not covered by the CIA's publication rules.

Critics have argued for years that if Plame was concerned about her CIA cover, she should not have let Wilson discuss his mission to Niger publicly nor write about it in the New York Times. She touches on this only briefly in the book, saying neither of them ever considered the possibility it would jeopardize her cover.

Plame also revisits the debate over whether she suggested her husband for the Niger trip. Government officials have testified she did. In her book, she says a CIA colleague suggested it and a supervisor asked Wilson to come in to discuss it.

She harshly criticizes a Senate intelligence panel that investigated the leak. Testifying before a committee of young staffers, she said, "felt like a setup." She criticized the "Republican senators' complete disregard for the truth" and said they twisted the testimony.

Plame said the CIA refused to let her colleague clarify that it was he who first suggested Wilson for the trip.

She has kind words for Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, who led the leak investigation and forced several journalists to testify about their sources. She said she didn't understand why "well-meaning but self-righteous talking heads" decried that effort.

"It was the Pentagon Papers or Watergate turned on its head," she writes, adding, "These reporters were allowing themselves to be exploited by the administration and were obstructing the investigation."

After reading a Washington Post editorial criticizing her husband, Plame writes that she "suddenly understood what it must have felt like to live in the Soviet Union and have only the state propaganda entity, Pravda, as the source of news about the world."

The book's title is drawn from a comment Rove is said to have made about Wilson's wife being "fair game." "The next time we were in line for Communion," she writes, "I would pass him the wafer plate and whisper softly, 'My name's Fair Game, what's yours?"

(This version SUBS 16th graf, As a solution ..., to correct that American Spectator is a conservative publication, Mother Jones a liberal one)


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