We know our Novak but who is the Scooter Libby here?
Do we remember somewhere deep in our minds that famous Plamegate
scandal of Whitehouse?
A story of dirty selfish politics at its worst and where the
identity of an undercover CIA agent Valerie Plame, ex Ambassador Wilson’s
spouse, to undermine latter’s position against the WMD case, was disclosed!
Why? It was merely because Wilson, an ex-ambassador to Niger,
was sent to Niger by the CIA on the reference of his wife Valerie to examine if
there was any connection between Saddam & Niger on the nuclear issue.
Wilson couldn’t find any but was shocked when the Bush
Administration made a case of attacking Iraq on the basis of WMD; his
remonstration appeared in the form of an op-ed in July 2003 in the New York
Times and that was the moment the Oval Office decided to castigate the
‘culprit’.
Richard Armitage and David Corn used the White House Chief of
Staff; poor Scooter Libby was picked to release information about Valerie Plame
Wilson to columnist Robert Novak in order to undermine Wilson’s arguments; this
was politics at its worst. His column appeared a week later.
Other officials from the State Department were of the view that
the leakage of the information was political payback for Wilson’s article.
Judith Miller, yet another NYT incumbent who became enmeshed in controversy
after her coverage of Iraq’s (WMD) program both before and after the
2003 invasion was somehow later implicated in the Plamegate, in which the
status of Valerie Plame as a member of the (CIA) became widely known. When
asked to name her sources, Miller cited reporter’s privilege!
She bluntly refused to reveal her sources in the leak and
preferred to spend 85 days in jail protecting her source – Scooter Libby –
never forget for a moment that we are also in search for ours. Miller later was
forced to resign from her job at the New York Times in November 2005.
Scooter Libby the source was convicted of obstruction of justice and false
swearing to federal investigators in the Plame investigation thus sentenced to
30 months in federal prison and fined $250,000, nevertheless, was pardoned by
President George W. Bush.
A decade
later, the scene changes, locations and the governments are dissimilar and so
are the characters, however, the state of affairs are surprisingly matching.
One fine morning a story appeared in a venerated daily which was founded by
none other than father of the nation Quaid e Azam about seventy-five years back
at Delhi, years before the partition.
The columnist has a
solid standing among the journalistic circles and the readers. My friend Cyril
Almeida is well-known for contributing priceless write-ups. However, a week
back he contributed an article that suddenly created hullabaloo in the
political, military circles and the public. His write up “Act against militants
or face international isolation, civilians tell military” was less of an op-ed
and more of a news piece; Cyril, never the type to write an ordinary piece. It
appeared as if out of sheer elation to share this breaking news he forgot to
care for the style.
The question is not that what was said, rather the issue is how
come it reached Cyril and if at all it reached to our Robert Novak then who was
the Scooter Libby in this case? Was the information placed on the editor’s desk
through Islamabad resident editor after routine editorial checks or was it an
unusual ‘direct throw’? Cyril isn’t at fault. It is his profession to get the
sizzling stories by any means. The puzzle is the source’s anonymity that
certainly is not General Rizwan Akhtar as the damage is done to the army’s
repute and self inflicting injuries are never popular with Khakis. So, should
we say someone from governmental circles? That can’t be ruled out as majority
of the political parties have shown unanimity over army bashing in the recent
past.
Although, Cyril has a history of scripting controversial
thrilling pieces and making off the record conversations public, however, I
shall never blame him for so, as I said earlier that this is his vocation where
some are responsible enough while others care damn about the ethics. As a
matter of fact the onus lies upon those who expect that what they share will
remain off the record. Of course, some, on purpose share sensitive information
and deliberately ‘warn’ the stooges to ensure that what they shared is shared further.
I remember that Cyril once earlier made the GHQ authorities
uncomfortable by extensively quoting from a background briefing given by the
then COAS General Kayani and as usual summing up his story with a footnote
that, “All comments were made strictly on the condition of anonymity being
maintained.” However, Mr. Almeida, both as a journalist and as a citizen
of the country, failed to reciprocate the responsibility and trust by leaking
that information which was related to war and diplomacy and by no way as urgent
as exposing corruption and underhand deals, thus shattered the confidence of
his hosts.
Our friend’s write-ups never confirm his inclination towards
left but that doesn’t mean that his soft corner for the right is across the
board for odds and ends. Many of his articles written in the past spelled his
fondness for the current ruling party while for the PPP he would always be
critical.
In his article of 18 February 2011, ‘The Myopia Continues’,
Cyril Almeida, conveys the following message – only he knows who asked him to
do so – to President Zardari, “When the interior minister, the ex-foreign
minister and the all-powerful spy chief met to decide the fate of Raymond
Davis, two of those gents were of the opinion that Davis doesn’t enjoy ‘full
immunity’.
“One of those two has now been fired by Zardari. The other,
well, if Zardari tried to fire him, the president might find himself out of a
job first”. In yet another piece in Dawn on 16 Sep 2011, ‘Inside
Zardari’s mind, the update’, Cyril writes, “Only two things can stop
him: Sharif, if he wised up and somehow stops the election from being stolen;
the army, if it decides the costs of non-intervention are higher than the
benefits of the status quo.”
My only question to the concerned quarters is that such
controversies always offer fodder to otherwise defeated Indian media onslaught
against Pakistan, hence in that light, did our Scooter Libby think at least
once before feeding this reckless story to our ambitious Robert Novak about the
disastrous fallout? Or he is so confident that our Richard Armitage and David
Corn are going to save his skin and will keep him as the unnamed source?
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