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Issue date: 11/6/08
News & Features

Former CIA agent speaks about identity leak to public

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Plame acknowledged that it was common practice for the CIA to check manuscripts written by their former operatives to ensure that nothing that could compromise the agency is published.

She claimed, however, that nothing she had written about her experiences prior to that day actually posed a threat.

The Hopkins audience appeared largely supportive of Plame's situation. During the question and answer session, one student expressed sympathy for "the large gap in [her] resume."

Another audience member, who referred to Novak as "the Prince of Darkness," asked Plame why she had not filed a lawsuit against him.

Plame explained that Novak did not have security clearance and therefore did not have the responsibility to make proper decisions with regard to her identity. That responsibility, she said, lay with "those with security clearance."

She described Novak as "a blade of grass with elephants running over him."

Plame seemed to lose her composure slightly when responding to a few questions, however.

"Were there any direct reprisals against your husband?" an audience member asked her.

"Other than trying to destroy him completely?" she asked in return, going on to describe specific attacks she witnessed on her husband's business and character.

Another question that elicited a sharp response was when an audience member asked, "How did you feel when Nancy Pelosi took impeachment off the table?"

"I'm not even going to speak to that," Plame answered. "I think the whole impeachment process would drag things down."

Overall, the question and answer session remained civil and orderly.

Student reactions to the event were somewhat mixed. Some had been hoping for more of an insider's look at the life of an undercover agent, rather than the account of the highly publicized legal and political repercussions of Plame's exposure.

"It was informative, but it's not like it wasn't anything I hadn't already read about. I was hoping maybe she'd talk about her experiences as a CIA agent," sophomore Justin Shen said.

Still, others responded more favorably.

"I didn't really understand everything that happened before, but now just the extent was eye-opening," freshman Laura Quigley said.

Others commented that hearing the story firsthand was refreshing. Junior Thomas Vitale summed up the reaction of many in one short sentence.

"She definitely did not disappoint," he said.

"I'd say it was a very good turnout," MSE Programming Chair Brian Kim said about their third event of the year.

According to Kim, attendance at MSE events had been between 500 and 800 people. Since Plame's speech was free and open to the public, MSE could not provide exact statistics as to the size of the audience, but Kim estimated that Thursday night's audience leaned towards the higher end of the range.

Plame was the latest in a line of speakers hosted by the MSE's series "A More Perfect Union," a theme chosen to coincide with the 2008 presidential elections.
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OLIVE GROVE BOOKS

posted 11/07/08 @ 1:09 PM EST

Publisher?s Note: Our author had it right in 1987, but couldn?t get published because they said the events he predicted could not possibly happen. Well, they did, and we finally published him when we discovered the manuscript. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Bailey Wu Xiang

posted 11/08/08 @ 6:16 PM EST

"This occurred only a week after her husband, Joseph Wilson, published an editorial that criticized the Bush administration for entering the Iraq War as a result of unreliable intelligence. (Continued…)

NameRequired

posted 11/08/08 @ 6:51 PM EST

Ms. Muth wrote:

Plame segwayed into a critique...

Truly, the barbarians are already inside the gate.

Try:

Plame segued into a critique...

Taffy Ducque

posted 11/09/08 @ 3:21 PM EST

I note with interest that the reporter seems very concerned with the civility of the discourse, and Valerie Plame's control of her emotions.
Although she did have one or two flagrant outbursts, for the most part things went well and ultimately 'She did not disappoint. (Continued…)

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