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Plame Wilson writes: "If you offer the public a true story that is at odds with what the government wants you to know, they will stop at nothing to destroy you, your reputation, and the reputations of the people around you."

Valerie Plame Wilson. (photo: BBC)
Valerie Plame Wilson. (photo: BBC)


US Government Is Bullying an American Hero

By Valerie Plame Wilson, Reader Supported News

15 September 12

 

very day thousands of Americans working for the U.S. government spend all their waking hours keeping their fellow citizens safe. The vast majority of them work quietly - and anonymously - as they track our enemies, aid our allies, and seek out any and all threats to our country. And most of the men and women don't give a damn about the absurd posturing and contrived drama generated by America's political process. As I learned first-hand in 2003, there are times when the politicians bring the posturing and drama to you.

I served my country, loyally and well, as a covert CIA operations officer focused on stopping nuclear weapon proliferation until the Bush administration decided to betray my secret identity as payback for my husband questioning the White House's justification for the Iraq War. The lesson was simple: If you offer the public a true story that is at odds with what the government wants you to know, they will stop at nothing to destroy you, your reputation, and the reputations of the people around you.

In the past few weeks, we have heard riveting stories of heroism and valor from one of the U.S. soldiers who participated in the combat mission that killed Osama bin Laden. His book, written under a pseudonym (his true identity was subsequently made public by Fox News), is by most accounts devoid of any classified information. In fact, most of what is in the book had been already leaked by top officials of the U.S. government themselves. I am dismayed to read the steady stream of criticism flowing from the U.S. government aimed at the book and its author. The Defense Department and administration officials have called the author's decision to publish the book the "height of irresponsibility." Former CIA Director and current Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has even gone so far as to say, "I think we have to take steps to make clear to him and to the American people that we're not going to accept this kind of behavior."

At the same time that they threaten the author and try to "make clear" they're not going to accept an honest account of what happened in Abbottabad, Americans have also recently learned that the CIA and other U.S. government agencies have been cooperating with Hollywood figures on a movie about the same topic. In fact, according to CIA emails released recently, one writer was given a "deep dive" inside the Agency as they wrote a screenplay on the bin Laden raid. Are U.S. government officials angry that the author wrote a book, or that his book came out before their movie? This, of course, comes after the U.S. government officials have participated in and been sources for newspaper articles, magazine features and even movies - like Act of Valor.

It is time for the public to make clear to our government that we will no longer accept their unsubstantiated or spoon-fed version as the only one of significant historical events. I don't believe that cooperating with an author or a screenwriter or even a movie producer on an authentic account of what happened in war is necessarily a bad thing, as long as no classified information is jeopardized. In fact, it has happened throughout American history and inspired many Americans to serve our country in their careers - myself included. However, next time you hear an American government official attacking the author of No Easy Day - stop and ask yourself why they are trying to bully an American hero. I just wish the officials making these threats would do the same. Our government has survived as long as it has because there are those prepared to hold it to account for its words and deeds. It's the essence of our democracy.

 

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+131 # mjc 2012-09-15 08:52
Have not read the book but have indeed heard the various point-blank criticisms of the author and I assumed...as I probably should not have...that the author was merely trying to wrap himself in the "glory" of the raid, being self-serving account of HIS participation. I will go back and listen to the 60 Minutes program on which he appeared. Thanks for your account as it pertains to the US Defense Dept, etc.
 
 
+21 # zonaman 2012-09-15 11:54
Plame and her husband were true "whistle-blower s" in the best possible sense. This military man seems to be in it all for the money and nothing else.
I have little respect for sheer greed accompanied by disrespect for one's commanding officers and his countrys laws.
 
 
+54 # in deo veritas 2012-09-15 13:45
turn about's fair play. The government by its actions has no respect for the people it pretends to protect and laws it is unwilling to enforce should those laws bring down those who are paying them under the table. The hatred, greed, and other despicable behavior so much in play today will bring the destruction of this country as sure as there is God to judge us. Time is running out.
 
 
+5 # bluesapphire48 2012-09-18 18:10
Yes, Valerie Plame and Ambassador Joe Wilson are true American heroes also. His book, THE POLITICS OF TRUTH, is a great read.
 
 
+67 # DaveM 2012-09-15 09:03
Does anyone recall the concept of "public servants"? The American government is supposed to work for US--we hire them and pay their salaries. How long would an employee remain employed who constantly attacked his employer, at times using unlawful means?
 
 
+32 # Merschrod 2012-09-15 11:20
Where is the constant attack on the employer in the this?
 
 
+45 # in deo veritas 2012-09-15 13:52
War on the middle class, women, minorities, the elderly, unions, minority religious groups, etc. etc. ad nauseum........ .
 
 
+7 # RLF 2012-09-17 04:24
Problem is...if you've been asleep...that the US government doesn't work for the people...otherw ise half the banking community would be in jail. This is typical of the Obama administration who don't prosecute business theives and torturers but only whistle blowers and strikers.
 
 
+6 # HowardMH 2012-09-17 11:25
RLF, totally agree and there is a whole lot of stupid out there that doesn't understand that.

Until there are two hundred thousand really, really pissed off people on Capital Hill (all at the same time) raising some serious hell against the Lunatics, absolutely nothing is ever, ever going to happen to these totally bought and paid for by the richest 50 people in the world that are becoming more and more powerful with each passing rigged election thanks to the stupid people.
 
 
+71 # whecologist 2012-09-15 09:12
Right to the point, Valerie. It is a shame how under the guise of authority any government promotes lies and distortions, half truths and twisted information and conclusions. This goes back to the old saying about worldly power corrupting. I have encountered this and exposed this in our nation's wild horse and burro program run by the
BLM under Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar and the US Forest Service run by Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack. The Wild Free roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, though still a legal act, has been grossly subverted by mean spirited and greedy interested including those assigned as our public servants. If interested in this noble act and the beautiful horses and burros and their rightful freedom as returned natives, read my book The Wild Horse Conspiracy. It is available either through me or on amazon.com. We must really put for a valiant effort if we are to save all that is most valuable and most practical for the survival of life on Earth including our how two-legged kind!
 
 
+46 # Trueblue Democrat 2012-09-15 09:14
Bush 41 and Bush 43 both went after whistle-blowers with all the power of the government and fellow-travelin g news media, while coddling traitors such as Bob Novak.

What we didn't expect, but got, in President Obama is a man even more hostile to whistle-blowers and much more dedicated to punishing them in every way he can. The assault he has orchestrated against Julian Assange goes beyond vendetta -- it is open warfare with no holds barred.

Reason number 1,3-- Weil, I've lost count, but my reasons for not voting again for Obama are well above 1,300.
 
 
-2 # RobertMStahl 2012-09-15 11:25
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_Manning
 
 
+73 # zonaman 2012-09-15 11:41
So you're voting instead for Mitt the Twit & Twiggy? Real smart move !!!
 
 
+20 # Glen 2012-09-15 12:04
You surely understand, zonaman, that there is more to choose from than the two party system. If more citizens expected and voted outside that duality, the message might get through.

OK. Maybe not. Our present government doesn't really care what citizens are concerned with.
 
 
+25 # Trueblue Democrat 2012-09-15 12:24
Who said anything about voting for Romney?

By the way, voting for the lesser of two evils is still voting for evil
 
 
+10 # Duster 2012-09-15 23:17
Quoting Trueblue Democrat:
Who said anything about voting for Romney?

By the way, voting for the lesser of two evils is still voting for evil


It remains a trusim that the difference between a lesser and a greater evil is the distinction between bad and worse. The real problem is to discern what is worse. Frankly, both the Dems and Reps appear to be headed down the same trail neck and neck.
 
 
+8 # dquandle 2012-09-15 13:13
Nope voting against all of these criminals
 
 
+23 # in deo veritas 2012-09-15 13:53
Who's twiggy? Looks more like Eddie Munster to me.
 
 
+47 # Atia 2012-09-15 12:33
And you seriously believe that Romney would do better?
That man, as Huntsman said, is the best-oiled weathervane!
By not voting for Obama, you will be casting a vote for Romney.
 
 
+17 # Phlippinout 2012-09-15 16:14
That is not what he is saying. Her is not saying Romney is better, he is saying he is open eyed to the Obama scam. Big difference
 
 
-25 # dquandle 2012-09-15 13:13
Amen. Obama has proven himself to be a war criminal and tyrant par excellence, following in and surpassing deep and foetid footsteps of Bush and Clinton.
 
 
+27 # in deo veritas 2012-09-15 13:56
Had I a choice I would vote for neither. It seems that every time we have chosen the lesser of two evils we have made a mistake. 2000 and 2004 don't count as we were blindsided by the Supremely Corrupt Court.
 
 
+7 # zonaman 2012-09-16 06:26
in deo veritas..... But you do have a choice, and not voting at all is only a vote for IMHO, a return to Salem and it's witch trial mentality.
 
 
-14 # wantrealdemocracy 2012-09-15 16:54
I'm glad Trueblue Democrat got over the disease of being a loyal Democrat no matter what. The Democrats are no longer the party of the working people. And this story about 'getting Osama' is all lies. THe man died of kidney failure ten years ago. Then we are supposed to believe the conflicting stories of what happened that day in Pakistan. They killed some man and dumped his body in the sea and checked the DNA of the man...how? in fifteen minutes in a remote town in Afghanistan? Who is dumb enough to believe this story? And our President thinks we should be proud of a murder and all chant U.S.A! U.S.A! this is the chant of total idiots.
 
 
+6 # futhark 2012-09-16 08:53
I wish I could find the link to the Internet streaming rant "I Killed Sasquatch". It puts the whole Osama bin Laden assassination into its proper asinine perspective.
 
 
+154 # juliajayne 2012-09-15 09:15
If anyone has the credibility to speak on this issue it's Ms. Plame.I'm grateful to her for bringing her own perspective. Thank you, good lady.
 
 
+98 # tomo 2012-09-15 09:18
Yes, I think our government has gotten into the mindset that they own the news. It's "a breach of security" for others to tell us what's going on; but it is, I suppose, "government educating the citizenry" for government to tell us what they want us to know--or want us to think. We've move a long way from the First Amendment, and a long way toward the Orwellian world of Big Brother.
 
 
+151 # geohunt1 2012-09-15 09:33
I consider Valerie Plame Wilson an American hero. I would believe her before I would believe any elected Washington official.
 
 
+140 # Working Class 2012-09-15 10:30
Don't forget her husband, Joe Wilson. The two of them are true Americans. They had to know what they were facing when Joe exposed the Bush Whitehouse lies about yellow cake/Iraq. They did it anyway because they believe in what our country should be. Valerie and Joe are heros.
 
 
+61 # yaramaz 2012-09-15 09:41
Very appreciative of your commentary. This should be a democracy we are living within. Alas, it would seem there is erosion along these lines.
 
 
+116 # TrueAmericanPatriot 2012-09-15 09:52
Thank you Valerie Plame-Wilson, for your service to our nation and your efforts to keep us safe. You are a prime example of what a TRUE PUBLIC SERVANT is. It's such a shame that you were outed by a bunch of criminal hacks, who I hope will be marched into prison (AbuGharib I hope). Karl Rove & Darth Cheney should be the first ones put in!
 
 
-65 # handmjones 2012-09-15 09:57
Those of us who are convinced that OBL was long dead aren't much impressed by this author's account.
 
 
+15 # Merschrod 2012-09-15 11:23
? Please explain the connection?
 
 
-13 # Glen 2012-09-15 12:11
I think handmjones means there would be no issue with this at all if it were known that bin Laden was dead long ago, as has been noted by numerous journalists, et al. And that itself was revealed a number of years ago. Bin Laden was plagued with serious kidney disease, requiring daily nursing and dialysis. He was very ill.

None of us will EVER know who was killed in that compound. Or should I say murdered.
 
 
+7 # Antemedius 2012-09-15 14:54
I distinctly remember the DNA analysis of the body being plastered all over the front page of every newspaper and available for download publicly all over the web and the video of the burial at sea with the closeups of Osama's face wrapped in the flag on every TV news program for days on end, so the official story had to have been true.

Obama wouldn't lie.

Wait...
 
 
-9 # Texas Aggie 2012-09-15 13:31
I don't think that nutcases' opinions are worth a whole lot.
 
 
+3 # phrixus 2012-09-15 16:05
And your evidence is what, exactly?
 
 
+33 # julillywk 2012-09-15 09:59
This is not a hero, this is a guy with a grudge who has a political ax to grind and timed his book for just before the Republican convention so that it could get maximum negative attention against the Obama campaign. He protested too much that it was n't political book, but that is hard to swallow with the timing and the statement that no one wanted to help Obama win another term...and that everything was fine iin SEALville until Obama was elected and suddenly things were "harder". How about that Obama suddenly started to concentrate on a very difficult target, rather than slipping by and saying bin Laden's capture wasn't important. I can see Ms Plame identifying with this man, but he's no hero. What she did was a whistleblowerr act that was desperately needed to counteract the Bush story invented to justify the Iraq invasion. What he has done is nothing at all -- except to try to somehow denigrate Obama.
 
 
+27 # cordleycoit 2012-09-15 10:04
I have know some of the men and women who have served in the OSS and in later agencies. Devcent guys for the most part. From what I could see it was mainly dull fact gathering, weather reporting, things far removed from glamor. They never got parking tickets and were careful drivers. Severalposed as journalists which made being a photo journalist a bitmore hairy because you would get asked to do things that were not wise by FBI types in Mexico and points East. Occasionally one would get seriously blown and the Americans seemed to fail at protecting their own. Also as a private citizen I knew lawyers where ever I was working the Americans Embassies had little time for Americans with problems.Now a days it seems steroid blown out monsters are in fashion for the action guys.
 
 
+66 # Adoregon 2012-09-15 10:14
You are witnessing the confluence of entertainment and propaganda.

The government and select corporate "news" organizations decide what reality is to be and then "mediate" the information to fit the goals. You know, like the bogus run-up to the war in Iraq.

How many times will the U.S. citizenry be willing fools and so called journalists willing tools?
 
 
+4 # nealjking 2012-09-15 10:20
I'm sorry but I'm not buying this. The author had the legal and moral obligation to allow the administration to preview and approve release. It is NOT the prerogative of a private non-authorized citizen to make the decision as to what is classified or not.
 
 
+9 # Merschrod 2012-09-15 11:28
He just did not have a good agent or publisher. That is his problem now. Yes, you just have to clear this stuff and put up with the stonewalling, but some authors have done it well.
 
 
+7 # dquandle 2012-09-15 13:16
It is not the prerogative of a corrupt and thoroughly criminal executive, which has time and time again attempted to obliterate the constitution which it swore to uphold.
 
 
+25 # in deo veritas 2012-09-15 14:04
To the pentagram types everything is classified just to cover their butts. There is no justification for the amount of stuff dating back to WWII still being classified.Just like with the JFK assassination the issue is to protect the criminals from justice. It must be working or Bush and his gang would be behind bars somewhere-hopef ully not at the taxpayers expense.
 
 
-43 # Aggie61 2012-09-15 10:21
I wonder about Miss Flames motives and how she knows which details were considered classified and why. As a rule, these sort of stories are kept controlled and require releases. I can understand it if she is bitter and angry at the Bush admin., but this total anti-government stance is off target. Her timing is highly suspect, contributing only to a biased bad-mouthing of Pres. Obama shortly before the election. I had been sympathetic and supportive of her plight under Bush's abuse of her and her husband. Not so much today.
 
 
+13 # tigerlille 2012-09-16 03:00
Let me get this straight aggie61. You sympathized with Valerie Plane when the Bush administration outted her as a CIA agent (endangering many lives, but that's just collateral damage, right?), but now that a Democrat is in office, her whistle-blowing is offensive because your guy is up for office? Who decreed that Obama can't be criticized because he is up for election? In many ways, there is no significant difference between Bush and Obama. Give up the partisan politics, things don't work that way.
 
 
+27 # Bill Clements 2012-09-15 10:27
What I'm troubled by: there is no mention of Owen's breach of the non-disclosure agreement that he purportedly had to sign? I would love for Ms. Plame to comment on that part of the story. Obviously, that breach does not interfere with her calling Owen an American Hero. I think it would for me.

And the other issue that isn't really addressed: the timing of this book and it's political ramifications for the election. I have not read the book, but I have heard that Owen and some of his Navy Seal buddies are not big fans of Obama's. That, in and of itself, is not a problem for me, but the timiong of the book's publication and the right's use of this book to Swiftboat Obama is a problem.

So, I find Ms. Plame's full-throated support of Owen problematic.
 
 
+32 # kalpal 2012-09-15 10:30
No one goes through the pain of attaining power without having an ego that assures them they are the lords of creation and teh most competent humans alive. (Look at David Addington, an American traitor working for Dick Cheney who along with Bush reneged on their oaths of office.)
 
 
+38 # JanisL 2012-09-15 10:32
If the Justice Dept. is not going after this author in like manner with like charges then they are most certainly in the interest of fairness required to drop all charges against Bradley Manning, cease their covert attempt to go after Julian Assange and immediately pardon by executive fiat John Walker Lindh. The trumped up "classification " of unclassified material that they found inconvenient for the American public to know is just that--phony! And burying John Walker Lindh, who merely happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time and who witnessed an illegal massacre by U. S. agents of a large number of Iraqi prisoners, is a serious miscarriage of justice! They are guilty of cruel and unusual punishment of this young man to silence him from telling this horrendous story! Mr. President, commute his sentence at once!
 
 
+26 # James Marcus 2012-09-15 10:32
Perhaps it is time to stop being surprised by the Facts of, and actions by, our 'Government' . To stop expecting sane, reasonable, 'Democratic', or Constitutionall y consistent activity.
Wake Up. 'The Big Money' now 'owns' it all , controls most of our governmental 'representative s', in ALL branches, and The Major Media; Both Political Parties, and is subverting the entire process with Greed, Gusto and Far Worse.
It is reasonable to understand why so many 'Government Policies' seem so brutal, and Un-American.
It is deliberate.
 
 
+55 # Sensible1 2012-09-15 10:42
The Bush administration as taught us all to not trust our government. I started mistrusting the government with Nixon. But can we honestly say just who we should not trust? I'm for wikileaks and all whistleblowers, somewhere we may learn the truth.
 
 
+12 # zonaman 2012-09-15 12:08
I started with President Dwight Eisenhower when he lied to the whole world on television about "the U-2 spy plane" affair. I was still just a kid, but it was a shock that has never left me.
 
 
0 # bluesapphire48 2012-09-18 18:18
We need to take the Declaration of Independence seriously... "That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it..."
 
 
+15 # Antemedius 2012-09-15 10:44
"If you offer the public a true story that is at odds with what the government wants you to know, they will stop at nothing to destroy yo..."

4 words.

Barack. Obama. Bradley. Manning.
 
 
+29 # Innocent Victim 2012-09-15 10:50
Ms Plame-Wilson: You and Mr Wilson are heroic in his exposure of the Bush administration' s lies about yellow-cake and your exposure of the criminality of Vice-President Cheney's flunkies. Regrettably, we are no longer representable, in my view, as a "democracy", even the highly flawed one that once we were. Our government has no legitimacy on the basis of consent of the governed, for both practical and theoretical reasons. The practical ones have to do with campaign funding, winner-take-all elections, corporate media control and others. The theoretical one comes from the abrogation of the protections of the Bill of Rights, protections without which there would have been no ratification of the Constitution in 1789. These protections have been so trampled by the Obama/Bush presidencies that the ratification is, in my opinion, void. We have a government that is a despotism. It has no legitimacy.
 
 
+13 # dquandle 2012-09-15 13:17
How absolutely and horrendously true.
 
 
+36 # jayray 2012-09-15 10:51
I appreciate what Valerie is saying, but as a former intelligence professional myself I know I signed an agreement to submit anything I wrote about my experience to the government to be sure I had not included any classified information. I did submit one book, and it was cleared relatively quickly. I don't think this procedure is too difficult or onerous to make sure people do not inadvertently include classified information that could cause problems the author might not even consider.
 
 
+9 # Antemedius 2012-09-15 11:40
Good boy... (pats on head)

1) Submission to authority. "These people accept almost without question the statements and actions of established authorities, and comply with such instructions without further ado" writes Dean. "[They] are intolerant of criticism of their authorities, because they believe the authority is unassailably correct. Rather than feeling vulnerable in the presence of powerful authorities, they feel safer. For example, they are not troubled by government surveillance of citizens because they think only wrongdoers need to be concerned by such intrusions. Still, their submission to authority is not blind or automatic; [they] believe there are proper and improper authorities...a nd their decision to submit is shaped by whether a particular authority is compatible with their views."

Cracks In The Wall, Part I: Defining the Authoritarian Personality
http://dneiwert.blogspot.com/2006/08/cracks-in-wall-part-i-defining.html
 
 
+35 # ConcernedConserv 2012-09-15 10:51
I do think Americans are/have been fed an altered version of reality when the truth inconveniently exposes an error in judgement or other misstep by a government (official) which could result in criticism. And I do believe that those who call attention to a misdeed or unjust policy perpetrated by someone in power are/have been unjustly punished. My father was a federal government employee during the 1950's. At one point in his career, he had the authority to hire personnel. He made the choice against the wishes of his superior to hire a non-white male, something that to my knowledge was rarely, if ever, done during the 50's. As a result, my father was held back from advancement for more than a decade afterward, denied opportunities to contribute to his full potential and be properly compensated for his efforts. Not only did he bear the cost of his "punishment", but so did his family - and his country.
 
 
+33 # maddave 2012-09-15 10:52
Evidenced by Myers & Marchenko, Seals are not great writers. That's not neither. . , NOR SHOULD IT BE! Read on:
My point is that this book appeared far more quickly AFTER the attack and far too conveniently BEFORE the November elections NOT to draw attention and questions. NO rank amateur writer can sit down at a computer, compose a full blown book and have it on the bookstands in the period of time that he has . . . and certainly NOT by himself.

To further complicate the issue, from the first day that he entered BUDS, he KNEW that everything that he would do, see or hear would be "classified"; NOT for publication; and CERTAINLY not for publication without prior written permission by the DOD! The punishments for unauthorized publication are severe and include loss of his retirement benefits, imprisonment , disgrace and exclusion from the SEAL Brotherhood. Right or wring, those were the rules and he agreed to them. His writing the book was professional suicide.

So what was offered that could remotely compensate him for all that his publishing that book would cost him? My conclusion is that the same moneyed folks who "Swift Boated" John Kerry in 2004 - or folks of their ilk - are at the bottom of this. Our hapless SEAL is merely a missile aimed at unhorsing Obama & his reelection.

Perhaps he and Bradley Manning can share a cell & swap notes.
 
 
+8 # Glen 2012-09-15 12:29
You just highlighted the reason why past government and military employees have covered their asses by presenting a novel, rather than a "factual" rendering of their knowledge. That does not translate into my believing this book is factual, just a blatant, and suspect rendering of an action that remains suspect. The man could be punished no matter the facts involved.
 
 
+7 # Majikman 2012-09-16 08:10
Excellent points, maddave. This dude was NOT alone. Although I haven't read the book and cannot comment on its contents, I wondered why he did not take his story, anonymously, to a credible writer such as a Seymour Hersh.
 
 
+40 # Art947 2012-09-15 10:56
When I opened this essay from Ms. Plame I thought that she was going to talk about Bradley Manning, however, no mention was made of this individual who seems to have been "buried" by the press. If we want to know the truth about the governments that have 'served" our nation, then we need to stop permitting everything to be labeled a "State Secret." Too much has been permitted to be swept under the rug under this term.

I don't know if the author of this book about the raid on Osama bin Laden is telling the truth or an embellished version to enhance his fame. I would hope that we get additional reports to confirm or deny the "facts" rather than just statements condemning the author. There are serious questions, however, if the motivation for producing this book are political.
 
 
+44 # walt 2012-09-15 11:17
It's always amusing when Americans start screaming about the terrible bullying that goes on among young people in schools. Yet, when one looks objectively at the whole of our country, bullying is modeled quite well by those in charge, as clearly seen in this article.

But look at other events like invading Iraq (which was based on lies), occupying Afghanistan for 11 years, the horrible scenes we saw of police brutalizing peaceful protesters in Occupy locations including deliberate pepper-spraying college students, launching remote-controll ed drone attacks, and much more.

America needs to wake up to reality and see that we as a nation love bullying and it seems
like we are in no rush to stop it as we now hear all the posturing about an attack on Iran.
 
 
+22 # zonaman 2012-09-15 12:21
wait.... Bullying is "modeled" extremely well in this particular Presidential contest.... Romney's "gang-rape-like " bully act in his senior year of high school is surely a model for all of todays Tea-brain children... let alone his incredulous statement that he remembers none of it. What kind of utter Creep does one have to be to "forget" doing that to another human being?
 
 
+17 # Glen 2012-09-15 12:30
Nice, walt. Thank you for yanking everyone back to the reality of what the U.S. is.

The ole father-knows-be st attitude of the U.S. is wearing very thin and generating a lot of hatred.
 
 
+14 # Scott479 2012-09-15 11:31
Under the mud's more mud when it comes to governmental disinformation. They say to the public: "Kids, keep the channel tuned to Honey Boo Boo and we'll deliver a custom reality for your pleasure."
 
 
+8 # RobertMStahl 2012-09-15 11:36
Indira Singh, perhaps our biggest hero (heroin?), did not come out in the open for something as banal as an annunciation and she may not be as lucky as Julian Assange now or, even, Bradley Manning. She may be dead or tortured silently and endlessly for the logicians in our day that transcribe or invert deeds into murder and crime. Where is Indira Singh? What does she have in common with the lives of these unselfish souls? Cabals, or asymmetric crime understanding, I think.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_Manning
 
 
+5 # kathleenmorris 2012-09-15 11:58
I saw the interview on 60 minutes with Scott Paley. "Mark"
was authentic in his reporting / telling us about what happened and he is not in it for the money. And he is living at risk of his life and reputation. I support his speaking out. As I understand it, he has not released anything that was classified and is telling the story from the Navy Seals point of view. His / their interpretation of the facts and giving them to us, honoring the president and all involved. He is a hero for doing this in my world. Thank you "Mark"...
 
 
+16 # the wizard 2012-09-15 12:09
If the government didn't want this book released it would have never see the light of day. Remember, we don't get news anymore. It's all propaganda that would make the old Soviet machine look amateurish by comparison.
There's a reason this book was published, and no one will talk about it.
 
 
+17 # James Smith 2012-09-15 12:29
The USA is not a free country and the government is not answerable to the people. The government seems to regard the American citizen as its greatest enemy.

It's time to get out while you still can.
 
 
+9 # karlarove 2012-09-15 13:02
I appreciate Valerie Plame's comments. She truly knows how our government does what it likes if they don't agree with someone's opinion. I have not read the book, has anyone posting here read it?
 
 
+15 # anyfreeman 2012-09-15 13:16
Two reading recommendations . Read Seth Rosenfeld's "SUBVERSIVES" about the FBI's abuses and favoritism to boost Ronald Reagan for 40 years. Then for a deeper, and more historical perspective, "Taking the Risk Out of Democracy: Corporate Propaganda versus Freedom and Liberty" by Alex Carey.
Valerie Plame Wilson deserves our attention, if for no other reason, that she did not ask for it. The official sliming is becoming one constant, Rep or Dem admin. The powerful require much more vigilance than the powerless.
 
 
+11 # brider 2012-09-15 13:17
Valerie Plame-Wilson is an American hero and those who outed her should be in prison for violations of the
Clasified information release act. The author of the Seals
signed an agreement with the U S Government not to
release ANY information concerning his employment
to anyone even to the point of not telling his wife where he was. I know I signed the same Agreement during the Viet Nam years. I was stationed the majority of the time in Washington but my wife did not even know which base was my duty station. His sititation is different than Plame's. She was outed he outed himself. He should be tried and sent to prision for this violation. I don't care who ya are the President is the commander in Chief and you follow all the laws whether ya like them or not. The idea that this raid was for Obama is absurd and totally way off any understanding of any military code.
 
 
+1 # Eldon J. Bloedorn 2012-09-15 13:24
Is the book now available? Anyone know? Name of the Book?

Thank you.
 
 
+2 # one4all 2012-09-15 13:29
I have great respect for Valerie and her husband, but it seems she has missed the point here. Our government has a legitimate right to determine what is classified and what isn’t before something like this is published. What was violated here was an important procedure intended as a safeguard. Should we as a nation allow an individual to be the sole judge of what is and is not classified? As a former CIA officer, Valerie must agree that some secrets need to be kept in order to maintain national security. The question is who should make the decision, and what rules should be in place – and enforced -- to ensure proper security. Maybe this book doesn’t reveal anything classified. But it should be the DOD that decides, not one Navy seal.
 
 
+9 # fredboy 2012-09-15 14:52
Read the book last week. It's available at Costco. Excellent read. Too bad the truth makes anyone squirm--it's a riveting, heroic portrayal of remarkably dedicated and flexible war fighting professionals.
 
 
+5 # Paul Scott 2012-09-15 15:38
Well said Mrs. Plame, you reveal an old history truth that is happening way too often in this nation’s government. Your story can only be told by those of you working in the lower ranks and serving in the trenches. Exceptions, to this, would be those that get in the way intentionally or unintentionally . Generally speaking, those working in the lower ranks find this truth out; after they have already been bitten by their own snake (S). By the time they realize it they have already become the target, of the sleaze, working in this government for reasons other than a government pension and honorable service.
 
 
+5 # cassandrapt 2012-09-15 16:01
It is my understanding that the author signed an agreement not to disclose the details of the mission. As a Navy Seal sent on a secret mission, he probably should have honored that agreement. Doesn't anyone think he was looking to make a bunch of money on a bestseller?
 
 
+6 # larrypayne 2012-09-15 16:05
What bothers me is that Valerie Plame is supposed to be a very savvy person concerning the workings of our government.
Yet she does not even mention that this operation might possible be a hoax and the author would then be an accomplice. Of all the comments here, only the Wizard seems to get it.

Immediately after the Bin Laden raid was announced, White House Counter-Terrori sm advisor John Brennan told newsmen that Obama had watched the raid in real time. He also said Bin Laden had a gun and used a woman as a shield. All these statements turned out to be blatant lies. The news media did not demand an explanation for the lies and let it pass. An operation that starts out on lies is most likely all lies. Why can't most people understand that?
 
 
+15 # Innocent Victim 2012-09-15 17:01
US government persecutes Bradley Manning and Julian Assange as well as the man Ms Plame-Wilson describes. Pfc Manning is heroic - if he did pass the memos on to Wikileaks - because in that case he did what a US soldier is required to do: expose the crimes of his superiors, especially war crimes. Mr Assange is heroic in having published what the most irresponsible terrorist government, the US government, did not want known of its crimes and lies. Assange is being persecuted by US government pressure on the UK and Sweden.
 
 
+16 # Innocent Victim 2012-09-15 17:07
There has never been any evidence that Osama bin Laden was involved in 9/11. There has never been a credible explanation for the demolition of the two towers and bldg no 7. No demolition? Just two airplanes? No reputable expert agrees with that thesis. The US government lies. Presidential Commissions lie and conceal. The Kennedy Commission. The Shuttle Commission. The 9/11 Commission. Lies and concealments.
 
 
+8 # independentmind 2012-09-15 19:16
Thank you for your article. I was appalled when your identity was leaked in retribution for your husband's views. There is way too much of this not being allowed to speak out, a lack of tolerance for opposing views in this country. I was hoping that, given Obama's greater tolerance for dissent, that we wouldn't see a repeat of what happened to you. I am sorry I was wrong.
 
 
+9 # Rick Levy 2012-09-15 22:33
Valerie Plame and Joe Wilson. Thank you. You are patriots in the true sense of the word. Unfortunately, no good deed goes unpunished.
 
 
+1 # tigerlille 2012-09-16 00:18
Valerie Plane is another American heroine. Her analysis is this article
lead me to once again ask, just what is the difference between the Bush and Obama administrations ? Obama is more intolerant of whistle blowers than Bush, incredibly enough. I think that Valerie Plane and Julian Assange would have a lot to share with each other.
 
 
+8 # RMDC 2012-09-16 04:28
I just can't accept the opening of this article -- a CIA covert operator working to keep people safe!!! Come on. That is not what the CIA was created to do. Philip Agee had it right when he left the CIA and began a long career of exposing what it it does. He said CIA really stands for "Capitalism's Invisible Army." The job of the CIA has always been to promote the interests of US corporations around the world by illegal means. It is secret because what it does is illegal. Corporations can do their own legal promotion. They need the CIA for the illegal things, like overthrowing a capital-unfrien dly government, subverting labor organizations, and so on.

The nuclear weapons line is just Plame's cover. All CIA people need a cover. She worked in Palestine. There's no nuclear weapons there, unless she was monitoring Israel's nukes.

To me, it is kind of funny to see the CIA squabbling with one of its hitmen to see who gets to profit from the murder of Osama bin Laden. Maybe like the good gangsters that they are, they will take to killing each other. Let's hope so. That would make a much better movie -- "Good Fellas -- The CIA Version."

The CIA should be abolished and its records published for all to read. The CIA is deeply what is wrong with the US. Plame may just be a true believer. Hopefully one day she will wake up.
 
 
+4 # Innocent Victim 2012-09-16 07:36
I agree though not with the severity towards Ms Plame Wilson or Mr Wilson. They were probably idealistic USians (she still writes about our "democracy"!).

President Truman, reportedly, did not with to have the OSS converted to a CIA with an operations division. He wanted, I am told, only an intelligence gathering agency. Congress forced the operations unit on him. It was that division that overthrew the elected, legitimate governments of Guatemala, Iran and later, Iran - much to our lasting regret.

The US government, today, has lost all claim to legitimacy, as I wrote in my messages, above. We are ruled by force, plain and simple. On that account, our rulers are thugs, plain and simple.
 
 
+5 # oregonstu 2012-09-16 06:51
Ah, Valerie, I have great respect for you (even though you are rather deluded about the purpose if the CIA), but I fear you have fallen for their little trick here. Osama bin dead since 2001, and of course they are perfectly well aware of this, because he was our boy the whole time. The whole "assassination was a huge media hoax intended to keep milking the boogeyman for propaganda purposes... even beyond his SECOND grave. And this whole bs story about the special ops clown spilling the beans in his book is yet another trick to continue that ploy. The Pentagon pretending to come down on him is a necessary element intended to lend "credibility" to his story. Incredible to see people continue to lap this crap up.
 
 
-4 # panhead49 2012-09-16 07:11
I want to see the list of the charities this fool said he would donate the proceeds of his book towards. Curious to see who, other than the writer, is just as comfortable with blood money as Halliburton/Xe is.

Mark - don't expect any tridents being slapped onto your coffin when the time comes. And considering who you've betrayed....
 
 
+3 # nurseopinion 2012-09-16 16:35
It IS time we make it clear to our government that we cannot accept a "spoon-fed" account as an honest historical event. I do suspect that perhaps the book came out before officials wanted. I also feel that irrational FEAR is what the government wants to instill in us to keep us submissive. I am happy to see that Valerie Plame Wilson has not stopped speaking the truth. I am most grateful to Valerie and her husband for their acts of heroism...uncom mon today. Since when did our elected officials have the right to do whatever they wish, without regard to the truth? We must continue speaking out to ensure government is accountable to those they represent, in this democratic society. And for those of us who speak out because it is the right, honest thing to do, I say it's difficult, but well worth it.
 
 
+7 # jerryball 2012-09-16 16:47
It's not only the American Government, the Israeli government has denigrated its biggest whistleblower that raised the alarm when Israel was doing what Iran is now doing. Secretly making atomic weapons without the knowledge of its citizens. The whistleblower was Mordecai Vanunu who was kidnapped in Rome and spent 18 years in jail.

"You Cannot Break the Human Spirit": Israeli Nuclear Whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu Released After 18 Years

http://www.democracynow.org/2004/4/21/you_cannot_break_the_human_spirit
 
 
+2 # nurseopinion 2012-09-17 04:37
Funny too, we teach our children NOT to bully. We teach our children to tell the truth. Yet somehow when we "grow up", we seem to forget, and engage in childish behaviors to the extreme.....bac k to school for all (except for Valerie and Joe, who actually grew up).
 
 
+2 # Zozo 2012-09-17 10:26
Did I miss the contribution on RSN concerning the administration' s demand to keep whole the NDAA?
http://rt.com/usa/news/ndaa-hedges-appeal-obama-339/
 
 
-1 # Aggie61 2012-09-17 19:02
There is no resemblance between Ms. Flames stutuatuin and the former Navy enlisted man. She was betrayed by her country. He betrayed his country.
 
 
+1 # FDRva 2012-09-18 23:27
Valerie Plame & Joe Wilson are American heroes. Barack Obama is just an extraordinarily well-financed politician. The actions of his Administration are almost always Bush-like.

It just reminds me why I voted for Hillary in the primary--and Cynthia McKinney in the general.
 
 
0 # Uncle Joe 2012-09-29 05:15
Hollywood, having invested millions in insider trading of government secrets, is now in the awkward position of making a movie based in part on the real facts included in the 'hard-back' version. OH WAIT! that would be plaigerism. Now Hollywood has to collaborate openly with the author (& pay royalties to the people who actually got the job done)
 

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