Alan Cooperman reviews Valerie Plame's book, My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. We've heard it all before.
All the emphasis on Robert Novak, Scooter Libby, and the White House, but no mention of Richard Armitage in the review.
Plame was outed. Her career was ruined.
Wow. I had no idea.
This is interesting:
There is no reason to doubt that [Valerie Plame] Wilson wrote "Fair Game" herself. To put it kindly, the memoir lacks the sheen of a ghostwriter's work and has the voice of an ordinary person caught up in extraordinary events. It doesn't help that the CIA redacted the manuscript heavily before approving it for publication. Each time she is about to launch into a juicy anecdote, it seems, lines are blacked out, sometimes for pages on end.
The book is, however, greatly assisted by an afterword by Laura Rozen, a reporter for the American Prospect. Rozen faithfully echoes Wilson's point of view but fills in many of the censored dates, places and other details from published sources. Readers would be smart to turn to the afterword first, before tackling [Plame] Wilson's disjointed narrative.
So not only is this Plame stuff old and boring and irrelevant, it's not well-written.
I bet even rabid haters of President Bush won't bother with the book.
It's yesterday's non-news news.
2 comments:
It's not as old as VINCE FOSTER but your buddies won't let that go.
What this ADMINISTRATION did was harmful to the agency and the nation, and they did it for POLITICAL reasons.
My "buddies"?
You don't know my "buddies."
Sorry, General. Patrick Fitzgerald did his best to prove that the Bush administration harmed the CIA and the nation and Plame and Wilson. He failed, but it wasn't for lack of trying.
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