WASHINGTON — Former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage said Sunday he was foolish to have revealed Valerie Plame’s CIA identity.
Armitage’s acknowledgment came in response to comments by Plame, who said the former Bush administration official had no right to talk to a reporter about where she worked.
A year ago, Armitage publicly apologized to Plame and her husband. He remains the only principal in the leak to have done so.
At least three one-time administration officials in addition to Armitage discussed Plame’s CIA status with reporters. They are former White House political adviser Karl Rove; Vice President Dick Cheney’s ex-chief of staff, Lewis “Scooter” Libby; and former presidential press secretary Ari Fleischer.
Armitage and Rove were sources for a 2003 newspaper column by Robert Novak that disclosed Plame’s CIA employment.
Novak’s column came out eight days after Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, said the administration had twisted pre-war intelligence to exaggerate the Iraqi threat.
Libby was convicted this year of perjury, obstruction of justice and lying to the FBI about his conversations with reporters regarding Plame.
After receiving immunity from prosecution, Fleischer admitted to a federal grand jury that he had told reporters about Plame.
President Bush, who was questioned in the criminal investigation, commuted Libby’s 30-month prison sentence and never took any individual to task publicly for the leak.
In July, Bush said the criminal investigation was done and that “now we’re going to move on.”
Armitage has taken a different tack.
“I think it was extraordinarily foolish of me” to have disclosed Plame’s identity, Armitage said Sunday on CNN’s “Late Edition.”
Armitage said there was no ill intent on his part. He said he spoke to Novak after seeing a reference to Wilson’s wife in a memo, which did not name her.
Plame sued Cheney, Rove, Libby and Armitage for allegedly violating her rights, but a federal judge dismissed the case, saying there was no legal basis for it.
Despite the dismissal, the judge said the lawsuit raised important questions relating to the propriety of actions undertaken by the nation’s highest government officials.



