Beltway Books: CIA to Plame: Don’t Publicize Public Record

By Aaron Hierholzer

A federal judge ruled last week that Valerie Plame cannot reveal the dates of her employ at the CIA in her upcoming autobiography Fair Game: My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House. Plame and Simon & Schuster filed suit against the agency when the CIA Publications Review Board decided that the memoir was fine–except for those dates. Thing is, the dates had already been widely reported and published in the Congressional Record (and are on Wikipedia). Judge Barbara Jones says, however, she was swayed to bar the dates from the book by a letter from the CIA. What did it say? Even S&S and Plame don’t know, since that letter was classified.

The publisher hasn’t said whether it will appeal the ruling, but the book seems to still be on track. You can already order it on Amazon! (Current user tags: “neocon garbage” (4), “glorified excrement” (5), and the succinct “Evil” (3).) Plame’s looking fetching on the cover, but the lack of classic spy imagery is disappointing.

Related books:

  • Plame’s less hot husband Joseph Wilson wrote a door stopping account of the leak (The Politics of Truth, Carroll & Graf, $16.95) that was well-reviewed, but failed to reach sales of hotcake proportions.
  • Lewis Libby authored a novel back in 199

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