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The Politics of Truth: Inside the Lies that Led to War and Betrayed My Wife's CIA Identity: A Diplomat's Memoir

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Through the last three presidential administrations and two wars with Iraq, no one has personally witnessed, influenced, or fueled news over more history-making events than Joseph Wilson. The last American diplomat to sit face-to-face with Saddam Hussein, he is a consummate insider who has the intelligence, principles, and independence to examine current American foreign policy and the inner workings of government and to form a candid assessment of the United States’ involvement in the world. In February 2002, Joseph Wilson was sent to Niger by the CIA to investigate claims that Iraq had sought to purchase uranium in that country. Wilson’s report, and two from other American officials, conclusively negated such rumors, yet all were brushed aside by the White House. Startled by the infamous words uttered by George W. Bush in his 2003 State of the Union Address: “The British Government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa,” Wilson decided to reveal the truth behind the initiation of the Iraq war. The Politics of Truth is an explosive and revelatory book by a man who stands for the accurate recording of history against those forces bent on fabricating truth.

Opinión de Amazon.es

While many former Bush administration officials published books airing their gripes and concerns in advance of the 2004 election, few were in a situation as personal as Joseph Wilson's. A career diplomat, he found himself working for an administration that apparently leaked information revealing his wife, Valerie Plame, to be a CIA operative soon after Wilson cast doubt on Bush's claims of Iraq trying to buy uranium from Niger. When columnist Robert Novak named Plame, there was widespread speculation about who leaked the information. In The Politics of Truth, Wilson points a finger at Dick Cheney’s chief-of-staff I. Lewis (Scooter) Libby and national security aide Eliot Abrams although Wilson never really presents smoking gun evidence against them. There is little here that breaks new ground in terms of hard facts being revealed, nonetheless, Wilson's account, personal and well written, maps out the human impact of the situation in ways that major newspapers never could. Wilson's animus toward the administration is made stronger by his support of the president in the 2000 election and he held out hope that a centrist conservative approach would help America's position in the world. That scenario withered, in Wilson's mind, when the plan to invade Iraq became increasingly inevitable and, like many traditional conservatives, Wilson mourns the rise of the ideological "neo-conservatives" who shaped foreign policy. But while a true-life secret identity/betrayal story is inherently fascinating, and Wilson's indignation and scorn is powerfully delivered, there is more to recommend his book. Wilson tells of being stationed in the Persian Gulf in the days leading up to the first Gulf War, a haunting encounter with Saddam Hussein, and years of efforts to establish democracy in Africa. The Politics of Truth provides a glimpse inside the high stakes world of international intelligence and, Joseph Wilson says, that world can be vicious. --John Moe

De Publishers Weekly

Nobody who's paid close attention to the unfolding story of the leaking to columnist Robert Novak of the name of Ambassador Wilson's wife as a CIA operative will be surprised by the two White House staffers—Lewis "Scooter" Libby and Elliott Abrams—Wilson proposes as the most likely suspects in what he calls the "organized smear campaign" against him. He views the leak as retaliation for his presenting evidence that, contrary to President Bush's 2003 State of the Union assertion, Iraq was not trying to buy uranium from Niger. Wilson hits back hard with a righteous anger against those who would jeopardize national security to score political points. By the account of this longtime Foreign Service officer who was in Baghdad in the months leading up to the first Gulf War, Wilson stood up to Saddam Hussein in a showdown that now makes for one of the memoir's most stirring sections. In fact, readers will discover this book to be a vivid, engrossing account of a foreign service career that spans nearly three decades. Wilson is a lively storyteller with an eye for compelling visual detail and brings a welcome insider's perspective on the political situations of African nations where he has served. He's equally honest about the toll his professional commitment has occasionally taken on his personal life. And it's that candor, as well as the respect shown for previous administrations of both parties, that helps make his charges against the current president's advisers difficult to brush off. His revelations should fly off the shelves. 3 maps, 16 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Críticas

A vivid, engrossing account. . . . His revelations should fly off the shelves. -- Publishers Weekly, starred review

Fascinating . . . dissent not from the radical fringe but from the heart of the establishment. --
Los Angeles Times

Riveting and all-engaging . Remarkably, Bush s White House continues to attack [Wilson].... They have picked a fight with the wrong fellow. --
John W. Dean, New York Times Book Review

Superb.... Wilson's allegations carry the ring of truth. --
St. Louis Post Dispatch

Biografía del autor

Joseph Wilson, a political centrist, was a career United States diplomat from 1976 to 1998. During Democratic and Republican administrations he served in various diplomatic posts throughout Africa and eventually as ambassador to Gabon. He was the acting ambassador to Baghdad when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. In February 2002, he investigated reports of Iraq’s attempt to buy uranium from Niger. In October 2003, Wilson received the Ron Ridenhour Prize for Truth-Telling from the Fertel Foundation and the Nation Institute. He lives in Washington, D.C.

De The Washington Post

Former Ambassador Joseph Wilson has many qualities of a good diplomat. He is handsome, articulate, well-groomed and speaks French. During Operation Desert Shield in 1990-91, Wilson did such a courageous job of protecting the 800 or so Americans stranded in Baghdad that he says President George H.W. Bush called him a "true American hero." But no one would describe Wilson, who retired from the State Department in 1998 to become a consultant, as discreet or self-effacing.

The first 300 or so pages of The Politics of Truth is a worthy, occasionally entertaining, if overlong, chronicle of diplomatic service that would never have been widely published but for Wilson's involvement in one of the more bizarre episodes of the Bush administration. In July 2003, Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, was outed as an undercover CIA operative, allegedly in retaliation for Wilson blowing the whistle on Bush administration dissembling about Iraqi efforts to procure weapons of mass destruction. The section of Wilson's book that deals with the flap, roughly the last 130 pages, is repetitive and self-dramatizing. It does not reveal much in the way of "news" -- Wilson's claims and conclusions are either long hashed over or based on what the intelligence business describes as "rumint," or rumor intelligence. But as a diary of ego and suspicion, inflamed by leaks and posturing on all sides, The Politics of Truth is revealing, though not always intentionally.

Wilson hails from old San Francisco stock -- with ties to the "Bohemian Club and the San Francisco Yacht Club," he lets us know -- and flopped about for a time as "hippie-surfer" before finding his calling in diplomacy. He rose to become an ambassador to small African countries and retired to make some money and raise a family with his third wife, who was ostensibly working for an international energy company. In 2002, the CIA asked Wilson to travel to Africa to check out reports that Iraq was trying to buy uranium from the small country of Niger. Wilson found no evidence to support the claim. Nonetheless, administration officials, including President Bush, asserted that Saddam was trying to buy bomb-making material in Africa. Wilson began quietly telling reporters that they should dig more deeply into the story. At about that time, roughly March 2003, the neocons at the White House, led by Vice-President Cheney's chief of staff I. Lewis ("Scooter") Libby, began a "workup" on Wilson to discredit him. Or so Wilson claims, though his sources are third-hand. "I am told by a member of the press, citing White House sources," Wilson writes, that Libby referred to him as an "asshole playboy." On July 6, Wilson published an op-ed piece about his Niger trip in the New York Times entitled "What I Didn't Find in Africa." Wilson began hearing from reporters that the administration was out to get him. On July 14, conservative columnist Robert Novak reported, "Wilson never worked for the CIA, but his wife, Valerie Plame, is an Agency operative on weapons of mass destruction."

It is not clear that Novak's sources knew they were outing an undercover agent -- they may have assumed she was an analyst working at CIA headquarters on nonproliferation issues. But Wilson immediately assumed that by blowing his wife's cover, the White House neocons were sending a message to silence other whistle blowers. Wilson impressively leaped to defend his wife's honor -- on "Meet the Press," in glossy magazines, on "Imus in the Morning," even on "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart" at Comedy Central. The high point, or low point, came when Wilson and his beautiful blond wife posed for Vanity Fair, riding in Wilson's Jaguar convertible. Undercover Agent Plame was the one wearing dark glasses.

Wilson warmed to the fight, not to mention the publicity. In The Politics of Truth, he refers to his new friends in the media by their first names ("Tim," "Chris," "Ted," "Andrea"). He is embraced by the "progressive left," allowing him to go the West Coast to stay in Norman Lear's guest house and eat lunch with, inevitably, Warren Beatty. Wilson's eagerness, his enjoyment of the melodrama, undermines his portrayal of the sinister White House. Wilson never does figure out who leaked the story to Novak (a grand jury is still out on that). But he has an awfully good time telling us about it all. "Wouldn't it be fun to see Karl Rove frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs?" he crowed to a crowd in Seattle. His wife Valerie, the one person in this story who really did suffer, at least had the good sense to tell her husband that he had "gone too far."

Reviewed by Evan Thomas


Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.

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The Politics of Truth: Inside the Lies that Led to War and Betrayed My Wife's CIA Identity: A Diplomat's Memoir
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Fair Game: My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House

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Opiniones destacadas de los Estados Unidos

  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A reviewer who's actually READ the book
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 22 de junio de 2004
    The negative reviewers on the site have obviously not read the book. Likewise with the few that attempted to debunk his claims without having actually read his claims. Typical behavior by the furiously stupid Right. The book itself is largely non-controversial,... Ver más
    The negative reviewers on the site have obviously not read the book. Likewise with the few that attempted to debunk his claims without having actually read his claims. Typical behavior by the furiously stupid Right.
    The book itself is largely non-controversial, covering his career as a diplomat, primarily through Africa with a now infamous stint in Iraq, garnering him kudos and admiration from no less than George H.W. Bush. In striking contrast to those who suggested that his posting by the CIA to Niger was some sort of boondoggle, he had actually served there and knew the principals and dynamics involved in attempting to buy uranium, as well as information from other American sources. What was done with that information and to him and his wife constitute no less than a complete outrage, which is clear if you read even the most biased of accounts (at least those accounts which actually include information).
    He lays out his case for and against war quite clearly, and gives a very comprehensive timeline of what happened when, and his involvement therein, in contrast to his detractors who have chosen to only speak in excerpts and twisted facts. That these people are allowed to function in government speaks very low of us, and of whatever happened to their moral centers.
    All in all, a surprisingly engrossing book, especially regarding his previous foreign experience, with just a tinge of the anger one can detect from news stories and his personal appearances. Evidently when the Administration decided to use their patented "slime and defend" tactics against Wilson, they picked the wrong guy: he's spoiling for a fight, and given the prosecution in this case, somebody's going down for the count.
    The negative reviewers on the site have obviously not read the book. Likewise with the few that attempted to debunk his claims without having actually read his claims. Typical behavior by the furiously stupid Right.
    The book itself is largely non-controversial, covering his career as a diplomat, primarily through Africa with a now infamous stint in Iraq, garnering him kudos and admiration from no less than George H.W. Bush. In striking contrast to those who suggested that his posting by the CIA to Niger was some sort of boondoggle, he had actually served there and knew the principals and dynamics involved in attempting to buy uranium, as well as information from other American sources. What was done with that information and to him and his wife constitute no less than a complete outrage, which is clear if you read even the most biased of accounts (at least those accounts which actually include information).
    He lays out his case for and against war quite clearly, and gives a very comprehensive timeline of what happened when, and his involvement therein, in contrast to his detractors who have chosen to only speak in excerpts and twisted facts. That these people are allowed to function in government speaks very low of us, and of whatever happened to their moral centers.
    All in all, a surprisingly engrossing book, especially regarding his previous foreign experience, with just a tinge of the anger one can detect from news stories and his personal appearances. Evidently when the Administration decided to use their patented "slime and defend" tactics against Wilson, they picked the wrong guy: he's spoiling for a fight, and given the prosecution in this case, somebody's going down for the count.
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A Dedicated Civil Servant
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 13 de julio de 2004
    Joseph Wilson has a masterpiece on his hands here. Basically this is two books rolled into one, so you really get your money's worth. The first half mainly deals with Wilson's career in the foreign service. The second half goes into the recent struggles he has... Ver más
    Joseph Wilson has a masterpiece on his hands here. Basically this is two books rolled into one, so you really get your money's worth. The first half mainly deals with Wilson's career in the foreign service. The second half goes into the recent struggles he has had with the Bush admininstration. In particular, the administration's penchant for lying and the criminal act of revealing the identity of his CIA agent wife. Both sections are very compelling to read.
    The section dealing with his career takes us on a whirlwind tour of life in the foreign service in Africa. He vividly show us the low and the high points of his career--from stuffing bodies into makeshift coffins to jetting around with the European Command. You get a real sense of what it is like. You can see that Wilson has given his best in the service of America, and he's proud to be an American who loyally served both Republican and Democratic administrations. He worked on several projects to bring democracy to Africa and I respect him for that.
    Flash forward to 2002. A retired Wilson is asked by the administration to check out a report on the sale of uranium to Iraq in Niger. Niger is one of the countries in which Wilson had served and he knew the rulers who were in power during the alledged sale. Therefore he was the most qualified for the mission whether his wife recommended him or not. To get lectures about nepotism from Republicans, is like getting diet advice from the candy store. After his trip, he concluded that the reports were false, and reported that to the administration. Several months later, Wilson finds out that the President used the report of uranium sales in Niger in his State of the Union address to justify war in Iraq. When it was exposed as false, the administration claimed ignorance despite having the report from Wilson, and also reports from two other sources disclaiming the sales. Wilson, angry at the bald-faced lies, exposed them. The administration, instead of finding the culprit who put lies into the President's mouth, went for revenge on Wilson. They tried to smear his reputation, and when that didn't work, they revealed the identity of his undercover CIA agent wife, putting national security and intelligence assets at risk. This is plainly traitorous and illegal. This is the same Bush administration that might be re-elected this year. Be sure that you read this book before you go to the polls. Don't let this administration stab you in the back like it did to Joseph Wilson.
    Joseph Wilson has a masterpiece on his hands here. Basically this is two books rolled into one, so you really get your money's worth. The first half mainly deals with Wilson's career in the foreign service. The second half goes into the recent struggles he has had with the Bush admininstration. In particular, the administration's penchant for lying and the criminal act of revealing the identity of his CIA agent wife. Both sections are very compelling to read.
    The section dealing with his career takes us on a whirlwind tour of life in the foreign service in Africa. He vividly show us the low and the high points of his career--from stuffing bodies into makeshift coffins to jetting around with the European Command. You get a real sense of what it is like. You can see that Wilson has given his best in the service of America, and he's proud to be an American who loyally served both Republican and Democratic administrations. He worked on several projects to bring democracy to Africa and I respect him for that.
    Flash forward to 2002. A retired Wilson is asked by the administration to check out a report on the sale of uranium to Iraq in Niger. Niger is one of the countries in which Wilson had served and he knew the rulers who were in power during the alledged sale. Therefore he was the most qualified for the mission whether his wife recommended him or not. To get lectures about nepotism from Republicans, is like getting diet advice from the candy store. After his trip, he concluded that the reports were false, and reported that to the administration. Several months later, Wilson finds out that the President used the report of uranium sales in Niger in his State of the Union address to justify war in Iraq. When it was exposed as false, the administration claimed ignorance despite having the report from Wilson, and also reports from two other sources disclaiming the sales. Wilson, angry at the bald-faced lies, exposed them. The administration, instead of finding the culprit who put lies into the President's mouth, went for revenge on Wilson. They tried to smear his reputation, and when that didn't work, they revealed the identity of his undercover CIA agent wife, putting national security and intelligence assets at risk. This is plainly traitorous and illegal. This is the same Bush administration that might be re-elected this year. Be sure that you read this book before you go to the polls. Don't let this administration stab you in the back like it did to Joseph Wilson.
    A 21 personas les resultó útil
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  • 4.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A Compelling Read - No Matter What your Politics!
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 21 de julio de 2005
    Joseph C. Wilson's life as a foreign service officer, Ambassador to Gabon, and Sao Tome and Principe under President George H. W. Bush, Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton, Senior Director for African Affairs at the National Security Council from June 1997... Ver más
    Joseph C. Wilson's life as a foreign service officer, Ambassador to Gabon, and Sao Tome and Principe under President George H. W. Bush, Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton, Senior Director for African Affairs at the National Security Council from June 1997 until July 1998, (responsible for the coordination of U.S. policy to the 48 countries of sub-Saharan Africa), and the last diplomat to meet with Saddam Hussein in 1990, just before the first Gulf War, is fascinating enough to warrant a best selling memoir, in and of itself. President Bush #41, once hailed Wilson as "truly inspiring" and "courageous," after he gave shelter to more than one hundred Americans at the US embassy in Baghdad, although Saddam Hussein threatened to execute anyone who refused to hand over foreigners.

    There is much autobiographical material in "The Politics of Truth: Inside the Lies that Led to War and Betrayed my Wife's CIA Identity," but this is so much more than the run of the mill anecdotal musings of "my life so far." At the heart of this book lies Wilson's controversial story and the allegations which led to Justice Department Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald's ongoing investigation into possible violation of multiple criminal statutes, including the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982, which makes it a federal crime to knowingly reveal the identity of a covert CIA agent.

    In just over 500 pages, Wilson gives a detailed account of his foreign service career which spanned more than two decades. He also candidly discusses the events leading to his decision to go public with his criticisms of the Bush administration. Wilson divides his book into three parts: his time in Africa - in which his love of the continent and its people is clearly evident; his time as the acting ambassador of Iraq on the eve of Desert Storm - which has sections that read like an espionage thriller; and finally the story of his mission to Niger, and the outing of his wife's identity to serve unethical political purposes.

    Wilson writes of a meeting he was asked to attend at CIA headquarters, whose participants included the intelligence community's experts on Africa and uranium, along with staff representing the CIA and US State Department. According to Wilson, a report "purporting to be a memorandum of sale of uranium to Iraq had aroused the interest of Vice President Dick Cheney." Wilson was then told that the Vice President's office had tasked the CIA to find out if there was any truth to the report. He was asked, at this meeting to share with the analysts his knowledge of Niger, uranium, and the Nigerien government officials in charge at the time the contract was supposedly signed - 1999 or 2000. Wilson had not been to Niger in two years, but the Minister of Mines, who would have overseen the uranium sale, if it had taken place, was a friend of his. At the end of the meeting, Wilson was asked if he would be willing to travel to Niger to check out the report in question. He emphasized to the attendees that he was a diplomat not a spy, and that his profile in Africa could hardly be considered a low one. He knew the country, the situation and had the contacts. He thoroughly discussed whom he would meet with and what questions he would ask with the US Ambassador to Niger. You'll have to read the book for further accounts.

    Now, I think, given the controversy and name calling, that the following is important and is indicative of other similar issues which have been used in a vicious PR campaign to cloud Wilson's allegations, and the purpose of the Justice Department's investigation. Objectively, does it matter if Vice President Cheney's office officially gave Mr. Wilson the assignment? His office tasked the CIA with selecting an appropriate, qualified person to do the job. Does it matter if the director of the CIA personally hired him for the temporary investigatory position? Or a high-level CIA official? Or if he was selected because Valerie Plame, his wife, recommended him for the job? (which Wilson denies). Who hired him is not the point here, nor is whether he could or couldn't get the job on his own, etc. The point is that Joseph C. Wilson would not have been sent to Niger on a fact finding mission if he did not possess the expertise to do the job. Not only was the messenger shot in this case, so was his wife!!

    The outing controversy has its roots in the 2003 State of the Union address, when President Bush said, that the British government had learned that Iraq had sought uranium in Africa, a possible indication of Saddam Hussein's interest in nuclear weapons. Mr. Wilson wrote an Op-Ed article in The New York Times questioning whether the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to justify the war in Iraq. Had the administration ignored not only his own 2002 report, but two previous inquiries by Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick, an American ambassador to Niger, and Carleton Fulford, a Marine Corps general, who also found that the Iraq-Niger story was not credible.

    What follows are the details of columnist Robert Novak's role in bringing Ms. Plame's name to the fore and connecting it with her CIA job, and all the subsequent ugliness. Wilson and his credibility have been attacked on a daily basis. "He's just a flamboyant politician, not equipped to discuss yellow cake." "She's been photographed by Vanity Fair?" (Whatever that means!?). Is it a crime to be glamorous and intelligent? Everyone has read the slurs. I find Wilson's take on all this informative, and can certainly empathize with his outrage, (and his wife's - and mine as a US citizen!), however, this is not the book's strongest section. Much of this information, minus Wilson's unique perspective, is available in the media. The first two parts are outstanding, and the entire narrative is extremely well written. However, I know most will buy or borrow this book because of the seemingly ever present scandal of leaks and lies associated with it.

    Whatever one's partisan politics, and we all have them, hopefully the American people will unite and condemn anything illegal or unethical that was committed in this altogether unsavory situation. The investigation is still underway, and it will be interesting to see how this all pans out. In the interim, the book makes for a compelling read. It is certainly not boring! Highly recommended!

    JANA
    Joseph C. Wilson's life as a foreign service officer, Ambassador to Gabon, and Sao Tome and Principe under President George H. W. Bush, Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton, Senior Director for African Affairs at the National Security Council from June 1997 until July 1998, (responsible for the coordination of U.S. policy to the 48 countries of sub-Saharan Africa), and the last diplomat to meet with Saddam Hussein in 1990, just before the first Gulf War, is fascinating enough to warrant a best selling memoir, in and of itself. President Bush #41, once hailed Wilson as "truly inspiring" and "courageous," after he gave shelter to more than one hundred Americans at the US embassy in Baghdad, although Saddam Hussein threatened to execute anyone who refused to hand over foreigners.

    There is much autobiographical material in "The Politics of Truth: Inside the Lies that Led to War and Betrayed my Wife's CIA Identity," but this is so much more than the run of the mill anecdotal musings of "my life so far." At the heart of this book lies Wilson's controversial story and the allegations which led to Justice Department Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald's ongoing investigation into possible violation of multiple criminal statutes, including the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982, which makes it a federal crime to knowingly reveal the identity of a covert CIA agent.

    In just over 500 pages, Wilson gives a detailed account of his foreign service career which spanned more than two decades. He also candidly discusses the events leading to his decision to go public with his criticisms of the Bush administration. Wilson divides his book into three parts: his time in Africa - in which his love of the continent and its people is clearly evident; his time as the acting ambassador of Iraq on the eve of Desert Storm - which has sections that read like an espionage thriller; and finally the story of his mission to Niger, and the outing of his wife's identity to serve unethical political purposes.

    Wilson writes of a meeting he was asked to attend at CIA headquarters, whose participants included the intelligence community's experts on Africa and uranium, along with staff representing the CIA and US State Department. According to Wilson, a report "purporting to be a memorandum of sale of uranium to Iraq had aroused the interest of Vice President Dick Cheney." Wilson was then told that the Vice President's office had tasked the CIA to find out if there was any truth to the report. He was asked, at this meeting to share with the analysts his knowledge of Niger, uranium, and the Nigerien government officials in charge at the time the contract was supposedly signed - 1999 or 2000. Wilson had not been to Niger in two years, but the Minister of Mines, who would have overseen the uranium sale, if it had taken place, was a friend of his. At the end of the meeting, Wilson was asked if he would be willing to travel to Niger to check out the report in question. He emphasized to the attendees that he was a diplomat not a spy, and that his profile in Africa could hardly be considered a low one. He knew the country, the situation and had the contacts. He thoroughly discussed whom he would meet with and what questions he would ask with the US Ambassador to Niger. You'll have to read the book for further accounts.

    Now, I think, given the controversy and name calling, that the following is important and is indicative of other similar issues which have been used in a vicious PR campaign to cloud Wilson's allegations, and the purpose of the Justice Department's investigation. Objectively, does it matter if Vice President Cheney's office officially gave Mr. Wilson the assignment? His office tasked the CIA with selecting an appropriate, qualified person to do the job. Does it matter if the director of the CIA personally hired him for the temporary investigatory position? Or a high-level CIA official? Or if he was selected because Valerie Plame, his wife, recommended him for the job? (which Wilson denies). Who hired him is not the point here, nor is whether he could or couldn't get the job on his own, etc. The point is that Joseph C. Wilson would not have been sent to Niger on a fact finding mission if he did not possess the expertise to do the job. Not only was the messenger shot in this case, so was his wife!!

    The outing controversy has its roots in the 2003 State of the Union address, when President Bush said, that the British government had learned that Iraq had sought uranium in Africa, a possible indication of Saddam Hussein's interest in nuclear weapons. Mr. Wilson wrote an Op-Ed article in The New York Times questioning whether the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to justify the war in Iraq. Had the administration ignored not only his own 2002 report, but two previous inquiries by Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick, an American ambassador to Niger, and Carleton Fulford, a Marine Corps general, who also found that the Iraq-Niger story was not credible.

    What follows are the details of columnist Robert Novak's role in bringing Ms. Plame's name to the fore and connecting it with her CIA job, and all the subsequent ugliness. Wilson and his credibility have been attacked on a daily basis. "He's just a flamboyant politician, not equipped to discuss yellow cake." "She's been photographed by Vanity Fair?" (Whatever that means!?). Is it a crime to be glamorous and intelligent? Everyone has read the slurs. I find Wilson's take on all this informative, and can certainly empathize with his outrage, (and his wife's - and mine as a US citizen!), however, this is not the book's strongest section. Much of this information, minus Wilson's unique perspective, is available in the media. The first two parts are outstanding, and the entire narrative is extremely well written. However, I know most will buy or borrow this book because of the seemingly ever present scandal of leaks and lies associated with it.

    Whatever one's partisan politics, and we all have them, hopefully the American people will unite and condemn anything illegal or unethical that was committed in this altogether unsavory situation. The investigation is still underway, and it will be interesting to see how this all pans out. In the interim, the book makes for a compelling read. It is certainly not boring! Highly recommended!

    JANA
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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A MUST READ!! LOVED IT!!! VERY INFORMATIVE AND EXCITING!!
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 29 de junio de 2011
    I'm late getting to read this book but makes it even more interesting with a current perspective on the recent past and all that has happened in Iraq. I found the 5 STAR reviews all accurate, agree with the reviewers,and was unable to put this book down. I hope he... Ver más
    I'm late getting to read this book but makes it even more interesting with a current perspective on the recent past and all that has happened in Iraq. I found the 5 STAR reviews all accurate, agree with the reviewers,and was unable to put this book down. I hope he writes more books because he certainly has a lot to say and such rich experience to share with his fellow Americans. Even though this came out in '04 it is so relevant to today now that we have '04 - '11 to reflect upon. Great Job, Joe!!! How about another book - there must be another one in that very intelligent head of yours!! Loved it!!
    I'm late getting to read this book but makes it even more interesting with a current perspective on the recent past and all that has happened in Iraq. I found the 5 STAR reviews all accurate, agree with the reviewers,and was unable to put this book down. I hope he writes more books because he certainly has a lot to say and such rich experience to share with his fellow Americans. Even though this came out in '04 it is so relevant to today now that we have '04 - '11 to reflect upon. Great Job, Joe!!! How about another book - there must be another one in that very intelligent head of yours!! Loved it!!
    A 6 personas les resultó útil
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  • 3.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Three Stars
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 7 de agosto de 2014
    Good piece of writing from this viewpoint.
    Good piece of writing from this viewpoint.
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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Outstanding
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 19 de julio de 2004
    It is well written and provides a great first-hand account of a diplomat's life and experiences, something I'd not had much contact with previously. I'm thankful that insightful professionals like Wilson have devoted their careers to foreign service. I'm... Ver más
    It is well written and provides a great first-hand account of a diplomat's life and experiences, something I'd not had much contact with previously. I'm thankful that insightful professionals like Wilson have devoted their careers to foreign service. I'm encouraged by Wilson's attitude toward our country and by his willingness to confront those who have abused our trust. Given his backgound and experiences, I cannot help but believe what he has written about our involvement in Iraq. I find it amazing that he can keep his composure in the face of the attacks. I think he would be a facinating person to know. I highly recommend the book.
    It is well written and provides a great first-hand account of a diplomat's life and experiences, something I'd not had much contact with previously. I'm thankful that insightful professionals like Wilson have devoted their careers to foreign service. I'm encouraged by Wilson's attitude toward our country and by his willingness to confront those who have abused our trust. Given his backgound and experiences, I cannot help but believe what he has written about our involvement in Iraq. I find it amazing that he can keep his composure in the face of the attacks. I think he would be a facinating person to know. I highly recommend the book.
    A 16 personas les resultó útil
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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    There were excellent articles that appeared in Vanity Fair Magazine that caused ...
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 15 de agosto de 2014
    I am looking forward to reading the real story from an expert who cited facts that Saddam didn't have the yellow cake or other materials that were needed to to make a nuclear bomb or WMD's. I story help to disprove bush #2 and cheney's assertion that lead to the... Ver más
    I am looking forward to reading the real story from an expert who cited facts that Saddam didn't have the yellow cake or other materials that were needed to to make a nuclear bomb or WMD's. I story help to disprove bush #2 and cheney's assertion that lead to the invasion of Iraq and later afganistan. There were excellent articles that appeared in Vanity Fair Magazine that caused me to by this book.To find it in hardcover at an excellent price and at Amazon all made worthwhile.
    I am looking forward to reading the real story from an expert who cited facts that Saddam didn't have the yellow cake or other materials that were needed to to make a nuclear bomb or WMD's. I story help to disprove bush #2 and cheney's assertion that lead to the invasion of Iraq and later afganistan. There were excellent articles that appeared in Vanity Fair Magazine that caused me to by this book.To find it in hardcover at an excellent price and at Amazon all made worthwhile.
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  • 4.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Interesting... could've been a bit shorter.
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 27 de julio de 2017
    I learned quite a lot from Mr. Wilson's book. I didn't follow this story closely at the time, so I felt I was able to look at it with fresh eyes & no particular agenda. The good: I learned far more about various interworkings of government that... Ver más
    I learned quite a lot from Mr. Wilson's book. I didn't follow this story closely at the time, so I felt I was able to look at it with fresh eyes & no particular agenda.

    The good:
    I learned far more about various interworkings of government that definitely squashed many stereotypes.

    The bad:
    It got boring in parts. Finally after I was about 80% done, I was just skimming pages. I was hoping for more of a resolution than was delivered.

    Those hoping for more of a story about Mrs. Wilson's broken cover may well be disappointed. This is about as far from a typical CIA or James Bond memoir as you get. I recommend it for the history & learning more about corruption. An epilogue would've been appreciated.
    I learned quite a lot from Mr. Wilson's book. I didn't follow this story closely at the time, so I felt I was able to look at it with fresh eyes & no particular agenda.

    The good:
    I learned far more about various interworkings of government that definitely squashed many stereotypes.

    The bad:
    It got boring in parts. Finally after I was about 80% done, I was just skimming pages. I was hoping for more of a resolution than was delivered.

    Those hoping for more of a story about Mrs. Wilson's broken cover may well be disappointed. This is about as far from a typical CIA or James Bond memoir as you get. I recommend it for the history & learning more about corruption. An epilogue would've been appreciated.
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  • bookfan
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    The Politics of Truth: Inside the Lies That Put the White House on Trial and Betrayed My Wife's CIA Identity
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 13 de octubre de 2011
    This is a fascinating book. I came to it after viewing the movie 'Fair Game' and was simply intrigued. Mr Wilson provides a very thorough- and in the circumstances a relatively objective account of how his family's reputation was besmirched by that family's...Ver más
    This is a fascinating book. I came to it after viewing the movie 'Fair Game' and was simply intrigued. Mr Wilson provides a very thorough- and in the circumstances a relatively objective account of how his family's reputation was besmirched by that family's government, specifically the Bush administration. These are not the allegations of someone who is anti government or anti USA but an American Ambassador and his CIA staffer wife. In fact 'allegations' is the wrong word as it suggests that there is much debate about what happened. There isn't. But it is not for me to reveal how Wilson proves his case. But prove it he does. As he fairly points out and as it is explored in the movie the outing of his wife as an agent put many people at risk throughout the world. The book is an important work and a lesson to us all about how governments can behave abominably and criminally against their own citizens.
    This is a fascinating book. I came to it after viewing the movie 'Fair Game' and was simply intrigued. Mr Wilson provides a very thorough- and in the circumstances a relatively objective account of how his family's reputation was besmirched by that family's government, specifically the Bush administration. These are not the allegations of someone who is anti government or anti USA but an American Ambassador and his CIA staffer wife. In fact 'allegations' is the wrong word as it suggests that there is much debate about what happened. There isn't. But it is not for me to reveal how Wilson proves his case. But prove it he does.
    As he fairly points out and as it is explored in the movie the outing of his wife as an agent put many people at risk throughout the world.
    The book is an important work and a lesson to us all about how governments can behave abominably and criminally against their own citizens.

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  • Casey Roo
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    He's been there, done that; and called it as he saw it.
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 12 de octubre de 2004
    I own and read books from all extremes of the current debate (or debacle, depending on your viewpoint). This has to be one of the best, along with Ron Susskind's The Price of Loyalty about O'Neill's dismissal. Why? It's extraordinarily well-written (no...Ver más
    I own and read books from all extremes of the current debate (or debacle, depending on your viewpoint). This has to be one of the best, along with Ron Susskind's The Price of Loyalty about O'Neill's dismissal. Why? It's extraordinarily well-written (no ghost-writer) and it's the story of a patriot and truth-teller who hated the disillusion and power games with which he was forced to come to terms. So, it's no polemic; just the slow unwinding of all kinds of pain. He'll rank, in due course, with the Old China Hands who were dismissed the service for telling the truth in the 1940's, and maybe even with Ed Murrow. And, by the way, his anecdotes are so engaging that he's one of those people I want to be trapped in an airport lounge with ... whatever your views, don't miss.
    I own and read books from all extremes of the current debate (or debacle, depending on your viewpoint). This has to be one of the best, along with Ron Susskind's The Price of Loyalty about O'Neill's dismissal. Why? It's extraordinarily well-written (no ghost-writer) and it's the story of a patriot and truth-teller who hated the disillusion and power games with which he was forced to come to terms. So, it's no polemic; just the slow unwinding of all kinds of pain.
    He'll rank, in due course, with the Old China Hands who were dismissed the service for telling the truth in the 1940's, and maybe even with Ed Murrow. And, by the way, his anecdotes are so engaging that he's one of those people I want to be trapped in an airport lounge with ... whatever your views, don't miss.

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    No es acerca del producto

    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • F
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Excellently written
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 13 de julio de 2013
    Firstly, I'm not a fan of non-fiction, especially memoirs. The only other memoir I enjoyed reading was Angela's Ashes so you get the picture. This I loved. It's really well written. It's interesting. I read the whole thing over two days, it was that good.Ver más
    Firstly, I'm not a fan of non-fiction, especially memoirs. The only other memoir I enjoyed reading was Angela's Ashes so you get the picture. This I loved. It's really well written. It's interesting. I read the whole thing over two days, it was that good.
    Firstly, I'm not a fan of non-fiction, especially memoirs. The only other memoir I enjoyed reading was Angela's Ashes so you get the picture.
    This I loved. It's really well written. It's interesting. I read the whole thing over two days, it was that good.

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  • Guido
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    AMAZING BOOK
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 13 de noviembre de 2013
    I started this book after watching the movie. The book is a true page-turner and give you a very good picture of what went on with one of the most controversial situation of the recent years.
    I started this book after watching the movie. The book is a true page-turner and give you a very good picture of what went on with one of the most controversial situation of the recent years.

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  • Linnie Sue
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Five Stars
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 14 de octubre de 2016
    Good book.
    Good book.

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