This deal was known, or at least suspected, in 2006. An FBI investigation was begun, but ended for "lack of evidence." What is new is first, that a recording of this conversation has surfaced (the recording came from of a court-approved wiretapping of the suspected agent); and second, that it appears that the FBI investigation against Harman was not dropped for lack of evidence after all. Rather, it was dropped because then-attorney general Alberto Gonzales intervened to get the charges dismissed, so that Harman, a big cheerleader for the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program, could be free to defend it (this was at the time when news of the program was breaking in the New York Times).
The deal was ultimately unsuccessful, from the standpoint of the players involved: Harman never got her committee appointment after all, and the two AIPAC officials (Steven J. Rosen and Keith Weissman) still face trial (in June) – lest we be tempted to draw conclusions about the omnipotence of AIPAC. What happens next remains to be seen.
There is lots of information about this at:
http://innovation.cq.com/liveonline/54/landing
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/04/20/harman/print.html
http://static.cqpolitics.com/harman-3098436-page1.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/us/politics/21harman.html?hp
Judith Norman
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