1. WP article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A40012-2003Oct3?language=printer**********************
2. It was a CIA front company engaged in tracking and stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Brewster-Jennings is now defunct, completely shut down, thanks to the outing of Valerie Plame and of Brewster-Jennings itself which was mentioned BY COMPANY NAME in a Novak column a week after his Plame outing.
When Randi Rhodes discussed it in detail one day on her show, it painted quite a picture for just how treasonous the act of outing Valerie Plame really was. And when you combine the following perspectives with the enigmatic comments of whistleblower Sibel Edmonds in
a certain interview, regarding high-level administration officials being complicit in the smuggling of drugs and weapons
including nuclear weapons , it really becomes intriguing (in a nauseating kind of way). Because WHY would they want to disable Brewster-Jennings? Was it only to get back at Joe Wilson and threaten other would-be whistleblowers? Or was it for larger purposes?
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3. Possibly crazy people wrote this (no offense, pcp's!)), but..what the heck, you've got a shaker of salt around somewhere to eat it with:
http://sparky-mcgruff.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/7/3/16838/88864Not only was Plame's cover blown, so was that of her cover company, Brewster, Jennings & Associates. With the public exposure of Plame, intelligence agencies all over the world started searching data bases for any references to her (TIME Magazine). Damage control was immediate, as the CIA asserted that her mission had been connected to weapons of mass destruction.
However, it was not long before stories from the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal tied Brewster, Jennings & Associates to energy, oil and the Saudi-owned Arabian American Oil Company, or ARAMCO. Brewster Jennings had been a founder of Mobil Oil company, one of Aramco's principal founders.
...Knowing all of this, there's really no good reason why the CIA should be too upset, is there? It was only a long-term proprietary and deep-cover NOC - well established and consistently producing "take" from ARAMCO (and who knows what else in Saudi Arabia). It was destroyed with a motive of personal vengeance (there may have been other motives) by someone inside the White House.
From the CIA's point of view, at a time when Saudi Arabia is one of the three or four countries of highest interest to the US, the Plame operation was irreplaceable.
and this one:
U.S. intelligence sources have also said that Fitzgerald's investigation has gone far beyond the mere leaking of Plame's name, itself a violation of the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, but has expanded to look into the exposure of Plame's colleagues who worked under the cover of a CIA firm called Brewster, Jennings & Associates. The "brass plate" CIA proprietary had offices in Boston and Washington, DC. Active since 1994, Brewster-Jennings was instrumental in tracking the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and had agents or correspondents in a number of countries including Iraq, North Korea, Belarus, Russia, South Africa, Iran, Israel, China, Pakistan, Congo (Kinshasa), India, Taiwan, Libya, Syria, Serbia, and Malaysia. By releasing Valerie Plame’s name, other agents' non-official covers were blown and the lives of U.S. operatives within foreign governments and businesses may have been placed in danger.
...
In July 2003, the covert operations of Plame and her Brewster-Jennings colleagues were rolled up as a result of the White House leak to columnist Robert Novak and other journalists. Observers believe the White House was retaliating for the report by Wilson that the administration was incorrect when it stated that Iraq was shopping for "yellow cake" uranium in Niger. On behalf of the CIA, Wilson visited Niger prior to the Iraq war and determined that the administration's evidence was based on erroneous information and falsified documents.
...
Recently, CIA Director George Tenet and Plame's ultimate boss, Deputy Director of Operations James Pavitt, suddenly resigned within hours of one another. Intelligence sources have said the two have been cooperating with Fitzgerald's investigation of the Plame/Brewster-Jennings leak and the damage to U.S. clandestine operations which globally track the flow of WMDs.
Sensitive CIA operations that were compromised by the leak included companies, government officials, and individuals associated with the nuclear smuggling network of Pakistan's chief nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan.