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Meet America’s most famous spy, whose exposure caused a scandal that reached all the way to the White House. Valerie Plame Wilson talked to correspondent Katie Couric in her first-ever interview, which was first broadcast last October. Ostensibly, Plame Wilson, the wife of Ambassador Joseph Wilson, was a business consultant until it was revealed that she was a covert CIA officer. The leaking of her identity was a political vendetta, she and her husband say, for his public accusation that the Bush administration manipulated intelligence on Iraq’s weapons programs. Besides the "horrible" feeling of reading her name in the paper, knowing her 18-year career was over, she says the leak seriously damaged the CIA and her network of contacts built up over those years. "I can tell you all the intelligence services in the world that morning were running my name through their databases to see, did anyone by this name come in the country? When? Do we know anything about it? Where did she stay? Who did she see?" she tells Couric.

 

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War and rape go hand in hand, but in Congo’s civil war rape is more than soldiers committing crimes: it is a weapon as potent as any gun or bomb. In our second story, as CNN’s Anderson Cooper reported last winter, thousands of women have been raped and mutilated in an effort by the victorious to impose their will on the vanquished, humiliating them in body and spirit. The act is so prevalent in the ethnic civil war that civilians have been emboldened to commit the crime as well. Anneke Van Woudenberg of Human Rights Watch makes this horrible observation: “I think because of the widespread nature of the war, because there has been so much violence, rape is now on a daily basis - rape is the norm."

 

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We take you to Florence, Italy, for our third piece, where the Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece, "The Battle of Anghiari," once resided. Painted on a wall 500 years ago, most art historians believed if it didn't fade away with time it must have been painted over or destroyed. But as Morley Safer reported last April, an art detective thinks he has solved the mystery of the missing mural.

 

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Those stories, and Andy Rooney's under the weather, on this Sunday's 60 Minutes, Aug. 17, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

 

 


 

 
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