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9/11 Panel's Chiefs Want Rice to Testify Under Oath
The New York Times ^ | 3/30/2004 | PHILIP SHENONand RICHARD W. STEVENSON

Posted on 03/29/2004 8:43:15 PM PST by Utah Girl

The chairman and vice chairman of the independent commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks said on Monday that they would ask Condoleezza Rice to testify under oath in any future questioning because of discrepancies between her statements and those made in sworn testimony by President Bush's former counterterrorism chief.

"I would like to have her testimony under the penalty of perjury," said the commission's chairman, Thomas H. Kean, the former Republican governor of New Jersey, in comments that reflected the panel's exasperation with the White House and Ms. Rice, the president's national security adviser.

Ms. Rice has refused to testify in public before the commission, even as she has granted numerous interviews about its investigation.

The White House declined to respond to Mr. Kean's comments. One official who had been briefed on discussions between the White House and the commission said Monday night that several options were under consideration that might lead to a compromise over Ms. Rice. The official, who asked not to be named because of the delicacy of the negotiations, declined to specify the options and said nothing had yet been decided.

Ms. Rice has granted one private interview to the 10-member, bipartisan commission and has requested another. But the White House has cited executive privilege in refusing to allow her to testify in public or under oath. That decision has led Democrats and other critics to accuse the White House of trying to hide embarrassing information about its failure to pre-empt the Sept. 11 attacks.

"I think she should be under the same penalty as Richard Clarke," Mr. Kean said in an interview, referring to Richard A. Clarke, the former White House counterterrorism adviser who testified to the panel last week that the Bush administration had not paid sufficient attention to the threat from Al Qaeda before Sept. 11, 2001.

Congressional Republican leaders have said Mr. Clarke lied under oath in describing the Bush administration's counterterrorism record and requested that previous Congressional testimony by him be declassified.

In a private interview in February with several members of the commission, Ms. Rice was not required to be under oath, and panel officials said no transcript was made of the four-hour conversation. The commission has required all witnesses testifying at public hearings to be sworn in, opening them to perjury charges if they are found to be lying, while all but a handful of the hundreds of witnesses questioned behind closed doors have not been sworn in.

In separate interviews, Mr. Kean and the panel's vice chairman, Lee H. Hamilton, a former Democratic House member from Indiana, said they would continue to press for Ms. Rice to testify under oath in public.

But they said that if the White House continued to refuse to have her answer questions at a public hearing, any new private interviews with Ms. Rice should be conducted under new ground rules, with the national security adviser placed under oath and a transcription made.

Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton also said that if the White House agreed, they were ready to declassify and make public the notes taken by commissioners when they interviewed Ms. Rice on Feb. 7, along with the transcripts of nearly 15 hours of private questioning of Mr. Clarke that was conducted by the commission before last week's hearing. "My tendency is to say that everything should be made public," Mr. Kean said.

Throughout the day on Monday, there were signs of a debate within the administration over whether to hold fast to the principle of not allowing White House aides to testify before Congress or to seek a deal that would allow Ms. Rice to appear before the commission.

White House officials said Ms. Rice herself was looking for ways she could be permitted to respond to the commission, despite the reservations of the White House counsel's office and the potential difficulty of explaining why the administration was reversing course on what it had made a matter of principle.

One outside adviser to the White House said Mr. Bush's political staff was inclined to compromise on Ms. Rice's testimony, judging the political costs of continuing to fight in the midst of a tight re-election campaign to outweigh any cost from showing flexibility on the principle.

"It's fair to say many of the senior political advisers understand the principle but have a more pragmatic view," said the adviser, who insisted on anonymity, saying he wanted to keep his role behind the scenes.

This adviser said Karl Rove, Mr. Bush's senior adviser and political strategist, wanted to move the election away from questions like "Were there intelligence failures?" and to put the focus instead on which candidate could better protect against any future efforts by terrorists to attack the United States.

"If we're going to have a discussion about W.M.D. and intelligence failures and Osama bin Laden, that's not an election George W. Bush wins," the adviser said. "If it's about who keeps you safer, that's the ground we want to be on."

The White House has cast its objections to allowing Ms. Rice to make a formal appearance before the commission as a matter of upholding the principle of separation of powers between Congress, which created the commission, and the executive branch.

In a letter to the commission last week, Alberto R. Gonzales, the White House counsel, said that in order to protect the ability of any president "to receive the best and most candid possible advice from their White House staff" on national security issues, it was important that "these advisers not be compelled to testify publicly before Congressional bodies such as the commission."

A second outside adviser said that White House officials believed they could endure the political firestorm raging now but that they were concerned that giving up the privilege could come back to haunt them down the road.

After finding herself at the center of the political furor over Mr. Clarke's testimony, Ms. Rice asked last week for a separate meeting with the commission, specifically to rebut the accusation made by Mr. Clarke in his testimony and in his new, best-selling memoir.

"With other witnesses, our policy has been to conduct interviews under oath when key factual matters are in dispute, and there are obviously some factual matters here under dispute," Mr. Hamilton said. He said the commission would probably go ahead with the interview even if Ms. Rice refused. "If she decided not to be placed under oath, that would be her decision, and we are still going to want her testimony."

The commission has voted in the past against issuing a subpoena for Ms. Rice, and panel members said today that they were unlikely to reconsider given the lengthy court challenge that might result.

Opinion polls over the last week offer no clear signs on whether the furor over Mr. Clarke's accusations will affect Mr. Bush's hopes for re-election.

A poll by the Pew Research Center conducted March 22 through Sunday showed Mr. Bush running even with Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts in a head-to-head match-up among registered voters. A poll by Newsweek taken after Mr. Clark's testimony showed that while the president's overall approval rating remained steady at 49 percent, the percentage of voters who said they approved the way he had handled terrorism and domestic security issues had dropped.

Ms. Rice has given a flurry of interviews to news organizations over the last week in which she has challenged Mr. Clarke's truthfulness, including his depiction of her as slow-footed in responding to intelligence warnings throughout 2001 that Al Qaeda was plotting a catastrophic attack on the United States.

Members of the commission, Democrats and Republicans alike, say they are angered by her interviews. They say the White House has made a major political blunder by continuing to assert executive privilege in blocking public testimony by Ms. Rice while continuing to use her as the principal public spokeswoman in defending the Bush's administration's actions before Sept. 11.

"I find it reprehensible that the White House is making her the fall guy for this legalistic position," said John F. Lehman, Navy secretary in the Reagan administration and a Republican member of the commission. "I've published two books on executive privilege, and I know that executive privilege has to bend to reality."

While there is precedent for the White House argument that incumbent national security advisers and other White House advisers should not be required to testify in public, constitutional scholars say that the position is based only on past practice, not law, and that presidents have repeatedly waived the privilege, especially at times of scandal or other intense political pressure.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 911commission; condoleezzarice; stophillary
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Oh my goodness. Kean is a spineless wimp. He makes it sound as if Condi Rice needs to go under oath now. And earlier today he said "Refusal to have Condi Rice is a huge political blunder." Arghhhhh, nothing about principle about not having National Security advisors testifying in public going against a principle, just a political blunder. And he says NOTHING about Richard Clarke and HIS contradictions under oath and in public.
1 posted on 03/29/2004 8:43:17 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
Why do they have Condi Rice testifying instead of Saddam?
2 posted on 03/29/2004 8:45:26 PM PST by Freedom of Speech Wins
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To: Utah Girl
Why do they have Condi Rice testifying instead of Saddam?
3 posted on 03/29/2004 8:45:32 PM PST by Freedom of Speech Wins
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To: Freedom of Speech Wins
Have Clinton and Gore testified???
4 posted on 03/29/2004 8:47:12 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
If she were to go under oath and it appeared to show clarke was lying, then the spin would be that she was the one lying. No win thing here, junk the bastards and move on!
5 posted on 03/29/2004 8:48:41 PM PST by Waco
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To: Freedom of Speech Wins
Why do they have Condi Rice testifying instead of Saddam?

Because they are frightened by what Saddam might actually reveal -- there'd be a lot of plane flights out of DC pronto.

6 posted on 03/29/2004 8:50:00 PM PST by Alia (California -- It's Groovy! Baby!)
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To: Alia
At this point I say it's best to just say "NO", and move on.org. The commission can just feel free to release her previous testimony.
7 posted on 03/29/2004 8:53:49 PM PST by Belisaurius ("Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, Ted" - Joseph Kennedy 1958)
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To: Belisaurius
I just read a Washington Post that says the White House is negotiating with the 9/11 commission to have Rice's testimony released.
8 posted on 03/29/2004 8:56:34 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
This flap is much ado about very little. The principals are merely talking past each other and the mission of the commission is getting lost in the dust-up.
9 posted on 03/29/2004 8:56:40 PM PST by middie
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To: Utah Girl
This adviser said Karl Rove, Mr. Bush's senior adviser and political strategist, wanted to move the election away from questions like "Were there intelligence failures?" and to put the focus instead on which candidate could better protect against any future efforts by terrorists to attack the United States.

By not readily allowing Rice to testify, the White House has taken Clark off the front pages for a few days. Shortly, maybe tomorrow, the White House will announce Rice WILL testify under oath. She will then sink Clark.

10 posted on 03/29/2004 8:58:08 PM PST by Balata
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To: Utah Girl
On the surface this seems a hard one to fathom, unless it's just more of the same modus operandi by the white house (resist, resist, resist a little less then capitulate to get maximum bad impact). On the other hand it could be a coup in antagonizing the Democrat anti-Bush faction on the commission to the point that, when she does testify, they are crazed and make gross missteps in their passion to really get Condoleezza. Although she has had some rough press outings in the past - I think she's smart and tough and should be able to handle these grandstanding jokers.

The mere fact that were have to watch the strategies and counter strategizing that is going on is proof that the commission was not a good idea.

Something in the line of this issue - I can say that I welcome the post Rehnquist retirement nomination of Justice Antonin Scalia to Chief Justice. There is not a perfect chance that the will make it, but if he loses he says on the court, and having Scalia on the Court whether it is C.J. or A.J. - is a very good good thing. In the public hearings that are part of the confirmation process Scalia would grind Schumer, Leahman, et. al. into shredded dog meat. It would be sweet.

11 posted on 03/29/2004 8:59:39 PM PST by Wally_Kalbacken (Seldom right, never in doubt!)
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To: Utah Girl
I don't know, but I'd say.....doubtful. Right after the old Clarke testimony broke on FR this afternoon, suddenly there were several new stories on the wire about the WH "negotiating"....I'm taking it with a grain of salt.
12 posted on 03/29/2004 9:01:22 PM PST by A Citizen Reporter
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To: Balata
Condi can go just after Clintoon.
13 posted on 03/29/2004 9:02:56 PM PST by jocko12
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To: Utah Girl
Related Item:

Past National Security Advisors agree on Exec. Privilege (includes video)

14 posted on 03/29/2004 9:03:30 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: Belisaurius
I am so sick of these gutless wonder republicans on this commission!!! I sent Chairman Kean a letter and an email concerning Ben-Vieste leaking Condi's previous private (classified) testimony to the press on Saturday. I told him if he was worth a flip, he would have the mafia-owned Ben-Vieste recuse himself. But we all know he won't, he doesn't have the balls to do it. The way he conducted the public testimony was a disgrace. Him allowing the biased audience cheering section, the book by Clarke to be used repeatedly for reference as if it were the law, and letting Clarke testify (lie) longer than any other witness (and because why?) was the most flagrant, partisan witch hunt I have witnessed since Clinton's impeachment hearings.

Why in the hell should Condi testify in public when the communist dim commissioners are already releasing her testimony that was suppose to be confidential? We are at war right now, for heaven's sake! These people keep telling the terrorist just what we have done and haven't done and don't think for a minute they're not keeping tabs.

This 9-11 commission is a total partisan circus and they don't care who they take down.......as long as they are in the Bush administation. It has been a sham from the beginning....because if anybody gave a sh*t about our national security, they would NOT have had these hearings in an election year.

I say Bush should stick to his guns. Have Condi go back and testify in private if they want to talk to her again.
15 posted on 03/29/2004 9:23:45 PM PST by bornintexas (..Release your military records, John F'n Kerry!)
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To: bornintexas
She has testified privately. The only reason they want her to testify publicly is so the lamestream socialist media can have sound bites of them grandstanding and berating her as they rake her over the coals...

If they want her words to be public, let them read her testimony out loud.

For that matter lets just release Clarks previous testimony.

He has perjured himself before congress either in his public testimony soliciting free advertisement for his book, or he purjured himself in the private testimony.

It is time to call for an investigation of him and prosecution...
16 posted on 03/29/2004 9:36:39 PM PST by TASMANIANRED
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To: Belisaurius
lol. Ben Veniste has been leaking data. Why should the commission concern itself with releasing her previous testimony, when, well, there's a Ben Veniste in the room.
17 posted on 03/29/2004 9:43:31 PM PST by Alia (California -- It's Groovy! Baby!)
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To: Utah Girl
But .. when Clinton said no to Clarke testifying - I wonder if this same group would be complaining; probably not.
18 posted on 03/29/2004 9:53:10 PM PST by CyberAnt (The 2004 Election is for the SOUL of AMERICA)
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To: Utah Girl
So much for a non partisan investigation. As far as I am concerned they can dump their finding in the nearest trash can. This was supposed to be an investigation of what led up to 911.Its nothing but a Blame Bush for everything party.
19 posted on 03/29/2004 9:56:44 PM PST by dalebert
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To: Balata
Shortly, maybe tomorrow, the White House will announce Rice WILL testify under oath. She will then sink Clark.

I agree that this is probably what will happen. The White House is playing this pretty well...wait...wait...wait...and then spring Condi on them with all the national spotlight. She will skewer Clarke in a forceful, dignified way, and the American people will rally behind her and the president.

20 posted on 03/29/2004 9:57:47 PM PST by Azzurri
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