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In a Sprawling Memoir, Clinton Cites Storms and Settles Scores (NYT Spin on Clinton's "My Lies")
New York Times ^ | 06/19/04 | JOHN M. BRODER

Posted on 06/18/2004 8:38:02 PM PDT by conservative in nyc

The New York Times

June 19, 2004

In a Sprawling Memoir, Clinton Cites Storms and Settles Scores

By JOHN M. BRODER

Former President Bill Clinton, in a 957-page autobiography that is by turns painfully candid about his personal flaws and gleefully vindictive about what he calls the hypocrisy of his enemies, blamed his affair with Monica Lewinsky on the "old demons" that have haunted him all his life.

He said the affair was personally humiliating and almost cost him his presidency and his marriage. In the end, after months sleeping on the couch, a year of intensive marital counseling and his acquittal on impeachment charges in the Senate, he said he finally felt free.

"In some ways it was liberating," he wrote in the book, "My Life," which is to be released on Monday with an initial printing of 1.5 million copies, adding that he no longer had a secret to hide. A copy was obtained by The New York Times from a bookstore. Mr. Clinton received an advance of more than $10 million for the memoir and is planning an extensive publicity campaign beginning this weekend to sell it.

The book provides an intimate glimpse not only of Mr. Clinton's struggle with the affair and the impeachment battle that followed, but also of eight eventful years in the White House, an improbable childhood and a precocious political career in Arkansas.

The book is sprawling, undisciplined and idiosyncratic in its choice of emphasis. It devotes nearly 100 pages to his childhood but treats large spans of his presidency as a travelogue of campaign cities and foreign capitals. Mr. Clinton wrote his book after the Sept. 11 attacks, and he devotes a good deal of space to his administration's efforts to deal with terrorism, and its growing concern about Osama bin Laden.

The signature events of Mr. Clinton's presidency are largely familiar and many of his former aides as well as his wife, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, have written their accounts of them. But this is the first full-length explanation from Mr. Clinton of how it felt to be at the center of so many storms.

The book's length gives the former president plenty of room to settle scores and he does so with his customary élan. He takes the whip to Republicans in Congress; Louis J. Freeh, the former F.B.I. director; the National Rifle Association; and even the Supreme Court, which ruled unanimously in 1997 that Paula Jones's sexual harassment case against him could go forward while he was in office. He called that one of the most politically naïve and damaging court decisions in years.

But he reserved special venom for Kenneth W. Starr, the independent counsel who chased him for years in one of the most expensive government investigations in the nation's history. He writes that Mr. Starr was the tribune of an organized right wing cabal that was determined to destroy his presidency because he was a personal anathema to them and repeatedly defeated them on policy grounds.

He accused Mr. Starr of pulling a "cheap, sleazy publicity stunt" by hauling Mrs. Clinton before a federal grand jury investigating the Whitewater affair. He said Mr. Starr could have come to the White House.

Yet Mr. Clinton also readily acknowledges that his sexual self-indulgence and his carefully crafted evasions gave his foes all the ammunition they needed to derail his presidency at least temporarily and damage his standing with the public.

Mr. Clinton wrote that from a very early age he lived "parallel lives," with a public gregariousness and sunny disposition masking private turmoil and weakness.

He several times witnessed his alcoholic stepfather, Roger Clinton, beating his mother and once firing a gun at her head. But he wrote that he would go to school the next day as if nothing had happened. This pattern was especially evident again in 1998, he said, when the Lewinsky affair was revealed and Mr. Clinton spent months lying to his family, his aides and the nation about it.

He said as a child he learned, too well, how to live with secrets. His family creed, he said, was "don't ask, don't tell."

He called 1998 the strangest year of his presidency, when he was compelled to lead two incongruent lives. The Lewinsky investigation brought what he called the "darkest part" of his personal life into full view.

He said he was disgusted by his sexual encounters with Ms. Lewinsky, which he said ended after several months when he could no longer live with himself. He admits that his actions were immoral and foolish, but repeatedly says that he was determined not to let Mr. Starr drive him from office because of them.

When he belatedly confessed to Mrs. Clinton in August 1998, he wrote, she reacted as if he had punched her in the gut. Telling their daughter, Chelsea, was even worse. He felt for weeks afterward, as he slept on a couch in the White House and a borrowed vacation home on Martha's Vineyard, that his indulgence and mendacity risked not only his marriage but also the love and respect of his only child.

He said he spent the several days immediately after his confession alternately begging for forgiveness and plotting a retaliatory strike against Mr. bin Laden and Al Qaeda for the August 1998 bombings of United States embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. Aides warned him that such a strike might be seen as an effort to change the subject from his personal and legal woes.

He said he forcefully told his aides to stick to national security advice. Mr. Clinton forgives most of his opponents their own foibles, even former Speaker Newt Gingrich who led Republicans into control of Congress in the 1994 elections and into pitched battle with Mr. Clinton. But his judgment of Mr. Freeh, the F.B.I. director he appointed in 1993, is harsh. He said Mr. Freeh, a former federal district court judge, turned on the White House to deflect criticism from serious lapses at the F.B.I., including scandals in its forensic laboratory and its handling of the shootout in Ruby Ridge, Idaho.

The book pulses with Mr. Clinton's own voice and is bursting with a typical profusion of anecdote and detail. Mr. Clinton writes that his father's death at age 28, before he was born, made him conscious of his own mortality and spurred him to live every moment to the fullest. Mr. Clinton writes with rueful candor about his chubby adolescence, confessing that he was once the only child at an Easter egg hunt not to get an egg, not because he could not find them, but because he could not move fast enough to compete with the other children.

He describes his youth as "a fat band boy" and recalls that in junior high school, as he began to learn more about his mind and body, some of it scared him, including his first sexual stirrings. Mr. Clinton also tells about his effort to avoid the Vietnam draft, which later became an issue in his presidential campaign. He details his aversion to going to Vietnam, and writes that he searched his heart at the time, trying to determine whether it was "rooted in conviction or cowardice." He says he is not sure, given how events played out, that he ever answered the question for himself.

He dwells briefly, though, on his confrontation with Mr. Gingrich and the other Republican leaders in Congress over the government shutdown during one of the big budget battles of 1995 and 1996. Mr. Gingrich, then the speaker of the House, told Mr. Clinton that he had thought the president would cave in to Republican demands, and said Republicans underestimated him. There are glimpses of his world view: Mr. Clinton argues that the Middle East conflict and the China-Taiwan conflict were polar opposite problems. The first would worsen with lack of attention, he believed, and the second would get better as long as neither side did anything too aggressive. But he devotes only a sentence to the harrowing moments when he sent a Navy carrier near the Taiwan strait to stop China from missile tests meant to intimidate the island's voters before a crucial election.

Mr. Clinton defends his record on terrorism, arguing that he pressed the allies for more of a focus on counterterrorism and citing speeches in which he called terror "the enemy of our generation.''

He also notes that in 1996 he signed two directives on terrorism and appointed Richard A. Clarke to be the administration's terrorism coordinator.

Mr. Clinton has surprisingly little to say about his opponent in the 1996 election, Bob Dole, but he paces readers through his campaign stops and analyzes the cultural factors that influenced the election in many states. Much as he often did in person, he runs through poll results state-by-state, concluding that over all he was happy with the re-election results, an overwhelming electoral and popular victory.

Mr. Clinton weaves the tale of the Whitewater investigation through the account of his White House years, always with a dismissive tone. He explained the sudden appearance of Mrs. Clinton's legal billing records in the White House residence as the product merely of sloppy record-keeping in Arkansas.

He expressed remorse and gratitude to Susan McDougal, who went to jail rather than testify against the Clintons on Whitewater. He said that she suffered because she refused to lie and tell prosecutors what they wanted to hear.

Mr. Clinton closes the book with a short meditation on the lessons he has learned about accepting personal responsibility, letting go of anger and granting forgiveness. He said that in the many black churches he has visited he has heard funerals referred to as "homegoings."

"We're all going home," he wrote, "and I want to be ready."

Todd S. Purdum and David E. Sanger contributed reporting for this article.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | Help | Back to Top


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: billclinton; bubba; clinton; hildabeast; lewinsky; mylies; mylife; slimes; spin; x42
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To: conservative in nyc
He said he spent the several days immediately after his confession alternately begging for forgiveness and plotting a retaliatory strike against Mr. bin Laden and Al Qaeda for the August 1998 bombings of United States embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. Aides warned him that such a strike might be seen as an effort to change the subject from his personal and legal woes.

Is he trying to claim it was the right wing cabal who allowed bin Laden to escape?

21 posted on 06/18/2004 9:04:29 PM PDT by Zevonismymuse
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To: CaptainK

Bubba doesn't hold a candle to the greatest writer of the 20th Century.


22 posted on 06/18/2004 9:06:02 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: conservative in nyc

Enablers. This no review, it's a promotional press release. NO perspective, no distance, taking known habitual liar's word for everything. Who ever doubts that Monica was not the only bimbo during those years? And yet the Slimes treats the whole episode as something out of the ordinary. Let's wait for the reviews in the conservative press...


23 posted on 06/18/2004 9:11:37 PM PDT by Revolting cat! ("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
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To: Cicero
... can't bring myself to read this poisonous swill.

I will not, of course, purchase the book. I already know enough about the great forgotten one.

I am, however, awaiting one left-leaning review which I will get a kick out of reading. He is probably drilling through the self-congratulatory tome as we post.

Guess who?

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.That's right. Christopher Hitchens.

24 posted on 06/18/2004 9:15:50 PM PDT by KC Burke (Men of intemperate minds can never be free....)
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To: goldstategop
Too true. The only thing they have in common is the lengthiness of their books.
25 posted on 06/18/2004 9:16:36 PM PDT by CaptainK
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To: conservative in nyc
Amazing!

Nothing is ever his fault.

26 posted on 06/18/2004 9:16:49 PM PDT by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: Ignorance On Parade)
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To: goldstategop
The real tragedy is a man of such political skill and charm might have been able to make something of himself had he not been so poll-dependent. In the end for all his grandiose ambitions he achieved little,

Our current president embodied the potential of a generation -- so many talents, so much charm, such great skill. But in the end, to what end? So much promise to no great purpose.
--- George W. Bush acceptance speech, 8-03-04

27 posted on 06/18/2004 9:20:48 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: conservative in nyc

this should be about as exciting as Hitler's Mein Kampf


28 posted on 06/18/2004 9:37:02 PM PDT by arly
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To: conservative in nyc

In all of the posts of articles about Clinton's book or his 60-Minutes interview, he conveniently omits the fact that his impeachment was not about the sex with Monica, but about LYING UNDER OATH. If any one of us were found guilty of this, we would most certainly be doing time.

Slamming Kenneth Starr and the VWRC for his troubles is a classic Rat tactic.


29 posted on 06/18/2004 9:37:24 PM PDT by Theresawithanh (BUSH/CHENEY 2004!!!!!!)
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To: goldstategop
"he achieved little and was able to finish his term in office only because the American people thought removing him from office for lying about a personal matter was too harsh a punishment for a moment of human weakness. That must be little solace for a man who won't be remembered as one of the presidential "greats" in the history books."

Most of the American people did not fall for that lie. He was impeached because he lied under oath and obstructed justice - plus a few more legal goodies - NOT for lying about his personal life!!!!!

30 posted on 06/18/2004 9:50:54 PM PDT by LADY J
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To: conservative in nyc

"He said the affair was personally humiliating and almost cost him his presidency"

It wasn't the affair Billy, it was lying under oath. You never can bring yourself to admit that, can you?

I remember the contrived photo ops used to really irritate me: All the little minority children gathered around his feet as if he were their benevolent uncle. It seemed like he had one of those at least once a week. Remember Ron Brown's funeral when he was yukking it up with his cronies until he saw the camera was on him, the he went into head-hanging lower-lip-biting mode? Just happening to come across the little pile of stones during his solitary, reflective walk on the beach during the '94 D-Day memorial and then stopping and arranging them into the shape of a cross. Everything about him reeked of the fallacious.


31 posted on 06/18/2004 9:52:03 PM PDT by dandi ("No nation ever taxed it's way into prosperity." - R.L.)
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To: conservative in nyc
They cannot be serious. Have they no decency?

The vaunted New York Times falls for the sleeping on the couch lie. We are being treated to what we had to endure during the years this thing held office: He states obvious lies and the media can't be bothered to insert even a hint of a qualifier indicating they have any doubt their Bill is telling anything but the truth.

As to this:

But he devotes only a sentence to the harrowing moments when he sent a Navy carrier near the Taiwan strait to stop China from missile tests meant to intimidate the island's voters before a crucial election.

Could it be he didn't want to dwell on the area where his activities are really suspect?

'Dear Charlie'

At the request of several Opinion, Inc. readers, we offer the complete text of the letters between Charlie Trie, fugitive Clinton fundraiser, and President Clinton about U.S. fleet movements in response to military pressure aimed at democratic Taiwan by the Chinese communist military.

The nature, text, and context of these letters have been virtually ignored by the Big Media.

The following letter to President Clinton from Charlie Trie was faxed by former White House aide Mark Middleton to the Oval Office on March 21, 1996 with a handwritten cover notation reminding the White House that "Charlie Trie is a personal friend of the President from LR (Little Rock). He is also a major supporter. The President sat beside Charlie at the big Asian fundraiser several weeks ago." Hours before this letter was faxed, Trie hand-delivered $460,000 in checks to the Clinton's legal defense trust fund. All these checks, plus an additional $122,000 in additional Trie-directed donations, were returned three months later because of evidence that they were forged and funneled to Clinton's slush fund by a Taiwan-based Buddhist cult.

~snip~

32 posted on 06/18/2004 10:12:10 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: 1rudeboy
Is it just me, or does everyone else find this "sleeping on the couch" business a bit much?

It's been getting commented about here as well as our noticing the fatuous media reporting it with a straight face, just as they always do with "him".

Brit Hume will probably wryly mention it with the appropriate cocked eyebrow and droll tone indicating he knows there's a big fat lie sitting there.

33 posted on 06/18/2004 10:15:02 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: LADY J

I do agree with you. But the truth remains the American people didn't want to see another President forced out of office. People did come to agree with the Democrats it was about sex and they thought impeachment was overkill. And didn't help Republicans that Starr's report seemed to focus more on Clinton's lurid sexual exploits than on his abuse of power.


34 posted on 06/18/2004 10:17:39 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: conservative in nyc

Mr. Clinton has surprisingly little to say about his opponent in the 1996 election, Bob Dole

Bob Dole was one of the best things that ever happened to clinton.

35 posted on 06/18/2004 10:23:00 PM PDT by fso301
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To: A Citizen Reporter
Thanks for highlighting this, I was going to remark on this amazing line of clintonian logic:

He explained the sudden appearance of Mrs. Clinton's legal billing records in the White House residence as the product merely of sloppy record-keeping in Arkansas.

And again, the New York Times doesn't blink an eye. Why that sloppy record-keeping transported those records by invisible transponder waves and they landed smack dab in the living quarters of the WH. I'm glad that's cleared up!

36 posted on 06/18/2004 10:23:11 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: fso301

With a better candidate, its possible Bubba might have been beaten. But no, Bob Dole had to insist it was his turn. To most Republicans, he was a representative of a time when the party's ideology could be summed up in getting along with the New Deal. And Clinton's appeal was he was gun shy and wouldn't rock the boat. The rest as they say, was history.


37 posted on 06/18/2004 10:27:08 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: CaptainK
But Dan Rather said that, as a presidential memoir, it's second only to Grant.

I saw Danny said that, too. Five stars out of five for a presidential memoir, said Dan.

Do ALL the presidential memoirs talk about their first "sexual stirrings"?

He describes his youth as "a fat band boy" and recalls that in junior high school, as he began to learn more about his mind and body, some of it scared him, including his first sexual stirrings

It does not strike me as presidential in the least.

38 posted on 06/18/2004 10:30:04 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: YaYa123
"Todd S. Purdom, who contributed to this, is married to Dee Dee Myers."

Makes me wonder if Dee Dee was helping Todd pen this review, while they lounged on the bed, laptop at er...hand:

The book pulses with Mr. Clinton's own voice and is bursting with a typical profusion of anecdote and detail...

Instead of "profusion", I would have used "proSPEWtion".
39 posted on 06/18/2004 10:59:41 PM PDT by CaptSkip
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To: conservative in nyc
...and his acquittal on impeachment charges in the Senate....

I thought he was not removed from office. I don't think that's an acquittal. Remember, doesn't rise to the level of blah blah blah.
40 posted on 06/18/2004 11:06:52 PM PDT by Joe_October (Saddam supported Terrorists. Al Qaeda are Terrorists. I can't find the link.)
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