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Bill Clinton authorized Sandy Berger's access
WorldNetDaily ^ | January 4, 2007 | By Chelsea Schilling

Posted on 01/03/2007 11:48:07 PM PST by Jim Robinson

Investigation into pilfered documents reveals former president signed letter

President Bill Clinton signed a letter authorizing former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger's access to classified documents that later came up missing, according to a newly released investigation report by the National Archives and Records Administration.

The sensitive drafts of the National Security Council's "Millennium After Action Review" on the Clinton administration's handling of the al-Qaida terror threats in December 1999 suspiciously disappeared after Berger said he intended to "determine if Executive Privilege needed to be exerted prior to documents being provided to the 9/11 Commission." Then-Attorney General John Ashcroft testified before the 9-11 commission about the millennium report, urging the panel to ask why the document's warnings and "blueprint" to thwart al-Qaida's plans to target the U.S. were ignored by the Clinton administration and not shared with the incoming Bush security staff.

The NARA investigation report said Clinton signed an April 12, 2002, letter designating Berger – and another person whose named is redacted – as "agents on his behalf to review relevant NSC documents regarding Osama Bin Laden/Al Qaeda, Sudan and Presidential correspondence from or to (Sudanese President) Omar Bashir, contained in the Clinton Presidential records." A subsequent letter from a National Security Council official, May 14, 2002, said Berger repeatedly was briefed that "he was not allowed to remove any documentation from NARA."

Last year, Berger plea bargained a criminal sentence on the charge of unlawfully removing and retaining classified documents. A judge gave him no prison time, a $50,000 fine, 100 hours of community service and a ban from access to classified material for three years

According to the NARA report, after the 9-11 attacks, Clinton administration officials were swamped with calls regarding their handling of terrorist threats, and Berger soon realized he would have to testify. Berger said he put in over 100 unpaid hours of his time to be responsive.

The former White House adviser said the documents up for review were so numerous that he was unable to reconstruct them from memory, so he took 10-to-12 pages of notes and hid them in the pocket of his blazer.

The investigation report says, however, the May 14, 2002, letter stated "notes may be taken but must be retained by NARA staff and forwarded to the NSC for a classification review and appropriate marking. Berger, the letter said, "was made aware of this requirement."

In July 2003, Berger's handling of the papers began to "cause archival concerns in maintaining provenance" after he asked to leave the viewing office several times to hold very private phone calls. Later, in September, Berger once again stepped out of the office and headed for the men's room, but personnel reported an unknown white object beneath his pant leg.

A witness said Berger "bent down, fiddling with something white, which could have been papers, around his ankle."

After Berger's actions aroused suspicion in September 2003, an unnamed archives official hand-numbered drafts provided to Berger as a means of controlling the documents without consulting with NARA general counsel, security, management, the Office of the Inspector General or law enforcement.

In October, Berger returned to the archives office and was given one file folder of documents at a time. The NARA report indicates an e-mail numbered 217 came up missing after he reviewed it. Berger later said he slid the document under his portfolio.

When personnel noticed it was missing, they offered a copy of document 217 to Berger, and he reportedly slid the second file under his portfolio as well. Later, Berger said if he had been asked to return the file "it would have triggered a decision for him to give the documents back."

Instead, Berger said he had to make a private phone call and went to a desk outside the office. However, the phone line remained unlit, and he quickly departed to the restroom, a location from which he was reported to have recently returned.

Berger made numerous suspicious visits to the men's room in which personnel were concerned he might be hiding documents. He said he "went to the restroom on an average of every 30 minutes to one hour to use the facilities and stretch his legs."

According to the NARA report, Berger claimed he accidentally took the files outside of the archives building and didn't want to risk bringing documents back because personnel might notice something unusual. Instead, he took the files to a fenced construction area on Ninth Street, slid them under a trailer and returned to the office to finish his review. After doing so, he returned to the site, reclaimed the documents and took them to his office.

During the visit, Berger is reported to have hidden four documents in his pockets, all versions of the Millennium Alert After Action Review.

Archives officials decided to call Berger and ask him for the documents. He said he didn't think he had any files. They advised him NARA was treating the matter as a security infraction and was going to report the incident to the National Security Council. If Berger admitted to taking the documents by mistake, the incident would be reported as inadvertent removal. But, he maintained that staff members were in error, and he had given the files back to an assistant.

Later that evening, Berger claimed to have found two documents, and NARA made arrangements to pick up the files the following morning. However, NARA reports the documents were an e-mail and a facsimile Berger reviewed Sept. 2, 2003, not classified files viewed Oct. 2, 2003.

Berger said he could not find any additional documents and claimed he must have thrown them away. According to the NARA report, "He had destroyed, cut into small pieces, three of the four documents. These were put in the trash. By Saturday, the trash had been picked up. He tried to find the trash collector but had no luck."

The inspector general was briefed on the incidents Oct. 10. That day, OI investigators recovered documents from Berger's home at the request of his attorney. Six months later, the Department of Justice notified the 9/11 commission.

Berger said if someone had always been with him, he would not have taken any documents.

Despite his April 1, 2005, guilty plea for Unauthorized Removal and Retention of Classified Material, Berger still vehemently denies smuggling any documents in his socks. According to the report, he said he was adjusting them "because his shoes frequently come untied and his socks frequently fall down."


TOPICS: Breaking News; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 20020412; 200309; 20030902; 20031002; 20031010; 217; abledanger; alqaeda; alqaida; berger; billclinton; billclintontantrum; clinton; clintonlegacy; corruption; coverup; crime; crook; documents; email; enemywithin; fifthcolumn; gorelick; gorelickwall; maar; millenniumplot; missingemail; nara; nationalsecurity; nsc; nscmaar; sandyberger; sandybergler; sandybuglar; sandyburglar; socks; thief; watergatex4
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To: Howlin; All
Who needs Sandy's shredded documents to 'hurt her chances,' anyway?

The clintons' malpractice and malfeasance
ooze from every orifice, real and virtual....

VIRTUAL KILL:
THE CHRIS WALLACE-BILL CLINTON INTERVIEW DECONSTRUCTED



361 posted on 01/07/2007 8:44:32 PM PST by Mia T (Stop Clintons' Undermining Machinations (The acronym is the message.))
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To: onyx; All
"What did Sandy Berger know and when did he know it?"

Oops, wrong administration....

The one question that Hillary Clinton should be asked at every whistle stop on her campaign is "What is Sandy Berger hiding?" She claims her time as First-Lady as part of the experience that prepared her for the Senate, ergo Presidency. So, she was there when the deals were being done. What's he hiding?

If this was a Republican theft, Sandy Berger would be a resident of Ft. Leavenworth by now. This issue cannot be brought up enough because future national security could be riding on the very papers that he destroyed.

Did Bill make a deal with Bin Laden to protect the US during his watch? Was his administration aware of an airplane plot scenario and didn't tell the incoming Bush people? What is so important that this man had to risk his fortune and future to protect the Clintons?--MHT

 

Excellent! Excellent!

Conversely, did the clintons protect bin Laden because of the Nobel Peace Prize?

MISSING CLINTON AUDIO! 'Can we kill 'em tomorrow?'
(+Albright-Fulbright-Nobel TERRORISM revelations)


ALBRIGHT INDICTS CLINTON FOR TERRORISM FAILURE
(and doesn't even know it)



'KILL BILL'
THE CLINTON-FOLEY NEXUS: A THEORY
part 1

We must nail missus clinton at every whistle stop, indeed. About this. About everything.

About the clintons' rape of Juanita Broaddrick. (Every once in a while a story of great magnitude arises in a way that provokes such little initial coverage that it effectively hides in plain sight. When this occurs, it's either because the original news worthiness appears to be at a lower level of importance, or because those with direct and indirect vested interests have enough aggregate influence so as to play down the story in question.)

HILLARY CLINTON THREATENED JUANITA BROADDRICK 2 WEEKS AFTER BILL CLINTON RAPED HER (VIDEO)


HILLARY ON THE COUCH: IS MISSUS CLINTON MENTALLY FIT?





COPYRIGHT MIA T 2007


362 posted on 01/09/2007 2:26:15 AM PST by Mia T (Stop Clintons' Undermining Machinations (The acronym is the message.))
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To: Jim Robinson

bookmark for later


363 posted on 01/09/2007 2:29:54 AM PST by GiovannaNicoletta
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To: All

bttt


364 posted on 01/09/2007 2:58:17 AM PST by Liz (Nearly all men can stand adversity, but to test a man's character, give him power. Abe Lincoln)
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To: onyx; All

This all screams the question, "Why has the media allocated so little focus on this?"

... The average reporter... once had a stronger loyalty to his craft than his biases -- perhaps the path to the good old days is through the future, and current journalism majors can lead us back to excellence.

Today however,

... [T]he media's five-to-one ratio of liberals to conservatives (as was reported by the Pew Foundation in 2004) is having a deleterious impact on us all in that we're only fully protected when the GOP commit the offense.

... Every once in a while a story of great magnitude arises in a way that provokes such little initial coverage that it effectively hides in plain sight. When this occurs, it's either because the original news worthiness appears to be at a lower level of importance, or because those with direct and indirect vested interests have enough aggregate influence so as to play down the story in question.

The Watergate scandal is an example of the first; Sandy Berger removing and extinguishing protected records of national security exemplifies the second.

... What happened to that kind of passionate investigative journalism? Sandy Berger stealing and destroying classified documents is a story with so many startling facts already in evidence, even the layman newshound should think to ask, "What else is being hidden and what are the motives?"

Why is robbing national security documents less important than robbing campaign documents?

Worse than Watergate
Front Page ^ | Jan 5, 2007 | Alan Nathan


"What is government itself but the greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary."

James Madison


 

When the founders granted 'The Press' special dispensation, they never considered the possibility that traitors in our midst would game the system. But that is precisely what is happening today. (Hate America? Support jihad? Become a 'journalist!')

This was bound to happen.

The premise behind the First Amendment as it applies to the press--that a vigilant watchdog is necessary, sufficient--indeed, possible--to protect against man's basest instincts--is tautologically flawed: The fox guarding the White House, if you will.

Walter Lippmann, the 20th-century American columnist, wrote, "A free press is not a privilege, but an organic necessity in a great society." True in theory. True even in Lippmann's quaint mid-20th-century America, perhaps. But patently false in this postmodern era of the bubbas and the Pinches.

When a free and great society is hijacked by a seditious bunch of dysfunctional, power-hungry malcontents and elitists, it will remain neither free nor great for long. When hijacked by them in the midst of asymmetric warfare, it will soon not remain at all.

If President George W. Bush is serious about winning the War on Terror, he will aggressively pursue the enemy in our midst.

Targeting and defeating the enemy in our midst is, by far, the more difficult task and will measure Bush's resolve and courage (and his independence from the MPRDC (mutual protection racket in DC)) more than any pretty speech, more even than 'staying the course.'

 

"It is hard to believe that a man is telling the truth when you know that you would lie if you were in his place."

H. L. Mencken
 

IN A 'PINCH': RETHINKING THE FIRST AMENDMENT
(Which came first, the 'journalist' or the traitor?)





365 posted on 01/09/2007 7:43:36 AM PST by Mia T (Stop Clintons' Undermining Machinations (The acronym is the message.))
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To: Jim Robinson
Berger said he intended to "determine if Executive Privilege needed to be exerted prior to documents being provided to the 9/11 Commission."

It seems to me that Executive Privilege could properly only be asserted by the executive in office when the documents are sought, i.e., the Bush Administration. The former Clinton administration is a legal non-entity. I don't see how it would be a position to assert any privilege.

366 posted on 01/09/2007 10:49:04 AM PST by Stingray51
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To: Stingray51
Of Course. Always after the fact when there can be no connection to the administration that we have to thank for the metastasizing of al-Quaeda, because nothing else mattered except clinton getting his rocks off however he could, flipping America the bird the whole time. You can take your %#$damn clinton and thust the son of a bitch to Hell.
367 posted on 01/09/2007 6:15:21 PM PST by Two Thirds Vote Aye (The Satanic Islamic savages are now more emboldened than they were on 9/10/2001.)
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To: Brilliant

Will we ever see Hillary's dissertation?
'Freedom of information' and all that, - right?
Where's the ACLU?


368 posted on 01/10/2007 6:47:04 AM PST by 4Liberty ( forced charity = theft)
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To: Unicorn

Isn't it nauseating the way all the former presidents "hug" and glad hand each other at state funerals, etc.

Absolutely disturbing.


369 posted on 01/10/2007 6:49:49 AM PST by 4Liberty ( forced charity = theft)
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To: truthkeeper

My favorite part:
"Berger said if someone had always been with him, he would not have taken any documents."

What is he - a toddler?? Do they have a "safety fence" to keep him away from the stove at home?

Berger would be IN JAIL now, if he were GOP.


370 posted on 01/10/2007 6:53:15 AM PST by 4Liberty ( forced charity = theft)
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