Isn’t that the day he said...take care of it...and went to Vegas.
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Marc Thiessen: Where was Obama during Benghazi? Ask the White House diarist
By Marc A. ThiessenMay 12, 2014
What was President Obama doing during the eight hours that the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, was under attack? Amazingly, we still do not know 20 months later.
But there is an easy way to find out just ask the White House diarist.
When trying to keep track of the presidents time, most observers look at WAVE records (the White House visitors log listing everyone who enters the White House complex) and the Presidents Public Schedule (which selectively lists the presidents public activities). But there is another document that meticulously records all the presidents activities, public and private, every second of every day. It is called the Presidents Daily Diary.
...So how is it that the White House has failed to give a full account of the presidents whereabouts during that eight-hour period? The White House knows precisely where he was and what he was doing, yet it is refusing to share that information with Congress and the American people.
...
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Marc Thiessen: Where was Obama during Benghazi? Ask the White House diarist
By Marc A. ThiessenMay 12, 2014
What was President Obama doing during the eight hours that the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, was under attack? Amazingly, we still do not know 20 months later.
But there is an easy way to find out just ask the White House diarist.
When trying to keep track of the presidents time, most observers look at WAVE records (the White House visitors log listing everyone who enters the White House complex) and the Presidents Public Schedule (which selectively lists the presidents public activities). But there is another document that meticulously records all the presidents activities, public and private, every second of every day. It is called the Presidents Daily Diary.
Just outside the Oval Office is a room called the Outer Oval, where the presidents secretary and personal aide sit and through which all visitors coming to see the president pass. Staff members in the Outer Oval keep track of the presidents location at all times. They carefully record the names of all individuals who walk into the Oval Office when they entered, how long they stayed, what the topic of discussion was. They keep a record of all calls made and received by the president, including the topic, participants and duration. They even record the presidents bathroom breaks (they write evacuating into the log).
This and other data on the presidents whereabouts are collected by a career National Archives employee whose title is White House diarist. This individual preserves them as a minute-by-minute historical record of the presidency for future use by presidential scholars.
What this means is that there exists a minute-by-minute record of where the president was and what he was doing for all eight hours of the Benghazi attack.
So how is it that the White House has failed to give a full account of the presidents whereabouts during that eight-hour period? The White House knows precisely where he was and what he was doing, yet it is refusing to share that information with Congress and the American people. This is unacceptable. Imagine if 20 months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the George W. Bush White House had still refused to account for where the president was or what he was doing that day. There would be outrage and constant demands from the press, Congress and other investigators demanding to know the answer to a simple factual question: Where was the president?
The new congressional select committee on Benghazi should subpoena the Presidents Daily Diary and call the White House diarist to testify before the committee. There is precedent for doing so. In 1998, the grand jury investigating the Monica Lewinsky affair questioned White House diarist Ellen McCathran. Moreover, the Presidents Daily Diary is not a classified document. It eventually becomes a publicly available record. There is no reason to withhold it from Congress.