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Secrecy,
Intransigence and War
The Vices of Hillary Clinton
By
ALEXANDER COCKBURN
and JEFFREY ST. CLAIR
November
16, 2007
http://www.counterpunch.com/cockburn11162007.html
Last of a three-part series.
Hillary Clinton's propensity
for overkill earned her and Bill the enmity of people capable of
inflicting serious damage, as the Whitewater and Cattle Futures
scandals duly attested. And soon, as they embarked on the 1992
presidential campaign, the same overkill reflex produced a perfect
storm of bad publicity that came within an ace of finishing Clinton
off altogether.
In January 2002, America was
introduced to the Gennifer Flowers scandal, courtesy of the
National Enquirer. Flowers was a former Little Rock newscaster
with whom Governor Clinton had an extended love affair for five
years in the 1980s, as pleasingly chronicled in Flowers' entirely
credible memoir, Gennifer Flowers: Passion and Betrayal.
After the Enquirer broke the Flowers story while Clinton was
campaigning in New Hampshire, his campaign advisors went into crisis
mode, trying to figure out the best defense. Seasoned tacticians
like Betsey Wright and David Ifshin suggested that the best course
would be to shrug the story off as unsubstantiated gossip mongering
by a supermarket tabloid. The national press corps was already
taking this tack, since the reporters on the campaign bus were loath
to admit they had been scooped by the Enquirer - whose story
was in fact a piece of well-researched investigative reporting,
backed up by taped phone calls and messages to Gennifer from Bill.
It was Hillary who instructed the campaign to put the ruthless
private investigator Jack Palladino on the case. In her memo to
Palladino, she ordered him to "impeach Flowers' character and
veracity until she is destroyed beyond all recognition." Thus
primed, Palladino went into action, seeking to portray Flowers as a
prostitute, a shakedown artist and career scamster.
While Palladino was trying
to finish off Flowers, Hillary urged Bill to follow the high-risk
strategy of both of them going on CBS's 60 Minutes for an
interview conducted by Steve Kroft. In front of a vast national
audience Bill, visibly ill at ease, admitted to causing pain to his
family while denying that their marriage was merely an arrangement.
"This is a marriage" he asserted. Hillary broke in. Years of effort
in burnishing Bill's image as a Son of the South went up in smoke as
she declared, "You know, I'm not sitting here like some little woman
standing by my man like Tammy Wynette."
The polls promptly showed
Bill's numbers plummeting south of the Mason-Dixon line. An affair
with Flowers was one thing, but insulting Tammy Wynette? The
nation's number one country star had been watching the program and
was furious. She immediately called her publicist to vent her
outrage, and the publicist relayed this to the press. For three days
the Clinton campaign tried to talk to Wynette. She declined all
calls until finally they got Burt Reynolds to call her, and she
relented, releasing the news she would accept Hillary's apologies.
The next storm the Clintons
had to face was the matter of his avoidance of the draft during the
Vietnam War. James Carville, the campaign manager, advocated
forthright admission that this is what he had done. Clinton agreed
with Carville's plan to go on ABC's Nightline with Ted
Koppel, bringing with him his famous letter to Colonel Eugene Holmes
frankly discussing the conflict between his desire to go and fight
in Vietnam and his concomitant eagerness to "maintain my political
viability". But Hillary was adamant. He should not admit that he
wanted to avoid the draft. On the other hand, he should not be
forced to apologize for being against the war. The entire file of
documents and letters should be concealed. Her view prevailed, and
the inevitable consequence was the draft-dodging issue stayed alive
as a steady stream of compromising documents was leaked to the press
over the next five months.
The desire for secrecy is
one of Mrs. Clinton's enduring and damaging traits, which is why
these campaign imbroglios are of consequence. Clinton dug himself
into many a pit, but his greatest skill was in talking his way out
of them in a manner Americans found forgivable. Befitting a
Midwestern Methodist with a bullying father, repression has always
been one of Mrs. Clinton's most prominent characteristics. Hers has
been the instinct to conceal, to deny, to refuse to admit any
mistake. Mickey Kantor, the Los Angeles lawyer who worked on the
1992 campaign, said that Hillary adamantly refused to admit to any
mistakes.
It's clear from Jeff Gerth
and Don Van Natta Jr.'s very revealing Her Way: The Hopes and
Ambitions of Hillary Rodham Clinton that Mrs. Clinton played a
major role in driving White House lawyer Vince Foster to suicide.
After the Clintons arrived in the White House, it became Foster's
role to guard their secrets. It was one thing to lock documents into
a secret room during the campaign. It was quite another to play
hide-and-seek with files in the White House, as Mrs. Clinton
required Foster to do. Now there weren't nosy reporters but special
prosecutors with subpoenas, looking for documents relevant to
Whitewater, to Mrs. Clinton's billing records at Rose Law, her tax
records relevant to the commodity trades. Foster was tasked with
hiding all these documents: some in his house, some in his office
and some - the most damaging files - back in his Little Rock house.
There were additional burdens for Foster. He was trying to douse
another fire started by Mrs. Clinton. This was her instruction to
fire the White House travel staff, on a trumped-up rationale. There
were six separate investigations into these firings, all of which
Foster had to deal with. Finally, the wretched man had to listen to
Mrs. Clinton publicly blame the whole "Travelgate" mess on him, even
as he was concealing documents making it clear she had been the
person initiating the mess. On top of that, Mrs. Clinton demanded
Foster be the principal liaison with Congress on her health reform
plan. For the last month of his life, she refused to communicate
with him, even though their offices were thirty feet apart.
Health reform was Mrs. Clinton's assignment in her husband's first
term. The debacle is well known. In early 1993, 64 per cent of all
Americans favored a system of national health care. By the time Mrs.
Clinton's 1342-page bill, generated in secret, landed in Congress,
she had managed to offend the very Democratic leadership essential
to making health reform a reality. The proposal itself, under the
mystic mantra "Managed Competition", embodied all the distinctive
tropisms of neoliberalism: a naïve complicity with the darker
corporate forces, accompanied by adamant refusal to even consider
building the popular political coalition that alone could have faced
and routed the insurance and pharmaceutical lobbies - two of the
most powerful forces on the American political scene. Mrs. Clinton's
rout on health reform remains one of the great avoidable disasters
of the last century in American politics, and one with appalling
human and social consequences
This disaster was compounded
by the fact that after the collapse of health reform, on the advice
of Dickie Morris (summoned by Mrs. Clinton), the Clintons swerved
right, toward all the ensuing ghastly legislative ventures of their
regime - the onslaughts on welfare, the crime bill, NAFTA. With
Morris came the birth of "triangulation" - the tactic of the Clinton
White House working with Republicans and conservative Democrats and
actively undermining liberal and progressive initiatives in
Congress. Money that could have given the House back to the
Democrats in 1996 was snatched by the White House purely for the
self-preservation of the Clintons.
After health care went down the tubes, Hillary adopted a very
low-key political profile, in part because Leon Panetta, the new
White House chief of staff, banned her from political meetings. She
outflanked him in two ways: by secret strategizing with Morris every
two weeks and by nightly strategy sessions with Clinton and Al Gore.
She swung back into a crucial public role with the Lewinsky affair,
ironically enough, standing by her man. Gerth and Van Natta
establish that she knew the full extent of her husband's relations
with the woman she called "Elvira" (the mid-'90s horror queen) on
January 21, 1998, eight months before the official narrative claims
that Bill informed her of his treachery the night before he gave his
deposition. She ordered a full-bore attack on Lewinsky as "a stalker
with a weight problem" and shoved Bill toward the doomed posture of
total denial. He himself had initially been trending toward a
stuttering half-admission that hanky-panky might have taken place.
But after he returned from the Lehrer show where he had taken this
non-combative route, Hillary lashed him into the categorical denial
- "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky" -
that exploded so disastrously in the months and years ahead. (Only
months earlier, Hillary had been the one who insisted that no deal
be made with Paula Jones, who could have been bought off with the
modest settlement her lawyer was requesting. Hillary said she didn't
want Jones to get "a single dollar".)
Bill had his Tammy, and he
knew the price. "Whatever Hil wants, Hil gets," he told his staff in
1998, and he began to read books about the campaigns of successful
female politicians - Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi, Benazir
Bhutto, Golda Meir. As Clinton headed toward impeachment, Hillary
set her course for the New York Senate seat.
Since Vietnam, there's never been a war that Mrs. Clinton didn't
like. She argued passionately in the White House for the NATO
bombing of Belgrade. Five days after September 11, 2001, she was
calling for a broad war on terror. Any country presumed to be
lending "aid and comfort" to al-Qaeda "will now face the wrath of
our country." Bush echoed these words eight days later in his
nationally televised speech on September 21. "I'll stand behind Bush
for a long time to come", Senator Clinton promised, and she was as
good as her word, voting for the Patriot Act and the wide-ranging
authorization to use military force against Afghanistan.
Of course she supported
without reservation the attack on Afghanistan and, as the propaganda
buildup toward the onslaught on Iraq got underway, she didn't even
bother to walk down the hall to read the national intelligence
estimate on Iraq before the war. (She wasn't alone in that. Only six
senators read that NIE.) When she was questioned about this, she
claimed she was briefed on its contents, but in fact no one on her
staff had the security clearance to read the report. And her
ignorance showed when it came time to deliver her speech in support
of the war, as she reiterated some of the most outlandish claims
made by Dick Cheney. In this speech, she said Saddam Hussein had
rebuilt his chemical and biological weapons program; that he had
improved his long-range missile capability; that he was
reconstituting his nuclear weapons program; and that he was giving
aid and comfort to Al Qaeda. The only other Democratic senator to
make all four of these claims in his floor speech was Joe Lieberman.
But even he didn't go as far as Senator Hillary. In Lieberman's
speech, there was conditionality about some of the claims. In
Senator Clinton's, there was no such conditionality, even though a
vehement war hawk, Ken Pollack, advising Senator Clinton prior to
her vote, had told her that the allegation about the al-Qaeda
connection was "bullshit".
Later, as the winds of
opinion changed, Senator Clinton claimed - and continues to do so to
this day - that hers was a vote not for war but for negotiation. In
fact, the record shows that only hours after the war authorization
vote she voted against the Democratic resolution that would have
required Bush to seek a diplomatic solution before launching the
war.
Today, Hillary Clinton says she supports the "surge" in Iraq and
claims it's working. From candidate, maybe president Hillary
Clinton, Iran can expect no mercy.
Click here for Part
One:
The Making of Hillary Clinton.
Click here for Part
Two:
Hillary and the Arkansas Elite.
Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair's latest book is
End Times: the Death of the Fourth Estate,
published by CounterPunch/AK Press. St. Clair's new book,
Born Under a Bad Sky,
will be published in December.
Reproduced from:
http://www.counterpunch.com/cockburn11162007.html
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