To believe the FBI or the White House
By CAL THOMAS
If forced to choose between the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
with all of its recent flaws, and the Clinton White House, which
is nothing but flawed, who would you be more inclined to believe
in a dispute involving who is telling the truth?
The president claims he was never told about alleged attempts
by the Chinese government to penetrate the American electoral
system and that the FBI instructed the National Security Council
staff during a briefing not to tell him. But the FBI issued a
statement denying the president's account and insisting it had
"placed no restrictions whatsoever on the dissemination up
the chain of command at the NSC or any information provided to
the NSC senior staff."
I'll go with the FBI on this one. Besides, the president repeatedly
assures us neither he nor his campaign did anything illegal, so
why the fuss if he really is telling the truth?
The excuses, whining and attempts to spread the guilt to Republican
fund-raising tactics is beginning to fail as a strategy. The opinion
polls, the only standard the president apparently cares about,
are finally beginning to reflect the public's concern that while
all politicians may be suspect, this president is more suspect
than others. The public may not like the way funds are raised
for political campaigns, but it dislikes in the extreme the prostituting
of America's good name to Chinese whose brothers-in-arms slaughter
and otherwise oppress their own people.
The Clinton White House isn't yet in a panic, but it's getting
close. The once impenetrable wall of confidence which reflected
the attitude that nothing can touch this president is beginning
to reveal a large crack. The president has survived reports of
alleged extra-marital affairs, draft-dodging, sexual harassment,
double-talking and double-mindedness on a range of issues, including
events collectively known as Whitewater. Now he faces a scandal
that could eclipse the rest and which the public can easily comprehend.
It may prove to be the biggest electoral heist in political history,
involving sleazy tactics in the selling of access.
The arrogance of this bunch is astonishing. Statements from
current and former administration officials, including former
chief of staff Leon Panetta, indicate the administration believed
virtually anything was justified to defeat Republicans because
the GOP would starve the elderly and ruin the country. So the
Clinton-Gore reelection team, believing it had the "anything
goes" green light from the president and first lady, may
have even sold seats on the president's Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board. Two men who contributed more than $200,000 to the Democratic
National Committee between June, 1995, and May, 1996, now have
blanket access to files containing secret intelligence.
The cynicism of the fund-raisers was unlimited. The Washington
Post reported the Cheyenne-Arapaho Indians of Oklahoma contributed
$107,000 to the Clinton-Gore re-election effort. They hoped the
money would buy favorable administration action on the return
of their tribal lands. What it got them was a solicitation for
more money and an offer from a Gore fund-raiser to lobby the administration
in exchange for a $100,000 retainer, a percentage of all royalties
from mineral rights on the land and a $10,000 per month fee. And
they say Republicans are the party of the rich!
Mrs. Clinton has helped move White House explanations from
the ludicrous to the laughable. Asked whether she made any fund-raising
calls from the White House, she invoked her Whitewater defense:
"I don't recall making any." Mrs. Clinton also offered
this explanation for why the president allowed nearly 1,000 people,
many of them donors, to spend the night at the White House: "Anyone
who knows my husband knows he enjoys people. He counts thousands,
if not hundreds of thousands, of people among his friends."
Most people would be happy to call one or two individuals friend.
The Clinton definition of friendship is apparently rather superficial.
It was once reported (erroneously) that former Nixon aide Charles
Colson would run over his own grandmother to re-elect that president.
The Clinton people apparently were prepared to allow the Chinese
communist government to run over their own country in pursuit
of a second Clinton term.
Los Angeles Times Syndicate
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