Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) is setting his sights on his biggest political target yet: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Issa,
the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, is
treading more carefully than he did with his investigation of Attorney
General Eric Holder and the Fast and Furious gun-tracking program, which
led to a House vote placing Holder in contempt.
Issa has not
called on Clinton to testify at a hearing Wednesday morning meant to
investigate security lapses at the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
Issa’s staff has also praised Clinton for vowing to cooperate with the
investigation of how an attack on the consulate left U.S. Ambassador
Christopher Stevens and three other American diplomats dead.
“After
dealing with the Department of Justice’s stonewalling in Operation Fast
and Furious, the State Department and Secretary Clinton have been a
breath of fresh air,” said Frederick Hill, a spokesman for Issa, in an
interview with The Hill. “They pledged their cooperation when we made
our first two witness requests.”
But there are signs that a
prolonged investigation by the pugnacious Issa and his panel, which
enjoys subpoena power over the administration, will bring the two
Washington heavyweights into conflict.
While Issa has not
directly criticized Clinton, one of his lieutenants — Rep. Jason
Chaffetz (R-Utah) — did on Tuesday, arguing the White House and Clinton
had been more concerned with normalizing relations with Libya’s new
government than with security.
“It seems to be a coordinated
effort between the White House and the State Department, from Secretary
Clinton to President Obama’s White House,” Chaffetz said on the Fox News
Channel morning show.
He said State had been too concerned that “putting up barbed wire on our facility would lead to the wrong impression.”
Issa has called four witnesses for the hearing.
Two of them have alleged that the State Department refused requests for more security in Libya, prompting Issa’s probe.
Eric
Nordstrom, a regional security officer who left Tripoli about two
months before the attack, told the committee that Deputy Assistant
Secretary for International Programs Charlene Lamb wanted to keep the
number of U.S. security personnel in Benghazi “artificially low,”
according to the Democratic memo.
And Lt. Col. Andy Wood, the head
of a 16-member special operations team that left Libya in August, said
Stevens wanted his team to stay in the country.
The State Department is sending Lamb and Patrick Kennedy, the undersecretary for management, to give its version of events.
Wednesday’s hearing should be well-attended, even with Congress not in session.
Seven
Republicans and four Democrats confirmed to The Hill that they planned
on going, and another six lawmakers said they had prior engagements. No
one said he or she would avoid it because it would be too partisan.
The
Republicans who confirmed their attendance are Reps. James Lankford
(Okla.), Ann Marie Buerkle (N.Y.), Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Pat Meehan (Pa.),
Scott DesJarlais (Tenn.), Trey Gowdy (S.C.) and Jim Jordan (Ohio).
Democrats include Reps. Chris Murphy (Conn.), Danny Davis (Ill.) and Jim
Cooper (Tenn.) and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D.C.).
A fight
between Issa and Clinton would have implications not only in the 2012
election, but possibly 2016 as well, given speculation — rejected by
Clinton — that she might run again for the White House.
The real
target for all of Issa’s investigations is Obama, whom Clinton is under
pressure to protect even as she looks to cement her own reputation as a
successful secretary of State.
And Issa, in going after State, is
setting himself up for a battle with one of the country’s most popular
and influential political figures.
Clinton is also a Washington
player with a cadre of loyal lieutenants dedicated to protecting her
image — not to mention her husband, President Bill Clinton.
Clinton and Issa have tangled in the past.
In
1998, Clinton, whose brother was married to Sen. Barbara Boxer’s
daughter, campaigned with the California Democrat against Issa, who
ended up losing the Senate election to a primary challenger despite
pouring millions of dollars into the race.
Issa and Clinton came
up against each other again in 2003, when California’s Democratic
governor, Gray Davis, was in the midst of being recalled.
Problems
for Clinton could arise down the road as the committee looks into
whether it was misled by the administration — a central theme to Issa’s
investigation of Holder.
After the Benghazi attack, the
administration initially held that it wasn’t premeditated, but rather
caused by a protest that got out of control. Officials now acknowledge
the attack was terrorism.
Similarly, the Justice Department
initially denied letting guns fall into the hands of criminals when
Congress began asking questions about Operation Fast and Furious.
The
department later rescinded that stance, but the damage was done and
Issa fervently went after senior DOJ officials, and eventually Holder,
for misleading Congress.
For the time being, Issa’s office holds
that Clinton’s response has been noticeably different from the DOJ’s and
says it is optimistic about the course of the probe.
“In great
contrast, the State Department, to this point, does not seem to have
drawn any hard lines in terms of either casting blame or defending what
happened,” said Hill. “They have indicated publicly that they share the
committee’s desire to learn what happened here.”
A State
Department official on Tuesday offered a closed-door briefing requested
by the chairmen of eight panels with jurisdiction over foreign affairs,
which Issa sat in on, after being given permission by Clinton to do so.
No comments:
Post a Comment