At
odds with Republicans, Hillary Clinton to testify on Benghazi
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[October 22, 2015]
By Jonathan Allen and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Whether it's a
fact-finding mission as Republicans insist or the political witch hunt
that Democrats anticipate, the congressional committee investigating the
deadly 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, on
Thursday will hear from Hillary Clinton, then the secretary of state and
now the top candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.
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Clinton and many of her fellow Democrats have seized on the
comments in recent weeks by Republican lawmakers as evidence that
the goal of the Benghazi committee in the U.S. House of
Representatives was to hurt her front-runner status in the campaign
for the November 2016 election.
Clinton's appearance follows months of unflattering reports about
her use of a private home email server for her State Department
work. The reports emerged in part because of the Benghazi
committee's demand last year to see Clinton's official records.
Trey Gowdy, the committee's Republican chairman and a former federal
prosecutor, has been put on the defensive as the most high-profile
event in his committee's 17-month existence drew near.
"Shut up" was his advice to Kevin McCarthy, the second most powerful
Republican in the House, and others in the party who would draw a
link between the committee's work and Clinton's declining
favorability in opinion polls.
Gowdy says he is focused on a serious inquiry into the killing of J.
Christopher Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya, and three other
Americans by suspected Islamist militants who invaded the U.S.
mission compound in the war-torn city of Benghazi with guns,
grenades and mortars.
The committee's five Democrats, who may discuss abandoning the
inquiry after Clinton's appearance, say they think there is little
left to unearth on Benghazi that more than half a dozen previous
inquiries did not find.
"I'm looking forward to answering questions about the real things
when I'm there," Clinton said pointedly in a television interview
earlier this month. She voiced disgust at what she said were
Republican admissions that "it's a political partisan committee for
the sole purpose of going after me."
Gowdy and some of the committee's six other Republicans say
Thursday's hearing will dispel this notion.
"The American people will be proud to see that this was a
fact-centric, mission-focused proceeding," Mike Pompeo, a Kansas
Republican on the committee, predicted in a phone interview this
week. He declined to place any special importance on Clinton's
appearance, speaking of it as simply the latest, but not the last,
in more than 50 committee interviews with witnesses.
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The committee's Republicans have asked the State Department to clear
for possible public release about 130 documents that the department
has supplied to the committee, according to two people with
knowledge of the communications.
Most of the documents are either Clinton's emails with Sidney
Blumenthal, a friend who served as an unofficial adviser to Clinton
and who often sent her long memoranda filled with purported
intelligence from Libya, or communications involving State
Department officials about diplomatic security in Libya in 2011 and
2012, the two people said.
A 2012 report by a government accountability review board sharply
faulted State Department officials for providing "grossly"
insufficient security in Benghazi, despite upgrade requests from
Stevens and others in Libya.
The Democrats will likely ask Clinton, who also testified about
Benghazi before the U.S. Senate in 2013, about how diplomatic
security can be improved, Adam Schiff, a Democratic member from
California, said in a telephone interview.
The panel's Republicans, he said, are expected to have Clinton
testify for at least six to eight hours. "I am not sure what we are
going to do in all that time," he said.
(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by
Leslie Adler and Howard Goller)
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