Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
TEXT SIZE: A A A A
Email this post | Back to Blog home
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Hillary's Bosnia "misstatement"
Will Bunch reports: Here's the interview excerpt yesterday that everybody's been talking about, where Sen. Hillarty Clinton made the extremely rare -- for her -- admission that she "misspoke" when she claimed in a major foreign policy address that she was under sniper fire when she landed in Bosnia in March 1996. Since the story first ran on Attytood (hyperlink: www.attytood.com) early yesterday even, her comments have been featured on national TV from CNN and MSNBC to ABC's "Good Morning America" and was jumped on by the New York Times (hyperlink: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/25/us/politics/25clinton.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin) .

You can see a video clip of the exchange between Will and Sen. Clinton by scrolling to the bottom of this post.


Here's the original posting:
 
Earlier this afternoon, Sen. Hillary Clinton came to the Daily News and Inquirer building here in Philadelphia -- where she's seeklng the Daily News editorial board endorsement -- and I had a chance to ask her about a controversy that's increasingly dogged her campaign the last few days: Whether she misrepresented the danger of her March 1996 trip to a U.S. military base in Bosnia in an effort to boost her foreign policy credentials.

Clinton acknowleged today for the first time that it was a "misstatement" when she said in a major prepared foreign policy speech last week that "I remember landing under sniper fire" but also tried to brush off the entire issue as "a minor blip." She also gave a revised account of her airplane landing and her tarmac greeting at the Tuzla Air Force base 12 years ago -- seeking to explain a picture re-published this weekend in the Washington Post showing her and daughter Chelsea calmly greeting an 8-year-old girl.

In her speech last week at George Washington University, Clinton maintained "[t]here was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base. Today, she told our group at the Daily News that she was informed that we "had to meet this 8-year-old girl," so "I took her stuff and left."

The dispute is hardly a trivial one because the New York senator has tried to stress that foreign policy experience is why voters in Pennsylvania's April 22 primary should chose her over Sen. Barack Obama, the overall leader in delegates and primary votes. And she has placed the Bosnia trip front and center, to the extent that her account of her visit there led off last week's televised speech. Here's what she said then (hyperlink: http://www.hillaryclinton.com/news/speech/view/?id=6553) :

I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base. But it was a moment of great pride for me to visit our troops, not only in our main base as Tuzla, but also at two outposts where they were serving in so many capacities to deactivate and remove landmines, to hunt and seek out those who had not complied with the Dayton Accords and put down their arms, and to build relationships with the people that might lead to a peace for them and their children.

In the week since that remark, which echoed other recent statements about her trip, several journalists - most notably Michael Dobbs of the Washington Post -- (hyperlink: http://blog.washingtonpost.com/fact-checker/2008/03/hillarys_balkan_adventures_par.html) have found holes in what Sen. Clinton said. In particular, Dobbs said none of more than 100 contemporaneous accounts mentioned sniper fire and that the Associated Press reporter on the trip had no recollection of any weapons fire. Dobbs also reported that CBS news footage shows the then-First Lady walking calmly from the C-17 transport plane as well as a number of dignitaries -- in addition to the 8-year-old Emina Bicakcic, a Muslim girl who read a poem in English -- waiting there.

A follow-up by the Post's Dobbs quotes a Clinton speechwriter, Lisa Muscatine, as defending her former boss -- stating the C-17 was chosen for its ability to make quick landings and that members of the Clinton party were issued flak jackets before arriving at Tuzla.

This afternoon, in the session with Daily News editorial writers and reporters (and some Inquirer staffers as well) in a conference room at the Daily News and Inquirer Building, I asked the presidential candidate about these discrepancies and also showed her a copy of the photo -- at the top of this post -- of her on the tarmac that day.

She was quick to answer, jumping in before I was fully finished with the question. Here's here response in its entirety:

"Now let me tell you what I can remember, OK -- because what I was told was that we had to land a certain way and move quickly because of the threat of sniper fire. So I misspoke -- I didn't say that in my book or other times but if I said something that made it seem as though there was actual fire -- that's not what I was told. I was told we had to land a certain way, we had to have our bulletproof stuff on because of the threat of sniper fire. I was also told that the greeting ceremony had been moved away from the tarmac but that there was this 8-year-old girl and, I can't, I can't rush by her, I've got to at least greet her -- so I greeted her, I took her stuff and then I left, Now that's my memory of it.

I followed-up, noting that the episode has raised questions about her credibility on foreign policy. She responded:

"No, I went to 80 countries, you know. I gave contemporaneous accounts, I wrote about a lot of this in my book. you know, I think that, a minor blip, you know, if I said something that, you know, I say a lot of things -- millions of words a day -- so if I misspoke, that was just a misstatement."

The Clinton campaign is clearly eager to put this controversy to rest before it drags down her Pennsylvania campaign. As the session broke up, campaign press secretary Jay Carson made a beeline to me to offer additional background, explaining that the senator didn't want to completely blow off the ceremony but that she was also in a hurry to get indoors. Within about 20 minutes, Carson emailed me press acconts from the time of the 1996 visit, including one from the Washington Post that said her trip was "the first time since [Eleanor] Roosevelt that a first lady has voyaged to a potential combat zone."

Posted by PA Primary Team @ 8:55 AM  Permalink | 55 comments
SAVE AND SHARE
Comments
Posted by Tanksleyd 09:02 AM, 03/25/2008
Iraq, Bosnia, NAFTA --> Impressive experience:Half Truths & "Mis-statements"
Posted by tdoc 09:38 AM, 03/25/2008
Obama lies, Hillary lies, and McCain claims economics isnt his specialty (but war is). Cant we do better than these hacks? Where's Al Gore when we need him? I'd even settle for Underdog.
Posted by Tanksleyd 09:49 AM, 03/25/2008
"Have no fear"...Said Mr. Bush
Posted by Sick_of_the_PC_Crowd 09:57 AM, 03/25/2008
This is the worst bunch of Presidential candidates I've seen since I became eligible to vote. It will be the lesser of two evils, as usual, in November.
Posted by samson 10:00 AM, 03/25/2008
Being Philadelphians we should be comfortable with our politicians lieing and stealing. I think that is why the PA democratic machine is so in love with Hillary. They all have aspirations to get to her level of depravity.
Posted by ZTG 10:15 AM, 03/25/2008
The truth is she doesn't have foreign policy experience. She was the president's wife. I don't want my surgeon's wife operating on me.
Posted by CommonSense in Philly 10:30 AM, 03/25/2008
Why can't we get Joe Biden back on the ballot. He makes so much sense and really has the experience.
Posted by Tanksleyd 10:54 AM, 03/25/2008
8 More GOP Years
Posted by gideon 10:55 AM, 03/25/2008
Not a lot of intelligent input here. No wonder there is so few comments
Posted by SmarterThanTheAverageBear 11:01 AM, 03/25/2008
Nobody seems to know that Ron Paul is still on the Republican ballot. http://www.ronpaul2008.com/
Posted by R. Penmark 11:03 AM, 03/25/2008
"MISSPOKE"? Try "BALD-FACED LIED THROUGH YOUR TEETH" to the American public, Hillary! This is what she does and just what you can expect from the Clintons and their filthy rotten ilk. All of the negativity they stir up around Obama is all lies too. OBAMA REALLY CARES about this country and the economy. What's her face is HOOD-WINKING you, PA! Don't fall for it! Barack the vote! :)
Posted by SmarterThanTheAverageBear 11:36 AM, 03/25/2008
How can you tell when a politician is lieing? Their lips are moving! :-)
Comment removed.
Posted by SmarterThanTheAverageBear 11:43 AM, 03/25/2008
We alrady know what liars the Clintons are. Remember "I did not have sex with that woman" OH, and don't forget when the rented out the lincoln bed room or stole all the "W" keys from the keybords & tried to steal the furniture....They can't be trusted.
Posted by Michigander 11:57 AM, 03/25/2008
This isn't the only time she has told this story. The jedreport website has documented more of the same. If Hillary is the nominee and I hope not....she has single handedly given the Republicans a string of material they will use to paint her as a serial liar. If the Democratic party doesn't want to lose the White House again it is time the party leaders put an end to this debacle and endorse Senataor Obama.
About Inquirer and Daily News Writers

The PA Votes '08 blog brings you up-to-the-minute coverage of the Pennsylvania primary campaign.

It's written by political journalists from the Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News. Send us your comments -- and news tips -- at this address.


And meet our regular bloggers:

Will BunchWill Bunch, one of the first mainstream newspaper journalists to blog regularly, writes the blog Attytood. Will, a senior writer at the Philadelphia Daily News, blogs about his obsessions, including national and local politics, pop music, the Philadelphia Phillies, soccer and other sports.

Angela Couloumbis Angela Couloumbis joined The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1998, and has covered government and politics in New Jersey, Philadelphia and throughout Pennsylvania, including Gov. Rendell’s 2006 race against former Pittsburgh Steeler Lynn Swann.

Dave DaviesDave Davies has covered government and politics in Philadelphia for the past twenty years. He is senior writer for the Philadelphia Daily News, where he has worked since 1990. He is also a fill-in host for National Public Radio's Fresh Air, and WHYY's Radio Times. He's also worked as a teacher, a cab driver and a welder.

Larry Eichel Larry Eichel is the senior writer for The Philadelphia Inquirer, covering the 2008 presidential election. He has served as national political writer, a foreign and national correspondent, a political columnist, sportswriter, national editor and suburban editor. He is the co-author of two books and three children.

Thomas FitzgeraldThomas Fitzgerald joined The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2000, and has covered Harrisburg as well as city, state and national politics for the newspaper. He was a “boy on the bus” in the 2004 presidential campaign and during primary contests in 2000 and 1996.

Ellen GrayEllen Gray is TV critic for the Daily News. She has been paid to watch television since 1994. She first liveblogged election night media coverage in November of 2000.

Gar JosephGar Joseph, the Philadelphia Daily News' city editor, has been involved in political coverage for two decades as a reporter and editor. His column, Clout, has twice been named best column in Philadelphia magazine's Best of Philadelphia issue.

Catherine LuceyCatherine Lucey joined the Philadelphia Daily News in 2002. Since then she has written about murderous drug gangs, political protesters and Harry Potter. For the past two years, she covered the 2007 mayoral election; she now covers the Nutter administration.

StormJonathan Storm became The Inquirer's television critic in 1990, after joining the paper in 1982. Previously, he spent six years at the Rutland Herald (Vt.) and six more at the Detroit Free Press. He’s been an avid TV watcher since age 5.