[Mb-civic] GOP Angered by Closed Senate Session - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Nov 2 03:45:24 PST 2005
GOP Angered by Closed Senate Session
Meeting Reopened After Two Hours
By Charles Babington and Dafna Linzer
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, November 2, 2005; Page A01
Democrats forced the Senate into a rare closed-door session yesterday,
infuriating Republicans but extracting from them a promise to speed up
an inquiry into the Bush administration's handling of intelligence about
Iraq's weapons in the run-up to the war.
With no warning in the mid-afternoon, the Senate's top Democrat invoked
the little-used Rule 21, which forced aides to turn off the chamber's
cameras and close its massive doors after evicting all visitors,
reporters and most staffers. Plans to bring in electronic-bug-sniffing
dogs were dropped when it became clear that senators would trade barbs
but discuss no classified information.
Republicans condemned the Democrats' maneuver, which marked the first
time in more than 25 years that one party had insisted on a closed
session without consulting the other party. But within two hours,
Republicans appointed a bipartisan panel to report on the progress of a
Senate intelligence committee report on prewar intelligence, which
Democrats say has been delayed for nearly a year.
"Finally, after months and months and months of begging, cajoling,
writing letters, we're finally going to be able to have phase two of the
investigation regarding how the intelligence was used to lead us into
the intractable war in Iraq," Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.)
told reporters, claiming a rare victory for Democrats in the
GOP-controlled Congress.
Beneath the political pyrotechnics was an issue that has infuriated
liberals but flummoxed many of the Democratic lawmakers who voted three
years ago to approve the war: allegations that administration officials
exaggerated Iraq's weapons capabilities and terrorism ties and then
resisted inquiries into the intelligence failures. Friday's indictment
of top White House aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby on perjury and
obstruction charges gave Democrats a new opening to demand that more
light be shed on these issues, including administration efforts to
discredit a key critic of the prewar claims of Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction.
Democrats were dismayed that President Bush made no apologies after the
indictment and that his naming of a new Supreme Court nominee Monday
knocked the Libby story off many front pages. As he stood on the Senate
floor to demand the closed session -- a motion not subject to a vote
under the rule -- Reid said Libby's grand jury indictment "asserts this
administration engaged in actions that both harmed our national security
and are morally repugnant."
The usually unflappable majority leader, Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), was
searching for words to express his outrage to reporters a few minutes
later. The Senate "has been hijacked by the Democratic leadership," he
said. "They have no convictions, they have no principles, they have no
ideas." Never before had he been "slapped in the face with such an
affront," he said, adding: "For the next year and a half, I can't trust
Senator Reid."
Frist seemed much calmer when the closed session ended. He agreed to a
six-senator bipartisan task force that will report by Nov. 14 on "the
intelligence committee's progress of the phase two review of the prewar
intelligence and its schedule for completion."
Committee Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) said the report was nearing
completion anyway, but Democrats disputed that. Committee Vice Chairman
John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) began inquiring about the evidence
against Iraq one week before U.S. troops invaded in March 2003. His
interest was sparked by revelations that the Bush administration gave
forged documents to U.N. weapons inspectors to support allegations that
Iraq had sought to buy a key ingredient for nuclear weapons from the
West African nation of Niger.
Roberts resisted a full investigation for three months. But in June
2003, when it became increasingly apparent that no weapons of mass
destruction were being found in Iraq, the committee agreed to look into
the intelligence cited in the administration's case for war. In February
2004, senators agreed to a second phase that would investigate the Bush
administration's use of intelligence and examine public statements made
by key policymakers about the threat posed by Iraq.
In July 2004, the committee issued the first phase of its bipartisan
report, which found the U.S. intelligence community had assembled a
deeply flawed and exaggerated assessment of Saddam Hussein's weapons
capabilities. The second phase was to focus on the administration's
deliberations over the intelligence or how it was used. Sources familiar
with the committee's work said there has been little examination of
these topics to date.
The Defense Department's Office of Special Plans stopped cooperating
with the Senate panel in July of this year. Roberts said key officials
hired lawyers and stopped talking when Rockefeller suggested laws may
have been broken. But Democrats dismissed that as an excuse.
Authority to hold secret Senate sessions is provided in Article 1,
Section 5 of the Constitution, and the Continental Congress met behind
closed doors. But the practice has ebbed in recent years. The most
recent closed Senate session was in February 1999 to deliberate
President Bill Clinton's impeachment trial, according to the
Congressional Research Service, and that was done through a bipartisan
agreement.
Reid said he was forced to seek the closed session to spur action on the
investigation. "The only way we've been able to get their attention is
to spend 3 1/2 hours in a closed session," he said. "It's a slap in the
face to the American people that this investigation has been stymied."
Rockefeller said Democratic requests for information related to the
investigation are routinely denied or ignored, and he suggested that the
Senate Republican leadership was under orders from the Bush
administration not to cooperate.
"Any time the intelligence committee pursued a line of inquiry that
brought us close to the role of the White House in all of this in the
use of intelligence prior to the war, our efforts have been thwarted
time and time again," Rockefeller said. "The very independence of the
United States Congress as a separate and coequal branch of the
government has been called into question."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/01/AR2005110101037.html?referrer=email
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