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Rice’s Attacks on Critic Could Backfire on Her

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Times Staff Writers

For one of the first times in the presidency of George W. Bush, his White House has been forced onto the defensive. And the general atop the battlements is his national security advisor, Condoleezza Rice.

The Bush mantra has always been that the best defense is offense, so Rice has been hitting back hard -- using television appearances and media briefings to try to undermine the credibility of Richard Clarke, the former counterterrorism chief who contends that Rice and the rest of the administration failed to respond to repeated warnings about terrorist threats.

But Rice’s aggressive strategy risks damaging her own credibility, rather than Clarke’s.

“Rather than deal with the substance of what he’s saying, they’re trying to impugn his character,” said Nancy Soderberg, a deputy national security advisor during the Clinton administration. “It’s not a campaign issue, it’s an issue of national security, so I think their pit-bull tactics are going to backfire.”

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Although Rice has made herself available to news outlets, she has refused to testify under oath before the independent commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks. That panel questioned a series of current and former government officials this week, including Clarke. As a result, the controversy created by Clarke is increasingly focusing on Rice, perhaps the president’s closest advisor.

Mary Fetchet, co-chair of Voices of September 11th, an advocacy group for families of the victims of the 2001 attacks, argued that Rice was key to the flow of information and therefore should testify about what she knew.

“I wish she would just skip the television interviews and take the time to testify in an open hearing under oath,” said Fetchet, whose son, Bradley, died in the World Trade Center. “I believe that I deserve the answers to the questions I have, and so does our country.”

Rice spent four hours last month behind closed doors with members of the commission, and on Thursday requested a second private meeting, but such appearances do not carry the same weight, in the eyes of the public, as testimony under oath in an open setting. However, the principle of executive privilege means that her advice to the president should remain private, she contends.

Many former officials from each party agree, saying presidential advisors need reassurance that they can offer their opinions without fear of public questioning.

“She can meet informally with them, she can do a lot of things to accommodate them” short of testifying, Soderberg said.

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But as the days pass and the controversy intensifies, that argument may be losing ground. Stephen Hess, a presidential scholar at the Brookings Institution who served in the Eisenhower and Nixon White Houses, said the Bush administration would have a hard time deflecting damage from Clarke’s allegations unless Rice agreed to testify.

“There are principles involved, and fair enough. But there are some questions being raised about her probity,” Hess said. “When a person’s own honesty or probity is in question, I think they should be given the right to testify.”

For their part, Democrats in Congress appear unwilling to let the issue go. In addition, Rice’s repeated media appearances this week seemed to add insult to injury, at least in some quarters.

“We need Condoleezza Rice, who seems to have time to appear on every television show, to make time to appear publicly before the 9/11 commission,” Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) said Thursday. “She is not constrained by precedent from doing that, as the White House has argued.... I’ve reluctantly reached the conclusion that what really constrains Ms. Rice’s full cooperation is political considerations.”

The chief political consideration, of course, is Bush’s reelection campaign, which is in full swing. And the White House testiness about Clarke reflects the importance of terrorism -- and Bush’s portrayal of himself “a wartime president” -- to his reelection bid.

But Rice’s reactions are also personal, as has become clear from her comments to the media. David Gergen, who has advised embattled presidents of each party, noted that the code of conduct in Washington used to be that White House tell-all books did not come out until a president’s first term was over.

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“[Rice] feels it’s a stab in the back, but it’s also a knife in the heart of what the Bush presidency is all about,” Gergen said. “They really do need to rebut it.”

All the same, he said, Rice’s TV appearances don’t appear to have done the job, in part because her sense of personal affront has made her seem shrill or strident at times. Gergen described the White House response as “carpet-bombing” and said the overall impression was one of overkill.

“They are blunting some of Clarke’s effectiveness, but at a considerable price,” Gergen said. “There is a spreading sense that they really try to smash anybody who disagrees with them.”

Moreover, as the controversy has become more partisan with each passing day, Rice may have damaged her public image as the national security advisor, a position traditionally seen as above the political fray.

To understand the White House response, insiders and observers alike say that it’s important to recognize that the most cherished value in the Bush administration is loyalty. As a result, Rice and others are reacting to Clarke’s disloyalty, not to the substance of his criticism.

“If Dick attacked me that way, I too would be angry,” said former Clinton national security advisor Anthony Lake. “But I know him, and he is an equal opportunity junkyard dog who is driven by wanting to get things done.”

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This is not the first time Rice has been on the front lines in defense of the president. She was at the eye of the storm last summer when the administration was forced to admit that “16 words” in the president’s State of the Union address -- about British contentions that Saddam Hussein had sought uranium from Africa -- were not true.

But in that situation, her deputy took the fall, and those allegations came from someone outside the administration who was aligned with the campaign of Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kerry, now the presumptive Democratic nominee.

This controversy stems from statements by a top inside aide whose credibility has so far withstood the White House assault. As a result, the consensus here is that Clarke’s recently published book and his testimony before the Sept. 11 commission have dealt the Bush presidency its most severe blow to date.

“They’re not used to this kind of attack,” said Soderberg. “9/11 has protected them behind this bubble of ‘national security crisis, rally behind the president.’ And this is the first time they’ve been under such scrutiny, and they’re not sure how to handle it.”

But the consensus also seems to be that it is far too early to guess whether it will have any effect on the presidential election in November. Seven months, after all, is a long time in politics.

Hess said that if Rice remained the front-line general for the White House, she could still win the battle. He thinks she would come across better in the formal atmosphere of the commission hearing than she has so far on television.

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“[Rice] could still could do better than anybody else in making this go away,” said Hess. “But if they are really serious about executive privilege, it could turn out to be the principle that defeats them.”

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