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Documents Claim Hastert Belittled Rights Concerns

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From Associated Press

Before becoming House speaker, Rep. J. Dennis Hastert told Colombian military officers that he was “sick and tired” of human rights considerations controlling U.S. anti-drug aid, according to a newly declassified government document.

At the time, the Clinton administration was pushing Colombia to improve its human rights performance as a condition of receiving U.S. aid.

Leading a May 1997 congressional delegation, Hastert also encouraged Colombian military and police officers to bypass the White House and deal directly with Congress, according to a cable signed by then-Ambassador Myles Frechette.

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John Feehery, Hastert’s spokesman, said the speaker strongly supports human rights efforts in Colombia and that the language in the cable likely reflected that Hastert “did not have a particularly strong relationship” with Frechette.

The cable was among 70 documents obtained by the National Security Archive, an independent research center.

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