The LBT INTERVIEW: HILLARY CLINTON
A candid conversation about the Benghazi maelstrom, the Lewinsky scandal, looking ahead to 2016, and rumors concerning her sexuality.
[Editor's note: Since this interview published,Former Deputy Assistant Secretary Raymond Maxwell has claimed that there was an after hours operation set up in the basement of the State Department building to go through all the documentation to be handed over to the Accountability Review Board and remove documents that may reflect badly on Ms. Clinton and her staff. The LBT will be monitoring this story. In the meantime, this interview now is of special interest.]
A brilliant, retentive intellect, a gift for flourishing notwithstanding sharp-elbowed politics, and a dynamic partner that twice won the White House. The truth is, these forces actually did not take Hillary Rodham Clinton from a medium-sized Midwestern law firm to the White House, the U.S. Senate and, finally, the Secretary of State’s office. Sheer grit and old-fashioned determination did. Clinton sat down with Peter Hartwig to discuss her legacy, the latest scandals enveloping Washington, and her view of 2016. Clinton was in high spirits and displayed an openness only now available to her as a private citizen.
LBT:
Let’s start with the question on everyone’s mind. Will Hillary Clinton run for president in 2016?CLINTON:
[Laughs.] Somehow I knew I would be asked that again today. Look, I’m just now starting to enjoy life out of public office. I need some time to myself before deciding anything, but if I do run I'll make sure you're the first to know.LBT:
Do you have any hobbies you want to pursue now that you have a moment for some fresh air?CLINTON:
I’m going to get started on my memoirs. When I wrote “It Takes A Village” I was more focused on policy and community in good government. Now I’m ready to share my story.LBT:
Could this be a prelude to another run?CLINTON:
We’ll just have to see. Right now I would rather relax and keep a low profile. The GOP’s obsession with Benghazi needs to pass. When it does I can assess how things look.LBT:
Let’s get into Benghazi a little. If you really didn’t know about the requests for more security at Benghazi, why didn’t you know about them?CLINTON:
You know, they say that “knowledge is power.” When you’re in government and people are always looking over your shoulder and looking for a weak spot, more often than not the opposite is true. Ignorance – not knowledge – is power. Ignorance is power. I’m better off not knowing all the details about what is going on in these dangerous places because I can then be attacked for failing to do “X,” “Y” or “Z.”LBT:
So instead a bureaucrat takes the fall?CLINTON:
Yes, so you have a Charlene Lamb to step in and take the fall for the State Department. And I think she did a wonderful job taking the hit during her day in Congress. She was a good foot soldier. That’s part of her job, after all.LBT:
She did really take the blunt force of the blow.CLINTON:
She did, and I will thank her in the appropriate way once the dust settles. Bill’s organization has plenty of room for someone like her. I did comment to him how funny these names are in Bill’s and my little kerfuffles. It’s like they’re out of a novel. “Lamb” for the State Department’s sacrificial “lamb.” Bill had his Linda Tripp who “tripped” up his whole deal with his Jewish intern and then his whole second term got derailed.“Since they didn’t do it I guess that means I ain’t sending anybody after them.”
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