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- THE WEEKNATION, Page 18Above the Fray
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- The White House wasn't involved in the passport scandal . . .
- technically
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- Chief of Staff James Baker may not have "orchestrated" the
- fishing trip made by State Department officials through Bill
- Clinton's confidential passport records four weeks before the
- election. But he knew about it, as did his political aide Janet
- Mullins, says a report by Sherman Funk, the department's
- inspector general. And neither did anything to stop it.
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- The dirty tricks began in September, when Bush partisans,
- including White House aides, began circulating unsubstantiated
- rumors that Clinton had contemplated renouncing his citizenship
- to avoid the draft during the Vietnam War. Funk found no
- "conspiracy" to damage Clinton. But he said Steven Berry, the
- department's Acting Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs,
- coached Republican Congressman Gerald B. Solomon on how to word
- a Sept. 29 letter that would provide State with a fig leaf of
- official justification for a search of Clinton's files. The next
- day Elizabeth Tamposi, Assistant Secretary for Consular
- Affairs, seized on Solomon's "request" and a handful of press
- inquiries to justify a rushed two-day hunt through 10 sets of
- confidential records in Washington, London and Oslo. Funk's
- report makes clear that Mullins informed Baker of the searches
- on or around Oct. 1. When the searches proved futile, Tamposi
- and her colleagues suggested Clinton's files had been "tampered
- with" -- a claim that took the FBI seven days to dismiss. But
- those were seven days in which Clinton had to endure a new round
- of stories speculating on his character and his patriotism --
- just what the White House wanted in the first place.
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- Tamposi lost her job, and is back home in New Hampshire.
- As he released the 100-page report on the affair, a visibly
- agitated Acting Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger
- anguished, "Our reputation has been tarnished," and disclosed
- that Bush had rejected his offer to resign. Baker, ever the
- master of fingerprint-free hardball tactics, stayed out of
- sight.
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