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This is an archive article published on September 17, 2002

Bush leaves Congress in dark

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., strode into the most secure room in the Capitol for a ‘‘top secret’’ briefing by the Defence ...

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Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., strode into the most secure room in the Capitol for a ‘‘top secret’’ briefing by the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, on the threat posed by the Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

With the windowless room swept for bugs and lawmakers sworn to deepest secrecy, Rumsfeld proceeded to disclose, well, absolutely nothing this group of lawmakers couldn’t have read in the morning papers or watched on TV news channels, according to participants.

Actually, they weren’t told even that much. ‘‘It was a joke,’’ said McCain, who soon rose and strode out the door. This has become an increasingly familiar scene on Capitol Hill, especially since the Bush administration blamed senators this summer for leaking classified information about top-secret intercepts of communications among terrorists in the days leading up to 9/11.

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Since the leak, the White House has put even tighter controls on classified and unclassified information available to most lawmakers, even those with special intelligence clearance.

The FBI is hunting the alleged leaker, even as the administration promises to consult more closely with Congress on how to deal with espionage. It’s not the first time legislators have seethed over Bush’s tight grip on classified information. Last October, members of both parties strongly objected to the president’s decision — later rescinded — to limit sensitive briefings to eight of Congress’s 535 members.

The President’s distrust of lawmakers now appears to be undermining his campaign to win Congressional authorisation to go to war with Iraq. Rumsfeld and other top advisers are not only keeping most lawmakers in the dark about new intelligence on Iraq, but they also are aggravating relations with Congress by portraying their briefings as top-secret affairs, according to interviews with several lawmakers.

‘‘It becomes almost insulting after a while,’’ said McCain, a staunch supporter of Bush’s Iraq policy.

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House Democratic Caucus Chairman Robert Menendez (N.J.) said several members are skipping the briefings rather than sign a secrecy pledge.

If this doesn’t change, it could cost Bush when the resolution comes up for a vote, according to lawmakers.

Vice President Dick Cheney last week said in an interview that the White House is withholding some ‘‘highly classified’’ information from Congress, but other officials said there’s no ‘‘smoking gun’’ or ‘‘bombshell’’ being withheld. (LATWP)

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