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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JEB who wrote (371987)3/16/2003 3:41:21 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Maybe it's true, maybe not. Iraqis offering money for US intelligence. Sure, we do the same thing. But a lot of propaganda going around. And like I said, who cares anymore? The war is going to happen.



To: JEB who wrote (371987)3/16/2003 5:01:03 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Gee, another mr. bill the serial sex pervert story.
Clinton Implicated in Air Force One Sex
Attack

Ex-President Bill Clinton "sexually molested" a female
steward aboard Air Force One and was later forced to
apologize to the woman, a bombshell new book by White
House whistleblower, Lt. Col. Robert Patterson reveals.

The identity of the woman, an enlisted member of the Air
Force, is being protected by Lt. Col. Patterson. But the
searing new account of a commander-in-chief preying upon
a military subordinate could spell trouble for New York
Sen. Hillary Clinton, who, as a member of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, would have jurisdiction to
investigate the incident.

In "Dereliction of Duty: The Eyewitness Account of How
Bill Clinton Compromised America's National Security,"
the former presidential aide says that in 1997 he got a
call from Lt. Col. Mark Donnelly, an Air Force One pilot
and commander of the Presidential Pilot Office.

"We got a problem," Donnelly said. "One of our female
stewards claims she was approached and touched
inappropriately by President Clinton and she's upset."

Lt. Col. Donnelly said the attack happened "in one of
the galleys on Air Force One. Apparently he cornered
her."

Lt. Col. Patterson said he was distressed at the news.
"I knew the woman Mark was referring to. She was bright,
cheery and beautiful. She was also an enlisted member of
the United States Air Force - and had just, apparently,
been sexually molested by the commander in chief."

Donnelly told his colleague that the Clinton assault
victim was "really upset but she doesn't want this to
get out. She just wants an apology."

Patterson said he approached Kris Engskov, the
president's personal aide, about arranging a meeting
where Clinton would acknowledge the sexual misconduct
and offer an apology.

"Two weeks later," Patterson recalled, "Kris walked into
the compartment where I was seated on Air Force One. He
said quietly, 'We got them together, the president
apologized. She seems fine with it.'" Just to be sure,
Patterson said, he confirmed that the apology had indeed
taken place with Lt. Col. Donnelly.

News of Clinton's Air Force One sexual assault of a
military enlistee comes at a particularly awkward time
for the former first couple. Sen. Clinton has just
completed tour of upstate New York military
installations and has been full of praise for the
military since she assumed the Armed Services post in
January.

Adding to the potential fallout, news of the
ex-commandeer-in-chief's sex attack on a female officer
bears an eerie resemblance to reports from female cadets
at the Air Force Academy in Colorado, who in the last
few weeks have complained that male superiors pulled
rank to get them into compromising situations, then
sexually assaulted them.

Reacting to the burgeoning scandal, Secretary of the Air
Force James G. Roche has vowed to investigate and take
action.

"I don't want young women to feel that they have to make
that kind of humiliating sacrifice to become officers,"
he told the New York Times on Sunday. Still, despite
Secretary Roche's pledge for a top-to-bottom
investigation, it's not clear that allegations by Air
Force personnel against the ex-commander-in-chief would
be part of any probe.

Though Lt. Col. Patterson's report of the sexual assault
by Clinton is the first leveled by a female military
officer, two other women have reported being attacked
aboard Clinton's plane.

In 1995, the Washington Post revealed that Clinton's
1992 campaign had paid $37,500 in federal campaign
matching funds to Kimberly Moore, head of a Little Rock
accounting firm, who was forbidden to discuss details of
her allegation under terms of the settlement. Campaign
aides told the Post that Moore had complained about
unwanted advances by a senior member of Clinton's staff
rather than the president himself.

But in 1998, campaign plane flight attendant Christyne
Zercher came forward with allegations that Clinton had
fondled her breasts and repeatedly invited her into the
plane's lavatory with his pants unzipped.

Sen. Clinton could not be reached on Sunday for comment
on the new sexual harassment charges in Lt. Col.
Patterson's book.

newsmax.com