From the Times of London:
September 7 1998
From Little Rock to the Oval Office, Clinton trails a stench of depravity and corruption
On every count, a moral bankrupt
It is not a good idea to make a charismatic sociopath the leader of one's party, or the President of one's country.
When the Democratic Senator Bob Kerrey says that President Clinton's conduct is "immoral", he is entitled to say that. He lost a leg in Vietnam when Bill Clinton was dodging the draft in Oxford; he ran against Clinton for the nomination in 1992 and in 1996 observed that Clinton was "an unusually good liar".
When Senator Joseph Lieberman says that the President has "compromised his moral authority", he should add an apology of his own. Senator Lieberman should say "sorry" to the American people for helping to persuade them to elect and re-elect a morally defective President.
The psychological truth about Bill Clinton is relatively simple. He is not wholly a madman; he does not hate his fellow human beings, as Hitler did, nor does he wish them ill; he is obsessed with power and with women; he is a brilliant emotional campaigner, but there is a piece missing. He has no moral compass; he does not know right from wrong. This was always apparent in the way he acted as Governor of Arkansas, but the Democrats, the American press and, worst of all, the American public, chose to overlook that. It was equally apparent in his behaviour to hundreds of women. He had a standard operating technique, and had a staff to handle it. The women were called "bimbo eruptions"; the technique was called "rub-a-dub".
The "rub-a-dub" involved telling the women to lie about the affair; if there was still a risk that she would talk, she was offered the choice between a good job, if necessary on the federal payroll, or having her character blackened. Sometimes this was accompanied by physical threats, given at second-hand; one woman has testified that an emissary of the Democrats threatened to "break her pretty legs". The Arkansas police say that they had to cover assignations with more than 100 women. Apparently President Clinton told Monica Lewinsky that he had connected with "some hundreds" of other women since he was first married. It is addictive conduct; it is also a destructive abuse of women.
Yet this is the less important part of the President's moral blindness. In the Arkansas years, he helped in the cover-up of the mass importation of cocaine into Mena airport, of which there is evidence that he had knowledge. He set up the $700 million Arkansas Development Finance Agency (ADFA), which made crony loans in return for kickbacks to the Governor's political funds. The ADFA records have disappeared. His wife had corrupt partners in the Rose Law Firm whose records were shredded shortly after the death of Vince Foster, the former White House counsel.
Clinton was the associate of Arkansas criminals, including his bond-dealing friend Dan Lasater, convicted for a cocaine felony and pardoned by Clinton. Lasater's executive partner, Patsy Thomasson, is still in the White House, and was one of those who went into Foster's office to clear up after his death.
Clinton failed to seek proper investigation of the suspicious deaths connected to these scandals. The numbers are high: four Clinton associates died in doubtful circumstances; eight people investigating allegations also died; nine witnesses died. Of these 21 deaths eight were found to be suicides, including those of Vince Foster himself, of Kathy Ferguson, the former wife of the trooper who allegedly solicited Paula Jones, and of Ed Willey, the former manager of Clinton's campaign finance committee. Five of the suspicious deaths occurred in plane crashes.
The pattern of abuse of public office continued in the White House, in raising funds for campaign finance, in the transfer of FBI files on political opponents, in the false prosecution of the White House travel staff. Some of the deaths occurred after Clinton became President. Jerry Parks, a private detective in Little Rock, was shot two months after Vince Foster's death. He had compiled a dossier on Clinton's sexual conduct, apparently at Foster's request. When Foster's death was announced on television, Parks turned to his wife and said: "I'm a dead man."
Mrs Parks alleges that the Clinton dossier was stolen shortly before her husband's murder and that she had been unable to secure a satisfactory Arkansas police investigation. Arkansas politics have long been a violent and corrupt affair, and neither as Governor nor as President did Bill Clinton help to reform it.
The Republicans, Kenneth Starr and now the Democrats have concentrated on the sexual scandals. There are a number of reasons for this. The corrupt maladministration and fundraising are very difficult to prove. Heaven knows who did the Arkansas murders, or how many of the suspicious deaths were murders. They belong to the hinterland of corrupt Arkansas politics in which Bill Clinton operated. The American people do not want to recognise that their President is not only a sex addict but a deeply corrupt politician.
Yet this is far more than a sex scandal. Democratic congressmen running in the mid-term elections are distancing themselves from him and after the elections he will no longer have much power to reward or punish. The loaves and fishes will be provided, if at all, by the publishers. Monica Lewinsky's book is being offered for $10 million.
After Watergate many of the participants, some of whom had gone to prison, wrote their accounts of the Nixon White House. What will Patsy Thomasson's memoirs be worth? She knows what went on between Dan Lasater and Clinton in the old days; she knows what she found in Vince Foster's office; she knows the reality of Bill and Hillary's relationship.
The next two years will see more and more of the truth coming out. Some of it may even exonerate Clinton from particular allegations. Unfortunately, much of it will be like the evidence of Monica Lewinsky or Gennifer Flowers, at first denied and then proved to be true. Once Clinton admitted that he had lied about Lewinsky, all the other lies he has told have ceased to work.
Clinton's position is therefore likely to get worse and worse, as the Starr report is published, as the evidence continues to flood out, and his party rejects him. The American people will begin to understand how defective he always was, how willing to abuse his power.
On The Frost Programme yesterday Chris Patten said he thought the best thing to happen would be for the American people to turn over the Clinton leaf and let him finish his term of office. If it were all only about Monica Lewinsky that might be possible, but there are too many other scandals. Miss Lewinsky was the norm, not the exception. There cannot be a clear-cut resolution of the Clinton scandals so long as he remains in the White House.
The authority of the President of the United States depends on public confidence in his moral character. Clinton now has no more moral authority in politics than Robert Maxwell, another charismatic sociopath, had in business. the-times.co.uk |