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Sen. Clinton Fires Back At Rice

New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has struck back at Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in the escalating political bickering over which president — Bill Clinton or George W. Bush — missed more opportunities to prevent the Sept. 11 attacks.

Sen. Clinton took aim at President Bush and Rice over their roles in 2001 before the attacks, part of a growing argument that ignited after former President Clinton gave a combative interview on "Fox News Sunday" in which he defended his efforts to kill Osama bin Laden.

"I think my husband did a great job in demonstrating that Democrats are not going to take these attacks," Hillary Clinton said Tuesday. "I'm certain that if my husband and his national security team had been shown a classified report entitled 'Bin Laden Determined To Attack Inside the United States' he would have taken it more seriously than history suggests it was taken by our current president and his national security team."

The senator was referring to a classified brief given to Mr. Bush in August 2001, one that Democrats say showed the Bush administration did not do enough to combat the growing threat from al Qaeda.

When the brief was delivered, Rice was the president's national security adviser, and Clinton's response was clearly designed to implicate her in the same criticisms that have been made of Mr. Bush.

Clinton's response came a day after Rice denied President Clinton's claim in the television interview that the Bush administration had not aggressively pursued al Qaeda before the attacks of 2001.

"What we did in the eight months was at least as aggressive as what the Clinton administration did in the preceding years," Rice said during a meeting with editors and reporters at the New York Post. "The notion somehow for eight months the Bush administration sat there and didn't do that is just flatly false, and I think the 9/11 commission understood that."

Rice also took exception to Mr. Clinton's statement that he "left a comprehensive anti-terror strategy" for incoming officials when he left office.

"We were not left a comprehensive strategy to fight al Qaeda," she told the newspaper, which is owned by News Corp., the company that owns Fox News Channel.

President Bush declined to comment on the controversy when asked about it Tuesday. "I don't have enough time to finger point," he said at the White House.

Mr. Clinton was angered during the television interview when asked by Fox News' Chris Wallace why he didn't do more to fight al Qaeda.

"That's the difference in me and some, including all of the right-wingers who are attacking me now," Mr. Clinton said in the interview. "They ridiculed me for trying. They had eight months to try. They did not try."


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The war of words has sparked a firestorm online, and led some to speculate that Mr. Clinton, in the Fox interview, was trying to demonstrate that the Democrats are tough on terror.

Sen. Joe Biden, a senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, doesn't think that was his motivation.

"I think he's frustrated and angry," Biden, D-Del., told Early Show co-anchor Hannah Storm. "I don't think he went onto the show to say I am going to help the Democrats. I think it was, look, I am going to make my case."

Asked about Sen. Hillary Clinton's comments, Biden said, "I don't think it will have any impact. She's also a powerful figure in our party, a very capable senator, but look, the Clintons are in a class by themselves. They are the best known people in the country, if not the world and anything they say or do is going to be hyped.

"They have a very long record dealing with those on the right. And, you know, I don't blame them for their frustration. I don't think it has much impact," Biden said.

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