WASHINGTON (AP) November 5, 2007 — House
Democrats on Thursday accused Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice of grossly
mismanaging diplomatic efforts in Iraq and concealing information from
Congress, putting a visibly frustrated Rice on the defensive.
At a hearing by a congressional watchdog
committee, Democratic lawmakers said the State Department under Rice had
been too lax with armed security contractors, ignored corruption at the
highest levels of the Iraqi government and was sloppy in overseeing
construction of the costly new U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
"I think there was a huge gap between what
she said and reality," said Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
Waxman, D-Calif., and other Democrats said
they would not call on Rice to resign, noting that their frustration is with
the Bush administration's policies rather than Rice alone.
"If you just change the deck chairs, it's
not going to change the policy," said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., a committee
member.
The hearing gave Democrats the venue to
hammer the administration on the war. Thus far, they have been unable to
pass veto-proof legislation ordering troops home from Iraq.
Recent events have given them ample fodder:
shootings involving the private guards hired to protect State Department
diplomats; allegations that Iraq's prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has
blocked corruption investigations; and delays in the embassy's construction.
The Democrats' strategy did not go
unnoticed by Republicans.
GOP fires back
Democrats seemed to be trying "to drill
enough small holes in the bottom of the boat to sink the entire Iraqi
enterprise, while still claiming undying support for the crew about to
drown," said Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia, the committee's top Republican.
The usually unflappable Rice became
frustrated at several points, including a tense exchange with Welch on
whether al-Maliki was corrupt. Since April, the prime minister has required
that Cabinet-level corruption investigations first receive his approval.
Such a policy, Welch and other Democrats say, is tantamount to blanket
immunity for al-Maliki and his ministers.
When repeatedly pressed to say whether she
thought al-Maliki was covering up fraud and abuse, Rice said she would not
respond to rumors.
"To assault the prime minister of Iraq or
anyone else in Iraq with here-to-date unsubstantiated allegations or lack of
corroboration, in a setting that would simply fuel those allegations, I
think, would be deeply damaging," she said.
After the hearing, Waxman said there was a
gap between "her very smooth presentation" and the facts. Rice said the
State Department was invested in stopping corruption, but Waxman said she
was unfamiliar with al-Maliki's corruption policy and that department
insiders tell lawmakers its efforts are dysfunctional.
The hearing comes after several weeks of
wrangling between Waxman and the department, particularly on the public
disclosure of U.S. corruption investigations in Iraq.
The department says such information should
be classified because it could expose sources and hurt U.S.-Iraqi relations.
Democrats counter that if Iraqi officials are stealing from their government
and funding anti-U.S. militias, the State Department should make it public.
Rice: Iran a bigger problem
Rice said militias are getting money in
many ways, and corruption possibly could be one. But, she added, a bigger
problem was financing from Iran.
On the issue of armed contractors such as
Blackwater USA, Rice this month ordered new rules for the private guards
that cover the use of deadly force.
Rice said Thursday that she and Defense
Secretary Robert Gates might make further recommendations. She said
legislation is needed to ensure contractors involved in overseas killings
can be prosecuted legally.
A day earlier, Rice ousted the State
Department's security chief, Richard Griffin, after a review panel she
convened found serious deficiencies in his office's oversight of
contractors.
Griffin, the assistant secretary of state
for the Bureau of Diplomatic Security, resigned under pressure, becoming the
first political casualty of the fallout from the Blackwater incident. He
will be replaced on Nov. 1 on an acting basis by one of his deputies.
Meanwhile, State Department officials
denied any double standard or impropriety in the firing of Griffin and this
week's promotion of two of his subordinates who directly oversaw the hiring
of contractors, including those in Iraq.
One official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity to describe an internal personnel matter, said the promotions were
based on performance reviews completed months earlier and took into account
their work over the past seven years.
Rice's answers on the Blackwater scandal
did not satisfy many Democrats during the hearing, including Rep. Paul Hodes
of New Hampshire.
Congress taking on more accountability
Before giving Blackwater hundreds of
millions of dollars, "didn't you or your subordinates ever stop to ask
whether or not the legal framework was a place to hold these contractors
accountable for its actions?" he asked.
Congress is moving to put all armed
contractors operating in combat zones under military control and make them
subject to U.S. criminal jurisdiction.
The Senate this month included a
requirement in its 2008 defense authorization bill that would give combatant
commanders authority over contractors.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., chairman of the
Senate Armed Services Committee, told reporters Wednesday he is confident
the House will go along with the idea and include it in a final bill sent to
President Bush.
A
separate bill to give U.S. courts jurisdiction to prosecute State Department
contractors has passed the House and is being reviewed by the Senate
Judiciary Committee.