W Post
October 29, 2013
 
 
What did President Obama know  and when did he know it?
 
 




 
By _Dana Milbank_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/dana-milbank/2011/02/24/ABhhJwI_page.html) , 

 
 
< 
For a smart man, President Obama professes to  know very little about a 
great number of things going on in his  administration. 
On Sunday night, the Wall Street Journal reported that he didn’t learn 
until  this summer that the National Security Agency had been bugging the 
phones 
of  German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other world leaders for nearly five 
years. 



 
That followed by a few days a claim by Health and Human Services Secretary  
Kathleen Sebelius that Obama didn’t know about problems with the 
HealthCare.gov  Web site before the rest of the world learned of them after the 
Oct. 1 
 launch. 
It stretches credulity to think that the United States was spying on world  
leaders without the president’s knowledge, or that he was blissfully 
unaware of  huge technical problems that threatened to undermine his main 
legislative  achievement. But on issues including the IRS targeting flap and 
the 
Justice  Department’s use of subpoenas against reporters, White House officials 
have  frequently given a variation on this theme. 
Question: What did Obama know and when did he know it? 
Answer: Not much, and about a minute ago. 
The Associated Press’s Josh Lederman led off Monday’s White House briefing 
 with an obvious question: “Was the president kept out of the loop about 
what the  NSA was doing?” 
“I am not going to get into details of internal discussions,” press 
secretary  Jay Carney replied, repeating previous promises that “we do not and 
will not  monitor the chancellor’s communications.” This formulation 
conspicuously omits  the phrase “did not.” 
CNN’s Jim Acosta cited the HealthCare.gov rollout and the IRS targeting,  
which Obama said he learned about through news reports. “Is there a concern,”
  Acosta asked, “that the president is being kept in the dark on some of 
these  issues?” 
Carney told Acosta he had “conflated a bunch of very disparate issues.” 
“Republican critics,” Acosta said, “are making the case, though, that the  
president appears to be in the dark about some pretty significant stories 
that  are swirling around this White House.” 
“Well, Republican critics say a lot of things, Jim,” Carney replied  
icily. 
That’s true. But in this case, the Republicans understated the number of  
issues on which the president has claimed to be in the dark. A compilation by 
 the Republican National Committee titled “The Bystander President” cited 
the NSA  spying on Merkel, the Obamacare rollout and an investigation of the 
IRS’s  targeting of political groups (the White House counsel knew of the 
inquiry but  said she didn’t inform Obama). The RNC also mentioned the 
failure of  clean-energy company Solyndra, which had received government 
funding 
(Carney had  said Obama read about it in “news accounts”), and the attempts 
to go after  reporters’ phone and e-mail records (which the president also 
found out about  from reading the news, Carney said). 
The RNC didn’t mention that Obama had allegedly known nothing about an FBI  
investigation of an affair involving David Petraeus that led him to resign 
as  CIA director. Neither did it mention two other claims that conservatives 
often  question: Obama’s ignorance of a guns-on-the-border sting operation 
called “Fast  and Furious” that went awry, and his unawareness of requests 
for additional  diplomatic security in Libya before a U.S. outpost in 
Benghazi was attacked. 
There’s no reason Obama should have known about Fast and Furious or  
diplomatic security requests. But how could he not know his spies were bugging  
the German chancellor? 
“Is it believable that the president would not know about surveillance of 
the  head of state of a close American ally?” ABC News’s Jon Karl asked 
Carney. “Does  that sound plausible to you?” 
This finally provoked a hint from Carney that Obama did, in fact, know that 
 the NSA was bugging Merkel. “The Wall Street Journal probably doesn’t 
appreciate  the suggestion that their story is wrong,” he said, referring to a 
report that  said Obama learned of the activity in the summer, “but I would 
say simply that  we’re not going to comment on specific activities reported 
in the press,” he  said. 
Another hint came from Carney’s assurance that “the president has full  
confidence in General [Keith] Alexander and the leadership at the NSA.” Obama  
probably wouldn’t have such confidence if that leadership had kept him in 
the  dark about something as consequential as the bugging of world leaders’  
phones. 
On one level, it would be reassuring — and much more credible — if the 
White  House admitted that Obama is more in the loop than he has let on. On 
another  level, it would be disconcerting: Is it better that he didn’t know 
about his  administration’s missteps — or that he knew about them and didn’t 
stop  them?

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