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Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2008 12:15:14 PM
Subject: Hillary's Bosnia whopper yesterday (video) rivals Bill's "Racak 
massacre" hoax


"Just this week Sen. Clinton said that she landed in Bosnia under "sniper 
fire," adding: "There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at 
the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the 
vehicles to get to our base." Clinton used to tell Iowa audiences: ""We used to 
say in the White House that if a place is too dangerous, too small or too poor, 
send the First Lady."
 
"But it is the Bosnia whopper that remains the high-profile, easily documented 
embarrassment. Will the media run with it? It's hard to tell."



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/how-will-hillarys-bosnia_b_92844.html

How Will Hillary's Bosnia "Whopper" Play in the Media?
Posted March 21, 2008 | 06:27 PM (EST) 



Read More: Barack Obama, Bosnia, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Media Bias, 
Sinbad, Video, Breaking Politics News 

    Buzz up! 



 
If you're Hillary Clinton and you've just been caught in a "whopper," the only 
thing to be grateful for is that it's Good Friday and people are distracted. 
How bad could this story be for her? When you tell the American public you 
faced gunfire, and it turns out all you really faced was a little girl with 
flowers - well, that's as bad as it gets. When you dramatically say you made a 
journey that was too dangerous for the President, only to have it revealed that 
he made the same trip two months earlier - and that your teenaged daughter was 
by your side - that only makes it worse.
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And there's video.
If they wanted to, the networks could juxtapose video of Sen. Clinton's 
dramatic recitation of the battle with this clip of that sweet eight-year-old 
on the tarmac with a bouquet. The question is: Will they want to?
Just this week Sen. Clinton said that she landed in Bosnia under "sniper fire," 
adding: "There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the 
airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles 
to get to our base." Clinton used to tell Iowa audiences: ""We used to say in 
the White House that if a place is too dangerous, too small or too poor, send 
the First Lady."
And her 16-year-old kid?
This latest deception is documented in detail in the Washington Post by a 
reporter who was there. The paper awards her statements "four Pinocchios," a 
rating they reserve for political misstatements they describe as "whoppers."
"Whopper" (Merriam-Webster): "An extravagant or monstrous lie."
Comedian Sinbad's now-famous response to Sen. Clinton's claims was to say, 
"What kind of president would say, 'Hey, man, I can't go 'cause I might get 
shot so I'm going to send my wife...oh, and take a guitar player and a comedian 
with you.'" He added, "I think the only 'red-phone' moment was: 'Do we eat here 
or at the next place.'"
As is often the case these days, the Clinton campaign responded to this 
observation by sticking to their story, and even embellishing it (in this case, 
with colorful details about running for cover under fire). That could turn out 
to have been a catastrophic mistake -- but that, as with so much in American 
politics, depends on the media and how they choose to handle it. They've 
saturated us for nearly two weeks with video of Rev. Wright, who as it turns 
out didn't say anything more extreme than what other candidates' spiritual 
advisors have said. Will this flap get the same attention? It remains to be 
seen.
Sen. Clinton's other honesty problem this week came with revelations that, 
while she claims to have been an internal NAFTA critic in the administration, 
she actually gave several presentations in favor of NAFTA at the time it was 
passed. But, to be fair, this may not be a deception. People are often called 
upon to advocate for decisions in public that they opposed in private. The 
NAFTA controversy suggests other concerns, such as: If she were such a vehement 
critic, and the administration backed it anyway, how important was she? And, 
how can she claim credit for the good deeds of her husband's administration and 
yet take no responsibility for its problems?
Still, Clinton's handling of the NAFTA question certainly raises concerns. 
Especially troubling is her campaign's work to spread rumors of Obama sending 
back-channel messages to the Canadians suggesting their anti-NAFTA rhetoric was 
all talk - when, according to a high-level Canadian source, her campaign had 
done that. 
But it is the Bosnia whopper that remains the high-profile, easily documented 
embarrassment. Will the media run with it? It's hard to tell. Despite the 
Clinton campaign's PR-driven argument to the contrary, press coverage has 
tended to favor both candidates at different times. Right now Jim Vandenhei and 
Mike Allen at Politico are saying that the media's pushing a false narrative in 
favor of Clinton in order to promote the sense of an ongoing "horse race," 
arguing that her chances of taking the nomination are actually far less than 
has been reported.
That makes sense -- not because the media's "in the tank" for Clinton or Obama, 
but because a protracted race serves its own interests. By that reasoning, it's 
very possible they'll downplay a story like this. Why? Because it could end her 
candidacy once and for all. That would give the media one less story to cover.
In the end, maybe one lie shouldn't matter. Perhaps this doesn't reflect on how 
Sen. Clinton would govern. In our political system, however, it does matter ... 
but only if the media choose to make it matter. Had Obama been caught in a lie 
of this magnitude, his campaign might well be over. Had McCain been caught in a 
similar lie, however, the press would probably have hidden it (the same way 
they edited video of his recent Al Qaeda/Iran gaffe). 
For me, the real subject of this story isn't the candidate who told an 
outrageous lie. It's the fact that our media holds unprecedented power. They, 
and the decisions they make about this story, may well decide whether Sen. 
Clinton's candidacy will survive. 
UPDATE:
Clinton supporters have noted an update to the WaPo piece with this statement 
from Lissa Muscatine: "I was on the plane with then First Lady Hillary Clinton 
for the trip from Germany into Bosnia in 1996. We were put on a C17-- a plane 
capable of steep ascents and descents -- precisely because we were flying into 
what was considered a combat zone. We were issued flak jackets for the final 
leg because of possible sniper fire near Tuzla. As an additional precaution, 
the First Lady and Chelsea were moved to the armored cockpit for the descent 
into Tuzla. We were told that a welcoming ceremony on the tarmac might be 
canceled because of sniper fire in the hills surrounding the air strip. From 
Tuzla, Hillary flew to two outposts in Bosnia with gunships escorting her 
helicopter."
The last time I took a flight I was told what to do in "in the event of a water 
landing." But if I said I had survived a crash landing on water, would I be 
telling the truth? Hillary provided a vivid description of having to run from 
sniper fire. It was a complete falsehood.
>From Wikipedia: "Lissa Muscatine was a speechwriter and the communications 
>director of former First Lady Hillary Clinton. Currently, she is a 
>speechwriter for Senator Clinton's campaign for the presidential nomination, 
>and is one of her closest advisors ..."
It requires enormous suspension of disbelief to accept the idea that Hillary 
brought her 16-year-old daughter too a place that was considered "too dangerous 
for the President" and exposed her to live sniper fire. Do those pro-Hillary 
commenters really believe she did that? If so, they should be concerned about 
her judgment. 
I continue to be astonished at the willingness of Clinton supporters to elide, 
obfuscate, tolerate, condone, and defend behavior from their candidate that 
would provoke their outrage if it came from anyone else. But that's not my 
central point. This is: For all the chatter about press bias for Obama, his 
career might be over had he been caught in this kind of misstatement. But the 
media wants a prolonged horse race, so Clinton will get a pass while we 
continue to be hammered with clips of Jeremiah Wright making statements Obama 
repudiated a week ago. The press is once again influencing the outcome of 
American elections - and that's not democratic.
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