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"...I was the buffet and he just couldn't resist
the dessert."
(CNN
06-23-2004) -- In his new memoir, former U.S. President Bill Clinton says
his "inappropriate" encounters with Monica Lewinsky began when she claimed they
did, during the government shutdown in November 1995.
That account contradicts his August 1998 testimony before a federal grand
jury that investigated the case.
The discrepancy between testimony by Clinton and Lewinsky about the timing of
the affair was one of the points that led the House to impeach Clinton for
providing false testimony to the grand jury about "the nature and details of his
relationship with a subordinate government employee."
In his 1998 testimony, the former president said, "When I was alone with Ms.
Lewinsky on certain occasions in early 1996 and once in early 1997, I engaged in
conduct that was wrong."
....on page 773 of his book, "My Life," Clinton
said, "During the government shutdown in late 1995, when very few people were
allowed to come to work in the White House and those who were there were working
late, I'd had an inappropriate encounter with Monica Lewinsky and would do so
again on other occasions between November and April, when she left the White
House for the Pentagon."
"For the next 10 months, I didn't see her, although we talked on the phone
from time to time," he said.
In her grand jury testimony, Lewinsky said their sexual relationship began on
November 15, 1995, at a time when government officers were shut down
...
(CNN 06-21-2004) Clinton told CBS he had no
rational explanation for his behavior with Lewinsky.
"I did something for the worst possible reason -- just because I could," he
said. "I think that's just about the most morally indefensible reason anybody
could have for doing anything."
Lewinsky responds to Clinton book
Associated Press
Posted Saturday, June 26, 2004
LONDON -- Monica Lewinsky begs to differ. The
former White House intern scorned Bill Clinton's explanation that he had an
affair with her "just because I could," and accused the former president of
failing to make clear their relationship was mutual in his new memoir. In her
first public comments on the book, "My Life," Lewinsky accused Clinton of trying
to destroy her with his characterization of the affair as something dirty and
wrong, and argued the liaison was one of mutual affection.
"I really didn't expect him to go into detail about our relationship" in the
book, the 30-year-old Lewinsky said in an interview with The Daily Mail. "But if
he had and he'd done it honestly, I wouldn't have minded. ... I did, though, at
least expect him to correct the false statements he made when he was trying to
protect the presidency. Instead, he talked about it as though I had laid it all
out there for the taking. I was the buffet and he just couldn't resist the
dessert."
In an interview with Independent Television News broadcast Friday, Lewinsky said
she was especially upset by Clinton's assertion on CBS' "60 Minutes" that he
embarked on the affair "for the worst possible reason. Just because I could."
"I was really upset when I first heard it," Lewinsky said.
US History and Clinton
07/14/2009 12:13:35 -0700
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