Former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton has agreed to testify to the House's select committee investigating
Benghazi, the panel's Democratic ranking member told CNN on Tuesday.
Rep. Elijah
Cummings said that Clinton agreed to testify before the committee investigating
the 2012 terrorist attack in December after he contacted her months earlier.
"The chairman asked me back in
September to inquire as to whether Secretary Clinton would testify,"
Cummings said. "She immediately said she would and that she wanted to come
in December, but if December did not work, she would come in January. She said
I'll do it, period. The fact is she was very clear. She did not hesitate for
one second."
The U.S.
consulate in Libya was attacked on Sept. 11, 2012. Four Americans, including
the U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens, were killed. Initially, the attack
was thought to be perpetrated by an angry mob responding to a video made in the
U.S. which mocked Islam and the Prophet Mohammed, but was later determined to
be a terrorist attack.
Nick Merrill,
the former first lady's spokesman, declined to go into detail about why Clinton
agreed to testify and when she might do so.
"I'm
going to leave it to the committee to address their plans," said Merrill.
In the past,
Cummings has publicly resisted calling Clinton to testify before the committee.
The Maryland congressman said in
December that he agrees with
other Democrats who say they don't see why she should be called.
Cummings'
comments on Tuesday, however, revealed the clearest indication to date that
Clinton was willing to show up before the committee, though many details remain
to be agreed upon and the appearance could well never happen.
While touring
the country selling her new memoir in June 2014, Clinton was asked whether she
would be willing to testify before the House committee.
"We'll
see," she told NBC in an interview. "I'm not going to prejudge
it."
Clinton added
that she took a lot of notes during the attack, but declined to say whether she
would hand over the notes.
"Let's
see if it's on the level or not. I don't want to be part of anything that in
any way politicizes or demeans the sacrifice that we saw happen there,"
Clinton said.
The attack
has remained a political issue for Clinton, who was secretary of state at the
time, since 2012. As the former first lady eyes a potential presidential bid, a
number of Republicans have signaled that Benghazi will be a main line of attack
against Clinton.
Sen. Rand
Paul has said the attack should disqualify Clinton from higher office.
Rep. Trey
Gowdy, the chairman of the Benghazi committee, told reporters on Tuesday that
he still intends to have Clinton testify as part of the investigation.
"Every
witness who has relevant information needs to be talked to," he said.
But Gowdy is
only prepared to hear from Clinton 30 days after receiving "all the [State
Department] documents" on the attack, including notes and emails from
Clinton.
"We
intend to access all of the information necessary to do the job the House
instructed us to do," Gowdy said in his opening statement at a committee
meeting on Tuesday. "And we need to access that information now. Talking
to only some of the witnesses will not work. Accessing only some of the
documents will not work. If you want all of the truth, you need all of the
information."
Republicans
have been long urging Gowdy to call Clinton to testify. Stop Hillary PAC, an
anti-Clinton group, delivered more than 264,000 signatures to the committee in
September 2014 urging Gowdy "to subpoena Hillary in order to uncover the
truth about Benghazi and subsequent cover up by the then Secretary of State and
President Barack Obama."
Democrats say
that Gowdy and other Republicans have let politics seep into this investigation
from the start and decided to call Clinton only after receiving the Stop
Hillary PAC signatures. But a statement from the congressman's spokeswoman
calls that into question.
"Chairman
Gowdy has always said we look forward to the Secretary's appearance as soon as
practical after State produces documents response to Committee requests,"
said Amanda Duvall, Gowdy's spokeswoman.
Clinton
testified for more than five hours before another House committee investigating
Benghazi in January 2013, shortly before she left the State Department. At the
time, Clinton acknowledged a "systemic breakdown" but said that her
department was taking additional steps to increase security at U.S. diplomatic
facilities.
Since then,
Clinton has said her biggest regret a during the four years she served as
America's top diplomat was the Benghazi attack.
"My
biggest regret is what happened in Benghazi," Clinton said in January 2014. "It
was a terrible tragedy losing four Americans, two diplomats and -- now it is
public so I can say -- two CIA operatives."
News Credit: CNN
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