Secretary of State John Kerry will not be forced to testify before a congressional panel investigating the Benghazi attacks just yet.
Republican Rep. Darrell Issa on Friday released Kerry from a subpoena for his testimony before the House Oversight Committee on June 12, making it increasingly likely the secretary of state will be grilled at a later date by a new House select committee chaired by Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy.
State Department officials had previously made clear that Kerry’s testimony before the Oversight panel “would remove any need” for the secretary of state to answer additional questions before the select committee, created specifically to investigate the September 2012 terror attack in Libya. Kerry was not at the State Department at the time of the attacks, which killed four Americans.
Issa, who chairs the committee, accused Kerry of trying to “squirm his way” out of testifying and of using the scheduled hearing as a “shield against the Select Committee.”









