Fending off new attacks ahead of a possible presidential bid, Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton unleashed a double-barreled defense of the former secretary of state’s record and health in back-to-back appearances Wednesday at two separate Washington events.
In a speech to the American Jewish Committee, Hillary Clinton offered a detailed defense of her work confronting Iran’s nuclear program as secretary of state. Minutes later, at a separate talk, the former president defended his wife’s handling of the attack on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya and said he was “dumbfounded” by GOP operative Karl Rove’s apparent assertion that she may have suffered a “traumatic brain injury” in a 2012 fall.
Rove denies using the phrase but says concerns about the former first lady’s health are fair game if she seeks the presidency.
The assertive words from both Clintons came after a rough patch for the former secretary of state.
House Republicans last week voted to create a special committee to investigate the 2012 attack on Benghazi which killed 4 Americans including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. The fatal assault has already been the subject of a dozen congressional hearings and an investigation by an outside panel that found no evidence of a political cover-up.
In her speech Wednesday, Hillary Clinton took a hawkish tone toward Iran.
“President Obama and I knew we had a new choice: Keep reading from the same old playbook, politically safe but practically unsustainable, or tear up the old playbook and devise a new strategy,” Clinton said of her approach.
Clinton said her initial openness to good faith talks with Iran spurred the international community to embrace an aggressive new sanctions regime when they refused, eventually pushing the country to return to negotiations.
“Not even Russia or China could deny what was going on — as much as they sometimes would have liked to,” she recalled. “So we went to the UN Security Council and proposed some of the toughest multilateral sanctions ever on record. I worked for months to round up the votes.”
In describing her role, she laid the groundwork to take credit if a temporary deal reached by her successor John Kerry leads to a permanent agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear program. At the same time, she argued that the international consensus she had helped engineer would facilitate a tough response if Kerry’s talks collapse.
“If there is no agreement, the onus is on the Iranians,” she said. “And let us be clear: every option does remain on the table.”
The “every option is on the table line” is often used by American and Israeli officials as a diplomatic euphemism for possible military action.









