The West Wing s03e05 Episode Script
War Crimes
Previously on The West Wing: He's a Republican lawyer.
Turns out he's on Government Oversight.
- You can't see him.
Political reporters don't care about the scope of inquiry.
We're not gonna get anywhere putting on a calm face.
We need to pick a fight.
- Hoynes put a poll in the field.
- A trip to New Hampshire? - High-tech corridor of the Northeast.
- Thanks to who? What does that matter right now? Third down and 12, 45 seconds to go.
Whitmeyer has the ball on the right side and immediately stops for a 2-yard loss - Okay.
- Do we know what kind of gun it was? - Which gun? - The first gun.
It was a.
38 pistol.
Okay, here are a few confirmations and a few more details.
The shooting took place approximately at United Baptist Church in Abilene, Texas.
Will Sawyer, is that you? Yes.
- You back in the country? - Yeah.
- Work for the San Francisco Chronicle? - No.
Then you wanna get your ass out of their chair? There's assigned seating? See the little brass plaques with the names of media outlets? I thought that meant they made a contribution.
Find a seat in back.
Fifteen minutes into the service, Daryl Bechtell B- E-C-H-T-E-L-L, walked into the sanctuary.
Reports indicate he was looking for his estranged wife.
He fired off a round that was from the.
38 missing his wife and hitting Harold Winter in the left shoulder.
Mr.
Winter is 65 and currently undergoing surgery at Abilene Regional Medical Center.
Mr.
Bechtell fired off anywhere between two and four more rounds at that point.
Reports differ as the crowd began to scatter.
Then Ron Cahrl pulled a 9mm Glock from under his suit coat and fired off three rounds in the direction of Mr.
Bechtell.
It's unclear which round struck Melissa Markey.
- Confirmation on her age? - She'll be 9 tomorrow.
Can you speak to what Daryl Bechtell or Ron Cahrl might be charged with? The Abilene Sheriff's Office will address that.
I can say that Mr.
Bechtell's gun was registered and Ron Cahrl had a license to carry a concealed weapon.
Doesn't Texas law prohibit weapons in a church or synagogue? I'll let the sheriff's office speak to that but I'll say that it only prohibits it if they post the prohibition in plain sight.
- C.
J .
- Hang on.
Well Melissa Markey died.
If you don't understand a question, say so, and they'll repeat it or they'll rephrase it.
- Yeah.
It's okay to not understand a question.
- It's okay to say,"I don't recall.
" - I appreciate this.
Yeah.
Don't you want to go over this with Josh? - He's pissed at me.
- No, he's not.
- He's Yeah, he is.
- He didn't say anything.
- He doesn't say anything.
- All right.
Anyway, I appreciate this.
Charlie, hang on a second.
You're gonna be sitting in a room.
It'll feel like you did something wrong but guess what.
- What? - You didn't.
So .
- Yeah.
- You got a cab? - Yeah.
- Come back when it's over.
- Thanks.
- You make a pick? - Oakland over Dallas.
- It's a lock.
- Okay.
Everybody wants to keep Oakland down the road but I'm not as impressed with the preseason hype.
You pick the Raiders at home and bank on them not being a favorite in the playoffs.
Okay.
Okay.
- Should I take Tennessee over Detroit? - I didn't say that.
- You said it with your eyes.
- Okay.
- I'll take Tennessee over Detroit.
- I'm writing it down.
Write it down.
Wait, no, give me Oakland over Dallas.
- Okay.
- Make it New Orleans over Atlanta.
- The game's about to start.
- New Orleans.
- I'm writing it down.
- Write it down.
- Good afternoon.
- Hi, Charlie.
- How was church? - It was fine.
- Stop it.
- It sucked.
- You're talking about church.
- I'm already going to hell.
- What was the problem? - He feels the homily lacked panache.
- It did.
- It was a perfectly lovely homily on Ephesians 5:21.
Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.
She's skipping the part that says, "Wives, be subject to your husbands.
The husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church.
" - I do skip that part.
- Why? - Because it's stupid.
- Okay.
Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by washing of water with the word that he might present the church to himself in something.
In splendor.
And I have no problem with it.
Anytime you want me to cleanse you with the washing of water, I'm up for it.
- Then what is your problem? - Hackery! He was a hack.
He had a captive audience.
I know because I tried to tunnel out several times.
He didn't know what to do.
- Want him to sing"Volare"? - Couldn't hurt.
- Words - Oh, God.
Words, when spoken out loud for performance, are music.
They have rhythm and pitch and timbre and volume.
These are properties of music.
Music has the ability to find us and lift us up in ways that literal meaning can't.
- Do you see? - You are an oratorical snob.
Yes, and God loves me for it.
- You said he was sending you to hell.
- Not for this.
You can't just trot out Ephesians, which he blew.
It has nothing to do with husbands and wives, it's all of us.
St.
Paul begins,"Be subject to one another out of reverence to Christ.
" Be subject to one another.
In this age of 24-hour cable crap devoted to feeding the voyeuristic gluttony of an American public hooked on a bad soap opera that's passing itself off as important don't you think you could find some relevance in verse 21? How do we end the cycle? Be subject to one another.
- This is about you.
- No, it's not.
Yes, it is.
But tomorrow it'll be about somebody else.
We'll watch Larry King and see who.
All hacks off the stage now.
That's a national-security order.
I'm going to the residence, taking a bath and turning on Sinatra.
- How does Mrs.
Sinatra feel about that? - Peace be with you.
Good morning, Mr.
President.
He's feisty.
Please, don't ask him about church.
No, I won't.
I'm sorry, Mr.
President.
Melissa Markey died.
Yeah, okay.
Oh, damn.
- Charlie, can I see Leo? - Yes, sir.
She lost too much blood at the scene, Jed, she didn't have a chance.
Yeah.
All right, I'll be over in the residence.
- I gotta see Babish this afternoon.
- Okay.
When do you think I should go in there? I'd wait a couple of hours till we have some more facts.
You'll talk to the sheriff's office and I guess, the DA.
Yeah, but you don't want to walk too far into that.
Yeah.
- Good morning.
- You heard? Yeah.
- C.
J.
thinks I should wait a few hours.
- I would.
- Okay.
- Thank you, Mr.
President.
Be subject to one another, Leo.
- What can I do to be of subject to you? - I'm fine.
- Yeah? - I've got Margaret.
Okay.
I think you should send Hoynes to Texas.
- He's not gonna want to do it.
- What do you care? - What are you doing today? - I'm meeting with Adamley.
- What about? - He wants to talk to me about the War Crimes Tribunal.
- Keep me out of it, all right? You think I should send Hoynes to Texas? Yeah.
All right, get him over here.
- Now? - Yeah.
Thank you, Mr.
President.
This proceeding is known as a deposition.
The person transcribing the deposition is a House reporter.
You were sworn in by a notary public and are under oath.
- Do you understand? - Yes.
Because you are under oath, your testimony here today has the same force and effect as if you were testifying before the committee in a courtroom.
- Do you understand? - Yes.
This committee has authorization pursuant to House Resolution 173.
My name is Clifford Calley.
I'm majority counsel for the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
State your full name for the record.
Donnatella Moss.
D-O-N-N-A-T-E-L-L-A M-O-S-S.
I'd like the record to show that I've met the witness socially on occasion and without objection I'd like to proceed.
- No objection.
- Counsel? - No objection.
- I'd like to express our appreciation to you for appearing on a Sunday.
Ms.
Moss, are you here voluntarily or due to a subpoena? - A subpoena.
- No need to thank me.
Donna, this is gonna be easy, you can laugh.
Were you asked to organize documents pursuant to this committee's investigation? - Yes.
- Would you describe how that worked? On instructions from Joshua Lyman and the White House Counsel's Office I took over a storage room at the OEOB and began sorting through inter-office and inter-departmental documents both from the campaign and from the West Wing.
- The campaign you're referring to is? - Bartlet for America.
- How'd you guys do? - We won.
My colleagues are gonna ask you some questions.
Then we'll get back to me and finish up.
- Okay.
- Ms.
Moss.
- Do you keep a photo album? - No.
- Okay, do you keep? - I'm sorry.
I keep photographs.
I don't have them in an album.
- Okay, do you keep a scrapbook? - No.
Do you keep letters, notes or correspondence you receive? Sometimes a birthday card or a letter from my father.
- Do you keep a diary? - No.
Okay.
Do you receive gifts from anyone who is currently? I'm sorry.
Hang on.
Would you read that back? "Question: Do you keep a diary? Answer: No.
Question: Okay, do you receive gifts from?" Okay.
Okay, go ahead.
Do you receive gifts from anyone who is currently working at the White House? - How you doing? - Good.
- You're sitting in my chair.
- It didn't have a plaque.
- Oh, I've missed you.
- Yeah.
- Well, you've been gone three weeks.
- Two and a half years.
- Really? - Yes.
- You were our man in Myanmar.
- I got kicked out of Myanmar.
Is there a third-world country that hasn't kicked you out? I've been kicked out of plenty of industrialized nations too.
- Why'd they kick you out? - First they didn't kick me out exactly.
They love me in Myanmar.
- What happened? - They put a bounty on my head.
It's not funny.
The Myanmarese government is built on narcotics trafficking.
Myanmar, Thailand, Laos.
I was this close to the story.
- Yeah? - I had interviews with Peng Jiasheng Pao Yuqiang, Li Zuru.
I was tight with narco-barons.
- Until? - The Myanmarese army Put a bounty on your head? - How'd you know? - State Department came and got me.
That had to be embarrassing in front of your narco-baron friends.
Anyway .
I'm assigned to the White House Press Corps until they can find me, you know, a reporting job.
- No, no offense taken.
- Thanks.
- Why'd you wanna see me? - Have a quote for comment.
- What is it? - Toby Ziegler says: "If the president wins reelection, it'll be on the vice president's coattails.
" If the president wins reelection, it'll be on the vice president's coattails? I think that's .
Yeah.
- He said this to you? - No.
- Where'd you get it? - The person he said it to.
Do me a favor, give me some time to check it out, okay? Yeah.
- You were gone two and a half years? - Yeah.
It seemed like less than that.
People lose all track of time and space when I'm not around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's 30 billion in school-modernization bonds.
Thanks, Ginger.
- Thank you.
- Sure.
It's 30 billion in school-modernization bonds.
- Interest-free? - Interest-free for school districts.
We're estimating it will help build and modernize 7000 schools nationwide.
There's another 1.
5 billion for urgent repairs targeted to high-need districts.
- Like roof repairs? - Roof repairs heating and cooling systems, electrical wiring.
We think we need the congressman's vote to get it onto the floor.
- He'll be with it.
- I thought so.
He wants the president's support on a bill he's sponsoring.
- What's it called? - The Legal Tender Modernization Act.
- Which is? - Elimination of the penny.
- Sorry? - It would permanently halt production of the penny.
- Why? - I'm glad you asked.
- Yeah.
Last year, the U.
S.
Mint cut and shipped them to the Federal Reserve, which dumped them on us.
- They're worthless.
- They're actually worth 1 cent.
The dollar has the buying power today the quarter had 30 years ago.
- Penny's power's shrunk to nothing.
- Not true.
You can get a gumball.
- No, you can't.
They cost a nickel.
- Really? I need to give the congressman a good reason why the White House won't support the bill, if they won't.
- Don't make me give you a good reason.
- You want your school repairs? We're already well on our way with 140 million pennies.
- Sam.
- I'll get you a good reason.
Charlie! Yes, sir.
- You took Indianapolis? - Yes, sir.
- You didn't want to take Kansas City? - No, sir.
Kansas City's got three players out of Notre Dame.
Always go with a team with more players out of Notre Dame.
- That's a heck of a system.
- What's yours? I compare the team's record to its opponent's record.
- That's a little simplistic, isn't it? - Yes, sir.
- Excuse me, Mr.
President? - Yeah.
- The vice president.
- Thank you.
- Hi, Charlie.
- Sir.
- Hey, John.
- Good afternoon, sir.
- Do you know this church? - No.
- The United Baptist Church in Abilene? - No.
- You feel like having a beer with me? - No, I'm fine.
On Sundays after church, my father would let my brother and me split a beer.
- Mind if I split some water with you? - Nancy.
I need you to go to Texas, John.
Nancy, could I get a cold beer and some ice water? - Yes, sir.
- And close the door, please.
- You want to send me to Texas.
- It's what Texans do.
You know, a decade ago, we passed a few national gun-control laws and the gun lobby turned its back on Congress and focused on the states.
The NRA systematically worked the legislatures to weaken conceal-and-carry laws, the effect of which is to increase gun sales and pad its own membership.
I don't agree with that The National Conference of State Legislatures is meeting in San Antonio.
- You want me to go and speak for you.
- Yeah.
Because that's what Texans do.
It's also what vice presidents do.
Thank you, Nancy.
Thank you, Nancy.
- Alan.
- Hey.
Come on back.
- Thanks for taking the time.
- No, no.
- So how did it go? - Oh, it was a good trip.
I met with Hassan, and I met with the aviation prince.
- You know what we need? - An aviation prince.
That's right.
Well, let me tell you something.
Sultan Bin Abu Azir ain't what he used to be.
Last time I was in Kuwait, he gave me a gold-inlay Gadara sword originated from the Binalhmar tribe.
- What'd you get this time? - Nothing.
You wanna go to the Situation Room, blow him off the face of the earth? Yeah.
So the NSC Communications Office cabled me a draft of the president's radio address for next weekend.
- Alan, it's a week -"At the close of the last World War our nation was instrumental in the creation of both the United Nations and the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal.
Now, at the dawn of the millennium, we cannot betray that tradition of moral leadership.
" He's made up his mind.
It's an early draft.
It's not a big thing.
I know that Hutchinson and Berryhill are for it, but to me to Fitzwallace, the Pentagon, the House and Senate Armed Services and House and Senate Foreign Relations it's a thing of catastrophic proportions.
Let's go inside and talk.
- Hey.
- I'm not here.
- I called and had you paged.
- Yeah? - I didn't know you were here.
- I'm not.
- I think the jig is up.
- Clearly I'm here.
But I'm not open.
The president was meeting with Hoynes so I wanted to see how it goes.
- Listen I see you picked Chicago over Cincinnati, so your money's gonna be in my pocket.
"If the president wins reelection it's gonna be on the vice president's coattails.
" You wanna know what's weird? I just said that exact same thing a couple of days ago.
I know.
You know how I know? Will Sawyer just told me.
- Will Sawyer's in Myanmar.
- He got kicked out.
- He's in the Room now.
- C.
J.
, I said it.
I said it in the W.
A.
meeting.
I said it at the end of the meeting.
We were talking about areas where Hoynes is polling stronger than .
It was .
I said to our own .
- Do I have a little time? - A little.
- Thank you.
- You're here now? Yeah.
Ginger? I want you to page every junior staffer and senior assistant who works in the West Wing.
I want them to assemble in the mess in two hours.
- What if? - If they can't be here then they don't need to come in tomorrow morning.
- Hey.
- How you doing? - How'd you get here before me? - I drove.
- Should you be here? - No.
- Then what? - I need to know why you lied.
- When? - Donna.
- I didn't lie.
- I saw your diary.
When I was over that night.
You keep a diary.
Why'd you say you didn't? - I don't keep a diary.
- I saw it.
- You didn't, because there is no diary - Donna, it's me and you.
- What's in it that you had to lie? - It's me and you? You're investigating me, my friends, my boss and the president.
- That's right.
- I thought you were smarmy with your: -"You can laugh.
" Was that charm? - Tell me what's There is no diary.
Eighteen U.
S.
C.
, 1001.
Lying to Congress: $ 10,000 and not more than five years in prison.
- Cliff - Eighteen U.
S.
C.
, 1505.
Obstruction of Proceedings Before Committees: Not more than five years.
Two U.
S.
C.
, 192.
Contempt of Congress: $ 1000 and imprisonment in a common jail for not more than 12 months.
It was a perfectly innocent mistake.
Let me talk to your lawyer and help you walk this back.
Just out of curiosity, what would you say? That you thought you saw a diary while you were hunting around for your boxer shorts? You shouldn't be here.
- Why? - Why? - Yes.
- Because this country is populated with unbalanced people, many of whom find their way to Washington as if the continent funnels them into this one spot.
He wants to abolish the penny? Not as much as he wants to give his boss a reason why we can't.
- Well, it's stupid.
- Yeah, the thing is, it isn't really.
- Really? - The majority of pennies don't circulate.
They go in jars, drawers.
2/3 of pennies produced in the last 30 years have dropped out of circulation.
- You're reading about this? - It's interesting.
- No, it's not.
The Mint gets letters with pennies taped on notebook paper from citizens who found them on the street and mailed them in to help with the debt.
- Hard to believe that hasn't worked.
- It's bad for the environment.
Production requires mining of tons of copper and zinc each year.
- Zinc? - In 1982, they changed the composition to 97.
5 percent zinc and only 2.
5 percent copper.
- Sam.
- I'm turning into a funnel person.
Yeah.
- Donna thinks you're still pissed at her.
- I'm not.
I wasn't before.
- When did she tell you that? - Before she left.
- You've heard from her? - No.
- She should be done by now.
- Here's a riddle: What's the most ubiquitous man-made object in America that doesn't interact with any mechanism or machine? - The penny? - The penny.
You can't even throw it in a tollbooth.
- Well, except for Illinois.
- Why can you use it in Illinois? - That's an interesting question.
- No, it's not.
- Hey.
- Hey.
I'm gonna have something for you soon.
Toby's talking to some people.
- Hey, are you a king? - No.
Somebody said you were hanging out with some tribe and they made you a king.
- I'm a god.
I'm the only white man to ever witness the sacrificial rites of the Bau tribe of Fiji.
I was almost a victim myself until they made me The Supporter of the World.
- How'd you swing that? - Using my Palm Pilot I convinced them I had the power to make the gods' writing appear and more significantly, predict the next day's weather.
- So you're a god.
- The God of Good Harvest.
I gotta go and bring my laptop.
It quacks when I have e-mail.
- No, you're too tall.
- What would happen? They would paint your face and other body parts black so as to resemble a warrior ornamented for feast or combat.
Then you would be garroted by a length of boar tripe.
Yeah.
No, good safety tip.
- Alan Adamley here? - Yeah.
- Why? - He's meeting with Leo McGarry.
- Why? - I don't know.
Listen you made a joke before.
- Yeah.
- About being assigned here until you can get a real reporting job.
- Yeah.
- Was it a joke? - Yeah.
Okay.
I'll have something for you on the other thing soon.
Thanks.
- That's not true.
- John It is not, Mr.
President.
Twenty-nine states have"shall issue" laws.
If you look at the state of New Jersey, which has a"may issue" law if you change that one word - I'm not saying Changing that word means law enforcement decides who gets a concealed weapon and when and where they carry it.
Texas has a"may issue" law in front of the legislature right now.
- You going down there - It's suicide, and you know it.
It's counter-scheduling.
You tell an audience what they don't wanna hear.
It shows you have courage.
The editors of The New York Times will think I have courage, while the people - You're a hero in Texas.
- I was a hero in Texas.
Texans don't like your courage of your convictions? They're not my convictions, they're yours.
Oh, yeah.
I forgot.
Mr.
President we're not gonna get anywhere by treating gun owners like psychopaths.
And particularly in the South, where guns are a tradition and a heritage that's passed on from father to son.
That's not good enough.
- Sir - A tradition passed from father to son? We tamed the frontier, John.
We did that already.
The NRA is gonna say you're taking advantage of the shooting in Abilene.
That you like when this happens.
It gives you a chance Let them stand in this room and say that.
On this day.
Let them stand in this room.
I like it? She was 9 years old.
Green Bay lost.
She was 9 years old.
You know, last month in Idaho, a man killed six members of his family including his pregnant wife.
And you know why the liberal intelligentsia didn't go crazy? Because he did it with an ax.
You think we need ax control? Well, that is an excellent point.
I never saw it that way.
- I'm playing devil's advocate.
- Tighter ax control.
You come down on firearms, tobacco and alcohol but you let Griffith talk about legalizing marijuana.
- She didn't - Sir You know what? Last year, gun deaths: 30,708.
Alcohol deaths: 35,450.
Tobacco deaths: 400,000.
Marijuana deaths: zero.
This guy, the second shooter, Rambo he's gonna get a parade.
You know why? There was no sign posted in the church saying you can't carry a concealed weapon.
I'm just playing devil's advocate.
She was 9 years old.
Two things.
One, technically it's not just a court for war crimes.
- Technically? - And two the president hasn't made up his mind.
- The U.
N.
has.
- The U.
N.
made up its mind in 1948 when they recognized genocide.
- Yes A crime so immense as to exceed the jurisdiction of any single court or government.
Alan, systematic extermination of civilians, enslavement, torture, rape, forced pregnancy, terrorism .
Doesn't the world need a permanent standing body? National sovereignty is at stake.
Americans are answerable to no one but their own government and laws.
- Yeah.
The U.
N.
is not a democratic organization.
There's no input into its deliberations by any Come on, the court is designed with plenty of safeguards to say nothing of if we don't subject ourselves to the treaty it'll encourage other countries.
You don't think that'll undercut the U.
N.
's campaign against war crimes? - Excuse me.
Excuse me, general.
- Hey, Sam.
- Margaret wasn't here.
- What do you need? - No, if you're busy, I can come back.
- We're eliminating genocide.
- What are you doing? - Eliminating the penny.
So I'll come back.
- Yeah.
- See you later.
- Hey.
- Hi.
- How'd it go? - It went fine.
- Just background, right? - It was fine.
- Is Josh in his office? - He's around someplace.
Thanks.
The only thing pennies interact with are coin-wrapping machines people buy to get rid of pennies, which proves the point.
- What point? - I don't know.
- It went okay? - Fine.
- How'd it go? - I need to talk to you for a second.
- What happened? - Can we go in your office? - Hey, how'd it go? - Fine.
- What happened? - They asked if I kept a diary and I said no.
Only I do keep one.
- Why'd you say that? - I don't know.
- You don't know? - Nothing in it is relevant.
Does anyone know you keep one? Nobody knows I keep a diary, except Cliff saw it.
- What do you mean? - After the deposition Cliff told me he saw the diary when he was in my apartment.
I swear, it wasn't premeditated.
Nothing in it was material You don't get to decide that! You don't get to decide what's material, Donna! - Keep your voice down.
- This is how it happens.
They got nothing on the president with MS, then you hand them - I know.
- You were subpoenaed! - You were under oath! - I screwed up.
You think?! - What should I do? - Do nothing.
Do absolutely nothing.
There's an old saying: Those who speak don't know, and those who know don't speak.
I don't know if that's true or not but I know, by and large, the press doesn't care who really knows what as long as they've got a quote.
Friday, we had our"week ahead" meeting in the Roosevelt Room.
Some of you were there, most of you weren't but I'm talking to all of you now.
Bruno Gianelli and I were leading a discussion about whether the president should stop in Kansas on his way back from the West Coast.
And I remarked that the vice president is polling better than the president right now in the plains states.
And if the president is reelected, it'll be on the vice president's coattails.
That remark got to a White House reporter.
We're a group.
We're a team.
From the president and Leo on through, we're a team.
We win together.
We lose together.
We celebrate and we mourn together.
Defeats are softened and victories sweetened because we did them together.
And if you don't like this team then there's the door.
It's great to be in the know.
It's great to have the scoop, to have the skinny.
To be able to go to a reporter and say, "I know something you don't know.
" So the press becomes your constituents, and you sell out the team.
So an item will appear in the paper tomorrow and it'll be embarrassing to me and embarrassing to the president.
I'm not gonna have a witch-hunt.
I'm not gonna huff and puff.
I'm not gonna take anyone's head off.
I'm simply gonna say this: You're my guys.
And I'm yours.
And there's nothing I wouldn't do for you.
- That was unexpected.
- Yeah.
You're a good deputy, Sam.
- What do you mean? - That.
- You won money on football, didn't you? - Yeah, but I mean it anyway.
What can I do for you today? Give me a good reason why we can't support the elimination of the penny.
- The Legal Tender Huckleberry Bill? - Modernization Bill, yeah.
- It'll never get to the floor.
- Why not? - Where's the House speaker from? - Illinois.
Which is the only state where you can put pennies in a toll machine.
Why? - It's because - Lincoln's from Illinois! - And so's the speaker.
- Yes.
That's a good reason.
Well, it's a dumb reason.
- But it's good enough, right? - Sure.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
- And thanks for the other thing.
- Yeah.
- Hi.
- Hi.
- What do you need? - You called me.
Yes, I did.
Well Toby made the remark in response to some new polling data.
It was offhand.
Obviously, he meant it as a joke and he regrets it.
- Okay.
- He'll be happy to go on-the-record.
- No, that's all right.
- What do you mean? - I don't need him.
- You won't let Toby explain himself? - I'm not writing it.
- Why not? - It's not news.
- Really? - Yeah.
Okay.
I'll see you in there.
- You weren't joking before, were you? - When? - When you said - No.
- Why do you think this is a bad beat? - I don't like being a stenographer.
And I don't like writing gossip.
I read a column where a lady bemoaned the decade of scandals she covered as if the news was to blame for the quality of journalism.
I don't know if there's ever been a more important time to be good at what I do.
Can you imagine how much I don't give a damn about what Toby said to a staffer? Yeah.
All right.
You can sit anywhere you want.
A hundred and thirty-nine countries have signed.
Thirty-five have ratified.
Once 60 ratify, that's the ballgame.
- You want to be left out? - Absolutely.
- This'll raise 19 kinds of hell in Congress.
- What doesn't? There are already extreme Republicans who are attaching amendments to bills cutting off military aid to any NATO member that signs the treaty.
- That won't happen.
- And committing the U.
S to forcibly rescue any American soldier held and tried in such a court.
Leo, this commits the United States to a scenario where we'd be invading Holland.
How much of this is about hedging our bets? - It's not - We set up Nuremberg! We set up the Tokyo War Crimes Trial.
And that was fine.
Until we realized the Cold War threat would take precedence.
So when the German rocket scientists came here to help us get into space Oh, please.
we looked the other way while SS officers followed right behind protected by American intelligence services because they were gonna help us with the communists.
Oh, please, Alan.
So how much of this is hedging our bets? You remember Operation Rolling Thunder? Yeah.
I think I do.
Yeah.
- September, 1966.
- Yeah.
You were piloting an F-105 Fighterchief.
This was our first unit, the 355th Tactical Fighter Wing out of Thailand.
I was forward air commander.
I gave you your directions.
"From IP, heading 273 for 10.
5 miles your target is north-south running bridge over river 1 kilometer to the tree line running east-west.
" Yeah.
- It was a military target.
- It was a civilian target.
It was a dam.
There were 11 civilian casualties.
Why did you tell me that? Because you could be charged and tried for a war crime.
Why did you tell me that? All wars are crimes.
- We've been here a while.
- Yeah.
- Maybe we'll call it a day, huh? - Yeah.
I'll get you some time with the president this week.
I'd appreciate that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
- Can I ask a question out of curiosity? - Yes, sir.
If guns are meant to deter the threat of crime, why conceal them? I mean, wouldn't you want the criminal to see that you've got a gun? - I suppose you would.
- Then what's the answer to that? I really don't know, sir.
- You don't know? - No, sir.
The concern is with the threat to the Second Amendment.
We can't agree it's a stupid amendment written before there were street lamps and police forces, and move on? - Sir.
There's no need for a citizen militia.
- I agree with you.
- Then say so.
Forty percent of Americans have a gun in their home.
Only 16 percent believe gun ownership is an absolute right.
Only 9 percent believe it's an absolute wrong.
There's a middle.
We can win them.
Not when we're running the MS defense.
Which we wouldn't have been doing if - If what, sir? - Nothing.
- Sir - You outed me, John.
With that trip to Nashua, with the oil companies.
You wanted people to start asking questions.
I needed to start running because nobody told me that I wasn't! And you announced that I found out on television! So did my wife.
This thing was mismanaged.
It was blown! - Yes, it was.
- Yes, it was.
Not easy being my vice president, is it? No, sir.
I wouldn't think so.
But it's the only way you're gonna get the nomination.
You know that, right? - If I win.
- Yeah.
And the only way you're gonna win is if I'm on the ticket.
- You know that, don't you, sir? - Yeah.
You'll go to Texas? - I want a seat at the table.
- Yeah.
- Mr.
President? - Yeah.
- They're ready in the Briefing Room.
- Thank you.
- I'll be back in my office.
- Yeah.
- Is there anything else, sir? - No.
Thank you, Mr.
President.
There's a coffee shop across the street.
You'll read it there.
You got an hour.
I haven't read it.
But if anything bothers you, you'll issue a subpoena in the morning.
You'll have it back before the end of the day.
If not, that's that.
- Yeah.
- If I read any of this in the newspaper or anything happens I don't like I've got the entries for October 4 and 5.
What's October 4 and 5? You.
That's fair.
Thank you.
It's starting to get cold already.
It's gonna be fine.
It's gonna be fine.
Turns out he's on Government Oversight.
- You can't see him.
Political reporters don't care about the scope of inquiry.
We're not gonna get anywhere putting on a calm face.
We need to pick a fight.
- Hoynes put a poll in the field.
- A trip to New Hampshire? - High-tech corridor of the Northeast.
- Thanks to who? What does that matter right now? Third down and 12, 45 seconds to go.
Whitmeyer has the ball on the right side and immediately stops for a 2-yard loss - Okay.
- Do we know what kind of gun it was? - Which gun? - The first gun.
It was a.
38 pistol.
Okay, here are a few confirmations and a few more details.
The shooting took place approximately at United Baptist Church in Abilene, Texas.
Will Sawyer, is that you? Yes.
- You back in the country? - Yeah.
- Work for the San Francisco Chronicle? - No.
Then you wanna get your ass out of their chair? There's assigned seating? See the little brass plaques with the names of media outlets? I thought that meant they made a contribution.
Find a seat in back.
Fifteen minutes into the service, Daryl Bechtell B- E-C-H-T-E-L-L, walked into the sanctuary.
Reports indicate he was looking for his estranged wife.
He fired off a round that was from the.
38 missing his wife and hitting Harold Winter in the left shoulder.
Mr.
Winter is 65 and currently undergoing surgery at Abilene Regional Medical Center.
Mr.
Bechtell fired off anywhere between two and four more rounds at that point.
Reports differ as the crowd began to scatter.
Then Ron Cahrl pulled a 9mm Glock from under his suit coat and fired off three rounds in the direction of Mr.
Bechtell.
It's unclear which round struck Melissa Markey.
- Confirmation on her age? - She'll be 9 tomorrow.
Can you speak to what Daryl Bechtell or Ron Cahrl might be charged with? The Abilene Sheriff's Office will address that.
I can say that Mr.
Bechtell's gun was registered and Ron Cahrl had a license to carry a concealed weapon.
Doesn't Texas law prohibit weapons in a church or synagogue? I'll let the sheriff's office speak to that but I'll say that it only prohibits it if they post the prohibition in plain sight.
- C.
J .
- Hang on.
Well Melissa Markey died.
If you don't understand a question, say so, and they'll repeat it or they'll rephrase it.
- Yeah.
It's okay to not understand a question.
- It's okay to say,"I don't recall.
" - I appreciate this.
Yeah.
Don't you want to go over this with Josh? - He's pissed at me.
- No, he's not.
- He's Yeah, he is.
- He didn't say anything.
- He doesn't say anything.
- All right.
Anyway, I appreciate this.
Charlie, hang on a second.
You're gonna be sitting in a room.
It'll feel like you did something wrong but guess what.
- What? - You didn't.
So .
- Yeah.
- You got a cab? - Yeah.
- Come back when it's over.
- Thanks.
- You make a pick? - Oakland over Dallas.
- It's a lock.
- Okay.
Everybody wants to keep Oakland down the road but I'm not as impressed with the preseason hype.
You pick the Raiders at home and bank on them not being a favorite in the playoffs.
Okay.
Okay.
- Should I take Tennessee over Detroit? - I didn't say that.
- You said it with your eyes.
- Okay.
- I'll take Tennessee over Detroit.
- I'm writing it down.
Write it down.
Wait, no, give me Oakland over Dallas.
- Okay.
- Make it New Orleans over Atlanta.
- The game's about to start.
- New Orleans.
- I'm writing it down.
- Write it down.
- Good afternoon.
- Hi, Charlie.
- How was church? - It was fine.
- Stop it.
- It sucked.
- You're talking about church.
- I'm already going to hell.
- What was the problem? - He feels the homily lacked panache.
- It did.
- It was a perfectly lovely homily on Ephesians 5:21.
Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.
She's skipping the part that says, "Wives, be subject to your husbands.
The husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church.
" - I do skip that part.
- Why? - Because it's stupid.
- Okay.
Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by washing of water with the word that he might present the church to himself in something.
In splendor.
And I have no problem with it.
Anytime you want me to cleanse you with the washing of water, I'm up for it.
- Then what is your problem? - Hackery! He was a hack.
He had a captive audience.
I know because I tried to tunnel out several times.
He didn't know what to do.
- Want him to sing"Volare"? - Couldn't hurt.
- Words - Oh, God.
Words, when spoken out loud for performance, are music.
They have rhythm and pitch and timbre and volume.
These are properties of music.
Music has the ability to find us and lift us up in ways that literal meaning can't.
- Do you see? - You are an oratorical snob.
Yes, and God loves me for it.
- You said he was sending you to hell.
- Not for this.
You can't just trot out Ephesians, which he blew.
It has nothing to do with husbands and wives, it's all of us.
St.
Paul begins,"Be subject to one another out of reverence to Christ.
" Be subject to one another.
In this age of 24-hour cable crap devoted to feeding the voyeuristic gluttony of an American public hooked on a bad soap opera that's passing itself off as important don't you think you could find some relevance in verse 21? How do we end the cycle? Be subject to one another.
- This is about you.
- No, it's not.
Yes, it is.
But tomorrow it'll be about somebody else.
We'll watch Larry King and see who.
All hacks off the stage now.
That's a national-security order.
I'm going to the residence, taking a bath and turning on Sinatra.
- How does Mrs.
Sinatra feel about that? - Peace be with you.
Good morning, Mr.
President.
He's feisty.
Please, don't ask him about church.
No, I won't.
I'm sorry, Mr.
President.
Melissa Markey died.
Yeah, okay.
Oh, damn.
- Charlie, can I see Leo? - Yes, sir.
She lost too much blood at the scene, Jed, she didn't have a chance.
Yeah.
All right, I'll be over in the residence.
- I gotta see Babish this afternoon.
- Okay.
When do you think I should go in there? I'd wait a couple of hours till we have some more facts.
You'll talk to the sheriff's office and I guess, the DA.
Yeah, but you don't want to walk too far into that.
Yeah.
- Good morning.
- You heard? Yeah.
- C.
J.
thinks I should wait a few hours.
- I would.
- Okay.
- Thank you, Mr.
President.
Be subject to one another, Leo.
- What can I do to be of subject to you? - I'm fine.
- Yeah? - I've got Margaret.
Okay.
I think you should send Hoynes to Texas.
- He's not gonna want to do it.
- What do you care? - What are you doing today? - I'm meeting with Adamley.
- What about? - He wants to talk to me about the War Crimes Tribunal.
- Keep me out of it, all right? You think I should send Hoynes to Texas? Yeah.
All right, get him over here.
- Now? - Yeah.
Thank you, Mr.
President.
This proceeding is known as a deposition.
The person transcribing the deposition is a House reporter.
You were sworn in by a notary public and are under oath.
- Do you understand? - Yes.
Because you are under oath, your testimony here today has the same force and effect as if you were testifying before the committee in a courtroom.
- Do you understand? - Yes.
This committee has authorization pursuant to House Resolution 173.
My name is Clifford Calley.
I'm majority counsel for the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
State your full name for the record.
Donnatella Moss.
D-O-N-N-A-T-E-L-L-A M-O-S-S.
I'd like the record to show that I've met the witness socially on occasion and without objection I'd like to proceed.
- No objection.
- Counsel? - No objection.
- I'd like to express our appreciation to you for appearing on a Sunday.
Ms.
Moss, are you here voluntarily or due to a subpoena? - A subpoena.
- No need to thank me.
Donna, this is gonna be easy, you can laugh.
Were you asked to organize documents pursuant to this committee's investigation? - Yes.
- Would you describe how that worked? On instructions from Joshua Lyman and the White House Counsel's Office I took over a storage room at the OEOB and began sorting through inter-office and inter-departmental documents both from the campaign and from the West Wing.
- The campaign you're referring to is? - Bartlet for America.
- How'd you guys do? - We won.
My colleagues are gonna ask you some questions.
Then we'll get back to me and finish up.
- Okay.
- Ms.
Moss.
- Do you keep a photo album? - No.
- Okay, do you keep? - I'm sorry.
I keep photographs.
I don't have them in an album.
- Okay, do you keep a scrapbook? - No.
Do you keep letters, notes or correspondence you receive? Sometimes a birthday card or a letter from my father.
- Do you keep a diary? - No.
Okay.
Do you receive gifts from anyone who is currently? I'm sorry.
Hang on.
Would you read that back? "Question: Do you keep a diary? Answer: No.
Question: Okay, do you receive gifts from?" Okay.
Okay, go ahead.
Do you receive gifts from anyone who is currently working at the White House? - How you doing? - Good.
- You're sitting in my chair.
- It didn't have a plaque.
- Oh, I've missed you.
- Yeah.
- Well, you've been gone three weeks.
- Two and a half years.
- Really? - Yes.
- You were our man in Myanmar.
- I got kicked out of Myanmar.
Is there a third-world country that hasn't kicked you out? I've been kicked out of plenty of industrialized nations too.
- Why'd they kick you out? - First they didn't kick me out exactly.
They love me in Myanmar.
- What happened? - They put a bounty on my head.
It's not funny.
The Myanmarese government is built on narcotics trafficking.
Myanmar, Thailand, Laos.
I was this close to the story.
- Yeah? - I had interviews with Peng Jiasheng Pao Yuqiang, Li Zuru.
I was tight with narco-barons.
- Until? - The Myanmarese army Put a bounty on your head? - How'd you know? - State Department came and got me.
That had to be embarrassing in front of your narco-baron friends.
Anyway .
I'm assigned to the White House Press Corps until they can find me, you know, a reporting job.
- No, no offense taken.
- Thanks.
- Why'd you wanna see me? - Have a quote for comment.
- What is it? - Toby Ziegler says: "If the president wins reelection, it'll be on the vice president's coattails.
" If the president wins reelection, it'll be on the vice president's coattails? I think that's .
Yeah.
- He said this to you? - No.
- Where'd you get it? - The person he said it to.
Do me a favor, give me some time to check it out, okay? Yeah.
- You were gone two and a half years? - Yeah.
It seemed like less than that.
People lose all track of time and space when I'm not around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's 30 billion in school-modernization bonds.
Thanks, Ginger.
- Thank you.
- Sure.
It's 30 billion in school-modernization bonds.
- Interest-free? - Interest-free for school districts.
We're estimating it will help build and modernize 7000 schools nationwide.
There's another 1.
5 billion for urgent repairs targeted to high-need districts.
- Like roof repairs? - Roof repairs heating and cooling systems, electrical wiring.
We think we need the congressman's vote to get it onto the floor.
- He'll be with it.
- I thought so.
He wants the president's support on a bill he's sponsoring.
- What's it called? - The Legal Tender Modernization Act.
- Which is? - Elimination of the penny.
- Sorry? - It would permanently halt production of the penny.
- Why? - I'm glad you asked.
- Yeah.
Last year, the U.
S.
Mint cut and shipped them to the Federal Reserve, which dumped them on us.
- They're worthless.
- They're actually worth 1 cent.
The dollar has the buying power today the quarter had 30 years ago.
- Penny's power's shrunk to nothing.
- Not true.
You can get a gumball.
- No, you can't.
They cost a nickel.
- Really? I need to give the congressman a good reason why the White House won't support the bill, if they won't.
- Don't make me give you a good reason.
- You want your school repairs? We're already well on our way with 140 million pennies.
- Sam.
- I'll get you a good reason.
Charlie! Yes, sir.
- You took Indianapolis? - Yes, sir.
- You didn't want to take Kansas City? - No, sir.
Kansas City's got three players out of Notre Dame.
Always go with a team with more players out of Notre Dame.
- That's a heck of a system.
- What's yours? I compare the team's record to its opponent's record.
- That's a little simplistic, isn't it? - Yes, sir.
- Excuse me, Mr.
President? - Yeah.
- The vice president.
- Thank you.
- Hi, Charlie.
- Sir.
- Hey, John.
- Good afternoon, sir.
- Do you know this church? - No.
- The United Baptist Church in Abilene? - No.
- You feel like having a beer with me? - No, I'm fine.
On Sundays after church, my father would let my brother and me split a beer.
- Mind if I split some water with you? - Nancy.
I need you to go to Texas, John.
Nancy, could I get a cold beer and some ice water? - Yes, sir.
- And close the door, please.
- You want to send me to Texas.
- It's what Texans do.
You know, a decade ago, we passed a few national gun-control laws and the gun lobby turned its back on Congress and focused on the states.
The NRA systematically worked the legislatures to weaken conceal-and-carry laws, the effect of which is to increase gun sales and pad its own membership.
I don't agree with that The National Conference of State Legislatures is meeting in San Antonio.
- You want me to go and speak for you.
- Yeah.
Because that's what Texans do.
It's also what vice presidents do.
Thank you, Nancy.
Thank you, Nancy.
- Alan.
- Hey.
Come on back.
- Thanks for taking the time.
- No, no.
- So how did it go? - Oh, it was a good trip.
I met with Hassan, and I met with the aviation prince.
- You know what we need? - An aviation prince.
That's right.
Well, let me tell you something.
Sultan Bin Abu Azir ain't what he used to be.
Last time I was in Kuwait, he gave me a gold-inlay Gadara sword originated from the Binalhmar tribe.
- What'd you get this time? - Nothing.
You wanna go to the Situation Room, blow him off the face of the earth? Yeah.
So the NSC Communications Office cabled me a draft of the president's radio address for next weekend.
- Alan, it's a week -"At the close of the last World War our nation was instrumental in the creation of both the United Nations and the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal.
Now, at the dawn of the millennium, we cannot betray that tradition of moral leadership.
" He's made up his mind.
It's an early draft.
It's not a big thing.
I know that Hutchinson and Berryhill are for it, but to me to Fitzwallace, the Pentagon, the House and Senate Armed Services and House and Senate Foreign Relations it's a thing of catastrophic proportions.
Let's go inside and talk.
- Hey.
- I'm not here.
- I called and had you paged.
- Yeah? - I didn't know you were here.
- I'm not.
- I think the jig is up.
- Clearly I'm here.
But I'm not open.
The president was meeting with Hoynes so I wanted to see how it goes.
- Listen I see you picked Chicago over Cincinnati, so your money's gonna be in my pocket.
"If the president wins reelection it's gonna be on the vice president's coattails.
" You wanna know what's weird? I just said that exact same thing a couple of days ago.
I know.
You know how I know? Will Sawyer just told me.
- Will Sawyer's in Myanmar.
- He got kicked out.
- He's in the Room now.
- C.
J.
, I said it.
I said it in the W.
A.
meeting.
I said it at the end of the meeting.
We were talking about areas where Hoynes is polling stronger than .
It was .
I said to our own .
- Do I have a little time? - A little.
- Thank you.
- You're here now? Yeah.
Ginger? I want you to page every junior staffer and senior assistant who works in the West Wing.
I want them to assemble in the mess in two hours.
- What if? - If they can't be here then they don't need to come in tomorrow morning.
- Hey.
- How you doing? - How'd you get here before me? - I drove.
- Should you be here? - No.
- Then what? - I need to know why you lied.
- When? - Donna.
- I didn't lie.
- I saw your diary.
When I was over that night.
You keep a diary.
Why'd you say you didn't? - I don't keep a diary.
- I saw it.
- You didn't, because there is no diary - Donna, it's me and you.
- What's in it that you had to lie? - It's me and you? You're investigating me, my friends, my boss and the president.
- That's right.
- I thought you were smarmy with your: -"You can laugh.
" Was that charm? - Tell me what's There is no diary.
Eighteen U.
S.
C.
, 1001.
Lying to Congress: $ 10,000 and not more than five years in prison.
- Cliff - Eighteen U.
S.
C.
, 1505.
Obstruction of Proceedings Before Committees: Not more than five years.
Two U.
S.
C.
, 192.
Contempt of Congress: $ 1000 and imprisonment in a common jail for not more than 12 months.
It was a perfectly innocent mistake.
Let me talk to your lawyer and help you walk this back.
Just out of curiosity, what would you say? That you thought you saw a diary while you were hunting around for your boxer shorts? You shouldn't be here.
- Why? - Why? - Yes.
- Because this country is populated with unbalanced people, many of whom find their way to Washington as if the continent funnels them into this one spot.
He wants to abolish the penny? Not as much as he wants to give his boss a reason why we can't.
- Well, it's stupid.
- Yeah, the thing is, it isn't really.
- Really? - The majority of pennies don't circulate.
They go in jars, drawers.
2/3 of pennies produced in the last 30 years have dropped out of circulation.
- You're reading about this? - It's interesting.
- No, it's not.
The Mint gets letters with pennies taped on notebook paper from citizens who found them on the street and mailed them in to help with the debt.
- Hard to believe that hasn't worked.
- It's bad for the environment.
Production requires mining of tons of copper and zinc each year.
- Zinc? - In 1982, they changed the composition to 97.
5 percent zinc and only 2.
5 percent copper.
- Sam.
- I'm turning into a funnel person.
Yeah.
- Donna thinks you're still pissed at her.
- I'm not.
I wasn't before.
- When did she tell you that? - Before she left.
- You've heard from her? - No.
- She should be done by now.
- Here's a riddle: What's the most ubiquitous man-made object in America that doesn't interact with any mechanism or machine? - The penny? - The penny.
You can't even throw it in a tollbooth.
- Well, except for Illinois.
- Why can you use it in Illinois? - That's an interesting question.
- No, it's not.
- Hey.
- Hey.
I'm gonna have something for you soon.
Toby's talking to some people.
- Hey, are you a king? - No.
Somebody said you were hanging out with some tribe and they made you a king.
- I'm a god.
I'm the only white man to ever witness the sacrificial rites of the Bau tribe of Fiji.
I was almost a victim myself until they made me The Supporter of the World.
- How'd you swing that? - Using my Palm Pilot I convinced them I had the power to make the gods' writing appear and more significantly, predict the next day's weather.
- So you're a god.
- The God of Good Harvest.
I gotta go and bring my laptop.
It quacks when I have e-mail.
- No, you're too tall.
- What would happen? They would paint your face and other body parts black so as to resemble a warrior ornamented for feast or combat.
Then you would be garroted by a length of boar tripe.
Yeah.
No, good safety tip.
- Alan Adamley here? - Yeah.
- Why? - He's meeting with Leo McGarry.
- Why? - I don't know.
Listen you made a joke before.
- Yeah.
- About being assigned here until you can get a real reporting job.
- Yeah.
- Was it a joke? - Yeah.
Okay.
I'll have something for you on the other thing soon.
Thanks.
- That's not true.
- John It is not, Mr.
President.
Twenty-nine states have"shall issue" laws.
If you look at the state of New Jersey, which has a"may issue" law if you change that one word - I'm not saying Changing that word means law enforcement decides who gets a concealed weapon and when and where they carry it.
Texas has a"may issue" law in front of the legislature right now.
- You going down there - It's suicide, and you know it.
It's counter-scheduling.
You tell an audience what they don't wanna hear.
It shows you have courage.
The editors of The New York Times will think I have courage, while the people - You're a hero in Texas.
- I was a hero in Texas.
Texans don't like your courage of your convictions? They're not my convictions, they're yours.
Oh, yeah.
I forgot.
Mr.
President we're not gonna get anywhere by treating gun owners like psychopaths.
And particularly in the South, where guns are a tradition and a heritage that's passed on from father to son.
That's not good enough.
- Sir - A tradition passed from father to son? We tamed the frontier, John.
We did that already.
The NRA is gonna say you're taking advantage of the shooting in Abilene.
That you like when this happens.
It gives you a chance Let them stand in this room and say that.
On this day.
Let them stand in this room.
I like it? She was 9 years old.
Green Bay lost.
She was 9 years old.
You know, last month in Idaho, a man killed six members of his family including his pregnant wife.
And you know why the liberal intelligentsia didn't go crazy? Because he did it with an ax.
You think we need ax control? Well, that is an excellent point.
I never saw it that way.
- I'm playing devil's advocate.
- Tighter ax control.
You come down on firearms, tobacco and alcohol but you let Griffith talk about legalizing marijuana.
- She didn't - Sir You know what? Last year, gun deaths: 30,708.
Alcohol deaths: 35,450.
Tobacco deaths: 400,000.
Marijuana deaths: zero.
This guy, the second shooter, Rambo he's gonna get a parade.
You know why? There was no sign posted in the church saying you can't carry a concealed weapon.
I'm just playing devil's advocate.
She was 9 years old.
Two things.
One, technically it's not just a court for war crimes.
- Technically? - And two the president hasn't made up his mind.
- The U.
N.
has.
- The U.
N.
made up its mind in 1948 when they recognized genocide.
- Yes A crime so immense as to exceed the jurisdiction of any single court or government.
Alan, systematic extermination of civilians, enslavement, torture, rape, forced pregnancy, terrorism .
Doesn't the world need a permanent standing body? National sovereignty is at stake.
Americans are answerable to no one but their own government and laws.
- Yeah.
The U.
N.
is not a democratic organization.
There's no input into its deliberations by any Come on, the court is designed with plenty of safeguards to say nothing of if we don't subject ourselves to the treaty it'll encourage other countries.
You don't think that'll undercut the U.
N.
's campaign against war crimes? - Excuse me.
Excuse me, general.
- Hey, Sam.
- Margaret wasn't here.
- What do you need? - No, if you're busy, I can come back.
- We're eliminating genocide.
- What are you doing? - Eliminating the penny.
So I'll come back.
- Yeah.
- See you later.
- Hey.
- Hi.
- How'd it go? - It went fine.
- Just background, right? - It was fine.
- Is Josh in his office? - He's around someplace.
Thanks.
The only thing pennies interact with are coin-wrapping machines people buy to get rid of pennies, which proves the point.
- What point? - I don't know.
- It went okay? - Fine.
- How'd it go? - I need to talk to you for a second.
- What happened? - Can we go in your office? - Hey, how'd it go? - Fine.
- What happened? - They asked if I kept a diary and I said no.
Only I do keep one.
- Why'd you say that? - I don't know.
- You don't know? - Nothing in it is relevant.
Does anyone know you keep one? Nobody knows I keep a diary, except Cliff saw it.
- What do you mean? - After the deposition Cliff told me he saw the diary when he was in my apartment.
I swear, it wasn't premeditated.
Nothing in it was material You don't get to decide that! You don't get to decide what's material, Donna! - Keep your voice down.
- This is how it happens.
They got nothing on the president with MS, then you hand them - I know.
- You were subpoenaed! - You were under oath! - I screwed up.
You think?! - What should I do? - Do nothing.
Do absolutely nothing.
There's an old saying: Those who speak don't know, and those who know don't speak.
I don't know if that's true or not but I know, by and large, the press doesn't care who really knows what as long as they've got a quote.
Friday, we had our"week ahead" meeting in the Roosevelt Room.
Some of you were there, most of you weren't but I'm talking to all of you now.
Bruno Gianelli and I were leading a discussion about whether the president should stop in Kansas on his way back from the West Coast.
And I remarked that the vice president is polling better than the president right now in the plains states.
And if the president is reelected, it'll be on the vice president's coattails.
That remark got to a White House reporter.
We're a group.
We're a team.
From the president and Leo on through, we're a team.
We win together.
We lose together.
We celebrate and we mourn together.
Defeats are softened and victories sweetened because we did them together.
And if you don't like this team then there's the door.
It's great to be in the know.
It's great to have the scoop, to have the skinny.
To be able to go to a reporter and say, "I know something you don't know.
" So the press becomes your constituents, and you sell out the team.
So an item will appear in the paper tomorrow and it'll be embarrassing to me and embarrassing to the president.
I'm not gonna have a witch-hunt.
I'm not gonna huff and puff.
I'm not gonna take anyone's head off.
I'm simply gonna say this: You're my guys.
And I'm yours.
And there's nothing I wouldn't do for you.
- That was unexpected.
- Yeah.
You're a good deputy, Sam.
- What do you mean? - That.
- You won money on football, didn't you? - Yeah, but I mean it anyway.
What can I do for you today? Give me a good reason why we can't support the elimination of the penny.
- The Legal Tender Huckleberry Bill? - Modernization Bill, yeah.
- It'll never get to the floor.
- Why not? - Where's the House speaker from? - Illinois.
Which is the only state where you can put pennies in a toll machine.
Why? - It's because - Lincoln's from Illinois! - And so's the speaker.
- Yes.
That's a good reason.
Well, it's a dumb reason.
- But it's good enough, right? - Sure.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
- And thanks for the other thing.
- Yeah.
- Hi.
- Hi.
- What do you need? - You called me.
Yes, I did.
Well Toby made the remark in response to some new polling data.
It was offhand.
Obviously, he meant it as a joke and he regrets it.
- Okay.
- He'll be happy to go on-the-record.
- No, that's all right.
- What do you mean? - I don't need him.
- You won't let Toby explain himself? - I'm not writing it.
- Why not? - It's not news.
- Really? - Yeah.
Okay.
I'll see you in there.
- You weren't joking before, were you? - When? - When you said - No.
- Why do you think this is a bad beat? - I don't like being a stenographer.
And I don't like writing gossip.
I read a column where a lady bemoaned the decade of scandals she covered as if the news was to blame for the quality of journalism.
I don't know if there's ever been a more important time to be good at what I do.
Can you imagine how much I don't give a damn about what Toby said to a staffer? Yeah.
All right.
You can sit anywhere you want.
A hundred and thirty-nine countries have signed.
Thirty-five have ratified.
Once 60 ratify, that's the ballgame.
- You want to be left out? - Absolutely.
- This'll raise 19 kinds of hell in Congress.
- What doesn't? There are already extreme Republicans who are attaching amendments to bills cutting off military aid to any NATO member that signs the treaty.
- That won't happen.
- And committing the U.
S to forcibly rescue any American soldier held and tried in such a court.
Leo, this commits the United States to a scenario where we'd be invading Holland.
How much of this is about hedging our bets? - It's not - We set up Nuremberg! We set up the Tokyo War Crimes Trial.
And that was fine.
Until we realized the Cold War threat would take precedence.
So when the German rocket scientists came here to help us get into space Oh, please.
we looked the other way while SS officers followed right behind protected by American intelligence services because they were gonna help us with the communists.
Oh, please, Alan.
So how much of this is hedging our bets? You remember Operation Rolling Thunder? Yeah.
I think I do.
Yeah.
- September, 1966.
- Yeah.
You were piloting an F-105 Fighterchief.
This was our first unit, the 355th Tactical Fighter Wing out of Thailand.
I was forward air commander.
I gave you your directions.
"From IP, heading 273 for 10.
5 miles your target is north-south running bridge over river 1 kilometer to the tree line running east-west.
" Yeah.
- It was a military target.
- It was a civilian target.
It was a dam.
There were 11 civilian casualties.
Why did you tell me that? Because you could be charged and tried for a war crime.
Why did you tell me that? All wars are crimes.
- We've been here a while.
- Yeah.
- Maybe we'll call it a day, huh? - Yeah.
I'll get you some time with the president this week.
I'd appreciate that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
- Can I ask a question out of curiosity? - Yes, sir.
If guns are meant to deter the threat of crime, why conceal them? I mean, wouldn't you want the criminal to see that you've got a gun? - I suppose you would.
- Then what's the answer to that? I really don't know, sir.
- You don't know? - No, sir.
The concern is with the threat to the Second Amendment.
We can't agree it's a stupid amendment written before there were street lamps and police forces, and move on? - Sir.
There's no need for a citizen militia.
- I agree with you.
- Then say so.
Forty percent of Americans have a gun in their home.
Only 16 percent believe gun ownership is an absolute right.
Only 9 percent believe it's an absolute wrong.
There's a middle.
We can win them.
Not when we're running the MS defense.
Which we wouldn't have been doing if - If what, sir? - Nothing.
- Sir - You outed me, John.
With that trip to Nashua, with the oil companies.
You wanted people to start asking questions.
I needed to start running because nobody told me that I wasn't! And you announced that I found out on television! So did my wife.
This thing was mismanaged.
It was blown! - Yes, it was.
- Yes, it was.
Not easy being my vice president, is it? No, sir.
I wouldn't think so.
But it's the only way you're gonna get the nomination.
You know that, right? - If I win.
- Yeah.
And the only way you're gonna win is if I'm on the ticket.
- You know that, don't you, sir? - Yeah.
You'll go to Texas? - I want a seat at the table.
- Yeah.
- Mr.
President? - Yeah.
- They're ready in the Briefing Room.
- Thank you.
- I'll be back in my office.
- Yeah.
- Is there anything else, sir? - No.
Thank you, Mr.
President.
There's a coffee shop across the street.
You'll read it there.
You got an hour.
I haven't read it.
But if anything bothers you, you'll issue a subpoena in the morning.
You'll have it back before the end of the day.
If not, that's that.
- Yeah.
- If I read any of this in the newspaper or anything happens I don't like I've got the entries for October 4 and 5.
What's October 4 and 5? You.
That's fair.
Thank you.
It's starting to get cold already.
It's gonna be fine.
It's gonna be fine.