WASHINGTON (AP) — The two women at the center of the David Petraeus
scandal — the biographer with whom he had an extramarital affair and
the socialite who received worrisome emails that led investigators to
uncover the illicit relationship — visited the White House on separate and apparently unrelated occasions. Neither woman met with President Barack Obama during their visits.
Petraeus resigned as CIA director last week after acknowledging an affair with writer Paula Broadwell.
In briefings Friday with lawmakers on Capitol Hill, the retired
four-star general was apologetic and regretful and insisted that his
resignation was related only to his personal behavior.
Paula
Broadwell, who was writing a book about Petraeus and eventually became
his paramour, attended meetings in June 2009 and June 2011 on
Afghanistan-Pakistan policy in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building,
which is located in the White House complex, a White House official said.
Jill Kelley,
the Tampa, Fla., socialite who initiated the investigation that
revealed the affair, and her twin sister had two "courtesy" meals at the
White House mess as guests of a midlevel White House aide in September
and October, the official said. Kelley and her family also received a
White House tour on the weekend before the Nov. 6 election.
The White House visits by Broadwell
and Kelley illustrate the wide-ranging access both women enjoyed
because of their ties with Petraeus, Gen. John Allen and others in the
close-knit military community. The White House official discussed their
visits on condition of anonymity because the visitors logs being cited
have yet to be made public.
The FBI
began an investigation after Kelley turned over anonymous emails that
had been sent to her and Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan.
Kelley was a friend of both Petraeus and Allen and had become a social
liaison between the Tampa civilian community and the military at MacDill
Air Force Base.
One anonymous
email traced to Broadwell warned Allen to stay away from Kelley. FBI
agents ultimately found emails between Petraeus and Broadwell that led
them to believe the two were having an affair.
Kelley
did not meet with any senior White House officials during any of her
visits, the White House official said. The midlevel aide who hosted
Kelley had met the Kelley family at MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa,
said the White House official, who would not identify the aide.
Kelley
boasted about her White House visits in emails to acquaintances. In an
email to a Tampa Bay Times reporter on Sept. 28, published by the
newspaper, Kelley wrote: "Btw I was made the (honorary) Ambassador to US
Central Command's Coalition!" she told a Times reporter in a Sept. 28
email. "In addition to that, I was just recently appointed to be the
Honorary Consulate General to South Korea! I'm in DC today — just left from breakfast at the White House. . . . I really hope to see you soon!"
Days
before the Petraeus scandal broke, Kelley emailed Tampa Mayor Bob
Buckhorn: "I was at the WH with my friends in the Administration this
weekend — the stress was surreal!" she wrote. "But glad POTUS has been
reelected!"
As for Broadwell,
she at no time set foot in the Executive Mansion, the White House
official said. Her June 2009 visit was to meet a national security
staffer working on Afghanistan-Pakistan policy matters. In the June 2011
visit, Broadwell was one of 20 participants in a briefing on
Afghanistan-Pakistan policy that occurred shortly before Obama delivered
a national address announcing the start of troop withdrawals from
Afghanistan.
The White House official said that meeting was not
listed in public White House visitor logs because it met a national
security exemption to White House disclosure policy.
Largely
out of public view in the week since his resignation, Petraeus was
whisked into private meetings with lawmakers Friday amid the sort of
clandestine atmosphere that befits a spy. A network of underground
hallways was used to smuggle the retired general into a secure room
beneath the Capitol to escape a clamorous crowd of photographers and
television cameras. Police closed down entire corridors in the Capitol.
Members
of Congress said the arrangements were designed to spare Petraeus
embarrassment and humiliation. Before the scandal, he famously
cultivated personal relationships with journalists and walked through
the front door of the Capitol and greeted reporters when visiting
Congress.
After more than four hours, Petraeus left the Capitol
much the way he entered and was seen departing in a two-vehicle
motorcade. About 20 minutes later, The Associated Press photographed
Petreaus entering his home — one of the only public images of him since
he resigned.
In separate
briefings with members of the House and Senate intelligence committees,
Petraeus discussed the September attack on the U.S. Consulate in
Benghazi, Libya,
which left four Americans dead. He did not discuss his adultery with
Broadwell, except to say that he regretted his behavior and that his
departure was unrelated to the deadly violence in Libya.
"He was
very clear his resignation was tied solely to his personal behavior,"
said Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., a member of the Senate Intelligence
Committee. "He was apologetic and regretful but still Gen. Petraeus."
Sen.
Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the chairwoman of the Senate committee,
apologized to reporters and photographers for the stringent security.
"I
know that's rankling you," Feinstein said. "We didn't want to make it
any more difficult for him. And you know, you people aren't always the
easiest. So the blame is on us. Any waiting that you did, I apologize,
but, you know, there's a lot of suffering going on."
Feinstein said no senators asked Petraeus about the affair.
Petraeus,
60, publicly acknowledged last week that he had cheated on his wife of
38 years with Broadwell, 40. It wasn't until Oct. 26 that Petraeus
acknowledged the affair to FBI agents, during their only interview of
him, a federal law enforcement official disclosed Friday. The official
was not authorized to speak on the record about the ongoing case and
requested anonymity for that reason.
The FBI began investigating
the case against Broadwell last summer but didn't notify the White House
or Congress until after the election.
In
the investigation, the FBI uncovered flirtatious emails between Allen
and Kelley, both of them married. On Friday, two U.S. officials said
investigators have found just a handful of the emails between Allen and
Kelley to be potentially problematic. They said investigators determined
the vast majority of the 20,000-plus pages of documents were routine.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to speak publicly about the ongoing investigation.
Obama
has put a promotion nomination for Allen on hold. The Joint Chiefs of
Staff are expected to meet next week to discuss the recent stumbles of
two of the military's top generals, said Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief
of U.S. Naval Operations. The joint chiefs want to review ethics,
accountability and behavioral issues and determine whether senior
officials are living up to the military's standards, Greenert said
Friday at the National Press Club.
The midlevel White House aide who hosted Kelley at the Executive Mansion had met her at MacDill Air Force Base, the White House official said.
Petraeus,
in his first media interview since he resigned, told CNN this week that
he had never given classified information to Broadwell. She has said
she didn't receive such material from Petraeus. But the FBI found a
substantial number of classified documents on Broadwell's computer and
in her home, according to the law enforcement official, and is
investigating how she got them. The Army has now suspended her security
clearance.
The official
outlined new details Friday of the timing of the FBI investigation that
showed that agents spent the summer making certain no one had hacked
into Petraeus' computers to track his movements — a potential national
security vulnerability raised by some of the first emails they saw in
the case. They also used the summer to rule out any possibility he
somehow participated in harassing Kelley by email.
Only after
that, in early fall, Broadwell was interviewed for the first time by the
FBI and agents searched her computers and found substantial amounts of
classified documents, the law enforcement official said. The focus of
the investigation shifted and agents spent most of October working with
the Pentagon to determine where she got the documents, their
significance and her right to have them.
___
Associated
Press writers Kimberly Dozier and Eileen Sullivan contributed to this
report. Also contributing: Nedra Pickler, Larry Margasak, Adam Goldman,
Lolita C. Baldor, Pete Yost, Donna Cassata, Henry C. Jackson and Robert
Burns.


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