Thousands of Clinton's White House Papers Released
National Archives make them public
The National Archives made public on Friday afternoon a trove of secret documents detailing the inner workings of Bill Clinton's White House, a disclosure of acute interest not just to the history of one presidency but to the prospects of another.
Thirteen years after Mr. Clinton left office, the release of 3,000 to 4,000 pages of internal memos and other papers may shed light on decisions he made during a tumultuous time and, just as significantly if not more so, possibly the role his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, may have played in shaping them.
The documents are the first batch of a larger set of papers withheld until now under exceptions to public disclosure requirements in federal law, exceptions that expired a year ago. As Mrs. Clinton prepares for a possible second campaign for the presidency in 2016, friends and foes alike will pore over the documents for information that elaborates on her actions as first lady before she became a senator and then secretary of state.
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