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Bob Woodward. Photo: AP

Bob Woodward says White House told him he would regret criticism

Famed journalist says senior official sent him email

Barack Obama

Journalist Bob Woodward on Wednesday said a senior White House official told him he would “regret” taking issue in recent days with President Barack Obama’s version of how across-the-board budget cuts came to be.

Woodward, who challenged the White House account in an article on Sunday, said a “very senior” White House official sent him an email in which, “It was said very clearly, ‘You will regret doing this.’”

Woodward made the comment in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. He declined to name the official.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday night.

Earlier in the day, Woodward criticised Barack Obama’s handling of the cuts set to take effect this week, calling the president’s decision to hold back on military deployments “madness".

His comments continued what has become a running dispute between Woodward, perhaps the country’s best-known print journalist, and the Democratic White House about who is responsible for the across-the-board cuts scheduled to begin on Friday.

Last week, Woodward published an opinion piece in the - where he is an associate editor - saying the administration was “wrong” to blame the cuts on Republicans.

That drew retorts from White House press secretary Jay Carney, who in posts on Twitter and later in comments to reporters blamed the budget stalemate on Republican opposition to including increased revenues in any deal to replace the cuts.

The US$85 billion across-the-board budget cuts were mandated by Congress and the White House as part of the August 2011 deal to avoid a government default. The reductions are split between defence spending and domestic programmes.

Woodward, who first gained fame in the 1970s from exposing the Watergate scandal during the administration of President Richard Nixon, wrote a detailed account in his last year book, “The Price of Politics,” of the August 2011 deal that led to the cuts.

Woodward followed with two television appearances on Wednesday.

In one, on MSNBC, he attacked Obama for drawing national security into the budget debate.

“So we now have the president going out [saying] ‘Because of this piece of paper and this agreement, I can’t do what I need to do to protect the country.’ That’s a kind of madness that I haven’t seen in a long time,” Woodward said on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Obama warned of threats to Navy readiness in a visit to the Newport News Shipbuilding shipyard in Virginia, where maintenance to the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln has been delayed by the budget crisis.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon said it was delaying deployment of another carrier, the USS Harry Truman, to the Middle East because of funding.

Obama’s decision to drag the military into the budget fight likely would not have happened in previous administrations, Republican or Democratic, Woodward added on MSNBC’s programme.

In the second interview, on CNN, he said, “It makes me very uncomfortable to have the White House telling reporters, you’re going to regret doing something that you believe in.”

 

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