At the White House press briefing Monday, Jay Carney was not asked directly about his statement from June 2013 that “we would not make any decisions about transfer of any detainees without consulting with Congress and without doing so in accordance with U.S. law,” as we reported yesterday. However, the Washington Post reports that Carney rejected criticism about the lack of notice to Congress:
White House chief of staff Denis McDonough echoed Carney’s assertion:
However, in the same June 2013 press briefing where Carney made his statement that the White House would consult with Congress before making any detainee transfer decisions, he made clear that the White House considered the return of Sgt. Bergdahl and the release of any detainees to be two separate issues [emphasis added]:
The Obama administration is also claiming that secrecy and lack of time were other considerations in the lack of congressional consultation or even notification. House Intelligence Committee chairman Mike Rogers is now saying Congress was last consulted about a possible Bergdahl-detainee swap in 2011, the Hill reports.