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THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary ________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release October 24, 2000 PRESS BRIEFING BY JAKE SIEWERT The James S. Brady Briefing Room 12:27 P.M. EDT Q Jake, did the White House have any influence on the CIA's decision to release documents surrounding the period of the coup that brought Pinochet to power; that decision reverses Tenet's earlier position in August that he would withhold those documents. MR. SIEWERT: I think our role in the press reports was somewhat overstated. The system worked here and the DCI and the National Security Advisor agreed to a further review of the documents that were withheld in August. Based on that review and discussions that he had with Mr. Berger, the DCI decided to release additional documents. Those documents have now been redacted to protect intelligence sources and methods, and so we'll have a final release of those documents on Monday, November 13th. But in the end, the DCI made the right decision, we think. Q Was it Mr. Berger's position that additional documents should, indeed, be released? MR. SIEWERT: I think as a result of the review that we undertook by the NSC staff, the State Department discussions within the entire team there, the DCI made a decision to release those documents. I'm not going to characterize all the decision-making that took place there. MR. CROWLEY: It's close collaboration by the DCI and the National Security Advisor, both to extend the review and then we'll reach this decision. END 12:55 P.M. EDT