A hit man for Hillary Clinton

For one hour on Sunday afternoon, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Philippe Reines was behaving most undiplomatically.

He had been engaged in a testy email exchange with a journalist who was asking tough but fair questions related to the State Departments handling of the attack in Libya in which the American ambassador was killed and then Reines escalated.

Why do you bother to ask questions youve already decided you know the answers to? he asked.

Why dont you give answers that arent bull[expletive] for a change? replied the writer, BuzzFeeds Michael Hastings.

I now understand, Reines parried, why the Defense Department concluded beyond a doubt that youre an unmitigated [expletive]. Hows that for a non-bull[expletive] response? Now that weve gotten that out of our systems, have a good day. And by good day, I mean [expletive] off.

Reading the full exchange when BuzzFeed published it Monday, I recognized it as vintage Philippe: savage, sardonic and over-the-top in the service of the cause that is his lifes work and his reason for being the reputation of Hillary Clinton. Such traits have caused many to revile Philippe (like Madonna, who performed in Washington this week, he is known here by one name only). Journalists in particular have found him to be ruthless and sometimes dishonest in his unwavering loyalty to Clinton, his patron of the past dozen years.

Yet these traits also say something admirable about Philippe. He is a throwback an unapologetic loyalist in a town that no longer values loyalty. He could have cashed in on his ties to Clinton and become wealthy in the private sector. He could have turned against her as other top aides in her fractious presidential campaign did in 2008. Instead, he stuck with her, from her Senate office to her presidential run to the State Department becoming what is essentially the deputy assistant secretary for Doing Hillarys Bidding.

When he was pushed aside by Howard Wolfson during a power struggle within the ca! mpaign, he didnt complain: He took on a minor role, essentially an aide de camp to Chelsea Clinton, until he returned to favor. In his role as Chelsea defender, he led the effort that got MSNBCs David Shuster suspended for asking whether Chelsea had been pimped out by her mothers advisers.

Part Clinton henchman, part Clinton hit man, hes described by a friend in the administration as the secretary of states roving linebacker who sometimes gets called for unnecessary roughness. Chris Lehane, who brought Philippe to Al Gores presidential campaign, describes his tribal sense of loyalty as old school.

I first met Philippe when, as a young prankster on the Gore campaign, he persuaded staffers to send him their ZIP codes so their hometowns could be protected by Gores missile-defense proposal. Later, as Clintons Senate spokesman, he once responded to criticism of her by asking: Is it possible to be quoted yawning?

But his humor gave way to anger, as Reines, now 42, became a caricature whose loyalty to his boss overshadowed everything even his limited private life. Theirs is often likened to a mother-son relationship, and that closeness gives Philippe power well above his title. The closeness also explains why he wasnt rebuked for his obscene exchange with Hastings; nobody doubted that Philippe was channeling Clintons own anger.

CNN had infuriated Clinton by reporting that slain Ambassador J. Chris Stevens had worried about his security because he thought he was on an al-Qaeda hit list information that came from his diary, which a CNN reporter had found at the site of the attack. But State officials had a weak case against CNN because they had failed to secure the site; if CNN hadnt found the diary, it may have wound up in the hands of the militants who killed Stevens.

Instead, Philippe attacked CNN over a peripheral issue, accusing the network of violating a promise it had made to Stevens family not to broadcast the diarys contents without permission. In a raw and lengthy criticism of CN! N, Phili ppe called the networks actions disgusting and accused it of essentially stealing from a crime scene. It was Hastings challenge to that statement (he thought CNN had done good journalism) that provoked Philippes email outburst.

On Tuesday, Philippe admitted to me that he had erred not in substance but because it was a mistake to let this become about me. In Philippes world, everything is always about Hillary.

Dana Milbank is a columnist for The Washington Post. His e-mail address is danamilbank@washpost.com.