White House accepts some blame in gatecrasher saga
White House accepts some blame in gatecrasher saga
An uninvited couple gatecrashed Obama's debut state dinner last week.

Washington: The White House on Wednesday shouldered some of the blame for an embarrassing breach of security that permitted an uninvited couple to gatecrash President Barack Obama's debut state dinner last week.

In the latest twist to a saga, the White House said it would in the future ensure that White House staff are physically stationed alongside Secret Service agents to screen guests at official events.

"After reviewing our actions, it is clear that the White House did not do everything we could have done to assist the United States Secret Service in ensuring that only invited guests enter the complex," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Jim Messina said in a memo released to the media.

The incident, which has an international dimension because the gatecrashers were within feet of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and they shook hands with Obama, has already drawn a rare public apology from the Secret Service, and Messina reiterated they had been at fault.

"As the Secret Service said last week, agents failed to verify that these two individuals were invited guests before they entered the White House," he said.

The couple, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, deny they crashed the party and insisted during a television appearance on Tuesday they had been invited guests, a claim the White House has flatly denied.

Daily White House media briefings have been swamped with questions about who was at fault for the error since it emerged last Wednesday, almost crowding out queries about Obama's strategy to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan to fight the Taliban.

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