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FBI director’s top aide was told of Petraeus affair week before elections

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — FBI Director Robert Mueller’s top aide was told former CIA chief David Petraeus was having an extramarital affair that might have compromised national security a week before the Nov. 6 elections, a congressional official said Monday.

The disclosure raises fresh questions about why the FBI leadership withheld the information from the nation’s top intelligence official and the congressional committees that oversee the U.S. intelligence community until after President Barack Obama won re-election.

Had the affair that forced Petraeus’ startling resignation on Friday become public earlier, it might have stoked a political outcry already flaring over the deaths of the U.S. ambassador to Libya, two CIA contractors and a State Department staffer in a Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, by suspected Islamist extremists.

New details emerged Monday of the affair between Petraeus and his biographer, Paula Broadwell, whose allegedly threatening emails to another of the former four-star Army general’s friends triggered the FBI investigation that uncovered their relationship.

Petraeus, 60, and Broadwell, 40, began their affair about two months after he became CIA director in September 2011, and they had agreed to end it about four months ago, said retired Army Col. Steve Boylan, a former Petraeus aide who is acting as his unofficial spokesman.

“There weren’t a lot of meetings,” Boylan told McClatchy Newspapers. “Based on what I understand, it was a mutually agreed upon realization that this was something they shouldn’t be doing.”

Petraeus was informed of the FBI investigation at, or just before, the beginning of November, and told his wife of 38 years, Holly, just before he sent a statement to the CIA workforce on Friday, admitting to adultery and announcing that he was resigning, said Boylan.

“They are a very strong family. He has done a pretty bad thing and hurt them deeply,” he said. “But given time and space, they can get through it.”

Boylan denied that Petraeus ever passed classified information to Broadwell.

“The two were separate,” he said. “One was his private life. One was his professional career, which came to an end on Friday, at least for now.”

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