The comment will be seen by the parser as a comment in the XSL, and will be dropped from the generated HTML code.
If you want to generate a comment into your HTML, you need to enclose it inside a CDATA
block, so it will be seen by the XSL parser as plain text to be copied to the destination document verbatim.
The code would look like this:
<![CDATA[
<!--[if lte IE 7]>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/rcm/verisign/style/2012/ie7.css"/>
<![endif]-->
]]>
Everything between <![CDATA[
and ]]>
will be treated as plain text.
Hopefully that should answer your question.
However, if at all possible, I'd suggest the best solution here would be to drop support for IE7. The usage stats for it have dropped through the floor in the last six months or so - it's almost as low as IE6 now; there's hardly anyone still using it. I appreciate in some cases you may not have a choice, but if you do have a choice, my advice is to drop it.
[EDIT]
Okay, after further research, it seems you're right: a plain CDATA
block does escape its output (despite claims to the contrary in many places).
Instead, you need to use <xsl:comment>
to generate an HTML comment in the output. Doing this with conditional comment syntax gets quite messy, and you will probably still need to use CDATA.
The best example I can find is here: http://getsymphony.com/download/xslt-utilities/view/21798/
As you can see, it's quite a lot of code.
A short version (without the flexibility) might look like this:
<xsl:comment>
[if lte 7<![CDATA[>]]>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/rcm/verisign/style/2012/ie7.css"/>
<![CDATA[<![endif]]]>
</xsl:comment>
Hope that helps. Sorry the original answer was incomplete.