Dick Cheney
ordered the CIA to conceal a counter-terrorism plan from
Congress. This act resulted in information extracted under
torture which was used to scare the USA into thinking that
Iraq had weapons of mass destruction (WMD/
nuclear warheads) which they didn't. This mis-information
cost the USA taxpayer BILLIONS of dollars in war spending,
not to mention the senseless loss of life and the loss of
the USA's international reputation.
Most of
the greatest evils that man has inflicted upon man have come through
people feeling quite certain about something which, in fact, was false.
- Bertrand Russell
-
Chris McGreal,
Washington
-
guardian.co.uk,
Sunday 12 July 2009 17.41 BST
-
Article history
The former US vice-president
Dick Cheney
ordered the
CIA
to conceal a highly secret counter-terrorist programme from
Congress for eight years, possibly in breach of longstanding
oversight laws.
Democratic leaders in Congress are planning hearings to
establish how and why information about the programme was
withheld. The details have been revealed to members of
intelligence committees but not been made public.
The revelation in the US
press on Sunday that Cheney played a primary role in keeping
the programme secret suggests that it would have been highly
contentious. Attention has focused on reports earlier this
year that he oversaw an assassination programme.
One member of an
intelligence committee who was briefed on the secret
operation last week said that Congress would have been
unlikely to have approved it.
According to US
intelligence officials quoted in the US media the CIA
director, Leon Panetta, told congressional intelligence
committees that information about the programme was withheld
on Cheney's orders. Panetta told the committees that as soon
as he learned of the programme's existence last month he
shut it down.
The law requires the
president to keep Congress "fully and currently informed of
the intelligence activities", although it does allow
information to be withheld about "exceptionally sensitive
matters". However, it has been the accepted practice that
the existence of even the most secret category of covert
programmes is revealed to the "gang of eight" Democratic and
Republican leaders of the two houses of Congress and their
intelligence committees. That was not done on this occasion,
apparently on Cheney's orders.
The nature of the
programme has not been made public, although it does not
involve the CIA's controversial use of waterboarding and
other forms of torture. Nor is it about domestic
intelligence.
In March, the respected
investigative reporter Seymour Hersh revealed that he had
uncovered evidence during research for an as-yet unpublished
book that Cheney oversaw an "executive assassination ring"
for years.
"It is a special wing of
our special operations community that is set up
independently. They do not report to anybody, except in the
Bush-Cheney days, they reported directly to the Cheney
office. ... Congress has no oversight of it," he said at the
time.
"It's an executive
assassination ring essentially, and it's been going on and
on and on. Under President Bush's authority, they've been
going into countries, not talking to the ambassador or the
CIA station chief, and finding people on a list and
executing them and leaving. That's been going on, in the
name of all of us."
-more
By Adam Goldman and Matt Apuzzo
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Four of
the nation's most highly valued terrorist prisoners were secretly
moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2003, years earlier than has been
disclosed, then were whisked back into overseas prisons before the
Supreme Court could give them access to lawyers, the Associated
Press has learned.
The transfer allowed the United
States to interrogate the detainees in CIA "black sites" for two
more years without allowing them to speak with lawyers or human
rights observers or to challenge their detention in U.S. courts.
Had they remained at the Guantanamo Bay prison for just three
more months, they would have been afforded those rights.
"This was all just a shell game to hide
detainees from the courts," said Jonathan Hafetz, a Seton Hall
University law professor who has represented several detainees.
Removing them from Guantanamo Bay
underscores how worried President
George W. Bush's
administration was that the Supreme Court might lift the veil of
secrecy on the detention program. It also shows how insistent
the Bush administration was that terrorists be held outside the
U.S. court system.
-more
This chart highlights how Cheney aggregated power at key national
security centers -- the Pentagon, State and White House -- and lists the
positions his friends and allies have held during the time period
leading up to the 2003 war in Iraq.
Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney have been closely
linked for more than three decades, beginning when Rumsfeld was
President Nixon's chief of staff and Cheney was his young aide.
Cheney has relied on Rumsfeld and insiders at the Pentagon to create
their own intelligence capability; Rumsfeld oversees roughly 85 percent
of the nation's $44 billion intelligence budget.
Vast sums of money were being siphoned to the DOD
circa 2002-2004.
Over the last 3 years the Inspector General for the Department of
Defense has identified irregularities of trillions of dollars that could
not be accounted for.
For example:
A
draft audit disclosed last month concluded that US government had been
overcharged by some 61 million dollars for oil purchased through a
Halliburton subcontractor in Kuwait.
There were no bid contracts, my
friends.
Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
create a secretive, ad hoc intelligence bureau within the Pentagon that
they mockingly dub “The Cabal.” This small but influential group of
neoconservatives is tasked with driving US foreign policy and
intelligence reporting towards the goal of promoting the invasion of
Iraq.
The group—which later is folded into the slightly more official Office
of Special Plans (OSP) (see
2002-2003)—gathers
and interprets raw intelligence data for itself, refusing the
participation of the experts in the CIA and DIA, and reporting,
massaging, manipulating, and sometimes falsifying that information to
suit their ends.
[New
Yorker, 5/12/2003]
Lewis "Scooter" Libby
Chief of Staff to the Vice President (2001-2005)
Libby has worked closely with Cheney for almost 20 years, starting when
he was an under secretary at the Pentagon when Cheney was secretary of
defense. As Cheney's chief of staff during the run-up to war with Iraq,
Libby helped push the vice president's agenda at the CIA, the State
Department and in the press. CIA officials claim Libby accompanied
Cheney on many trips to CIA headquarters, where the pair questioned
analysts about Iraq's weapons capabilities. Libby left the vice
president's office in October of 2005, after being indicted on five
counts of perjury and obstruction of justice; the indictment suggests
the Office of the Vice President tried to discredit Ambassador Joseph
Wilson after he went public with his doubts over the charge that Iraq
was trying to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger. According to
prosecutors, Libby told at least two reporters that Wilson's wife,
Valerie Plame, worked for the CIA. Libby has pleaded "not guilty" to the
charges and told prosecutors that he was authorized by Cheney to share
certain classified material with reporters.
________________
They knew, but did nothing
In this exclusive extract from his new
book, Philip Shenon uncovers how the White House tried to hide the truth
of its ineptitude leading up to the September 11 terrorist attacks.
She had not attended the meetings herself. She had asked
that the then attorney-general, John Ashcroft, receive a special
briefing at the Justice Department about al-Qaeda threats. But she did
not talk with Ashcroft herself in any sort of detail about the
intelligence. Nor did she have any conversations of significance on the
issue with the FBI director, Louis Freeh, nor with his temporary
successor that summer, the acting director Tom Pickard.
There is no record to show that Rice made any special effort to discuss
terrorist threats with Bush. The record suggested, instead, that it was
not a matter of special interest to either of them that summer.
Bush seemed to acknowledge as much in an interview with Bob Woodward of
The Washington Post that Bush almost certainly regretted later. In the
interview in December 2001, only three months after the attacks, Bush
said that "there was a significant
difference in my attitude after September 11" about al-Qaeda and the
threat it posed to the United States.
Before the attacks, he said: "I was not on point, but I knew he was a
menace, and I knew he was a problem. I knew he was responsible, or we
felt he was responsible, for the previous bombings that killed
Americans. I was prepared to look at a plan that would be a thoughtful
plan that would bring him to justice, and would have given the order to
do that. I have no hesitancy about going after him. But I didn't feel
that sense of urgency, and my blood was not nearly as boiling."
...
Tipped off by an article in The Washington Post, the commission
discovered the text of a speech that she had been scheduled to make on
September 11, 2001 - the speech was canceled in the chaos following the
attacks - in which Rice planned to address "the threats of today and the
day after, not the world of yesterday". The speech, which was intended
to outline her broad vision on national security and to promote the Bush
Administration's plans for a missile defense system, included only a
passing reference to terrorism and the threat of radical Islam. On the
day that Osama bin Laden launched the most devastating attack on the
United States since Pearl Harbour, bin Laden's terrorist network was
seen by Rice as only a secondary threat, barely worth mentioning.
But if Rice had left almost no paper trail on terrorism in 2001,
Clarke's files were everything that Bass could have hoped for. Clarke
wrote down much of what he saw and heard at the White House, almost to
the point of obsession when it came to al-Qaeda. Bass and his colleagues
could see that Clarke had left a rich narrative of what had gone so
wrong at the NSC in the months before September 11, albeit filtered
through the writings of the very opinionated Clarke.
Repeatedly in 2001, Clarke had gone to
Rice and others in the White House and pressed them to move, urgently,
to respond to a flood of warnings about an upcoming and catastrophic
terrorist attack by Osama bin Laden. The threat, Clarke was arguing, was
as dire as anything that he or the CIA had ever seen.
In the American summer of 2001, the nation's news organizations,
especially the television networks, were riveted by the story of one
man. It wasn't George Bush. And it certainly wasn't Osama bin Laden.
It was the sordid tale of an otherwise obscure Democratic
congressman from California, Gary Condit, who was implicated -
falsely, it later appeared - in the disappearance of a 24-year-old
government intern later found murdered. That summer, the names of
the blow-dried congressman and the doe-eyed intern, Chandra Levy,
were much better known to the American public than bin Laden's.
Even reporters in Washington who covered intelligence issues
acknowledged they were largely ignorant that summer that the CIA and
other parts of the Government were warning of an almost certain
terrorist attack. Probably, but not necessarily, overseas.
The warnings were going straight to President Bush each morning
in his briefings by the CIA director, George Tenet, and in the
presidential daily briefings. It would later be revealed by the 9/11
commission into the September 11 attacks that more than 40
presidential briefings presented to Bush from January 2001 through
to September 10, 2001, included references to bin Laden.
And nearly identical intelligence landed each morning on the
desks of about 300 other senior national security officials and
members of Congress in the form of the senior executive intelligence
brief, a newsletter on intelligence issues also prepared by the CIA.
The senior executive briefings contained much of the same
information that was in the presidential briefings but were edited
to remove material considered too sensitive for all but the
President and his top aides to see. Often the differences between
the two documents were minor, with only a sentence or two changed
between them. Apart from the commission's chief director, Philip
Zelikow, the commission's staff was never granted access to Bush's
briefings, except for the notorious August 2001 briefing that warned
of the possibility of domestic al-Qaeda strikes involving
hijackings. But they could read through the next best thing: the
senior executive briefings.
During his 2003 investigations it was startling to Mike Hurley,
the commission member in charge of investigating intelligence, and
the other investigators on his team, just what had gone on in the
spring and summer of 2001 - just how often and how aggressively the
White House had been warned that something terrible was about to
happen. Since nobody outside the Oval Office could know exactly what
Tenet had told Bush during his morning intelligence briefings, the
presidential and senior briefings were Tenet's best defense to any
claim that the CIA had not kept Bush and the rest of the Government
well-informed about the threats. They offered a strong defense.
The team's investigators began to match up the information in the
senior briefings and they pulled together a timeline of the
headlines just from the senior briefings in the northern spring and
summer:
"Bin Ladin Planning Multiple Operations" (April 20)and
"Bin Ladin Threats Are Real" (June 30)It was especially
troubling for Hurley's team to realize how many of the warnings were
directed to the desk of one person: Condoleezza Rice, the National
Security Adviser. Emails from the National Security Council's
counter-terrorism director, Richard Clarke, showed that he had
bombarded Rice with messages about terrorist threats. He was trying
to get her to focus on the intelligence she should have been reading
each morning in the presidential and senior briefings
"Bin Ladin Public Profile May Presage Attack" (May 3)
"Terrorist Groups Said Co-operating on US Hostage Plot" (May 23)
"Bin Ladin's Networks' Plans Advancing" (May 26)
"Bin Ladin Attacks May Be Imminent"
(June 23)
"Bin Ladin and Associates Making Near-Term Threats" (June 25)
"Bin Ladin Planning High-Profile
Attacks" (June 30),
"Planning for Bin Ladin Attacks Continues, Despite Delays" (July
2)
Other parts of the Government did respond aggressively and
appropriately to the threats, including the Pentagon and the State
Department. On June 21, the US Central Command, which controls
American military forces in the Persian Gulf, went to "delta" alert
- its highest level - for American troops in six countries in the
region. The American embassy in Yemen was closed for part of the
summer; other embassies in the Middle East closed for shorter
periods.
But what had Rice done at the NSC? If the NSC files were
complete, the commission's historian Warren Bass and the others
could see, she had asked Clarke to conduct inter- agency meetings at
the White House with domestic agencies, including the Federal
Aviation Administration and the FBI, to keep them alert to the
possibility of a domestic terrorist strike.
She had not attended the meetings herself. She had asked that the
then attorney-general, John Ashcroft, receive a special briefing at
the Justice Department about al-Qaeda threats. But she did not talk
with Ashcroft herself in any sort of detail about the intelligence.
Nor did she have any conversations of significance on the issue with
the FBI director, Louis Freeh, nor with his temporary successor that
summer, the acting director Tom Pickard.
There is no record to show that Rice made any special effort to
discuss terrorist threats with Bush. The record suggested, instead,
that it was not a matter of special interest to either of them that
summer.
Bush seemed to acknowledge as much in an interview with
Bob Woodward of The Washington Post that Bush almost
certainly regretted later. In the interview in December 2001, only
three months after the attacks, Bush said that "there was a
significant difference in my attitude after September 11" about
al-Qaeda and the threat it posed to the United States.
Before the attacks, he said: "I was not on point, but I knew he
was a menace, and I knew he was a problem. I knew he was
responsible, or we felt he was responsible, for the previous
bombings that killed Americans. I was prepared to look at a plan
that would be a thoughtful plan that would bring him to justice, and
would have given the order to do that. I have no hesitancy about
going after him. But I didn't feel that sense of urgency, and my
blood was not nearly as boiling."
If anyone on the White House staff had responsibility for making
Bush's blood "boil" that summer about Osama bin Laden, it was Rice.
The members of Mike Hurley's team were also alarmed by the
revelations, week by week, month by month, of how close the
commission's chief director, Philip Zelikow, was to Rice and others
at the White House. They learned early on about Zelikow's work on
the Bush transition team in 2000 and early 2001 and about how much
antipathy there was between him and Richard Clarke. They They heard
the stories about Zelikow's role in developing the "pre-emptive war"
strategy at the White House in 2002.
Zelikow's friendships with Rice and others were a particular
problem for Warren Bass, since Rice and Clarke were at the heart of
his part of the investigation. It was clear to some members of team
that they could not have an open discussion in front of Zelikow
about Rice and her performance as National Security Adviser. They
could not say openly, certainly not to Zelikow's face, what many on
the staff came to believe: that Rice's performance in the spring and
summer of 2001 amounted to incompetence, or something not far from
it.
David Kay, the veteran American weapons inspector sent to Iraq by
the Bush Administration in 2003 to search for weapons of mass
destruction, passed word to the commission that he believed Rice was
the "worst national security adviser" in the history of the job.
For Hurley's team, there was a reverse problem with Clarke. It was
easy to talk about Clarke in Zelikow's presence, as long as the
conversation centred on Clarke's failings at the NSC and his
purported dishonesty.
Long before Bass had seen Clarke's files,
Zelikow made it clear to the team's investigators that Clarke should
not be believed, that his testimony would be suspect.
He argued that Clarke was a braggart who would try to rewrite
history to justify his errors and slander his enemies, Rice in
particular. The commission had decided that in its private
interviews with current and former government officials, witnesses
would be placed under oath when there was a substantial reason to
doubt their truthfulness. Zelikow argued that Clarke easily fell
into that category; Clarke, he decreed, would need to be sworn in.
When he finally got his security clearance and was allowed into
the reading room, Bass discovered he could make quick work of Rice's
emails and internal memos on the al-Qaeda threat in the spring and
summer of 2001. That was because there was almost nothing to read,
at least nothing that Rice had written herself.
Either she committed nothing to paper or email on the subject,
which was possible since so much of her work was conducted
face-to-face with Bush, or terrorist threats were simply not an
issue that had interested her before September 11. Her speeches and
public appearances in the months before the attacks suggested the
latter.
Tipped off by an article in The Washington Post, the
commission discovered the text of a speech that she had been
scheduled to make on September 11, 2001 - the speech was canceled in
the chaos following the attacks - in which Rice planned to address
"the threats of today and the day after, not the world of
yesterday". The speech, which was intended to outline her broad
vision on national security and to promote the Bush Administration's
plans for a missile defence system, included only a passing
reference to terrorism and the threat of radical Islam. On the day
that Osama bin Laden launched the most devastating attack on the
United States since Pearl Harbour, bin Laden's terrorist network was
seen by Rice as only a secondary threat, barely worth mentioning.
But if Rice had left almost no paper trail on terrorism in 2001,
Clarke's files were everything that Bass could have hoped for.
Clarke wrote down much of what he saw and heard at the White House,
almost to the point of obsession when it came to al-Qaeda. Bass and
his colleagues could see that Clarke had left a rich narrative of
what had gone so wrong at the NSC in the months before September 11,
albeit filtered through the writings of the very opinionated Clarke.
Repeatedly in 2001, Clarke had gone to Rice and others in the White
House and pressed them to move, urgently, to respond to a flood of
warnings about an upcoming and catastrophic terrorist attack by
Osama bin Laden. The threat, Clarke was arguing, was as dire as
anything that he or the CIA had ever seen.
He pushed for an early
meeting in 2001 with Bush to brief him about bin Laden's network and
the "nearly existential" threat it represented to the United States.
But Rice rebuffed Clarke. She allowed him to give a briefing to Bush
on the issue of cyber terrorism, but not on bin Laden; she told
Clarke the al-Qaeda briefing could wait until after the White House
had put the finishing touches that summer on a broader campaign
against bin Laden. She moved Clarke and his issues off centre stage
- in part at the urging of Zelikow and the transition team.
Bass told colleagues that he gasped when he found a memo written
by Clarke to Rice on September 4, 2001, exactly a week before the
attacks, in which Clarke seemed to predict what was just about to
happen. It was a memo that seemed to spill out all of Clarke's
frustration about how slowly the Bush White House had responded to
the cascade of terrorist threats that summer. The note was
terrifying in its prescience.
"Are we serious about dealing with the al-Qaeda threat?" he asked
Rice. "Decision makers should imagine themselves on a future day
when the CSG [Counterterrorism Security Group] has not succeeded in
stopping al-Qaeda attacks and hundreds of Americans lay dead in
several countries, including the US.
Bass's colleagues said he knew instantly that the September 4
email was so sensitive - and potentially damaging, especially to
Rice - that the White House would never voluntarily release a copy
to the commission or allow him to take notes from the room if they
came close to reproducing its language. Under a written agreement
between the commission and the White House, notes could not
"significantly reproduce" the wording of a classified document.
Bass decided he would have to try to memorise it in pieces,
several sentences at a time, and then rush back to the commission to
bat them out on a computer keyboard.
The day he discovered the document, Bass all but burst into the
commission's offices and rushed over to Hurley.
"Holy shit, chief," Bass said excitedly. "You won't believe what
I found."
He told Hurley that Clarke's September 4 memo was a "document
that grabs you by the throat, a document that you write when you're
at the end of your tether - or well past it", as Clarke clearly was
in the weeks before September 11. Hurley instantly understood the
significance of what he was being told by Bass. The question for
both men was whether Zelikow would allow them to share any of it
with the public.
Months later, Bass could not take it any longer. He was going to
quit, or least threaten to quit, and he was going to make it clear
that Zelikow's attempts at interference - his efforts to defend Rice
and demean Clarke - were part of the reason why. He marched into the
office of Dan Marcus, the general counsel, to announce his threat to
leave the investigation.
"I cannot do this," he declared to
Marcus, who was already well aware of Bass's unhappiness. "Zelikow
is making me crazy."
He was outraged by Zelikow and the White House; Bass felt the
White House was trying to sabotage his work by its efforts to limit
his ability to see certain documents from the NSC files and take
useful notes from them. Marcus urged him to calm down: "Let's talk
this through." But Bass made it clear to colleagues that he believed
Zelikow was interfering in his work for reasons that were overtly
political - intended to shield the White House, and Rice in
particular, from the commission's criticism. For every bit of
evidence gathered by Bass and Hurley's team to bolster Clarke's
allegation that the White House had ignored terrorist threats in
2001, Zelikow would find some reason to disparage it.
Marcus and Hurley managed to talk Bass out of resigning, although
the threat lingered until the final weeks of the investigation.
On May 15, 2002, CBS network reported that a daily briefing
presented to Bush a few weeks before the September 11 attacks warned
him specifically about the threats of a domestic hijacking by
al-Qaeda.
Instead of releasing the briefing or at least offering a detailed
explanation of what was in the document, the White House chose to
have Rice hold a news conference at the White House in which she
raised as many questions about the briefing as she answered.
It would later become clear to many of the commission's members
and its staff that she had tried to mislead the White House press
corps about the contents of the briefing.
She acknowledged that Bush had received a briefing about possible
al-Qaeda hijackings, but she claimed that the brief offered
"historical information" and "was not a warning - there was no
specific time, place, or method".
She failed to mention, as would later be clear, that the briefing
focused entirely on the possibility that al-Qaeda intended to strike
within the United States; it cited relatively recent FBI reports of
possible terrorist surveillance of government buildings in New York.
Tom Kean, the commission's chairman, could not deny the thrill of
this. A former governor of New Jersey who had left politics to
become president of Drew University in his home state, Kean took a
seat in the reading room in the New Executive Office building where
the commission was reviewing the White House's most secret files.
Kean was handed a sheaf of presidential briefings from the Clinton
and Bush administrations. Here in his hands were the documents that
the White House had been so determined for so long to keep from him.
Lee Hamilton liked to refer to the briefings as the "holy of holies"
- the ultimate secret documents in the government - and Kean assumed
that must be the case.
"I thought this would be the definitive secrets about al-Qaeda,
about terrorist networks and all the other things that the President
should act on," he said. "I was going to find out the most important
things that a president had learned." He assumed they would contain
"incredibly secretive, precise, and accurate information about
anything under the sun."
Each brief was only several pages long, so Kean could read
through months of them in a stretch of a few hours.
And he found himself terrified by what he was reading, really
terrified. Here were the digests of the most important secrets that
were gathered by the CIA and the nation's other spy agencies at a
cost of tens of billions of dollars a year.
And there was almost nothing in them.
"They were garbage," Kean said. "There really was nothing there -
nothing, nothing."
If students back at Drew turned in term papers this badly
researched, "I would have given them an F," he said.
Kean pointed that out to one of his White House minders who
accompanied him to the reading room. "I've read all this," he told
the minder in astonishment. A lot of the information in the
briefings and other supposedly top secret intelligence reports had
already been revealed by the nation's big news organizations. "I
already knew this."
"Oh, but you're missing the point," the minder replied. "Now you
know it's true." It occurred to Kean that this might be the
commission's most frightening discovery of all: The emperors of
espionage had no clothes. Perhaps the reason the White House had
fought so hard to block the commission's access to the briefings was
that they revealed how ignorant the Government was of the threats it
faced before September 11. Kean could understand their fear. Imagine
the consequences if al-Qaeda and its terrorist allies knew how
little the US really knew about them.
Commission member Jamie Gorelick, who, along with Zelikow, was given
access to the larger universe of briefings, was more impressed by
the documents than Kean had been. Or at least she was less
unimpressed. She knew the Bush Administration was right to complain
the briefs in the months before
"a missile."
She had not
attended the meetings herself. She had asked that the then
attorney-general, John Ashcroft, receive a special briefing at the
Justice Department about al-Qaeda threats. But she did not talk with
Ashcroft herself in any sort of detail about the intelligence. Nor
did she have any conversations of significance on the issue with the
FBI director, Louis Freeh, nor with his temporary successor that
summer, the acting director Tom Pickard.
There is no record to show that Rice made any special effort to
discuss terrorist threats with Bush. The record suggested, instead,
that it was not a matter of special interest to either of them that
summer.
Bush seemed to acknowledge as much in an interview with Bob Woodward
of The Washington Post that Bush almost certainly regretted later.
In the interview in December 2001, only three months after the
attacks, Bush said that "there was a
significant difference in my attitude after September 11" about
al-Qaeda and the threat it posed to the United States.
Before the attacks, he said: "I was not on point, but I knew he was
a menace, and I knew he was a problem. I knew he was responsible, or
we felt he was responsible, for the previous bombings that killed
Americans. I was prepared to look at a plan that would be a
thoughtful plan that would bring him to justice, and would have
given the order to do that. I have no hesitancy about going after
him. But I didn't feel that sense of urgency, and my blood was not
nearly as boiling."
...
Tipped off by an article in The Washington Post, the commission
discovered the text of a speech that she had been scheduled to make
on September 11, 2001 - the speech was canceled in the chaos
following the attacks - in which Rice planned to address "the
threats of today and the day after, not the world of yesterday". The
speech, which was intended to outline her broad vision on national
security and to promote the Bush Administration's plans for a
missile defence system, included only a passing reference to
terrorism and the threat of radical Islam. On the day that Osama bin
Laden launched the most devastating attack on the United States
since Pearl Harbour, bin Laden's terrorist network was seen by Rice
as only a secondary threat, barely worth mentioning.
But if Rice had left almost no paper trail on terrorism in 2001,
Clarke's files were everything that Bass could have hoped for.
Clarke wrote down much of what he saw and heard at the White House,
almost to the point of obsession when it came to al-Qaeda. Bass and
his colleagues could see that Clarke had left a rich narrative of
what had gone so wrong at the NSC in the months before September 11,
albeit filtered through the writings of the very opinionated Clarke.
Repeatedly in 2001, Clarke had gone
to Rice and others in the White House and pressed them to move,
urgently, to respond to a flood of warnings about an upcoming and
catastrophic terrorist attack by Osama bin Laden. The threat, Clarke
was arguing, was as dire as anything that he or the CIA had ever
seen.
Rice's news
conference came eight months after the attacks.
Yet she was suggesting that in all that
time, no one had bothered to tell her
that there were indeed several reports prepared within the CIA, the
aviation administration, and elsewhere in the Government about the
threat of planes as missiles.
Had no one told her in all those months that the Department of
Defense had conducted drills for the possibility of a
plane-as-missile attack on the Pentagon? Had she forgotten that when
she and Bush attended the G8 summit in Italy in July 2001, the
airspace was closed because of the threat of an aerial suicide
attack by al-Qaeda?
The Commission - The Uncensored History Of The 9/11
Investigation by Philip Shenon (Little, Brown, $35) is published
on Monday.
_________________Shifting
the blame:
It was about as
harsh an attack as the former vice president could muster -- blaming
the death of 3,000 Americans on a single person. It is also deeply
debatable. There is, of course, the August memo, handed to the
president, which declared that al Qaeda was determined to attack the
United States. Clarke himself wrote in his book that in the run-up
to 9/11 he expressed deep concern over such an attack, but to no
avail.
_________________
More smoke from the top:
Condoleezza
Rice on the Charlie Rose show. [Source: PBS]Former
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice tells PBS’s Charlie Rose that
“no one” in the White House ever asserted that Saddam Hussein had
any connections to 9/11. Rose says, “But you didn’t believe [the
Hussein regime] had anything to do with 9/11.” Rice replies: “No. No
one was arguing that Saddam Hussein somehow had something to do with
9/11.… I was certainly not. The president was certainly not.… That’s
right. We were not arguing that.” Rice refuses to answer Rose’s
question asking if former Vice President Dick Cheney ever tried to
make the connection. In reality, former President Bush and his top
officials, including Cheney and Rice, worked diligently to reinforce
a connection between Iraq and 9/11 in the public mind before the
March 2003 invasion (see
(Between 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 p.m.) September
11, 2001,
Shortly After September 11, 2001,
Shortly After September 11, 2001,
After September 11, 2001,
Mid-September, 2001,
September 17, 2001,
September 19, 2001,
September 20, 2001,
September 28, 2001,
November 6-8, 2001,
December 9, 2001,
2002-March 2003,
March 19, 2002,
June 21, 2002,
July 25, 2002,
August 2002,
August 20, 2002,
September 12, 2002,
September 16, 2002,
September 21, 2002,
September 25, 2002,
September 26, 2002,
September 27, 2002,
September 28, 2002,
October 7, 2002,
October 7, 2002,
October 15, 2002,
December 2, 2002,
December 12, 2002,
January 26, 2003,
January 28, 2003,
Early February 2003,
February 5, 2003,
(2:30 a.m.-9:00 a.m.) February 5, 2003,
February 5, 2003,
February 6, 2003,
February 11 or 12, 2003,
and
February 17, 2003).
[Think
Progress, 3/19/2009]
_______________________
Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the
Senate Armed Services Committee, told a Washington audience this
week that claims by former Vice President Dick Cheney that
classified CIA memos showed that enhanced interrogation techniques
like waterboarding worked were lies.
Levin, speaking at the Foreign Policy Association's annual dinner
on Wednesday, said an investigation by his committee into detainee
abuse charges over the use of the techniques — now deemed torture by
the Obama administration — "gives
the lie to Mr. Cheney's claims."
The Michigan Democrat told the crowd that the two CIA documents
that Cheney wants released "say
nothing about numbers of lives saved, nor do the documents connect
acquisition of valuable intelligence to the use of abusive
techniques."
"I hope that
the documents are declassified,
so that people can judge for themselves what is fact, and what is
fiction," he added.
The
story continues with Blackwater, rebranded these days as Xe,
read on
|