|
From
The Daily Mislead, MARCH 25, 2004
Public
Record: Bush Ignored Terrorism Before 9/11
In the
face of Richard Clarke's well-documented testimony to the 9/11
commission yesterday, the White House is continuing
to say that it made
counterterrorism its top priority upon coming into
office in January 2001.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan, echoing
similar comments from top
Administration officials, said that "this
Administration made going after Al
Qaida a top priority from very early on" in the face
of increased terror
warnings before 9/11 (1). But, according to the
public record, the
Administration made counterterrorism such a "top
priority" that it never
once convened its task force on counterterrorism
before 9/11, attempted to
downgrade counterterrorism at the Justice Department,
and held only two out
of more than one hundred national security meetings
on the issue of
terrorism. Meanwhile, the White House was cutting key
counterterrorism
programs -- Bush himself admitted that he "didn't
feel the sense of
urgency" about terrorism before 9/11 (2).
According to the Washington Post, President Bush and Vice President Cheney
never once convened the counterterrorism task force
that was established in
May 2001 (3) -- despite repeated warnings that Al
Qaida could be planning to
hijack airplanes and use them as missiles. This
negligence came at roughly
the same time that the Vice President held at least
10 meetings of his
Energy Task Force (4) and attended at least six
meetings with Enron
executives (5).
Similarly, Newsweek reported that internal government documents show that,
before 9/11, the Bush Administration moved to
"de-emphasize"
counterterrorism (6). When the "FBI officials sought
to add hundreds more
counterintelligence agents" to deal with the problem,
"they got shot down"
by the White House.
Additionally, the Associated Press reported in 2002 that "President Bush's
national security leadership met formally nearly 100
times in the months
prior to the Sept. 11 attacks yet terrorism was the
topic during only two of
those sessions." This is consistent with evidence
Clarke has presented
showing that his January 2001 "urgent" memo asking
for a meeting of top
officials on the imminent Al Qaida threat was
rejected for almost eight
months (7). At the time, the White House said that
they simply "did not need
to have a formal meeting to discuss the threat" (8).
Finally, the White House threatened to veto efforts putting more money into
counterterrorism (9), tried to cut funding for
counterterrorism grants (10),
delayed arming the unmanned airplanes (11) that had
spotted bin Laden in
Afghanistan, and terminated "a highly classified
program to monitor Al Qaida
suspects in the United States (12).
Sources:
1.
Press Briefing Scott
McClellan,
03/22/2004.
2.
The George W. Bush
Presidency: An Early Assessment, 2003.
3.
Statement by the
President,
05/08/2001.
4.
Process Used to Develop
the National Energy Policy,
US
General Accounting Office.
5.
"Cheney:
We Met With Enron Execs", ABC News,
01/09/2002.
6.
Freedom of Information
Center,
05/27/2002.
7.
"Clarke's
Take On Terror", CBS News,
03/21/2004.
8.
"White
House Rebuttal to Clarke Interview",
Washington
Post,
03/22/2004.
9.
Freedom of Information
Center,
05/27/2002.
10.
"FBI
Budget Squeezed After 9/11",
Washington
Post,
03/22/2004.
11.
"Officials:
U.S. missed chance to kill bin Laden", Helena Independent
Record,
06/25/2003.
12.
"In
the Months Before 9/11, Justice Department Curtailed Highly Classified
Program to Monitor Al Qaeda Suspects in the U.S.", PR
Newswire,
03/21/2004. |