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Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (40912)10/8/2001 7:40:41 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 50167
 
Getting in bed with enemies of enemies is always a dangerous path...
refer to DustBinLadin who was the savior of freedom from the Russians in Afghanistan...ten years ago.
CC



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (40912)10/8/2001 7:43:31 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 50167
 
U.S. Intelligence refocuses

Sunday October 07 09:02 AM EDT
In Hindsight, C.I.A. Sees Flaws That Hindered Efforts on Terror
By JAMES RISEN The New York Times

George Tenet, the director of central intelligence, issued a directive shortly after Sept. 11 demanding improved information sharing throughout the government.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 George J. Tenet, the director of central intelligence, issued a secret directive shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks declaring an abrupt end to business as usual in America's intelligence community.

In the strongly worded memorandum, dated Sept. 16 and titled "We're at War," Mr. Tenet told senior officials at the C.I.A. and other intelligence agencies that it was time to end past squabbles over turf and to begin immediately to coordinate their efforts and share information in the new war against terrorism.

Mr. Tenet's order called for an immediate end to peacetime bureaucratic constraints on the C.I.A. while demanding improved coordination and information sharing throughout the government's national security apparatus.

"The agency must give people the authority to do things they might not ordinarily be allowed to do," the memo declared, according to an official who described the document in detail. "If there is some bureaucratic hurdle, leap it."

Mr. Tenet's memorandum addressed what many government officials say were some significant flaws in the nation's defenses against terrorism that were exploited by the hijackers on Sept. 11.

Indeed, as investigators learn more about the terrorist plot and piece together strands of intelligence that were collected both before and after the attack, they are beginning to see the outlines of where the United States went wrong.

A sense of wartime urgency over the need to prod the peacetime C.I.A. as well as the government's broader counterterrorism efforts suffuses the C.I.A. director's memo.

"We don't have time to have meetings about how to fix problems, just fix them," Mr. Tenet commanded, according to the official who described the document.

The unspoken message behind Mr. Tenet's memorandum was that the bureaucracy had grown too rigid in recent years, complicating the ability of intelligence agencies to confront a rapidly evolving threat like that posed by Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda, his network. In effect, Mr. Tenet's memo echoed many of the sentiments voiced by the C.I.A.'s critics since Sept. 11.

Some intelligence officials suggested that the memo was part of an effort by Mr. Tenet to pre-empt the inevitable criticism of the C.I.A. over what many consider the worst intelligence lapse since Pearl Harbor.

Mr. Tenet's new directive did not address the controversy surrounding the C.I.A.'s guidelines that require high-level approval before the C.I.A.'s American officers can recruit foreign spies with unsavory backgrounds. Those guidelines, imposed in 1995, have been criticized for placing unnecessary restraints on the C.I.A.'s ability to recruit informants inside terrorist organizations.

Since Sept. 11, key congressional leaders have been pushing the C.I.A. to drop the guidelines in order to unleash its officers in the field. But a United States intelligence official said that since then, the C.I.A. has streamlined the guidelines in order to speed the approval process for the recruitment of new agents.

Now, new agents can be approved by the C.I.A.'s Deputy Director of Operations, the chief of the agency's clandestine espionage service, and the requests no longer have to be sent further up the agency's organization chart, including all the way to the director himself.

There is little appetite in Washington now for a postmortem on the government's failure to detect and defeat the plot. Instead, the C.I.A., F.B.I. and other agencies are running flat out to investigate the attacks, prevent further assaults and go on the offensive against those they blame Mr. bin Laden and Al Qaeda.

On Friday, the House of Representatives backed away from an immediate inquiry into what went wrong. Instead, the House legislation calls for a commission that will be more forward-looking, identifying reforms needed to help prevent future attacks.

In hindsight, it is becoming clear that the C.I.A., F.B.I. and other agencies had significant fragments of information that, under ideal circumstances, could have provided some warning if they had all been pieced together and shared rapidly.

"It has been called to my attention that if you go back and sift through the intelligence reporting that was there before Sept. 11, that it is now clear that there are some things that should have rung bells a little bit louder," a senior intelligence official said. "There are a few fragmentary reports. But they are really only significant in hindsight. I wish we had paid more attention."

Bureaucratic and regulatory roadblocks dramatically slowed the government's ability to analyze some information it had already collected.

American officials now look back to intelligence received in June and July as the starting point in their efforts to try to reconstruct the events leading up to Sept. 11.

Officials familiar with the intelligence said the C.I.A. got a series of intercepted communications and other indications that Al Qaeda might be planning a major operation. In some of their communications, the terrorists used code words and double talk to disguise their plans.

The communications clearly showed increased activity, including indications of the movement of Al Qaeda operatives. But the timing and location of any attack were unclear.

"There was a real heightened danger toward the end of June and July," said one intelligence official. "The problem we had at the time was that there were all kinds of indications of a serious intent to do harm, but we didn't know where."

American counterterrorism analysts eventually concluded that an attack might come around the Fourth of July holiday, most likely aimed at American interests overseas.

"We had a floating list of likely places where an attack might take place, some in Europe, some in the Middle East," said one American official. "But the United States was not high on the list then."

The intelligence suggested that Al Qaeda was hoping to exploit the latest crisis between Israel and the Palestinians in a way not done in the past, perhaps for recruiting and propaganda purposes. Mr. bin Laden, born in Saudi Arabia, has typically focused his anti-American statements on the presence of American troops in Saudi Arabia, declaring it a violation of Islamic holy places. Now, in keeping with the rest of the Arab world, he shifted focus to the Palestinian uprising that began in September 2000, American officials believe.

When no July attack occurred, some American officials began to believe that whatever had been in the works had somehow been disrupted or aborted.

Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said in an interview last week that "nobody could ever get the fidelity" of the summer warnings. It was as if the C.I.A. could hear Mr. bin Laden broadcasting, but could not quite tune in to the right frequency to grasp his intentions.

Today, officials are still divided about the meaning of the summer intelligence. Some officials speculate that the communications traffic was purposefully devised to throw analysts off the trail of the real operation.

But in August, aware of the need for vigilance, the C.I.A. issued another report reminding senior policy makers at the White House, Pentagon and State Department that Al Qaeda was still committed to attacking American interests.

The August report also cautioned that Mr. bin Laden and his network blamed for the bombings of two American embassies in East Africa in August 1998 and the bombing of the destroyer Cole in Yemen harbor last October were interested in carrying out strikes in the United States. Officials said that warning was coincidence rather than a move based on any intelligence pointing toward the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

"It was more of a background piece, saying that bin Laden was interested in attacking us here," said one senior American intelligence official. "But no one read it as a report saying, watch out, here they come."

At about the same time that the C.I.A.'s August report was being prepared and delivered, the F.B.I. arrested a French citizen, Zacarias Moussaoui, on immigration charges. Officials at a flight school in Minnesota had called authorities after they became troubled that Mr. Moussaoui was trying to learn how to fly large jet aircraft, but had said he did not need to know how to take off or land.

After Mr. Moussaoui's arrest on Aug. 17, the F.B.I. asked the C.I.A. and French intelligence officials for information about him. French intelligence reported back that he had extremist beliefs and some troubling connections. Indeed, a French antiterrorist task force had an open file on him, saying he had traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan several times. But American officials say the French did not provide any conclusive connections to a terrorist group like Al Qaeda.

The C.I.A. also ran traces on him, but apparently did not find a connection with Al Qaeda before Sept. 11, officials added.

With strong suspicions but little evidence, F.B.I. headquarters decided not to allow its agents in Minneapolis to open a criminal investigation, or to seek a warrant for secret wiretaps and clandestine physical searches.

Only after Sept. 11 did the F.B.I. search his computer, which disclosed that he had collected information about crop-dusting aircraft.

The reluctance to seek a warrant coincided with a secret internal investigation prompted by Royce C. Lamberth, the chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which issues the warrants, about past F.B.I. requests for them.

In March, Judge Lamberth complained to Attorney General John Ashcroft about the way the F.B.I. was making applications to the court, and specifically referred to a request for a wiretap related to a member of Hamas, a militant Middle Eastern group. In response, the F.B.I. and the Justice Department opened an internal review.

F.B.I. and Justice Department officials have insisted that the review did not limit the ability to seek wiretaps. But F.B.I. headquarters nonetheless demanded more evidence from its agents in the field before agreeing to pursue an application for surveillance on Mr. Moussaoui.

The failure to investigate Mr. Moussaoui now seems just the kind of missed opportunity and bureaucratic hurdle that Mr. Tenet deplored in his memo.

Another example came in late August, just as the F.B.I. was debating whether to investigate Mr. Moussaoui. The C.I.A. told the Immigration and Naturalization Service that it should place two men, Khalid Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi, on its watch list to bar entry into the United States. The C.I.A. had earlier determined that Mr. Almihdhar had attended a meeting in Malaysia in January 2000 with people later implicated in the bombing of the Cole. Mr. Alhazmi had later traveled with Mr. Almihdhar to the United States, and so the C.I.A. wanted him added to the watch list too.

After the immigration service responded that both men were already in the country, the F.B.I. was notified and began to search for them. Neither was found before Sept. 11, when they apparently boarded American Airlines flight 77, the plane that the hijackers flew into the Pentagon.

Finally, intelligence officials say, in the days leading up to the hijackings there was a report that a member of Mr. bin Laden's family had been told to move to safety before an impending deadline, before some kind of work was done. Officials declined to provide details of the report, which they now say indicated that an attack was imminent.

Intelligence officials said that Mr. Tenet's memo did not detail specific lapses, but was clearly aimed at making sure they did not continue.

The memo may also represent a recognition that the inevitable post- mortems will eventually find that poor coordination in sharing intelligence was at the heart of the Sept. 11 failure.



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (40912)10/8/2001 8:30:36 PM
From: Jill  Respond to of 50167
 
Ike, thanx again for your thoughtful & informative posts. (EOM)



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (40912)10/8/2001 8:37:33 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
Syria wins Security Council seat; Israel: 'sheer absurdity'

By The Associated Press




UNITED NATIONS - Syria won a seat on the UN Security Council on Monday with overwhelming support from the nations of the world, despite being on the U.S. list of countries sponsoring terrorism. The General Assembly elected Syria to the powerful UN body for a two-year term on the first ballot. It received 160 yes votes from the 177 nations voting.

Israel protested on Monday the UN General Assembly's decision to include Syria on the Security Council, saying it contradicted world efforts to eradicate terror groups.

Israel accuses Syria of harboring 11 terror organizations, including the Hezbollah group, which has led fighting in Lebanon against Israel, including several attacks in the past year.

"Maybe it's about time that the world wake up and judge countries not according to the number of votes they gain in the United Nations but according to the policies they conduct in regards to terrorism," said Raanan Gissin, a spokesman for Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Some of the organizations supported by Syria were involved in some way in planning the attacks against the United States on Sept. 11, Gissin said. He called for the United States to pressure Syria to crack down on the terror groups.

Cabinet Minister Tzipi Livni said the approval was a cynical step. "Just two weeks ago (Syrian President) Bashar Assad called on the Arab world not to join the coalition against terrorism," Livni said.

In addition, Syria prevents Lebanon from implementing a UN Security Council resolution that calls for the deployment of the Lebanese army on the border with Israel, Livni said.

The General Assembly elected Syria to the Security Council for a two-year term, with 160 out of 177 nations giving yes votes. Syria is one of the nations included on the U.S. list of countries that support terrorism.

Syria was the unanimous choice of Arab and Asian nations for the Asian seat on the council being vacated by Bangladesh on Jan. 1. Candidates that have unanimous regional support are almost always elected. Last year, the United States led a successful campaign to keep Sudan, also on the U.S. list of terrorism sponsors, off the council.

But this year, despite opposition from Israel and a last-minute appeal from 38 members of the U.S. Congress to President George W. Bush to oppose Syria's candidacy, the U.S. administration has remained silent.

Israel's UN Ambassador Yehuda Lancry said Syria's election went against the spirit and letter of the UN Charter which stipulates that every candidate for the Security Council should prove its adequacy in terms of its contribution to international peace and security. "Syria indeed backs terrorist groups inside Syria and outside Syria," Lancry said. "It is really a sheer absurdity and a sheer nonsense to have Syria as a member of the Security Council."

But Saudi Arabia's UN ambassador, Fawzi Shobokshi, countered Monday that Syria "deserves to be a member of the Security Council ... because they represent a responsible government and the world's people, and play an important role in our part of the world." One major difference between last year's election and this year's is that Syria was running unopposed while Sudan was running against Mauritius in a hotly contested race.

The United States has been trying to enlist Syria's help in its global anti-terrorism campaign, and Syrian President Bashar Assad has condemned the attacks. But Rep. Eliot L. Engel, a New York Democrat who collected 38 congressional signatures Friday on a letter to Bush, said allowing Syria to join the council would send precisely the wrong signal to the international community at this critical time and would be counterproductive to America's efforts to put a halt to global terror.

The Security Council, the top UN decision-making body, is made up of 15 members. Russia, China, France, Britain and the United States hold permanent seats. Ten nonpermanent members are elected to two-year terms - five every year. Guinea, Cameroon and Bulgaria were also elected on the first ballot. Mexico defeated the Dominican Republic for a Latin American seat.



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (40912)10/9/2001 1:16:21 PM
From: Al Serrao  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
Surprise!

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