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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (424722)7/9/2003 2:04:58 PM
From: Augustus Gloop  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
<<Don't blame the Dems. Republicans control the Congress.>>

Finally someone speaks with intellect. It's nice to know that people finally realize that Congress controls things such as the PORK spending that the democratically controlled Congress forced upon us in the early 80's with their welfare society concept. You're comin' around Ken - Good man



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (424722)7/9/2003 2:08:22 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
Executive Branch continues to stymie the 9/11 investigation....
BUSH = SECRECY = FACISM

9/11 Commission Says U.S. Agencies Slow Its Inquiry

July 9, 2003
By PHILIP SHENON
WASHINGTON, July 8 - The federal commission investigating
the Sept. 11 terror attacks said today that its work was
being hampered by the failure of executive branch agencies,
especially the Pentagon and the Justice Department, to
respond quickly to requests for documents and testimony.

The panel also said the failure of the Bush administration
to allow officials to be interviewed without the presence
of government colleagues could impede its investigation,
with the commission's chairman suggesting today that the
situation amounted to "intimidation" of the witnesses.


In what they acknowledged was an effort to bring public
pressure on the White House to meet the panel's demands for
classified information, the commission's Republican
chairman and Democratic vice chairman released a statement,
declaring that they had received only a small part of the
millions of sensitive government documents they have
requested from the executive branch.

While praising President Bush and top aides for their
personal commitment to the panel's work, the commission's
leaders - the chairman, Thomas H. Kean, the former
Republican governor of New Jersey, and Lee H. Hamilton, the
former Democratic member of the House from Indiana - said
that federal agencies under Mr. Bush's control were not
cooperating quickly or fully.

"The administration underestimated the scale of the
commission's work and the full breadth of support
required," they said. "The coming weeks will determine
whether we will be able to do our job within the time
allotted. The task in front of us is monumental."

Claire Buchan, a White House spokeswoman, said today in
response to the statement from the panel, known formally as
the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States: "The president is committed to ensuring that
the commission has all the information it needs. The
president has directed federal agencies to cooperate and to
do so quickly."

Under the law creating the bipartisan, 10-member panel last
year, the commission, which met for the first time in
January, is required to complete its investigation by next
May. "While thousands of documents are flowing in - some in
boxes and some digitized - most of the documents we need
are still to come," the statement said. "Time is slipping
by."

The criticism today from Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton clearly
took senior administration officials by surprise and
brought a fresh round of attacks on the White House from
Congressional Democrats who have said that the
administration is trying to stonewall a politically
damaging inquiry.

Although the White House had initially opposed the creation
of an independent commission to investigate intelligence
and law-enforcement failures before the 2001 terrorist
strikes,
the administration eventually came around to
support the move, and it has repeatedly pledged full
cooperation.

The White House chose Mr. Kean to lead the investigation
after its first choice, Henry A. Kissinger, the former
secretary of state, resigned from the post rather than
release a list of clients of his consulting firm. Mr.
Hamilton was named vice chairman by Congressional Democrats
after their first choice, George J. Mitchell, the former
Senate Democratic majority leader, resigned when questions
were raised about similar conflicts of interest.

In their statement, Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton said that the
"problems that have arisen so far with the Department of
Defense are becoming particularly serious." They noted that
the Pentagon had not responded to a series of requests for
evidence from several Defense Department agencies,
including the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the North American
Aerospace Defense Command, which is responsible for
guarding American airspace from terrorist attack.


"Delays are lengthening and agency points of contact have
so far been unable to resolve them," the statement said.
"In the last few days, we have been assured that the
department's leaders will address these concerns. We look
forward to seeing the results."

Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton suggested that the Justice
Department was behind a directive barring intelligence
officials from being interviewed by the panel without the
presence of agency colleagues.

At a news conference, Mr. Kean described the presence of
"minders" at the interviews as a form of intimidation. "I
think the commission feels unanimously that it's some
intimidation to have somebody sitting behind you all the
time who you either work for or works for your agency," he
said. "You might get less testimony than you would."

(MORE ORWELLIAN BY THE MOMENT!!!! MINDERS?????)

"We would rather interview these people without minders or
without agency people there," he said.

In their written statement, the panel's leaders said that
the Justice Department had been "unable to resolve
important issues related" to the commission's access to
evidence and testimony from the case of Zacarias Moussaoui,
the only person facing trial in an American court for
conspiring in the Sept. 11 attacks.

A Defense Department spokeswoman said tonight that the
department would have no immediate response to the
criticism.

A Justice Department spokesman, Mark Corallo, said that his
department remained "committed to assisting the
commission's important work on behalf of the United
States." Mr. Corallo added, however, that "assembling the
enormous amount of information requested takes significant
manpower and time to accomplish."

He defended the administration's requirement that witnesses
be present when some executive branch officials are
interviewed by the panel. "In any investigation in which
federal employees are interviewed, it is standard practice
to have another agency representative present for the
benefit of the witnesses and to help facilitate the
investigation," he said.

Although their intent today was clearly to create
discomfort at the White House, Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton
said repeatedly that they were optimistic that the panel
could complete its work on time and that it would offer the
most complete account available of the events that led to
the terrorist attacks.

nytimes.com