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


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (444306)8/17/2003 2:23:16 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
U.S. Clamps Secrecy on Warnings Before 9/11
Marie Cocco
Newsday

Thursday 07 August 2003

It's not just the Saudi secret that's being kept.

The recent report of the joint congressional committee that probed intelligence failures before
the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon reveals what the Bush
administration doesn't want Americans to know about the American government.

You would not know this from media accounts about this report. They have dwelled on what
the Bush administration doesn't want us to know about the Saudi government.

This is the famous 28-page chapter, a series of blank lines across page after page, that the
president refuses to declassify despite the pleadings of the bipartisan group of lawmakers and
the Saudi government itself.

The dustup over Saudi secrets is exquisitely convenient. It obscures George W. Bush's
relentless hold on U.S. secrets and on information he maintains should be secret, though it has
not necessarily been before now.

The report's appendix hints at what these secrets are, and why they are kept. "Access
Limitations Encountered by the Joint Inquiry," the section is titled.

The White House refused to provide contents of the president's daily brief. This would clear
up questions about how much specific information President Bush received about an impending
attack during the spring and summer of 2001 - a period in which the intelligence community was
reporting with alarm that a "spectacular" attack against the United States involving "mass
casualties" was in the works.


"Ultimately, this bar was extended to the point where CIA personnel were not allowed to be
interviewed regarding the simple process by which the (brief) is prepared," the panel said.

The committee managed, "inadvertently," it says, to get some contents of a key briefing
Bush received in August 2001. It included "FBI judgments about patterns of activity consistent
with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks; as well as information acquired in May
2001 that indicated a group of Bin Ladin (sic) supporters was planning attacks in the United
States with explosives." In an extraordinary footnote, the panel cites public statements by
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice that characterized the August briefing as general
and having provided historical perspective on Osama bin Laden's methods of terror.

The lawmakers, though, were barred from interviewing Rice. They sought to "obtain a better
understanding of the development of counterterrorism policy in the Bush administration before
September 11, 2001." The panel was forced to submit written questions to a deputy.

Lawmakers also were barred from getting information on an intelligence reform commission
chaired by former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft. The Scowcroft commission's
findings already had been widely reported in the press.

The administration blocked the congressional investigators from obtaining information
showing how intelligence agency funding requests were handled by the White House budget
office, dating back to the Reagan administration. The lawmakers were kept from interviewing an
FBI informant who had contact with two of the Sept. 11 hijackers while they were living in San
Diego.


Not once, but twice, the panel was forced to tangle in court with the Justice Department over
information about its handling of Zacarias Moussaoui.

Moussaoui was detained nearly a month before the attack and now is charged as the "20th
hijacker." The Justice Department argued, to no avail, that Congress is covered by a local rule in
Virginia, where the Moussaoui case is being heard, that bars prosecutors and defense lawyers
from making out-of-court statements. The rule contains explicit language stating that it doesn't
cover "hearings or the lawful issuance of reports" by legislative or investigative bodies.

The inquiry's report devotes 15 pages to describing a pattern of Bush administration denials
and delaying tactics that prevented a fuller account of national failure before the attack. Last
month the independent 9/11 commission still probing the attack issued a similar compendium of
complaint.

Worry, if you will, about those 28 pages involving the Saudi sheiks. But a deeper, darker
problem is our own government's refusal to fill in the blanks about itself.