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


To: Wayners who wrote (492972)11/15/2003 2:09:06 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 769667
 
BUSH GUILTY OF COVERUP: Victims' Families Rip 9 - 11 Documents Deal The Associated Press

truthout.org

nytimes.com

Victims' Families Rip 9 - 11 Documents Deal
The Associated Press

Thursday 13 November 2003

WASHINGTON - Relatives of people who perished in the Sept. 11 attacks say a federal commission
accepted too many conditions in striking a deal with the White House over access to secret
intelligence documents.

The Family Steering Committee, a group of victims' relatives who are monitoring the work of the
independent commission, criticized the agreement announced late Wednesday. Under the deal, only
some of the 10 commissioners will be allowed to examine classified intelligence documents, and their
notes will be subject to White House review.

``All 10 commissioners should have full, unfettered and unrestricted access to all evidence,'' the
group said in a statement Thursday. It urged the public release of ``the full, official, and final written
agreement.''

Neither the commission nor the White House disclosed the terms of the agreement, although
sources familiar with the commission's work described some of its provisions.

``We really want to know the details here,'' said Lorie Van Auken of New Jersey, whose husband,
Kenneth, was killed at the World Trade Center. ``I don't understand what's so secret about that. I
mean, this is not a game.''

A commission spokesman, Al Felzenberg, said there is no need to broadcast the fine print. ``The
importance of the agreement is access to the documents,'' Felzenberg said.

The commission's chairman, former New Jersey Gov. Thomas H. Kean, defended the agreement.

``The most important fact to me is that there is not going to be any document not seen by a member
of the commission, and those documents will be used to inform our report,'' Kean said.

Two commissioners, former Indiana Rep. Tim Roemer and former Georgia Sen. Max Cleland,
criticized the deal after it was announced, saying it places unwarranted restrictions on the panel's
work. The commission discussed issuing a subpoena to the White House, although that could have
led to a legal battle had the Bush administration claimed executive privilege.

Three other commissioners -- former Watergate prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste, former Washington
Sen. Slade Gorton and former Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson -- said the agreement accomplishes what
the panel needed.

``The question for me is whether or not we will have sufficient information to do our job,'' Gorton said,
``and I believe the agreement provides that ability.''

Thompson said the agreement ``balances the rightful concerns of the president for the security of his
intelligence advice, and the commission's need to examine every fact.''

Roemer, Cleland and Ben-Veniste are Democrats; Kean, Gorton and Thompson are Republicans.
The 10-member commission has equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats.

The dispute centered on access to the ``presidential daily brief,'' a classified written intelligence
report Bush gets each morning.

The White House confirmed last year that one such report in August 2001, a month before the
attacks, mentioned that al-Qaida might try to hijack U.S. passenger planes. National security adviser
Condoleezza Rice has described the report as an analysis, rather than a warning, and said hijacking
was mentioned in a traditional sense, not as it was used on Sept. 11.

Describing the White House's concerns about access to the document, Bush said it is important ``for
the writers of the presidential daily brief to feel comfortable that the documents will never be politicized
and/or unnecessarily exposed for public purview.''

The commission has until May 27 to submit its report on the terror attacks and on related issues of
diplomacy, U.S. intelligence-gathering, immigration, commercial aviation and the flow of assets to
terror organizations.