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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KLP who wrote (41902)8/10/2004 3:23:09 AM
From: XBritRespond to of 81568
 
"note"? IBM employee from a while back, yes?



To: KLP who wrote (41902)8/10/2004 9:12:15 AM
From: RichnorthRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
According to Paul O'Neal (the Secretary of the Treasury who was ousted after serving two years) Bush's first order of business in January 2001 was the invasion of Iraq. O'Neal quoted Bush as having said something like, "Find me a way, a plan to attack Iraq......"

cbsnews.com

Seems to me the Jihadists of Osama ben Laden beat Bush to the punch on 01/09/11.

I believe they succeeded only because Osama who looked like a camel-driver wasn't taken seriously enough at that time, and their mode of attack, even when known to the CIA and FBI, was thought to be unachievable, and so apparently no concerted action was taken to nip it in the bud.



To: KLP who wrote (41902)8/10/2004 11:10:07 AM
From: bentwayRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Actually, neither one of us wrote it. What does that have to do with the truth of it?

The (9/11) report's tone is evenhanded and nonpartisan, but the facts gathered here are devastating for the Bush administration. The Clinton team may have dithered over plans to kidnap (or kill) Osama bin Laden in 1998 and '99, but they did manage to mobilize the government at every level to deal with al Qaeda's Millennium Plot. The Clinton administration gathered a small crisis group at the White House that made sure every agency worked to thwart al Qaeda's planned terrorist attack. The Bush team, in contrast, didn't get serious about bin Laden until those planes hit their targets. Indeed, it's shattering to read the report's account of the summer of 2001, well before the assault, when al Qaeda operatives couldn't stop chattering about the big, big terrorist attack they were planning -- and the Bush administration never went into full crisis mode. "Many officials told us they knew something terrible was planned, and they were desperate to stop it," the report notes. But they didn't, in part because the White House didn't take control.
Even after 9/11, some senior Bush officials didn't seem to get it. Another of those little-noticed footnotes describes a Sept. 20, 2001 memo prepared by undersecretary of defense Douglas J. Feith, apparently for his boss, Donald Rumsfeld. According to the commission, "the author expressed disappointment at the limited options immediately available in Afghanistan and the lack of ground options. The author suggested instead hitting terrorists outside the Middle East in the initial offensive, perhaps deliberately selecting a non-al Qaeda target like Iraq. Since U.S. attacks were expected in Afghanistan, an American attack in South America or Southeast Asia might be a surprise to the terrorists." If Feith really wrote such a memo, how is it possible that he is still in his job?