Tuesday, Jul. 29,
2003
The recently released Report of the Joint Congressional Inquiry
Into The Terrorist Attacks Of September 11, and its dismal findings,
have been well reported by the news media. What has not been widely
reported, however, are the inescapable conclusions that must be
drawn from a close reading of this bipartisan study.
Obviously, Republicans were not going to let Democrats say what
needed to be said, or maybe Democrats did not want to politicize the
matter. But since the facts could not be ignored or suppressed, they
reported them without drawing certain obvious, not to mention
devastating, conclusions.
Bluntly stated, either the Bush White House knew about the
potential of terrorists flying airplanes into skyscrapers
(notwithstanding their claims to the contrary), or the CIA failed to
give the White House this essential information, which it possessed
and provided to others.
Bush is withholding the document that answers this question.
Accordingly, it seems more likely that the former possibility is the
truth. That is, it seems very probable that those in the White House
knew much more than they have admitted, and they are covering up
their failure to take action.
The facts, however, speak for themselves.
Bush's Claim Of Executive Privilege For His Daily Intelligence
Briefing
One of the most important sets of documents that the
Congressional Inquiry sought was a set of copies of the President's
Daily Brief (PDB), which is prepared each night by the CIA. In the
Appendix of the 9/11 Report we learn that on August 12, 2002, after
getting nowhere with informal discussions, Congress formally
requested that the Bush White House provide this information.
More specifically, the Joint Inquiry asked about the process by
which the Daily Brief is prepared, and sought several specific Daily
Brief items. In particular, it asked for information about the
August 6, 2001 Daily Brief relating to Osama Bin Laden's terrorist
threats against the United States, and other Daily Brief items
regarding Bin Laden, Al Qaeda, and pre-September 11 terrorism
threats.
The Joint Inquiry explained the basis for its request: "the
public has a compelling interest ... in understanding how well the
Intelligence Community was performing its principal function of
advising the President and NSC of threats to U.S. national
security."
In short, the Joint Inquiry wanted to see the records. Bush's
public assertion that his intelligence was "darn good" was not
sufficient.
The Inquiry had substantial background material, for the Clinton
Administration's national security team had been very forthcoming.
As a result, it warned President Bush of the inevitable consequences
of refusal to provide access to the requested Daily Briefs.
The Inquiry told Bush: "In the absence of such access, we will
have no choice but to extrapolate the number and content of [Daily
Brief] items on these subjects from the items that appeared on these
subjects in the Senior Executive Intelligence Brief and other lower
level intelligence products during the same period."
Bush nevertheless denied access, claiming Executive Privilege.
While the Inquiry did not chose to draw obvious conclusions, they
are right there in the report for everyone else to draw. So I have
drawn them, to see what they look like.
Revealing Information In the 9/11 Report
After pulling together the information in the 9/11 Report, it is
understandable why Bush is stonewalling. It is not very difficult to
deduce what the president knew, and when he knew it. And the
portrait that results is devastating.
The president's briefing of August 6, 2001 was the subject of
public discussion even before the Inquiry started its work. As the
9/11 Report notes in a footnote (at page 206), "National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice stated in a May 16, 2002 press briefing
that, on August 6, 2001, the President Daily Brief (PDB) included
information about Bin Laden's methods of operation from a
historical perspective dating back to 1997." (Emphasis
added.)
At that May 16, 2002 briefing, Rice went on to say that the Brief
made clear that one method Bin Laden might choose was to hijack an
airline, taking hostages to gain release of one of their operatives.
She said it was "a generalized warring" with nothing about time,
place or method. And she added, "I don't think anybody could have
predicted that these people would take an airplane and slam it into
the World Trade Center, take another one and slam it into the
Pentagon."
Unfortunately, Rice's statements don't fit comfortably with the
Inquiry's information. It appears from the 9/11 Report that either
Rice was dissembling, or the CIA was withholding information from
the President (and hence also from Rice).
But as we have been learning with the missing Weapon of Mass
Destruction, the CIA has consistently been forthcoming. So it seems
that it is Rice who should explain herself.
A Closer Look At Rice's Statement
Note again that Rice stated, in explaining the August 6, 2001
Daily Brief, that it addressed Bin Laden's "methods of operation
from a historical perspective dating back to 1997."
What exactly did it say? We cannot know. But the Inquiry's 9/11
Report lays out all such threats, over that time period, in
thirty-six bullet point summaries. It is only necessary to cite a
few of these to see the problem:
- In September 1998, the [Intelligence Community] obtained
information that Bin Laden's next operation might involve
flying an explosive-laden aircraft into a U.S. airport and
detonating it. (Emphasis added.)
- In the fall of 1998, the [Intelligence Community] obtained
information concerning a Bin Laden plot involving aircraft in the
New York and Washington, D.C. areas.
- In March 2000, the [Intelligence Community] obtained
information regarding the types of targets that operatives of Bin
Laden's network might strike. The Statute of Liberty was
specifically mentioned , as were skyscrapers, ports,
airports, and nuclear power plans. (Emphasis added.)
In sum, the 9/11 Report of the Congressional Inquiry indicates
that the intelligence community was very aware that Bin Laden might
fly an airplane into an American skyscraper.
Given the fact that there had already been an attempt to bring
down the twin towers of the World Trade Center with a bomb, how
could Rice say what she did?
Certainly, someone could have predicted, contrary to Rice's claim
that, among other possibilities, "these people would take an
airplane and slam it into the World Trade Center, take another one
and slam it into the Pentagon."
The Unanswered Questions
Is Rice claiming this information in the 9/11 Report was not
given to the White House? Or could it be that the White House
was given this information, and failed to recognize the
problem and take action? Is the White House covering up what the
President knew, and when he knew it?
The Joint Inquiry could not answer these questions because they
were denied access to Bush's Daily Brief for August 6, 2001, and all
other dates. Yet these are not questions that should be
stonewalled.
Troublingly, it seems that President Bush trusts foreign heads of
state with the information in this daily CIA briefing, but not the
United States Congress. It has become part of his routine, when
hosting foreign dignitaries at his Crawford, Texas ranch, to invite
them to attend his CIA briefing.
Yet he refuses to give Congress any information whatsoever about
these briefings, and he has apparently invoked Executive Privilege
to suppress the August 6, 2001 Daily Brief. It can only be hoped
that the 9/11 Commission, which has picked up where the
Congressional Inquiry ended, will get the answers to these
questions.
Rest assured that they will be aware of the questions, for I will
pass them along.