[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Bush satisfied with pre-9-11 probes
CRAWFORD, Texas — President Bush insisted Sunday he was satisfied that
federal agents were on top of the terrorist threat after reading a
pre-Sept. 11 briefing detailing Osama bin Laden's intentions on U.S.
soil.
For two years, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice left Americans
with the impression that the memo from Aug. 6, 2001, focused on
historical information dating to 1998 and that any current threats
mostly involved overseas targets. Yet the release, under public
pressure, of the briefing showed that Bush had received intelligence
reporting as recent as May 2001 and that most of the current information
focused on possible plots in the United States.
"I was satisfied that some of the matters were being looked into" and
had any specific intelligence pointed to threats of attacks on New York
and Washington, "I would have moved mountains" to prevent it, Bush said
Sunday during a visit to Fort Hood in Texas.
But he said the document, which the White House released Saturday night,
contained "nothing about an attack on America. It talked about
intentions, about somebody who hated America - well, we knew that."
Should the memo - a leading topic of the Sunday talk shows - have raised
"more of an alarm bell than it did? I think in hindsight that's probably
true," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. He said the Clinton and Bush
administrations bear responsibility for Sept. 11.
The existence of the president's briefing memo was disclosed to the
public at a news conference in May 2002. The "overwhelming bulk of the
evidence" before Sept. 11, Rice declared, was that any terrorist attack
"was likely to take place overseas."
Most of the CIA reporting during the summer of 2001 did focus on
possible overseas targets. But the memo specifically told Bush that
al-Qaida had reached American shores, had a support system in place and
was engaging in "patterns of suspicious activity ... consistent with
preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks."
In May 2002, Rice said "there was specific threat reporting about
al-Qaida attacks against U.S. targets." She did not mention that it was
in the report sent to the president.
To accentuate the potential domestic threat, the memo told Bush the FBI
had 70 investigations related to bin Laden under way.
The president's memo mentioned two current threats: suspected al-Qaida
operatives might have cased federal buildings in New York and that,
according to a phone call to an American embassy in the Middle East, a
group of bin Laden supporters was in the United States to plan attacks
with explosives. The FBI later concluded the two Yemeni men
photographing buildings in New York were tourists.
Slade Gorton, a member of the commission investigating the Sept. 11
attacks, said the memo "did talk about potential attacks in the United
States," but "it didn't give the slightest clue as to what they would be
or where they would be."
"The FBI has more questions to answer than Condoleezza Rice or (former
presidential anti-terrorism adviser) Dick Clarke or anyone we've had
testify before us so far," said Gorton, a former Republican senator from
Washington state.
Gorton said the reference in the memo sent to the president about 70 FBI
investigations "would be sort of comforting to the person who read it
the first time around."
Commissioner Richard Ben-Veniste, a Democrat, saw as significant the
memo's references to May 2001 intelligence about a possible al-Qaida
explosives plot inside the United States.
The "leadership at the top," said Ben-Veniste, should have "butted heads
together, get them in the same room, and then pulse the agencies: 'What
do you know?' Get all of your agents out there with messages to say,
'Tell us everything you know at this moment.'"
But Richard Perle, a former Pentagon adviser who was an assistant
defense secretary in the Reagan administration, said there was "not
enough specificity to take any action."
"What could a president have done under those circumstances? Shut down
the United States? Grounded all aircraft? Gone into a panic mode?"
Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said it is easy to "go back now and pick
out a clue here and a tidbit there ... but we have to keep in mind the
environment. We have to keep in mind the volume of reporting that the
president and his advisers are dealing with each and every day."
To Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., however, the memo should have created a
sense of urgency at the top levels of government.
"If you are having a brief that is entitled `Bin Laden Determined to
Strike in the U.S.,' and then it lays out specific things ... you would
think that that would raise enough caution flags that you would haul in
the FBI, that you'd put out an all-points bulletin," he said.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Explore: Find Web sites making news in our Links in the News section.
Keep Up: Have 13News headlines delivered to your RSS reader.
Tell us: Is there something you believe 13NEWS should investigate? Please let us know.
Child's death under investigation in Suffolk
Portsmouth restaurant robbed four times since August
Giants suspend Super Bowl hero Plaxico Burresss