In
an appearance March 24 before the national commission
investigating the September 11 terrorist attacks,
and in an hour-long appearance on the NBC News
program Meet the Press on March 28, former Bush
counter-terrorism chief Richard Clarke reiterated
his charges that the Bush administration downplayed
the threat of terrorist attacks by Al Qaeda until
after the hijack-bombings of the Pentagon and
the World Trade Center, and then used the attacks
as the pretext to set in motion pre-existing plans
to invade Iraq.
Clarke's
accusations are laid out in his newly published
book, Against All Enemies, and amply corroborated
by the documentary record and testimony of other
participants. The controversy has created the
biggest political crisis for the Bush administration
since Bush took office in January 2001.
An
array of Bush administration officials, congressional
Republican leaders and right-wing media pundits
have denounced Clarke's account, without providing
any refutation of its factual content. Nor have
they provided any explanation of why the former
assistant to the president for counter-terrorism,
a registered Republican, would seek to destroy
Bush's political credibility on the issue upon
which the president has largely based his reelection
campaign‹his leadership in the "war on terror."
Clarke's
charges focus on the most explosive of political
issues: the connection between the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001 and the Bush administration's
decision to go to war with Iraq. Clarke explicitly
and insistently links the Bush administration's
inaction prior to 9/11 on the danger of Al Qaeda
attacks and its obsession with invading Iraq.
He maintains that the firm consensus of the US
intelligence establishment was that Iraq had no
connection to the terrorist attacks, and denounces
the Iraq war as a diversion from the "war on terror"
and a strategic blunder that has inflamed the
Muslim world and politically strengthened Al Qaeda.
With
30 years experience in the US national security
establishment, including high-level positions
in the Reagan, Bush senior and Clinton administrations
before he served in the second Bush White House,
Clarke is no anti-war dissenter. He is a ruthless
advocate of military and covert action in pursuit
of the interests of American imperialism. This
makes his testimony against the Bush administration
all the more damaging.
In
both his 9/11 commission testimony and his March
28 television interview, Clarke highlighted the
difference between the approach of the Clinton
administration to an upsurge of terrorist threats
and that of the Bush administration under similar
circumstances.
In
the period leading up to the millenium celebrations
in December 1999, US intelligence agencies reported
a dramatic spike in intercepts of threatening
communications involving Al Qaeda. At Clinton's
behest, his national security adviser, Samuel
Berger, convened daily meetings of the highest-level
security officials, including the heads of the
CIA and FBI, to monitor efforts to forestall an
attack. This continuous pressure, according to
Clarke, led to the disruption of a planned New
Year's Eve attack on Los Angeles Airport when
an Al Qaeda operative assigned to that attack
was arrested attempting to cross the US-Canada
border near Vancouver, British Columbia.
If
an effort of similar intensity had been mounted
during the summer of 2001, when intelligence intercepts
about terrorist threats from Al Qaeda again began
to spike, Clarke insisted, the September 11 attacks
might have been disrupted or prevented.
Much
of the media focus on his testimony has concerned
a series of meetings and memo exchanges among
White House officials during the first eight months
of 2001, and alleged differences between what
Clarke said while he was a Bush aide and what
he is saying now. But Clarke insists that bureaucratic
foot-dragging by the administration had real consequences
for efforts to prevent a terrorist attack within
the US.
Well-documented
facts support his case. When, for example, the
CIA learned that two Al Qaeda operatives who had
attended a high-level planning meeting in Malaysia
had entered the United States, it did not notify
the FBI for more than a year. Neither agency informed
Clarke or his cohorts on the White House counter-terrorism
team. These two known Al Qaeda operatives were
among the hijackers who, using their real names,
boarded four commercial jets on September 11 without
encountering any impediment from either government
or airline officials.
Clarke
observed acidly, "I think we even had their pictures.
I would like to think that I would have released,
or would have had the FBI release, a press release
with their names, with their descriptions, held
a press conference, tried to get their names and
pictures on the front page of every paper, America's
Most Wanted, the evening news, and caused a successful
nationwide manhunt for those two of the 19 hijackers."
The
lack of communication was despite the fact that
Clarke had convened a high-level meeting of agencies
responsible for preventing an Al Qaeda terrorist
attack, including the CIA, FBI and Federal Aviation
Administration, which monitors airline security,
in June 2001, in response to the increased level
of reported threats.
Clarke
told the 9/11 commission last Wednesday, "I had
been saying to the FBI and to the other federal
law enforcement agencies and to the CIA that because
of this intelligence that something was about
to happen, that they should lower their threshold
of reporting, that they should tell us anything
that looked the slightest bit unusual.
"In
retrospect, having said that over and over again
to them, for them to have had this information
[about the two future hijackers] somewhere in
the FBI and not told me, I still find absolutely
incomprehensible."
In
the same section of his testimony, Clarke said
the FBI had not notified the White House counter-terrorism
office of the case of Zacarias Moussaoui, a suspected
Al Qaeda member who was arrested after he attempted
to get training on a 747 jet at a Minnesota flight
school. Commission member Richard Ben-Veniste,
a former Watergate prosecutor, asked, "And had
you known on top of that that there was a jihadist
who was identified, apprehended in the United
States before 9/11, who was in flight school acting
erratically..."
Clarke
responded, "I would like to think, sir, that even
without the benefit of 20-20 hindsight, I could
have connected those dots."
The
World Socialist Web Site has long maintained that,
in analyzing the events of September 11, the least
plausible explanation is the official version
of the Bush administration, propounded endlessly
by the American media for two-and-a-half years:
that 19 Al Qaeda operatives entered the United
States, hijacked four airplanes on the same day
and flew them into the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon‹using suicide pilots trained at US
flight schools‹without any US government agency
having the slightest idea what the terrorists
were doing.
Clarke's
testimony confirms that the Al Qaeda attacks were
made possible by a virtual stand-down of the counter-terrorist
preparations that had been in effect in the last
years of the Clinton administration‹certainly
from the time of the bombing of the US embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania in August 1998.
What
neither Clarke, nor his interrogators, nor the
media have addressed is whether this stand-down
was deliberate: i.e., that at some level of the
US government, a decision was made to permit a
terrorist attack to go forward in order to provide
the necessary pretext for US military action in
the Middle East and Central Asia, a step which
up until then was politically impossible.
Not
only Clarke, but the entire array of former and
current national security officials who testified
last Tuesday and Wednesday before the 9/11 commission
agreed that public opposition made such military
intervention impossible before the September 11
attacks. This was a fact of political life, confirmed
by both Madeleine Albright, Clinton's secretary
of state, and Donald Rumsfeld, Bush's secretary
of defense.
Clarke‹following
in the footsteps of Paul O'Neill, former treasury
secretary, and other eyewitnesses‹confirms that
the Bush administration was focused from its first
days in office on preparing for war against Iraq.
Initially, Rumsfeld and other warmongers hoped
to use Iraqi self-defense actions, such as anti-aircraft
fire at US warplanes patrolling the "no-fly" zones
in northern and southern Iraq, as a suitable pretext
for war. But this proved to have little impact
on public opinion.
Clarke
never suggests that the Bush administration deliberately
decided to "take" a terrorist attack in order
to generate popular support for war, but he is
clearly not saying all he knows about the background
to September 11. Consider, for example, his comment
during Wednesday's hearing: "You know, unfortunately,
this country takes body bags and requires body
bags sometimes to make really tough decisions
about money and about governmental arrangements."
Another
significant detail is Clarke's report that after
his office had triggered a nationwide counter-terrorist
alert during the summer of 2001, based on intelligence
intercepts, it encountered pressure from the Pentagon,
which said that military units on alert status
were beginning to suffer from fatigue. The alert,
which had included the Federal Aviation Agency,
was eased by the end of August, two weeks before
the 19 suicide hijackers boarded their flights.
The timing suggests that those who dispatched
the hijackers knew when security was being relaxed.
What was their source of information?
More
than two years ago, the WSWS [See: "Was the US
government alerted to September 11 attack?" 16
January 2002] laid out in detail the evidence
that the US government had been alerted to the
terrorist attacks well before September 11. The
Bush administration was making preparations, not
to forestall such attacks and the consequent loss
of thousands of lives, but to use a terrorist
atrocity as the pretext for carrying out long-planned
military operations in the oil-rich regions of
Central Asia and the Middle East.
The
revelations of Richard Clarke provide further
evidence that something far more sinister and
ominous than incompetence or a failure to "connect
the dots" was behind the government's failure
to prevent the worst terrorist attack in US history.
Topplebush.com
Posted: April 9, 2004
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