A
small but significant White House cover-up fell
apart this past weekend.
When
the White House finally released the August 6,
2001 President's Daily Brief, it marked the end
of a two-year effort on the part of the Bush administration
to prevent the public from learning that a month
before the 9/11 attacks--and weeks after the U.S.
government had collected "chatter" indicating
Osama bin Laden was planning a major strike--Bush
received information indicating that al Qaeda
was intent on mounting attacks within the United
States.
Condoleezza
Rice was instrumental in the attempt to keep the
contents of this PDB--which was entitled "Bin
Ladin Determined To Strike in US" and which noted
that al Qaeda "apparently maintains a support
structure [in the United States] that could aid
attacks" and that the FBI had detected "suspicious
activity...consistent with preparations for hijackings
or other types of attacks"--from becoming known.
And it is obvious why it was so important for
her and the White House to smother this PDB.
The
existence of the August 6 PDB was first revealed
by CBS News' David Martin on May 15, 2002. But
Martin's report only referred to the PDB in one
sentence that noted the PDB had warned that an
attack by bin Laden could involve hijacking U.S.
aircraft. CBS did not report the title of the
briefing or any other material it contained. A
media furor erupted after the White House acknowledged
Bush had received this PDB. The day after the
CBS News report, The New York Times carried a
front-page story with a headline declaring, "Bush
Was Warned Bin Laden Wanted To Hijack Planes."
The
disclosure of the PDB came at an especially awkward
time for the White House. Two weeks earlier, news
reports revealed that an FBI agent in Phoenix
in July 2001 had written a classified memo suggesting
that a group of Middle Eastern aviation students
might be linked to terrorists (including bin Laden)
and that the FBI had not taken any action in response
to this agent's investigation. The "Phoenix memo"
received a flood of media coverage, and the Bush
administration--which heretofore had not had to
field any tough questions about the government's
pre-9/11 performance-- was confronted with queries
about the negligent handling of the agent's prescient
report. At the same time, the case of Zacarias
Moussaoui was in the news. On May 15, the Times
reported that before 9/11 an FBI agent had speculated
that Moussaoui, the suspicious aviation student
arrested by the FBI on immigration charges in
the summer of 2001, might have been planning to
fly a plane into the World Trade Center. News
reports had previously indicated that the FBI
had not pursued the Moussaoui case vigorously
prior to September 11.
The
Phoenix memo, the Moussaoui case--all of this
placed the administration on the defensive for
the first time since 9/11, as the White House
fended off suggestions (and accusations) that
the federal government, on Bush's watch, had missed
crucial tips and opportunities to thwart the horrific
attacks. Then came news of the August 6 PDB.
The
White House reaction was predictable: stonewall.
The Bush crew clearly did not want American citizens
to discover that he had been told that bin Laden
was aiming to conduct attacks in the United States,
and they did not want to have to answer the inevitable
questions (such as, what did the president do
in response to this briefing?). So Team Bush started
spinning, and its lead twirler was Rice.
On
May 16, she held a briefing for reporters and
described the PDB as "not a warning" and no more
than an "analytic report that talked about [bin
Laden's] methods of operations, talked about what
he had done historically, in 1997, 1998. It mentioned
hijacking, but hijacking in the traditional sense,
and in a sense said that the most important and
likely thing was they would take over an airliner
holding passengers and demand the release of one
of their operatives." She did not refer to the
title or the other elements of the PDB unrelated
to hijacking, including the report that al Qaeda
members had apparently set up a support network
in the United States. She did her best to make
the PDB seem rather dull:
"This
was generalized information that put together
the fact that there were terrorist groups who
were unhappy [with] things that were going on
in the Middle East as well as al Qaeda operatives,
which we'd been watching for a long time, that
there was more chatter than usual, and that we
knew that they were people who might try a hijacking.
But, you know, again, that terrorism and hijacking
might be associated is not rocket science."
That
ho-hum description hardly matches the actual memo.
And several days after the PDB story broke, Ari
Fleischer, then Bush's press secretary, told reporters
that the headline on the document was "Bin Laden
Determined To Strike the United States." That
is, he had changed an "in" to a "the"--an alteration
of significance, since the White House line has
been that the pre-9/11 chatter had the administration
looking for attacks on targets outside the United
States. A May 19 , 2002, front-page Washington
Post story did report the correct title of the
PDB and did state that the briefing had noted
that al Qaeda members were living or traveling
to the United States. But such reporting was overwhelmed
by a White House, PR blitz that maintained the
PDB was no big deal.
Rice,
Fleischer and their colleagues succeeded more
or less. The issue of the August 6, 2001, PDB
went away. But there was another front to worry
about. In 2002, the House and Senate intelligence
committees were conducting a joint 9/11 inquiry.
When the committees requested access to PDBs received
by Bush and Bill Clinton, the Bush White House
said no. As the final report of the joint inquiry
noted, "Ultimately, this bar was extended to the
point where CIA personnel were not allowed to
be interviewed regarding the simple process by
which the PDB is prepared."
The
joint inquiry did interview intelligence community
officials aware of the contents of the August
6 PDB. And the final report of the committees,
which was released last summer, strongly hinted
at what had been in the PDB. The committees got
it right, noting that intelligence material gathered
in early August 2001 had informed "senior government
officials" that bin Laden had wanted to conduct
attacks in the United States and that al Qaeda
had a support structure in the United States.
But the committees were unable to portray the
PDB definitively or to provide the title. Only
a few reporters picked up on the obvious hints
placed in the final report. For the most part,
the cover-up was still holding.
The
independent 9/11 commission finally forced the
August 6 PDB out of Bush's clutches. But first
the White House put up a fight, refusing to allow
the full commission to see this and other PDBs.
The commission and the White House negotiated
an agreement under which one commissioner, Jamie
Gorelick (a Democrat), and the panel's executive
director, Philip Zelikow (a Republican), were
able to review the PDBs and report back to the
other commissioners, after the White House vetted
the notes they had taken. September 11 family
members complained about the arrangement. They
believed the full commission should have access
to the PDBs, and they worried about Zelikow's
credibility. (He served with Rice in the first
Bush administration, co-wrote a book with her,
worked on the Bush II transition team with her,
and was appointed by George W. Bush to be on the
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.)
This deal did seem to provide the White House
the opportunity to continue to suppress specifics
about the PDB.
But
Richard Clarke got in the way. His book and his
testimony to the 9/11 commission brought far more
attention to the panel and to the issue of whether
the Bush administration had not regarded the al
Qaeda threat seriously before September 11. His
dramatic appearance also highlighted the White
House's refusal to permit Rice to testify. With
the White House trying to limit the commission's
actions, its attempt to sit on the August 6 PDB
became one more example of the administration's
reluctance to cooperate fully. (Earlier this year,
the White House had opposed the commission's request
to add two months to its end-of-May deadline and
had said Bush would not consent to an interview
with all of the panel's commissioners; it then
retreated on each point.)
When
Rice did appear, Democratic commission members--particularly
Richard Ben-Veniste--grilled her on the PDB, disclosing
information from the PDB and forcing her to reveal
its title. But she tried to stick to her previous
characterization of the PDB, noting it presented
"historical information based on old reporting."
That depends on what the definition of "historical"
is. The PDB did run through material dating back
several years to show that "bin Laden since 1997
has wanted to conduct terrorist attacks in the
U.S." But it also noted that al Qaeda was currently
maintaining a "support structure" in the United
States. And it cited information obtained in May
2001 that suggested "that a group of bin Laden
supporters was in the U.S. planning attacks with
explosives." (The White House said it reacted
aggressively to this tip-off and it was unrelated
to 9/11.) Rice repeatedly referred to the PDB
as a "historical" document and did not accept
Ben-Veniste's invitation to call for its declassification.
When Ben-Veniste asked Rice if she had ever told
Bush before August 6, 2001, of the existence of
al Qaeda cells within the United States, she did
not answer the question.
With
so much attention focused on the PDB, it became
inevitable that the Bush White House would have
to release it. The administration has established
a rather clear pattern. When it comes to sharing
information with the public about controversial
matters, it holds the line as long as it can--until
politics dictate otherwise. This is the SOP for
elected officials. But Bush does seem to dig in
his heels more than most. After two years of hiding
the PDB, the administration let it out on a Saturday
night--a rather convenient time to make inconvenient
information available.
When
the White House released the document, it held
a background briefing with reporters on a conference
call. During this sessions, one White House official
said, "The release of this PDB should clear up
the myth that's out there that somehow the President
was warned about September 11th." But the point
of the PDB was not that Bush had been warned specifically
about 9/11. At issue was what he had been told
about the prospect of a bin Laden strike inside
the United States, as well as what, if anything,
he did in response. Under questioning from Commissioner
Timothy Roemer, a former Democratic congressman,
Rice had said the PDB was "most certainly an historical
document that says, 'Here's how you might think
about al Qaeda.'" But there are no public indications
that after he received this briefing that Bush
thought at all about the possibility of an al
Qaeda attack in the United States. Maybe he did.
But during the background briefing, a White House
official declined to discuss how Bush reacted
to the August 6 briefing: "That's a confidential
relationship between the briefer who briefs the
President each morning and the President. So not
only do we not know, but it's not the sort of
thing that we would discuss."
The
day after the PDB was released, Bush held a short
media availability at Fort Hood, Texas, and insisted
that the August 6 briefing "said nothing about
an attack on America. It talked about intentions,
about somebody who hated America. Well, we knew
that." When asked if he was "satisfied" that every
agency had done all it should have prior to 9/11,
Bush redefined the question: "I'm satisfied that
I never saw any intelligence that indicated there
was going to be an attack on America at a time
and a place of an attack." It was a non sequitur.
No one has suggested he saw such intelligence.
The
PDB controversy is not about whether Bush received
a specific warning a month before 9/11. It concerns
his administration's attitude toward al Qaeda
and the possibility of domestic attacks prior
to September 11 and whether the White House has
truly been willing to see the full 9/11 tale uncovered
and told. The evidence is mounting that al Qaeda
was not the priority it should have been in the
first seven months of Bush's presidency. Yet the
White House is unable to acknowledge that it made
a misjudgment. Much of the public might even believe
that it was a natural mistake for a new administration
to underestimate the abilities and reach of a
madman hunkered down in faraway Afghanistan. In
a way, such a screw-up may be more forgivable
than Bush and his lieutenants' efforts to cover
up information and prevent the 9/11 commission
from completing a thorough examination.
Bush
lost the PDB battle, but the war is not over.
The 9/11 commission is working hurriedly to finish
its report by the congressionally mandated date
of July 28. No doubt, the commission will have
to tussle with the White House over the declassification
of other material. Will the administration once
more attempt to censor significant information?
Could this delay the release of the report? Declassification
fights tied up the congressional intelligence
committees' 9/11 report for eight months. A repeat
would push the unveiling of the 9/11 commission's
report until after the election, but commission
officials say they are determined to avoid such
a fate.
The
9/11 commission has not constantly inspired confidence,
but thanks to the panel, Rice's PDB cover-up,
after two years, caved in. Still, suspicious minds
would be right to wonder: Are there other cover-ups,
which are not yet publicly known, that will end
up more to Bush and Rice's liking?
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Posted: April 14, 2004
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