Tuesday, September 11, 2012

AUGUST 6, 2001 PDB "A HISTORICAL DOCUMENT"?



I watched Condoleezza Rice's appearance before the 9/11 Commission in growing amazement at her pathetic attempt to justify the inaction of the White House in the face of the President's Daily Briefing of August 6, 2001 titled "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US".  Kirk Eichenwald, the author of an opinion column in yesterday's New York Times titled "The Deafness Before the Storm", allows that Rice's contention that the PDB was "a historical document" may have contained a kernal of truth, simply because for months the White House had been receiving warnings even more dire than the August 6 PDB.  Remember the the words of National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism,  Richard Clark?
Clarke wrote in Against All Enemies that in the summer of 2001, the intelligence community was convinced of an imminent attack by al Qaeda, but could not get the attention of the highest levels of the Bush administration, most famously writing that Director of the Central Intelligence Agency George Tenet was running around with his "hair on fire".
So yes.  In the sense that intelligence and security officials in the government had warned of an '"imminent attack" for months, and the Bush administration paid little heed, the August 6 PDB, the sole PDB declassified for the commission, could be labeled "a historical document". 
That is, unless it was read in conjunction with the daily briefs preceding Aug. 6, the ones the Bush administration would not release. While those documents are still not public, I have read excerpts from many of them, along with other recently declassified records, and come to an inescapable conclusion: the administration’s reaction to what Mr. Bush was told in the weeks before that infamous briefing reflected significantly more negligence than has been disclosed. In other words, the Aug. 6 document, for all of the controversy it provoked, is not nearly as shocking as the briefs that came before it. 

By May 1, the Central Intelligence Agency told the White House of a report that “a group presently in the United States” was planning a terrorist operation. Weeks later, on June 22, the daily brief reported that Qaeda strikes could be “imminent,” although intelligence suggested the time frame was flexible.
Neocons in the White House advised that Bin Laden was only pretending that he was planning an attack on the US, and Bush, Cheney, Rice, et al. chose to believe them rather than the intelligence and security experts.

Woulda, coulda, shoulda...what is point of the reminder on the anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and another intended target in Washington DC, which was prevented when passengers attacked the hijackers on the plane that went down in Pennsylvania, that the intelligence agencies warned the Bush administration for months prior to September 11, 2001, that Bin Laden was determined to strike in the US?  I'm not sure, except to point out once again the incompetence of the Bush administration in its response to intelligence information.  Could it be because the Neocons had an agenda before they reached the White House, and the intelligence had to be twisted to fit the agenda, the agenda being to launch an attack against Iraq?

Now the Neocons, along with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have another agenda.  They are beating the war drums for an attack on Iran, and, once again, the intelligence about Iran's nuclear capabilities is in dispute.  Obama will be more than cautious about an attack on Iran for a number of reasons, including the  possibility of destabilizing further the already unstable situation in the Middle East.

But what about Romney?  From his own website: "U.S. policy toward Iran must begin with an understanding on Iran’s part that a military option to deal with their nuclear program remains on the table. This message should not only be delivered through words, but through actions."

And what would be the effect of an attack on the price of oil?  Do the warmongers, with their macho chest-pounding, who clamor for or threaten a pre-emptive attack on Iran think through to the consequences of a rise in oil prices on the world economy or to any of the negative consequences at all of launching an attack?

I watched with dismay and disbelief as the administration began its inexorable procession to the invasion of Iraq to protect the US and the rest of the world against Saddam's fast-moving development of nuclear weapons and his vast store of chemical weapons, which he could loose on the world at any moment, both of which turned out to be non-existent.  The reason I write is that I don't want our government to undertake this sort of deadly experiment again on the basis of junk intelligence.  I realize that it's quite likely that what I write here will make no difference at all, except, at best, to perhaps remind a voter or two in a swing state about what a vote for Romney might mean with regard to future military actions by the US. 

9 comments:

  1. Well this cynic probably thinks that it might precisely be because of a rise in oil prices that they would do it.

    I read recently that America now exports more oil than it imports. It's always about the money for the Bushes, the Cheneys, the Mitts and the Brits as in Justin Welby former OIL EXECUTIVE looking good for the next Archbishop of Canterbury. (I also see that BP is leaking oil off your shores after Isaac.)

    Another really bad side effect of Bush's derelilction of duty is that most of our basic rights under the constitution have now been thrown in the toilet due to HIS failure to timely act. I wonder how much fun he had throwing panic into the populace screaming--red alert, yellow alert, your children are not safe--after his failure to act.

    My one really big problem with President Obama is that he has not rectified this situation. You will be given health care come hell or high water and that's good BUT freedom always very good. When he moves to rectify that he might get my money. Right now what he is getting is my vote.

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    1. Bonnie, I have no doubt that the same people who push an attack on Iran want the oil companies to prosper, but a steep rise in oil prices could bring the world economy to its knees. I wonder if they think through to consequences ever.

      I'm not at all pleased with Obama vis-a-vis human rights, nor do I approve of the drone attacks in which civilians, including children, are killed. Our people are not dying, but we should not be killing innocents.

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    2. Perhaps too deeply cynical here. But I think "they" don't care about wrecking the economy of individuals or nations. They don't care about the innocents who will continue to die and don't have a human face for these power monger/money grubbing/self-centered/neocons. The faces of the poor are not present for these mover/shaker/power grabbers. I worry a lot about the loss of our freedom to speak out strongly against "hunger, fear, injustice and oppression" without fear of reprisals. When will this tip over into we are just rabble-rousing trouble makers? The freedom that brought us to this place in time--and if ever anyone should understand this--at least IMHO, it should be from someone in the African-American community. Freedom, that very scary place, is still the place from which draw our ability to stand fast. To speak out with a strong and collective voice. A voice that we are inch by slow inch being deprived of.

      We need to push really hard for alternative energy sources.

      Should President Obama lose this election, we have lost our chance to push back against the loss of our voices on really important issues.


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    3. Should President Obama lose this election...

      I tremble at the thought of Mitt Romney as president. A Romney administration would be disastrous in so many ways.

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  2. margaret, I knew the invasion of Iraq was based on phony intelligence. If I knew...

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  3. I think that a lot of thinking people knew or suspected, but once in power, they were deaf to anything but their own agenda. This was also true when they, neocons took power in the church. They knew how to grab power by any means, but then they knew zilch about running things..... same m o,power at any cost!
    nij

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  4. I think that a lot of thinking people knew or suspected, but once in power, they were deaf to anything but their own agenda. This was also true when they, neocons took power in the church. They knew how to grab power by any means, but then they knew zilch about running things..... same m o,power at any cost!
    nij

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    1. Bloggers were certainly pointing out opposing views to the info on intelligence handed out by the Bush administration. The newspapers had the same information as the bloggers, but if they ran the stories, they were on the inside pages, and stories by the likes of Judith Miller with her lying source were on the front page. Walter Pincus of the Washington Post was one of the heroic reporters, but his stories were buried on the inside pages if they ran at all.

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