For this president, who has made national
security a main theme of his re-election campaign, a lot depends on
whether Americans accept that President Bush and his national
security team were doing the best they could to protect us, given
what they knew.
Analysis and opinion polls in the coming days will bring some
indication of whether Mr. Bush has succeeded. Based on the evidence
of the hearings of the September 11 commission, however, and based
on Mr. Bush's own statements during the press availability with
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Crawford, my sense is that the
American people will believe him.
Human beings do notactonthe unimaginable, and members of the U.S.
government are - believe it or not - human, too. Threats that have
no place in our worldview become, in effect, invisible. Only when
catastrophe strikes does our view of the world change enough for
the patterns to emerge from the mass of intelligence and
information. Hindsight is 20/20, as they say.
In the absence of hard evidence that the September 11 plot was
known in detail to the intelligence services, the question to which
certain members of the September 11 commission keep returning is
this:
Why didn't anyone in a position of authority imagine and take
steps to prevent a terrorist plot to bring down the U.S. government
and destroy our economy by using passenger aircraft as flying bombs
against the World Trade Towers, the Pentagon and the White
House?
And the answer they keep getting from Clinton and Bush
administration officials alike is that no one had enough specific
information or the vision to connect such "dots" as existed. Even
the now famous - notorious, perhaps - Richard A. Clarke, whose book
"Against All Enemies" heaped fuel on the controversy of who knew
what and when, conceded in front of the September 11 commission
that nothing he himself had proposed in the summer of 2001 would
have stopped the attacks.
Not even the presidential daily briefing of Aug. 6, 2001, "Bin
Laden Determined To Strike in U.S.," which was declassified over
the weekend, contained enough specifics on which to act. "FBI
information since [1998] indicates patterns of suspicious activity
in this country consistent with preparations for hijackings or
other types of attacks, including recent surveillance of federal
buildings in New York," it says and mentions 70 bin-Laden-related
FBI field investigations in the United States. Surely the president
had a right to assume that FBI Director Louis Freeh would let him
know when one of these investigations resulted in actionable
intelligence.
One of the most important statements made by National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice during her appearance before the September
11 commission was that "the terrorists were at war with us, but we
were not at war with them." It can well be argued that the Clinton
administration ought to have known - after the attacks on the U.S.
embassies in Africa and the attack on the USS Cole in Yemen - that
terrorists were waging war against us. But the Clinton
administration saw isolated incidents, not a military strategy. And
they treated the 1993 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center as
a law enforcement matter.
As pointed out by Miss Rice during the hearings, the Clinton team
bequeathed no effective plan against al Qaeda to the incoming Bush
administration. Mr. Bush wanted to develop a plan that focused more
broadly on undermining the radical Taliban regime in Afghanistan
that gave bin Laden sanctuary and allowed him to train thousands of
terrorists. Such a strategic plan was in the works in the summer of
2001.
At home, a major problem was that the very people we pay to
imagine threats against the nation, intelligence agencies, were
prevented from sharing what they knew. The FBI could not talk to
the CIA or the Defense Intelligence Agency - as a matter of
culture, tradition and long-standing U.S. legal practice. Only now,
with the creation of the Homeland Security Department, the
Terrorism Threat Information Center and the passage of the Patriot
Act has that become possible.
In the end, the answer to all the September 11 commission's many
probing questions about why the U.S. government missed the threat
on September 11 may be that "no one could imagine it." After
September 11, the world changed and so did our view of the dangers
that face this country.
First appeared in The Washington Times