Could the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have been prevented?
We're hearing that question a lot these days, particularly after
the recent report from a congressional panel on intelligence that
some say indicates the answer is yes.
The report details the many warnings government officials received
before Sept. 11 that a major attack on U.S. soil was imminent. For
example, it says the CIA learned in May 2001 that associates of
Osama bin Laden "were disappearing while others were preparing for
martyrdom" and "were planning attacks in the United States with
explosives."
Of course, we can debate forever who knew what, when and how. A
more fruitful discussion, I believe, can come from answering two
other questions: What caused our intelligence system to fail us in
the first place? And what can we do to correct the problem?
According to investigative reporter Bill Gertz, author of the
best-selling book Breakdown: How America's Intelligence
Failures Led to September 11, Congress shoulders a large
measure of the blame. The intelligence community came under heavy
political fire in the mid-1970s, amid accusations that
out-of-control elements within it were spying on Americans and
violating civil rights. Two congressional committees, led by Sen.
Frank Church, D-Idaho, and Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y., chained the
intelligence services "with a combination of restrictions,
constraints and funding controls" that severely compromised their
capabilities, Gertz says.
Thanks to the Church and Pike committees, new people came to power
within the intelligence community who "created a culture of
intelligence that persists today-that ignores the need for
counterintelligence and relies on material gathered by foreign
intelligence services rather than on the CIA's own intelligence
operations," Gertz says.
The CIA, for instance, was forbidden to recruit terrorist spies.
But according to James Woolsey, former director of Central
Intelligence, "To deter CIA officers who are trying to penetrate
terrorist groups from recruiting people with violence in their past
is like telling FBI agents that they should penetrate the mafia,
but try not to put any actual crooks on the payroll as informants.
There's nobody in the mafia but crooks and there's nobody in
terrorist organizations but terrorists."
Another problem highlighted by the newest congressional report is
the lack of information-sharing among the various intelligence
agencies. When, for example, Philippine government officials broke
up a terrorist group operating in Manila in 1995 and learned that
it had ties to Osama bin Laden and was planning attacks on the
United States, they told the CIA, who in turn told the FBI …
nothing.
The problem isn't simply a lack of information; it's having a way
to piece it together. That's why we need to create a government
"fusion center" that can access intelligence collected by both
foreign and domestic intelligence services. The Department of
Homeland Security that Congress is trying to hammer out won't work
unless it can dip into raw intelligence information gathered by
agencies such as the CIA and the FBI.
Such a system would allow U.S. authorities to prevent, say, a
confirmed terrorist from obtaining a visa at the U.S. embassy in
Yemen. It also could help keep those on the CIA's watch list from
boarding commercial aircraft-which actually happened on Sept.
11.
Maybe we couldn't stop Sept. 11 from happening. But surely we can
stop it from happening again.
Edwin
J. Feulner, Ph.D., is president of The Heritage
Foundation (www.heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy
research institute.
COMMENTARY Defense
Intelligence: A Smarter Route
Sep 26, 2002 2 min read
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