The Trauma of 9/11 Is No Excuse By Richard A. Clarke

Richard Clarke, Bush's Counterterrorism Czar and a holdover from the Clinton Administration, weighs in on the Bush Administration prior to and after 9/11, and recent attempts by Rice and Cheney to spin the events and their actions. Clarke gives his own spin, essentially labeling Bush Administration principals as negligent, but not calling for accountability, merely a slight correction of perspective and course. Clarke, in his book and in testimony, is one of the people who placed Cheney in the PEOC while the attacks were in progress (Against All Enemies, 2-19). Here he recalls, "Once in the bomb shelter, Cheney assembled his team while the crisis managers on the National Security Council staff coordinated the government response by video conference from the Situation Room." and quotes Cheney's recent admission that he was, without noting that this contradicts Cheney's and the 9/11 Commission's timeline; "'I'll freely admit that watching a coordinated, devastating attack on our country from an underground bunker at the White House can affect how you view your responsibilities,' Cheney said in his recent speech."

Clarke also says, "Cheney's admission that 9/11 caused him to reassess the threats to the nation only underscores how, for months, top officials had ignored warnings from the CIA and the NSC staff that urgent action was needed to preempt a major al-Qaeda attack."

It's worth a read to see how the negligence/incompetence/no need for investigation or accountability excuse works, and it's being delivered by a major establishment figure who played a prominent 9/11 role- plus, he calls the Bush Administration out for torture and warrantless wiretapping- but labels it an overreaction out of zeal to be reelected and not seen as weak- not as crimes of treason needing to be prosecuted.

Posted in full for posterity- fair use:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/29/AR2009052901560.html?nav=hcmodule

The Trauma of 9/11 Is No Excuse By Richard A. Clarke
Sunday, May 31, 2009

Top officials from the Bush administration have hit upon a revealing new theme as they retrospectively justify their national security policies. Call it the White House 9/11 trauma defense.

"Unless you were there, in a position of responsibility after September 11, you cannot possibly imagine the dilemmas that you faced in trying to protect Americans," Condoleezza Rice said last month as she admonished a Stanford University student who questioned the Bush-era interrogation program. And in his May 21 speech on national security, Dick Cheney called the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, a "defining" experience that "caused everyone to take a serious second look" at the threats to America. Critics of the administration have become more intense as memories of the attacks have faded, he argued. "Part of our responsibility, as we saw it," Cheney said, "was not to forget the terrible harm that had been done to America."

I remember that morning, too. Shortly after the second World Trade Center tower was hit, I burst in on Rice (then the president's national security adviser) and Cheney in the vice president's office and remember glimpsing horror on his face. Once in the bomb shelter, Cheney assembled his team while the crisis managers on the National Security Council staff coordinated the government response by video conference from the Situation Room. Many of us thought that we might not leave the White House alive. I remember the next day, too, when smoke still rose from the Pentagon as I sat in my office in the White House compound, a gas mask on my desk. The streets of Washington were empty, except for the armored vehicles, and the skies were clear, except for the F-15s on patrol. Every scene from those days is seared into my memory. I understand how it was a defining moment for Cheney, as it was for so many Americans.

Yet listening to Cheney and Rice, it seems that they want to be excused for the measures they authorized after the attacks on the grounds that 9/11 was traumatic. "If you were there in a position of authority and watched Americans drop out of eighty-story buildings because these murderous tyrants went after innocent people," Rice said in her recent comments, "then you were determined to do anything that you could that was legal to prevent that from happening again."

I have little sympathy for this argument. Yes, we went for days with little sleep, and we all assumed that more attacks were coming. But the decisions that Bush officials made in the following months and years -- on Iraq, on detentions, on interrogations, on wiretapping -- were not appropriate. Careful analysis could have replaced the impulse to break all the rules, even more so because the Sept. 11 attacks, though horrifying, should not have surprised senior officials. Cheney's admission that 9/11 caused him to reassess the threats to the nation only underscores how, for months, top officials had ignored warnings from the CIA and the NSC staff that urgent action was needed to preempt a major al-Qaeda attack.

Thus, when Bush's inner circle first really came to grips with the threat of terrorism, they did so in a state of shock -- a bad state in which to develop a coherent response. Fearful of new attacks, they authorized the most extreme measures available, without assessing whether they were really a good idea.

I believe this zeal stemmed in part from concerns about the 2004 presidential election. Many in the White House feared that their inaction prior to the attacks would be publicly detailed before the next vote -- which is why they resisted the 9/11 commission -- and that a second attack would eliminate any chance of a second Bush term. So they decided to leave no doubt that they had done everything imaginable.

The first response they discussed was invading Iraq. While the Pentagon was still burning, Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld was in the White House suggesting an attack against Baghdad. Somehow the administration's leaders could not believe that al-Qaeda could have mounted such a devastating operation, so Iraqi involvement became the convenient explanation. Despite being told repeatedly that Iraq was not involved in 9/11, some, like Cheney, could not abandon the idea. Charles Duelfer of the CIA's Iraq Survey Group recently revealed in his book, "Hide and Seek: The Search for Truth in Iraq," that high-level U.S. officials urged him to consider waterboarding specific Iraqi prisoners of war so that they could provide evidence of an Iraqi role in the terrorist attacks -- a request Duelfer refused. (A recent report indicates that the suggestion came from the vice president's office.) Nevertheless, the lack of evidence did not deter the administration from eventually invading Iraq -- a move many senior Bush officials had wanted to make before 9/11.

On detention, the Bush team leaped to the assumption that U.S. courts and prisons would not work. Before the terrorist attacks, the U.S. counterterrorism program of the 1990s had arrested al-Qaeda terrorists and others around the world and had a 100 percent conviction rate in the U.S. justice system. Yet the American system was abandoned, again as part of a pattern of immediately adopting the most extreme response available. Camps were established around the world, notably in Guantanamo Bay, where prisoners were held without being charged or tried. They became symbols of American overreach, held up as proof that al-Qaeda's anti-American propaganda was right.

Similarly, with regard to interrogation, administration officials conducted no meaningful professional analysis of which techniques worked and which did not. The FBI, which had successfully questioned al-Qaeda terrorists, was effectively excluded from interrogations. Instead, there was the immediate and unwarranted assumption that extreme measures -- such as waterboarding one detainee 183 times -- would be the most effective.

Finally, on wiretapping, rather than beef up the procedures available under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), the administration again moved to the extreme, listening in on communications here at home without legal process. FISA did need some modification, but it also allowed for the quick issuance of court orders, as when President Clinton took stepped-up defensive measures in late 1999 under the heightened threat of the new millennium.

Yes, Dick Cheney and Condoleezza Rice may have been surprised by the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 -- but it was because they had not listened. And their surprise led them to adopt extreme counterterrorism techniques -- but it was because they rejected, without analysis, the tactics the Clinton administration had used. The measures they uncritically adopted, which they simply assumed were the best available, were in fact unnecessary and counterproductive.

"I'll freely admit that watching a coordinated, devastating attack on our country from an underground bunker at the White House can affect how you view your responsibilities," Cheney said in his recent speech. But this defense does not stand up. The Bush administration's response actually undermined the principles and values America has always stood for in the world, values that should have survived this traumatic event. The White House thought that 9/11 changed everything. It may have changed many things, but it did not change the Constitution, which the vice president, the national security adviser and all of us who were in the White House that tragic day had pledged to protect and preserve.

rclarke@hks.harvard.edu

Richard A. Clarke, the national coordinator for security and counterterrorism under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, is the author of "Against All Enemies" and "Your Government Failed You."

Read this Carefully. Ooops Fraudian Slip

"I'll freely admit that watching a coordinated, devastating attack on our country from an underground bunker at the White House can affect how you view your responsibilities," Cheney said in his recent speech.

I sent...

Mr. Clarke an email this morning. I'm hoping he responds.


Do these people deserve to know how and why their loved ones were murdered? Do we deserve to know how and why 9/11 happened?

So did I...he won't be responding to mine

I just had...

A simple question for him. It was VERY simple...

Larisa...

http://www.atlargely.com/atlargely/2009/05/911-trauma-defense-its-a-lie....


Do these people deserve to know how and why their loved ones were murdered? Do we deserve to know how and why 9/11 happened?

joe and jon

what were the emails you sent?

pls post here

I'm still thinking...

http://911reports.com

9/11 Trauma

Richard, tell the TRUTH about 9/11. Stop the Charade. You will be haunted by the deception and your participation in the cover up will be revealed.

cuts to the chase- it's not like he, of all people

must not have realized what was going on was far bigger than al Qaeda.

Clarke was the one who set COG in operation on 9/11, according to his own testimony.

I saw him on Bill Maher once, guest by video- Maher asked him about 9/11- don't remember Clarke's response to that, but I remember him remarking that when the Flu gets here it'll be worse.

It would seem he did some calculations and decided it's in his interest to support the 9/11 myth

http://911reports.com

Hello Mr. Clarke,

What time did Dick Cheney go to the PEOC on the morning of 9/11? According to Norman Mineta, David Bohrer, and Cheney himself, he was in the PEOC before the Pentagon was hit. Would that be an accurate statement? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

Jon Gold


Do these people deserve to know how and why their loved ones were murdered? Do we deserve to know how and why 9/11 happened?

Extremes

Clarke repeatedly calls the actions of the Bush administration "extreme", but their actions were not extreme they were "illegal".

Also, it's interesting to note the emphasis on Dick Cheney's "horror" after the second attack. Recall the Washington Post series on Cheney, in which they said he was the only person in the PEOC who did not react when the first tower collapsed/exploded. So, he was horrified by the planes but non-plussed by the exploding towers. I don't buy it.

Skating close to the edgy at Kos- 371 comments so far:

Richard Clarke on the White House 9/11 trauma defense by teacherken
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/5/31/737149/-Richard-Clarke-on-the-Wh...

This guy puts out a bunch of stuff, things that would make an objective observer wonder what the whole story is- but he doesn't make the reader drink, and some of it's couched in the incompetence-negligence-coincidence-convenience language;

* "From [Clarke] - and Paul O'Neill - we know about the administration's fixation about Saddam Hussein and Iraq, from the beginning of the administration and in the immediate aftermath of 9/11."

* "during much of that first day the President was out of the loop with the Vice President running the government. That may well have included issuing an order to shoot down the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania before it could hit Washington."

* in BOLD, quoting Clarke: "for months, top officials had ignored warnings from the CIA and the NSC staff that urgent action was needed to preempt a major al-Qaeda attack"

* "stories of Sandy Berger trying to tell Rice that the most important brief she would have would be Al Qaeda."

* "Bush's response to the PDB of August 6 - "Bin Laden determined to strike in the U. S." - as being "you've covered your ass.""

* "Ashcroft had stalled and refused to take any action on concerns about terrorism."

* "If Clarke is right, and I suspect he is in a position to know, the actions that flowed with respect to Iraq, an action which can fairly be called an aggressive war of choice costing the lives of tens of thousands, only a small fraction of which were American, was done for domestic political purposes. That is why anyone who opposed, who criticized, who offered more reasonable approaches in response, had to be destroyed, less the entire fabric of lies being posited unraveled and exposed the Bush administration's failure to protect the American people."

* "continued assertions that no subsequent attack occurred as a justification for suspension of civil liberties and the use of torture"

* "ignored the successful interrogation methods of the FBI and replaced them with untested methods of enhanced interrogation, and it used the minor flaws of the FISA system as an excuse to abandon a system that required oversight in favor of more extreme methods. On this last point Clarke does not mention something important: just as torture leads to many false leads that waste resources that should be narrowly focused on information obtained from proper interrogation, similarly the broad sweep of electronic communication gathered by the FBI was too unfocused to allow meaningful investigative followup."

* "NSA had information that was not being processed in a timely matter"

* "administration's failures to act on the warnings they were given about Al Qaeda meant that two of the hijackers were living with a known FBI informant and yet that information was never appropriately communicated."

* "attempts of Colleen Rowley and others to alert the government to the threats at least implied by the information that was available."

* "ironic that the government then was more concerned about procedures so that, for example, a computer in its possession was not properly search, something that COULD have provided information allowing disruption of the 9/11 plot."

* "reason that people like Cheney and Rice were surprised by 9/11 is that they had not listened to what they were being told"

* "Perhaps I missed it. Perhaps there has been serious discussion in the so-called mainstream media of how the reactions of the Bush administration were more for domestic political purposes than for those of national security."

* "And certainly the administration did NOT keep us safe - that line of reasoning conveniently ignores the anthrax attacks."

Peace de resistance:

"I sometimes wonder if the reluctance to fully examine what happened both before and immediately after 9/11 is because in the former case one could argue that criminal charges of dereliction of duty would have been appropriate, along with impeachments for failure to fulfill the responsibilities of various offices. And as to the latter, far too many in both parties acquiesced in the attempted destruction of the American system of government; they were complicit in the most serious undermining of our constitutional system in our history, which is why John Dean was correct to call it "Worse Than Watergate.""

Also has a link to a good article i hadn't seen: "McClatchy's Jonathan Landau and Warren Strobel, entitled Cheney's speech ignored some inconvenient truths, in which they detail 10 clear misstatements and untruths offered by the former Vice President"

http://911reports.com