Senators Want CIA to Release 9/11 Report

AP's got the goods

WASHINGTON (AP) - A bipartisan group of senators is pushing legislation that would force the CIA to release an inspector general's report on the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

The CIA has spent more than 20 months weighing requests under the Freedom of Information Act for its internal investigation of the attacks but has yet to release any portion of it.

The agency is the only federal office involved in counterterrorism operations that has not made at least a version of its internal 9/11 investigation public.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and two other intelligence committee leaders - chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., and senior Republican Kit Bond of Missouri - are pushing legislation that would require the agency to declassify the executive summary of the review within one month and submit a report to Congress explaining why any material was withheld.

The provision has been approved by the Senate twice, but never made into law.

In an interview, Wyden said he is also considering whether to link the report's release to his acceptance of President Bush's nominations for national security positions.

``It's amazing the efforts the administration is going to stonewall this,'' Wyden said. ``The American people have a right to know what the Central Intelligence Agency was doing in those critical months before 9/11.... I am going to bulldog this until the public gets it.''

Completed in June 2005, the inspector general's report examined the personal responsibility of individuals at the CIA before and after the attacks. Other agencies' reviews examined structural problems within their organizations.

Wyden, who has read the classified report several times, wouldn't offer any details on its findings or the conversations he has had with CIA Director Michael Hayden, former CIA Director Porter Goss and former National Intelligence Director John Negroponte.

But he did say that protecting individuals from embarrassment is not a legitimate reason for protecting the report's contents from public review. He also said the decision to classify the report has nothing to do with national security, but rather political security.

Hayden declined to be interviewed about the report. In a statement Thursday, his spokesman Mark Mansfield said the CIA director wants the agency to learn from any past mistakes, but doesn't want to dwell on them.

``Given the formidable national security challenges our nation faces, now and down the road, General Hayden believes it is essential for the Agency to move forward,'' Mansfield said. ``That's where our emphasis needs to be.''

The agency's actions prior to Sept. 11 have gotten renewed attention with the release of a memoir by former CIA director George Tenet. He has been criticized for not doing more to warn Bush about the al-Qaida threat.

In interviews about his memoir, he has said instead he worked the bureaucracy beneath the president by asking then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and others for action.

Bond said some intelligence officials have dismissed the inspector general's report as ``ancient history,'' which he doesn't accept. He said the report has additional information which would be useful to the public.

``We have no desire to embarrass or throw cold water on the enthusiasm of the great men and women of the CIA, but let's just take a clear and open look at what the IG found and see if we have all of those problems corrected,'' Bond said.

In an October 2005 statement Goss said the officers involved in counterterrorism were ``stars who had excelled in their areas'' singled out by the CIA to take on difficult assignments. ``Unfortunately, time and resources were not on their side, despite their best efforts to meet unprecedented challenges,'' he said.

Goss rejected a recommendation from CIA Inspector General John Helgerson that the agency form accountability review boards to examine any personal culpability. Bond said that move was regrettable.

In his statement, Goss also noted that the agency had received a Freedom of Information Act request for the report, and that a review process was ongoing. But the CIA has not released any documents to The Associated Press or other organizations that began requesting the information at least 20 months ago.

The law requires agencies to respond to requests within 20 days, but officials rarely meet those deadlines and often blame lengthy backlogs.

Groups including the National Security Archive have clashed with the agency over its FOIA policies. Last year, the archive gave the CIA its prize for the agency with the worst FOIA record. Called the ``Rosemary Award,'' it's named after President Nixon's secretary, Rosemary Woods, who erased 18 minutes of a key Watergate conversation on the White House tapes.

The citation noted that CIA's oldest FOIA requests could apply for drivers' licenses in most states. ``CIA has for three decades been one of the worst FOIA agencies,'' archive Director Thomas Blanton said this week.

Many of the individuals highlighted in the inspector general's report are likely to have retired. But some are believed still to be in senior government positions, making the report's findings even more sensitive at the CIA and perhaps elsewhere within the intelligence community.

The AP has reported that the two-year review of what went wrong before the suicide hijackings harshly criticized a number of the agency's most senior officials.

That includes Tenet, former clandestine service chief Jim Pavitt and former counterterrorism center head Cofer Black, according to individuals familiar with the report, who spoke in 2005 on condition they not be identified.

Yet the report also offered some praise for actions of Tenet and others.

Pavitt is now a principal with The Scowcroft Group, an international business advisory firm, and Black is vice chairman of Blackwater USA, an international security firm whose clients include the CIA and other U.S. agencies.

To refresh our recollection

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2001/11/05/archive/main316911.shtml

(CBS NEWS), NEW YORK, Nov. 5, 2001(AP) A secret office operated by the CIA was destroyed in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, seriously disrupting intelligence operations.

The undercover station was in 7 World Trade Center, a smaller office tower that fell several hours after the collapse of the twin towers on Sept. 11, a U.S. government official said.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that immediately after the attack, a special CIA team scoured the rubble in search of secret documents and intelligence reports stored in the station, either on paper or in computers. It was not known whether the efforts were successful...

The New York station was behind the false front of another federal organization, which the Times did not identify. The station was a base of operations to spy on and recruit foreign diplomats stationed at the United Nations, while debriefing selected American business executives and others willing to talk to the CIA after returning from overseas.

The agency's officers in New York often work undercover, posing as diplomats and business executives, among other things. They have been deeply involved in counter-terrorism efforts in the New York area, working jointly with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other agencies.

The CIA's main New York office was unaffected by the attacks, but agents have been sharing space at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations, and have borrowed other federal government offices in the city.

The agency is prohibited from conducting domestic espionage operations against Americans, but it maintains stations in a number of major United States cities, where CIA case officers try to meet and recruit students and other foreigners to return to their countries and spy for the United States.

The New York station was believed to have been the largest and most important CIA domestic station outside the Washington area.

Questions regarding the WTC7 "destroyed" secret docs

may include, (A) Are people being blackmailed by those who may have "borrowed" paperwork just prior to the collapse?

(B) Are people making money on financial markets from the "destroyed" documents?

Wouldn't there have been a great number of documents that, if removed in a timely fashion, could transform a moderately powerful person into an all powerful monster.

Sorry to speculate but it boggles the mind.

Interesting...

WASHINGTON - A bipartisan group of senators is pushing legislation that would force the CIA to release an inspector general's report on the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.[...]

"It's amazing the efforts the administration is going to stonewall this,'' Wyden said. "The American people have a right to know what the Central Intelligence Agency was doing in those critical months before 9/11.... I am going to bulldog this until the public gets it.'' [...]

"Wyden, who has read the classified report several times, wouldn't offer any details on its findings or the conversations he has had with CIA Director Michael Hayden, former CIA Director Porter Goss and former National Intelligence Director John Negroponte. But he did say that protecting individuals from embarrassment is not a legitimate reason for protecting the report's contents from public review. He also said the decision to classify the report has nothing to do with national security, but rather political security."

“We're an empire now, and when we act we create our own reality."

Digg

http://digg.com/politics/Senators_want_CIA_to_release_9_11_report_2

Whoa!

Maybe they now realize that 9/11 historical truth is on its way..

Interesting.

Any look at 9/11 is important.

This oughta make the mainstream news, no?

I hope we see more about this, and I hope the story has legs..

Maybe the tide really IS turning..?

I hope they continue to stonewall on it, even if it is almost certainly also just a story, and a "narrative".
____________________________
On the 11th day, of every month.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Q9nRs8cu5Y&eurl=http%3A%2F%2Ftruthaction...

Nope

This is a joke of an empty gesture. Different agencies point at each other to win political points for being "tough" or something, but everyone knows that anything fundamentally disturbing to the political orthodoxy will not be revealed or entertained.

Better than Silence.

I remember when silence was what we were up against. At least the causes of 9/11 are in the news. A total blackout of news was by far worse. Hope we can take advantage of it. Jonah Goldberg just wrote an article in my newspaper about the Rasmussen Poll, and I promptly wrote a piece back defending the 9/11 Truth movement. I hope everyone does the same.

Mine's...

Sorry, Jon

I didn't see you'd posted it. (write me off-line to discuss).

:)

I don't care man... the more the merrier. I was only playing.


It's Not The Crime That Kills You, But The Cover-Up

Could be limited hangout time.

Or they could just be throwing a few scraps to lull us back into complacency. No matter who is talking 9/11 Truth, we don't stop intensifying our efforts until the OCT is dead and gone, and MIHOP is mainstream public opinion. Then we work just as hard to clean up the mess we've made over the past 30 years.
------------------
"Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without." - Buddha
"What you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it." - Gandhi
"The Sun never shined on a cause of greater worth." - Thomas Paine

Coming from the CIA - I call disinfo

Lets see what it has if it does come out. But coming from the CIA, it is more likely to be disinfo aimed to support the official conspiracy theory narrative.

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Support a Congressional Investigation of 9-11

goto http://911blogger.com/node/8545

Nothing to see here

If Wyden read the report and the only thing he thinks will come of up is someone "being embarassed" then obviously the report wont have much for us to work with. or at least wont be any new "smoking guns" so i wouldnt get to excited over this

If Wyden...

Thought people would be "embarrassed" because information is revealed that further lends credibility to the idea that they were well aware of what was going on, then that will be huge. If the CIA Report talks about how Tenet was aware of 2 of the hijackers a year and a half prior to 9/11, etc... or if the report really drills Tenet, he said he would not be the "Fall Guy" for 9/11, and he might be pushed into naming names, etc...


It's Not The Crime That Kills You, But The Cover-Up