*** DO NOT POST ILLEGAL INFORMATION. Identifying agents is a criminal offense. Please also respect the rights of other individuals.

*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. CIA Tradecraft is making it available without profit to CIA Tradecraft Yahoo! Groups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

For more information go to:
http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html




YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS




--- Begin Message ---
You have been sent this message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] as a courtesy of 
washingtonpost.com 
 
 Personal Message:
 This is worth reading! It shows the utter incompetence and deception that are 
now the hallmarks of the Bush/Republican tyranny.
 
 Documents Highlight Bush-Blanco Standoff
 
 By Spencer S. Hsu, Joby Warrick and Rob Stein
 
  Shortly after noon on Aug. 31, Louisiana Sen. David Vitter (R) delivered a 
message that stunned aides to Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D), who were 
frantically managing the catastrophe that began two days earlier when Hurricane 
Katrina hit the Gulf Coast.
 
 White House senior adviser Karl Rove wanted it conveyed that he understood 
that Blanco was requesting that President Bush federalize the evacuation of New 
Orleans. The governor should explore legal options to impose martial law "or as 
close as we can get," Vitter quoted Rove as saying, according to handwritten 
notes by Terry Ryder, Blanco's executive counsel.
 
 Thus began what one aide called a "full-court press" to compel the first-term 
governor to yield control of her state National Guard -- a legal, political and 
personal campaign by White House staff that failed three days later when Blanco 
rejected the administration's terms, 10 minutes before Bush was to announce 
them in a Rose Garden news conference, the governor's aides said.
 
 The standoff, illuminated among more than 100,000 pages of documents released 
Friday by Blanco in response to requests by Senate and House investigators, 
marks perhaps the clearest single conflict between U.S. and Louisiana officials 
in the bungled response to New Orleans's surrender to floodwaters and chaos.
 
 While attention has focused on the performance of former Federal Emergency 
Management Agency director Michael D. Brown, and communications breakdowns that 
kept Washington from recognizing for 12 to 16 hours the scope of flooding that 
would drive the storm's death toll above 1,200, the clash over military control 
highlights government officials' lack of familiarity with the levers of 
emergency powers.
 
 Blanco's top aides relied on ad hoc tutorials from the National Guard about 
who would be in charge and how to call in federal help. But in the inevitable 
confusion of fast-moving events, partisan differences and federal/state 
divisions prevented top leaders from cooperating.
 
 A Blanco aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the people around 
Bush were trying to maneuver the governor into an unnecessary change intended 
to make Bush look decisive.
 
 "It was an overwhelming natural disaster. The federal government has an agency 
that exists for purposes of coming to the rescue of localities in a natural 
disaster, and that organization did not live up to what it was designed for or 
promised to," the aide said. Referring to Bush aides, he said, "It was time to 
recover from the fiasco, and take a win wherever you could, legitimate or not."
 
 Vitter, in an interview, disagreed but acknowledged the clash.
 
 "In my opinion, they [Blanco aides] were hypersensitive. . . . They seemed to 
feel there was some power play, which I don't think there was," he said. "The 
fact that it was [Rove] -- might that have fueled the governor's 
hypersensitivity? It may have, I don't know."
 
 White House spokeswoman Christie Parell said: "The president has said that 
these reviews are critically important and that government at all levels could 
have done better. But our focus right now is on ensuring that victims of 
Katrina are getting what they need to get back on their feet."
 
 In any event, the conflict delayed the arrival of active-duty troops in New 
Orleans, where reports of looting and violence prevented rescuers from 
retrieving stranded residents and evacuating hospitals and the Louisiana 
Superdome.
 
 Blanco has said she asked Bush on Aug. 29, the day of Katrina's landfall, "for 
everything you've got," requesting 40,000 troops on Aug. 31. The president 
deployed 7,000 active-duty troops on Sept. 3. Thousands more National Guard 
troops were already on the ground.
 
 But White House officials were concerned enough about what Brown and military 
leaders have testified to Congress was a lack of "unified command" to bring 
state Guard troops and active-duty federal troops under a single commander. 
They ultimately declined to force the issue over Blanco's objection and worked 
with existing command authorities.
 
 But Blanco's reluctance stemmed from several factors. According to documents 
and aides, her team was not familiar with relevant laws and procedures, 
believed the change would have disrupted Guard law enforcement operations in 
New Orleans and mistrusted the Bush team, which they saw as preoccupied with 
its own public relations problems and blame shifting.
 
 Within 30 minutes of receiving Rove's message on Aug. 31, Ryder and Blanco 
Chief of Staff Andrew Kopplin were briefed by Col. Jeff Smith, a senior state 
emergency preparedness official, advising them of the National Response Plan 
and Incident Command System, basic components of the Department of Homeland 
Security's playbook that lay out the chain of emergency authority.
 
 By 2:20 p.m., Blanco called Bush, saying she needed additional resources but 
not federalization, according to Ryder's notes. Instead, she said an emerging 
federal/state partnership was jelling and asked Bush instead to commit to an 
arrival date for troops.
 
 "We don't know necessarily what 'unified' command, or what do these words 
mean," the Blanco aide said. "The governor thinks that by that time, the 
command structure that is coming together will work."
 
 The next day, on a Bush visit, administration officials ganged up on Blanco 
out of the presence of staff members and tried to bully her into changing her 
mind, they said. Blanco requested 24 hours.
 
 Ryder's notes report that on the night of Sept. 1, Army Lt. Gen. H. Steven 
Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau, advised Blanco, as an aide put it, 
"You don't want to do that. You lose control, and you don't get one more boot 
on the ground."
 
 Later, Blum told Ryder he came "under political duress" for his opinion and 
used military slang to describe an out-of-control situation, according to 
Ryder's notes.
 
 At about the same time, Blanco communications director Bob Mann spoke to an 
aide to Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (Nev.), who said Democrats were 
eagerly "mobilizing big-time to push back on criticism of the state."
 
 "Bush's numbers are low, they are getting pummeled by the media for their 
inept response to Katrina and are actively working to make us the scapegoats," 
Mann wrote to Ryder. Mann said that Mike McCurry, President Bill Clinton's 
press secretary, was predicting "a full-blown P.R. disaster-scandal" for Bush 
by the weekend and that Clinton FEMA chief James Lee Witt was offering to help 
Blanco. Witt was hired the next day.
 
 With all that in the background, by the night of Sept. 2, relations between 
the Bush and Blanco teams were tense. At 11:20 p.m., Blanco received a fax from 
the White House asking that she sign a letter requesting a federal takeover. 
Bush Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr. said the president planned a news 
conference to announce the changes the next morning.
 
 At 8:56 a.m., just before Bush stepped onto the White House lawn, Blanco 
called Card and aides faxed a rejection letter.
 
 The president did not mention the dispute with Blanco in his remarks, and 
deployed troops using existing command structures.
 
 Blanco aides remained convinced that the White House was trying to take credit 
for a situation in New Orleans that had by then improved. In hindsight, Blanco 
spokeswoman Denise Bottcher said, the lesson to states is that they must be 
ready to take care of themselves and "not rely on anyone else."
 
 But Vitter took another lesson, saying that in catastrophic incidents the 
legal and practical problems of calling in active-duty military must be 
straightened out "so people don't mess around for three days and then come to 
some understanding, which is what essentially happened here."
 
 
 Would you like to send this article to a friend? Go to 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/emailafriend?contentId=AR2005120400963&sent=no&referrer=emailarticle
 
 

Visit washingtonpost.com today for the latest in:

News - http://www.washingtonpost.com/?referrer=emailarticle

Politics - 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/politics/?referrer=emailarticle

Sports - 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/sports/?referrer=emailarticle

Entertainment - 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artsandliving/entertainmentguide/?referrer=emailarticle

Travel - 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artsandliving/travel/?referrer=emailarticle

Technology - 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/technology/?referrer=emailarticle




Want the latest news in your inbox? Check out washingtonpost.com's e-mail 
newsletters:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?node=admin/email&referrer=emailarticle

Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive
c/o E-mail Customer Care
1515 N. Courthouse Road
Arlington, VA 22201 

© 2004 The Washington Post Company

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to