http://www.democracynow.org/2012/9/12/500_days_author_kurt_eichenwalds_new
 
"500 Days": Author Kurt Eichenwald's New Account of How Bush Admin Ignored
Warnings Before 9/11
 
Democracy Now: September 12, 2012

NERMEEN SHAIKH: One day after the 11th anniversary of the September 11th
attacks, we begin the show by talking about newly disclosed documents that
provide further evidence the Bush administration ignored repeated warnings
about Osama bin Laden's plans to attack the United States. Writing in the
New York Times, journalist and author Kurt Eichenwald reports the Bush
administration dismissed a number of warnings of an al-Qaeda attack in the
United States beginning in the spring of 2001, instead focusing on Iraq and
Saddam Hussein. Eichenwald writes, quote, "the neoconservative leaders who
had recently assumed power at the Pentagon were warning the White House that
the C.I.A. had been fooled; according to [this] theory, Bin Laden was merely
pretending to be planning an attack to distract the administration from
Saddam Hussein, whom the neoconservatives saw as a greater threat,"
end-quote.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, to talk about the significance of these findings, we're
joined by the author himself, Kurt Eichenwald, an award-winning journalist,
contributing editor at Vanity Fair. His op-ed
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/11/opinion/the-bush-white-house-was-deaf-to-
9-11-warnings.html>  in the New York Times yesterday is called, "The
Deafness Before the Storm." His latest book, 500 Days: Secrets and Lies in
the Terror Wars, also author of the book The Informant.

We welcome you to Democracy Now!

KURT EICHENWALD: Thanks for having me.

AMY GOODMAN: So, Kurt, lay out the chronology for us. A lot of people know
August 6, 2001, right before the September 11th attacks. Explain then that
memo and then how you went back.

KURT EICHENWALD: Well, actually, the way to look at this, is sort of
backwards. In 2004, the 9/11 Commission hearings were coming down and
saying, "We want to see these presidential daily briefs." And the Bush
administration fought releasing them. They finally released the August 6th
one, which had the now-infamous headline, "Bin Laden determined to strike
U.S." And in her testimony, Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser
at the time, said this was merely a historical document. It was a review of,
you know, bin Laden and al-Qaeda and their intents and what they've done.
And actually, when you read it, that is what it was. And it was also a red
herring, because-I can't say that's why they released it, but it certainly
was convenient, because that document was the only one of the many that had
gone out over the previous few months that was historical. All the others
were: "There is an attack coming," "There's an attack coming that's going to
be devastating. There are going to be mass casualties," "There is a
terrorist cell in the United States that is plotting to strike," I mean,
with a great deal of table pounding. And there was-and I don't want to keep
picking on Secretary Rice, but she did-in that, she did testify, "If we had
been made aware that there was an attack coming, we would have done
something." Well, they were made aware. And, you know, in the end, what
these documents show is that the Bush administration was not at that point
prepared to consider al-Qaeda and these kind of non-state terrorist
organizations as being a significant threat.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: But who are the neoconservative leaders that you point to
who were more interested in Iraq than in listening to what's happening with
al-Qaeda, what was happening?

KURT EICHENWALD: Well, the lead fellow was Paul Wolfowitz, who was the
number two at the Pentagon. And, you know, since this piece came out, there
are members of the Bush administration-Ari Fleischer last night was saying,
"Oh, Paul was kicking this idea around, but people said no, and that was
it." Well, that's a lie, you know, because when you look at the presidential
daily briefs, the CIA actually had to go back and put together an entire
brief saying, "No, we're not being fooled. This is real. Let's have to deal"
- and it's going to the president of the United States. There's a debate
playing out to the president of the United States, in June of-June 29th of
2001, about whether these warnings are even worth listening to. So, you
know, it's a very serious, serious circumstance.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Who else is privy to the briefs, apart from the president?
Who else heard the briefings from the CIA?

KURT EICHENWALD: Well, it would have gone to the vice president. It would
have-there are two levels of briefings. There are the presidential daily
briefs, and then there's a second level down called the SEIB. And that gets
around a broader roof of people. Now, elements of what are in the
presidential daily briefs are also in the SEIB. And so I can say that some
elements of what I'm saying were wide-were among the whole national security
senior advisory group within the Bush administration.

AMY GOODMAN: This is a clip from April 8th, 2004, of the secretary of state
then, Condoleezza Rice, testifying in a hearing before the 9/11 Commission
about the attacks.

SECRETARY OF STATE CONDOLEEZZA RICE: There was no silver bullet that could
have prevented the 9/11 attacks. In hindsight, if anything might have helped
stop 9/11, it would have been better information about threats inside the
United States, something made very difficult by structural and legal
impediments that prevented the collection and sharing of information by our
law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

AMY GOODMAN: That was then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who actually
spoke at the Republican National Convention this summer. Kurt Eichenwald,
talk about what she said, and then talk about what you describe as the
obsession, not with Osama bin Laden, but with Saddam Hussein, and how they
felt this was sidetracking that targeting.

KURT EICHENWALD: OK. Well, that quote from Secretary Rice was something
that, actually, to me, sort of goes to the heart of what's so offensive
here, because, you know, we can say, "Well, here are the warnings." We
cannot say, "Well, if they had done x, y and z, 9/11 would have been
stopped." All we can say is they had this information.

But what we also know is, now that these documents are out, the CIA did a
spectacular job in developing the evidence and bringing it to the White
House, and the White House didn't listen. And so, what you had from almost
the get-go was the White House and members of the administration saying,
"Well, the intelligence wasn't good enough," and "Oh, if we had only had
something else." And they get to the point of saying, "Well, we weren't
given a place and a time," as if, you know, we're talking about an
invitation to a birthday party. I mean, the way intelligence works, you
don't say, "On Tuesday, March-you know, September 11th, there will be an
attack here." If you have that much information, it would simply be: "We've
arrested these people."

And the thing to bear in mind-I'll throw one more little fact out. The only
other time you had a series of threat alerts on the scale of what you had on
the summer of 2001 was in December of 1999. And it was: bin Laden is about
to strike. I mean, same thing, very, very similar. And the entire government
went on high alert. You had, you know, the Counterterrorism Center in their
terrace-Counterterrorist Center at the CIA was told, "Don't worry about your
budget." And they blew through their first nine months of the year budget in
15 days. And, you know, this was a full-court-press "we're going to stop
them." And they picked up terrorists around the world. You know, the one
people know about is the fellow who was planning to bomb Los Angeles
International Airport. But there were people picked up in Indonesia, there
were people picked up in Pakistan, who were going to attack American
interests there. And so, that was very, very successful. And it was
successful because the government has the ability and the capacity to go on
high alert. What the Bush administration did was say, "This is very
concerning. Let's have a meeting, you know, and let's put out notices to our
embassies and put out notices to our military: you know, be particularly
careful." But it's not the same thing.

AMY GOODMAN: And what about Saddam Hussein here, the significance of the
problem of it being Osama bin Laden for the neocons in the White House,
because they wanted to get Saddam Hussein?

KURT EICHENWALD: Well, there, you just sort of have to understand the shift
that took place in that period. The Republicans had been out of the White
House since '92. When they left, the nation state was the enemy-you know,
Iraq, Iran, North Korea, whoever you wanted to pick. And Saddam was the
center of the war. They leave. And during the time from '92 through 2000,
the detached threat, the non-nation-state threat, develops. Al-Qaeda
develops. We hadn't heard of al-Qaeda before that time. And so, when they
get-when the Republicans get back into office, they have spent the last year
on the outside, you know, rattling the "We have to take down Iraq, and
Clinton isn't taking down Iraq" saber. And they get back in, and the Clinton
people tell them, "The most important thing you're going to deal with over
the next few years is bin Laden." But they haven't adapted to that. This is
a new world. And it's, "No, Iraq is the most important." So they're still in
that old mindset. And unfortunately, facts started being shoved into that
mindset. If you had a piece of information come up, "Well, how does that
relate to Iraq? What did bin Laden say? Well, how does that relate to Iraq?
What's for breakfast today? Well, how does that relate to Iraq?"

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Kurt Eichenwald, I want to turn to your appearance on MSNBC
yesterday, where you were joined by Republican governor of New York, George
Pataki, who challenged the premise of your book and much of what you're
saying now, your book 500 Days: Secrets and Lies in the Terror Wars.

GEORGE PATAKI: I just think this is incredibly unfortunate, to be perfectly
honest, because, first of all, having been there on September 11th and for
weeks, months thereafter, President Bush provided inspired, effective
leadership. And September 11th, everything changed. And to look 11 years
later and say, "Aha! This was happening before September 11th in the
summer," and to go through and selectively take out quotes and say, "You
should have done that, you should of done that," I think it's incredibly
unfair and a disservice to history. And, by the way, you know, if you look
back, there are those who could have said, "President Roosevelt was at fault
for Pearl Harbor. Look at all the intelligence."

KURT EICHENWALD: And there are a lot of people who do say that.

GEORGE PATAKI: But the government didn't look back and say, "Let's blame the
president." It came together to fight an important war. We came together to
fight an important war. Wait, you could also look back, Kurt, and say that
you got intelligence we were going to be attacked. Of course, we had already
been attacked. The towers were blown up in '93. And I don't think it serves
us any point to say that then the Clinton administration treated it as a
criminal act as opposed to a terrorist act.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: That was George Pataki, who was governor of New York when
the 9/11 attacks happened. Your response?

KURT EICHENWALD: There has been, over the last 24 hours, a quite a
disturbing response from the Republicans, which is actually surprising,
because what I'm doing is I am writing a history. This is what happened. I
don't come in and say something horrific about, well, this is what should be
done, and they should have acted in this way, and they could have stopped
9/11. I never say any of that. I have said, this is what they did in '99,
and it worked, and they could have done that. But, you know, what is sort of
the conceit of what Governor Pataki is saying is, "Well, we don't want to
hear the history, because George Bush did a great job after 9/11, and
whatever happened beforehand is irrelevant." His comment about Roosevelt, I
mean, this would be as if we were saying, in 1952, we couldn't talk about
the history of what happened before the bombing, before the attack on Pearl
Harbor. Well, it's 11 years before. It's history. And unfortunately, so much
in this country now gets seen through this partisan prism, that when you're
dealing with "here's what happened," people don't want, people don't want to
hear it if it doesn't fit the talking points of the day.

AMY GOODMAN: The people who threatened to quit within the CIA, I mean, this
wasn't just a minor issue. You had a whole group of people who-we remember
when Cheney went repeatedly to the CIA, saying, "You're not giving me the
information I want to attack Saddam Hussein." The White House
counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke, September 12th, Bush comes up to
him and says, "I need information on Saddam Hussein." But the CIA folks who
were talking about it being Osama bin Laden when the rest were pushing them
to say Saddam Hussein?

KURT EICHENWALD: Well, I think what you're talking about is the July 9th
meeting at the CIA, where the counterterrorism people all got together. And
again, this goes to exactly what Governor Pataki was saying. It's like, "We
get these warnings all the time. And there was something in '93," you know,
as if there's no purpose for counterterrorism, because, oh, we all know
they're going to come at us all the time. Well, the people who put together
the intelligence, the people who were there, day in, day out, the people who
were the ones listening in on the phone calls, the people who are protecting
American citizens were sitting in a conference room saying, "We need to put
in for a mass transfer, because this is coming, and it's going to be really
bad." And-

AMY GOODMAN: And they're going to be blamed for it.

KURT EICHENWALD: And they're going to be blamed for it. And the senior
fellow in the room says - this is a scene in 500 Days - senior fellow in the
room says, "There's nobody more qualified than us to ride this thing down.
They're not going to be able to get people in here who are qualified, and we
are going to be the ones here holding the bag," and, you know, which is
exactly what happened. They're sitting there saying, not, "Oh, what's the
next thing we can do?" They're saying, "We've done everything we can do.
They won't act. It's going to happen. It's going to be bad. We're going to
be blamed." And the only thing they failed to do was to get the White House
off the dime, and that wasn't their responsibility.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: One of the most interesting accounts in your book is of
President Bush trying to persuade-then-President Bush trying to persuade
French President Jacques Chirac to support U.S. military action in Iraq. You
write that Bush said to Chirac, quote, "Jacques, you and I share a common
faith. You're Roman Catholic, I'm Methodist, but we are both Christians
committed to the teachings of the Bible. We share one common Lord." Bush
goes on to say, quote, "Gog and Magog are at work in the Middle East.
Biblical prophecies are being fulfilled. This confrontation is willed by
God, who wants to use this conflict to erase His people's enemies before a
new age begins," end-quote. Can you elaborate on that exchange?

KURT EICHENWALD: That was a very interesting day when I heard that. This was
a phone call-at that point, Chirac had been expressing a great deal of doubt
about the intelligence that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.
His doubts obviously were well placed. And Bush was trying to get a unified
effort behind getting a resolution from the U.N. and then for military
action. And Chirac was not being particularly cooperative, for the very
reason he didn't trust the intelligence. And so there's this phone call, and
Bush is giving many reasons why France should become part of a-why Chirac
should be joining in. And he's not having a lot of success. And suddenly you
shift into this religious conversation.

And Chirac's response to this was, he gets off the phone - and other people
had been in on the call - and he looks at his staff and says, "Does anyone
know what he was talking about?" And someone there reaches out to an expert
on the Bible in Switzerland, - because it's like, what is Gog and Magog? And
this person writes up a report, and it's surreal. He writes a report for the
French president explaining these biblical terms that were cited by the
president of the United States in this national security conversation. And
Gog and Magog are from two the books of the Bible, one the Book of Ezekiel
and one the Book of Revelation. And it is central elements in, the
apocalyptic-, the Armageddon concept. And so, Chirac's response when he
reads this is, "I'm dealing with a fanatic, and I'm not going to make
national security decisions for France based on  the president's
interpretation of the Bible."

AMY GOODMAN: Kurt Eichenwald, we have to end this conversation, but the book
is fascinating, 500 Days. We'd like to ask you to stay after the show so we
can do part two and then broadcast it on Democracy Now! and put it online at
democracynow.org. Kurt Eichenwald is a contributing writer at Vanity Fair.
His latest book, 500 Days: Secrets and Lies in the Terror Wars. This is
Democracy Now! We'll be back in a minute.

  _____  

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