"The question is whether they're going to be implemented before the
next attack or after it.""


http://usatoday.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=USATODAY.com+-+Progress+too+slow%2C+say+9%2F11+panelists&expire=&urlID=14039342&fb=Y&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.usatoday.com%2Fnews%2Fwashington%2F2005-04-26-sept-11-progress_x.htm&partnerID=1660

Progress too slow, say 9/11 panelists

By Mimi Hall, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON â€" Congress and President Bush aren't moving fast enough to
protect the nation from terrorist attacks, the leaders of the
commission that investigated 9/11 said Tuesday.

Former commission chairman Thomas Kean and co-chairman Lee Hamilton
said they are planning a half-dozen hearings in June and July to
assess the government's progress in responding to the commission's
567-page report, released last summer. Commission members will issue a
"report card" in July.

Kean and Hamilton told reporters and editors at USA TODAY that
important recommendations from the report haven't been addressed.
Among them are improved efforts to spread American values in the
Muslim world and appointing a civil liberties board to monitor the
nation's intelligence and security policies.

"We know many of these recommendations are going to be implemented,"
Kean said. "The question is whether they're going to be implemented
before the next attack or after it."

Kean, a Republican former governor of New Jersey, said he is "very,
very happy" that Congress and the White House created a national
intelligence director post, and he praised the confirmation of former
United Nations ambassador John Negroponte to the job.

But he and Hamilton, a Democratic former congressman from Indiana,
said Washington has fallen far short in other important areas. Among them:

•Reorganizing Congress to better oversee intelligence and homeland
security agencies. Intelligence committees still have no real power
because they don't control those agencies' budgets.

•Promoting American values in the Muslim world. Bush recently
appointed his longtime adviser Karen Hughes to lead the effort at the
State Department, but she's not starting work until the fall.

Kean said the United States is perceived in the Middle East as a
military enforcer. "We cannot continue to be the man in the tank â€" and
that's our image in the Arab world," Kean said.

•Making more radio frequencies available so that police, firefighters
and other responders will be able to talk to each other during
emergencies. Efforts to do so have been bottled up in Congress.

•Appointing a civil liberties board. White House spokeswoman Erin
Healy said officials are "actively working to fill the positions" on
the board.

For this summer's hearings, Kean and Hamilton won't have the authority
to subpoena witnesses, as they did during their 20-month
investigation. But they hope to generate enough publicity to pressure
members of Congress and the White House to act.





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