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Why wont Condoleezza Rice give open, sworn testimony
on 9/11?
By Bill Van Auken
30 March 2004
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President Bushs National Security Advisor Condoleezza
Rice appeared on the CBS News program 60 Minutes Sunday
night to reiterate the US administrations rejection of growing
demands that she testify publicly and under oath before the national
commission formed to investigate the September 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks.
Rices interview with CBS correspondent Ed Bradley had
been billed by the administration as the culmination of a concerted
attempt by the White House and its political defenders to discredit
charges by the former Bush counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke.
A 30-year veteran of the US national security establishment,
Clarke has testified that the administration failed to act in
the face of mounting evidence of a threat of an Al Qaeda terrorist
attack, and then seized upon September 11 as the pretext for launching
a long-sought invasion of Iraq.
The Rice interview provided nothing in the way of new information,
and consisted largely of her insistence that the administration
could have done nothing differently prior to September 11. She
further claimed that the invasion and occupation of Iraq were
justified as part of a broad war on terrorism, despite
the absence of any evidence that the Iraqi regime either had links
to Islamist terrorism or possessed weapons of mass destruction.
The only issue of substance raised by Rice in the interview
was her confirmation of Clarkes charge that, the day after
the September 11 attacks, Bush demanded that he (Clarke) search
for a link between the terrorists and the Saddam Hussein regime
in Iraq. The White House had steadfastly denied over the previous
week that there was any evidence that such an encounter even took
place.
In an interview the previous Sunday on the same news program,
Clarke recalled responding to Bush: Mr. President, weve
done this before...weve been looking at this. We looked
at it with an open mind, theres no connection. Bush,
he said, responded by telling him: Iraq, Saddam, find out
if theres a connection. He described Bushs approach
as very intimidating and interpreted it as a clear
order to come back with the desired response implicating the Iraqi
regime.
Rices overall presentation was entirely unconvincing,
serving only to fuel the perception that the administration is
engaged in a cover-up over the September 11 events.
Republicans split on Rice testimony
Meanwhile, even Republican allies of the administration have
reacted with dismay over the refusal to have Rice give open and
sworn testimony.
Thomas Kean, the former Republican governor of New Jersey who
chairs the 9/11 commission, declared that this administration
shot itself in the foot by not letting her testify in public.
Kean went on to reject the administrations claim that
the refusal was justified on the grounds of executive privilege.
We recognize there are arguments having to do with separation
of powers, Kean said on Fox News Sunday. We
think in a tragedy of this magnitude that those kind of legal
arguments are probably overridden.
Appearing on ABCs This Week, another Republican
commissioner, John Lehman, said that the administrations
rejection of the demand that Rice publicly testify is creating
the impression for honest Americans all over the country and people
all over the world that the White House has something to hide,
that Condi Rice has something to hide. He went on to claim
that given there are no smoking guns demonstrating
wrongdoing by the administration, the refusal was absurd
and a political blunder of the first order.
Even Richard Perle, an influential advisor of the administration
and one of the chief architects of the war on Iraq, told CNN that
Rice would be wise to testify. As for the separation-of-powers
argument, Perle declared. Sometimes you have to set those
aside because the circumstances require it.
Meanwhile, the Family Steering Committee, representing relatives
of those killed in the September 11 attacks, issued a public statement
demanding that Rice testify under oath in a public hearing
immediately. The statement continued: We believe that
testifying before the Commission in a public forum is Ms. Rices
moral obligation given her responsibility as National Security
Advisor to protect our nation. The death of nearly 3,000 innocent
people warrants such a moral precedent.
In justifying her failure to appear before the commission either
in public or under oath, Rice began the CBS interview with a crude
lie about the nature of the investigation.
This commission is rightly not concentrating on what
happened on the day of September 11, she declared. So,
this is not a matter of what happened on that day, as extraordinary
as it isas it was. This is a matter of policy. And we have
yet to find an example of a national security advisor, sitting
national security advisor, who hasbeen willing to testify
on matters of policy.
In reality, the commission, which was accepted by Bush in November
2002 after persistent attempts by the administration to block
the formation of such a panel, is charged under law with investigating
the facts and causes relating to the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, and making a full and complete
accounting of the circumstances surrounding the attacks, and the
extent of the United States preparedness for, and immediate
response to, the attacks.
Hypocrisy over constitutional principle
There is ample precedent for Rice to testify. According to
a study produced in April 2002 by the Congressional Research Service,
Rices predecessors as National Security AdvisorZbigniew
Brzezinski in 1980 under the Carter administration, and Sandy
Berger in 1997 under Clintongave public testimony in legislative
forums.
Moreover, the level of hypocrisy in the Republican administrations
stand on executive privilege is evident when juxtaposed with the
hue and cry against the Clinton administration in 1998 over its
assertion of the same principle in an attempt to shield leading
White House aides from interrogation by Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr in the Monica Lewinsky affair.
Clintons claims of privilege were denied by the courts,
on the grounds that the Office of Independent Counsel had the
legal authority to pursue an investigation into Clintons
personal life in a case which involved lying about a private sexual
relationship. Yet Bush and Rice now assert privilege over what
is an undeniably public matter: their actions before, during and
after a terrorist attack that claimed 3,000 lives and was turned
into the pretext for an illegal war of aggression.
The real reasons for the Bush administrations reluctance
to submit Rice for sworn public testimony have nothing to do with
the administrations and Rices invocation of constitutional
principle.
Rices post represents the nexus between the White House
and the US national security establishment. She has been indicted
by Clarke as principally responsible for the Bush administrations
inaction prior to September 11, 2001 in the face of growing indications
of a threatened terrorist attack. She was also at the center of
the Bush administrations manipulation of the 9/11 tragedy
to prepare the invasion of Iraq.
Appearing on CNNs Larry King Live last week,
Clarke declared: If Condi Rice had been doing her job ...
if she had a hands-on attitude to being national security adviser,
critical information would have been gleaned from the CIA and
FBI regarding the presence of known Al Qaeda operatives in the
US and their preparations for using airplanes as guided missiles
against civilian targets.
In his testimony before the 9/11 panel, Clarke pointed in particular
to the case of Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid al-MidharAl Qaeda
operatives and eventual hijackers whom the CIA had monitored from
the time they attended a meeting of the Islamist organization
in Malaysia until they entered the US, where they found accommodation
with an undercover FBI informant in San Diego. One was even listed
under his real name in the telephone book. Had information about
these two been disseminated, Clarke stated, the attacks of September
11 might have been foiled.
Rice responded by calling Clarkes accusations scurrilous.
While refusing to testify before the 9/11 panel, she appeared
last week on virtually every network morning news show and several
other programs as well to respond to the testimony of the former
counter-terrorism chief. Neither she nor anyone else in the administration,
however, has provided a credible explanation of why Clarke, a
veteran counter-terrorism official and a registered Republican,
would slander her and the Bush White House over these issues.
What is clear from the record is that Rice has placed herself
at the center of a deliberate cover-up of what the administration
knew and did in the period leading up to the September 11 attacks.
In May 2002, amid mounting charges that the administration
had ignored evidence that a plot involving the hijacking of airplanes
was unfolding, Rice declared: I dont think anybody
could have predicted that they would try to use ... a hijacked
airplane as a missile.
Multiple warnings on aircraft attacks
In reality, Bush had received a memorandum barely a month before
the attacks, on August 6, 2001, warning that Al Qaeda was capable
of launching a major attack within the US and that such a strike
could involve the hijacking of US aircraft. Just a month earlier,
the administration had also been warned that terrorists had considered
the use of civilian airplanes as missiles.
Two years before the terrorist attacks, a document prepared
for the National Intelligence Council, a body that advises the
White House on potential threats, specifically warned that Al
Qaeda could hijack airplanes and fly them into buildings in retaliation
for US air strikes against targets in Afghanistan.
Suicide bomber(s) belonging to Al Qaedas Martyrdom
Battalion could crash-land an aircraft packed with high explosives
(C-4 and semtex) into the Pentagon, the headquarters of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), or the White House, the September
1999 report stated. The year before, US intelligence agencies
learned of a plot to fly an explosive-laden aircraft into the
World Trade Center towers.
In her own private testimony before the 9/11 commission (which
was classified and not transcribed) Rice had asked to revise the
statement about the impossibility of imagining the September 11
attacks, saying she misspoke, according to commission
member and former Watergate prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste. She
acknowledged that Clarke had himself warned of the possibility
of such an attack.
That Rice has continued to misspeak throughout
her attempts over the past week to refute Clarkes charges,
was spelled out in an article by Walter Pincus and Dana Milbank
of the Washington Post published last Friday.
Rices rebuttals of Clarkes broadside against
Bush, which she delivered in a flurry of media interviews and
statements rather than in testimony, contradicted other administration
officials and her own previous statements, wrote Pincus
and Milbank.
In an opinion piece she wrote for the Washington Post,
for example, she dismissed Clarkes proposals as a laundry
list of failed policies of the Clinton administration and
claimed that he had no plan relating to Al Qaeda. In an interview
on NBC two days later, however, she claimed that the administration
had accepted Clarkes proposals and acted upon them very
quickly.
Alleged contradictions between charges made by Clarke in his
testimony before the 9/11 panel and earlier statements he had
made when he was working as a White House advisor have led to
vitriolic suggestions by leading Republicans that he be charged
with perjury. Rice, however, faces no such threat, as none of
her conflicting statements have been made under oath.
Perhaps the greatest deception carried out by Rice is her denial
that the immediate and overriding response of the Bush administration
to September 11 was the desire to exploit the catastrophe in order
to stampede the American people into a war against Iraq.
In her interview with 60 Minutes, Rice claimed:
It was Afghanistan that became the focus of the American
response. And Iraq was put aside with the exception of worrying
about whether Iraq might try and take advantage of us in some
way.
Yet according to multiple sources from within the administration,
Iraq was placed directly on the front burner. In a January 12,
2003 article, the Washington Post reported that six
days after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
President Bush signed a 2 ½ page document marked TOP
SECRET that ostensibly dealt with Afghanistan but
directed the Pentagon to begin planning military options
for an invasion of Iraq. This followed a September 2002
CBS News report that within hours of the 9/11 attacks, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up with
plans for striking Iraq.
Paul ONeill, the former Bush administration treasury
secretary, provided similar testimony in the book by Ron Suskind,
The Price of Loyalty. He described a meeting of Bushs
war cabinet at Camp David the weekend after the terrorist
attack in which the discussion, led by Rice, quickly turned to
Iraq.
It was like changing the subjectIraq is not where
bin Laden is and not where theres trouble, said ONeill.
I was mystified. Its like a bookbinder accidentally
dropping a chapter from one book into the middle of another one.
The chapter is coherent in its own way, but it doesnt seem
to fit in this book.
Perhaps the most chilling moment in the 60 Minutes
interview with Rice came when Bradley asked her whether she believed
it was appropriate for her to apologize to the families of the
9/11 victims for the administrations failure to halt the
attacks.
Rice dodged the question, declaring: You couldnt
be human and not feel the horror of that day. We do need to stay
focused on what happened to us that day. And the best thing that
we can do for the memory of the victims, the best thing that we
can do for the future of this country, is to focus on those who
did this to us.
Rice: 9/11 an enormous opportunity
Rices real reaction to September 11 was spelled out in
a speech she delivered, some seven months after the attacks, at
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. There
she described the horrific event as an enormous opportunity.
An earthquake of the magnitude of 9/11 can shift the
tectonic plates of international politics, she declared.
She described the emerging situation as a period akin to
1945 to 1947, when American leadership expanded the number of
free and democratic statesJapan and Germany among the great
powersto create a new balance of power...
The comparison to the US occupation and restructuring of two
countries defeated in war was no accident. By this time, plans
for the US invasion and occupation of Iraq were well advanced,
and the administration was manufacturing the case for such a war,
with Rice playing a leading role in advancing lies about weapons
of mass destruction and phony links between the Iraqi regime
and September 11.
Rices performance as national security advisor and her
celebration of September 11 as an opportunity raise
serious questions as to whether the Bush administration or elements
within it deliberately engineered a stand-down of the US counter-terrorism
efforts with the idea that taking a terrorist attack
would create a desired pretext for launching wars aimed at securing
US hegemony over the strategically vital oil reserves of the Middle
East and Central Asia.
While the 9/11 panel is not about to pursue such a line of
investigation, the extreme reluctance of the Bush administration
to allow Rice to give public, sworn testimony is a clear indication
that there are questions it cannot afford to have asked or answered.
See Also:
The Bush administration and September
11: the implications of Richard Clarkes revelations
[29 March 2004]
The modus operandi of a cover-up
9/11 hearings ignore political, historical issues behind terrorist
attacks
[25 March 2004]
Former terrorism aide charges Bush manufactured
case for Iraq war
[23 March 2004]
Was the US government
alerted to September 11 attack?
A four-part series
[16 January 2002]
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