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Intelligence lessons


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#1 Lazarus Long

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Posted 18 March 2003 - 07:59 PM


http://edition.cnn.c...tory/index.html
They Had A Plan
Long before 9/11, the White House debated taking the fight to al-Qaeda
August 5, 2002 Posted: 11:01 PM EDT (0301 GMT)

Sometimes history is made by the force of arms on battlefields, sometimes by the fall of an exhausted empire. But often when historians set about figuring why a nation took one course rather than another, they are most interested in who said what to whom at a meeting far from the public eye whose true significance may have been missed even by those who took part in it.

One such meeting took place in the White House situation room during the first week of January 2001. The session was part of a program designed by Bill Clinton's National Security Adviser, Sandy Berger, who wanted the transition between the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations to run as smoothly as possible. With some bitterness, Berger remembered how little he and his colleagues had been helped by the first Bush Administration in 1992-93. Eager to avoid a repeat of that experience, he had set up a series of 10 briefings by his team for his successor, Condoleezza Rice, and her deputy, Stephen Hadley.

Berger attended only one of the briefings--the session that dealt with the threat posed to the U.S. by international terrorism, and especially by al-Qaeda. "I'm coming to this briefing," he says he told Rice, "to underscore how important I think this subject is." Later, alone in his office with Rice, Berger says he told her, "I believe that the Bush Administration will spend more time on terrorism generally, and on al-Qaeda specifically, than any other subject."

The terrorism briefing was delivered by Richard Clarke, a career bureaucrat who had served in the first Bush Administration and risen during the Clinton years to become the White House's point man on terrorism. As chair of the interagency Counter-Terrorism Security Group (CSG), Clarke was known as a bit of an obsessive--just the sort of person you want in a job of that kind. Since the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen on Oct. 12, 2000--an attack that left 17 Americans dead--he had been working on an aggressive plan to take the fight to al-Qaeda. The result was a strategy paper that he had presented to Berger and the other national security "principals" on Dec. 20. But Berger and the principals decided to shelve the plan and let the next Administration take it up. With less than a month left in office, they did not think it appropriate to launch a major initiative against Osama bin Laden. "We would be handing [the Bush Administration] a war when they took office on Jan. 20," says a former senior Clinton aide. "That wasn't going to happen." Now it was up to Rice's team to consider what Clarke had put together.

Berger had left the room by the time Clarke, using a Powerpoint presentation, outlined his thinking to Rice. A senior Bush Administration official denies being handed a formal plan to take the offensive against al-Qaeda, and says Clarke's materials merely dealt with whether the new Administration should take "a more active approach" to the terrorist group. (Rice declined to comment, but through a spokeswoman said she recalled no briefing at which Berger was present.) Other senior officials from both the Clinton and Bush administrations, however, say that Clarke had a set of proposals to "roll back" al-Qaeda. In fact, the heading on Slide 14 of the Powerpoint presentation reads, "Response to al Qaeda: Roll back." Clarke's proposals called for the "breakup" of al-Qaeda cells and the arrest of their personnel. The financial support for its terrorist activities would be systematically attacked, its assets frozen, its funding from fake charities stopped. Nations where al-Qaeda was causing trouble--Uzbekistan, the Philippines, Yemen--would be given aid to fight the terrorists. Most important, Clarke wanted to see a dramatic increase in covert action in Afghanistan to "eliminate the sanctuary" where al-Qaeda had its terrorist training camps and bin Laden was being protected by the radical Islamic Taliban regime. The Taliban had come to power in 1996, bringing a sort of order to a nation that had been riven by bloody feuds between ethnic warlords since the Soviets had pulled out. Clarke supported a substantial increase in American support for the Northern Alliance, the last remaining resistance to the Taliban. That way, terrorists graduating from the training camps would have been forced to stay in Afghanistan, fighting (and dying) for the Taliban on the front lines. At the same time, the U.S. military would start planning for air strikes on the camps and for the introduction of special-operations forces into Afghanistan. The plan was estimated to cost "several hundreds of millions of dollars." In the words of a senior Bush Administration official, the proposals amounted to "everything we've done since 9/11."

And that's the point. The proposals Clarke developed in the winter of 2000-01 were not given another hearing by top decision makers until late April, and then spent another four months making their laborious way through the bureaucracy before they were readied for approval by President Bush. It is quite true that nobody predicted Sept. 11--that nobody guessed in advance how and when the attacks would come. But other things are true too. By last summer, many of those in the know--the spooks, the buttoned-down bureaucrats, the law-enforcement professionals in a dozen countries--were almost frantic with worry that a major terrorist attack against American interests was imminent. It wasn't averted because 2001 saw a systematic collapse in the ability of Washington's national-security apparatus to handle the terrorist threat.

The winter proposals became a victim of the transition process, turf wars and time spent on the pet policies of new top officials. The Bush Administration chose to institute its own "policy review process" on the terrorist threat. Clarke told TIME that the review moved "as fast as could be expected." And Administration officials insist that by the time the review was endorsed by the Bush principals on Sept. 4, it was more aggressive than anything contemplated the previous winter. The final plan, they say, was designed not to "roll back" al-Qaeda but to "eliminate" it. But that delay came at a cost. The Northern Alliance was desperate for help but got little of it. And in a bureaucratic squabble that would be farfetched on The West Wing, nobody in Washington could decide whether a Predator drone--an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and the best possible source of real intelligence on what was happening in the terror camps--should be sent to fly over Afghanistan. So the Predator sat idle from October 2000 until after Sept. 11. No single person was responsible for all this. But "Washington"--that organic compound of officials and politicians, in uniform and out, with faces both familiar and unknown--failed horribly.

Could al-Qaeda's plot have been foiled if the U.S. had taken the fight to the terrorists in January 2001? Perhaps not. The thrust of the winter plan was to attack al-Qaeda outside the U.S. Yet by the beginning of that year, Mohamed Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi, two Arabs who had been leaders of a terrorist cell in Hamburg, Germany, were already living in Florida, honing their skills in flight schools. Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid Almihdhar had been doing the same in Southern California. The hijackers maintained tight security, generally avoided cell phones, rented apartments under false names and used cash--not wire transfers--wherever possible. If every plan to attack al-Qaeda had been executed, and every lead explored, Atta's team might still never have been caught.

But there's another possibility. An aggressive campaign to degrade the terrorist network worldwide--to shut down the conveyor belt of recruits coming out of the Afghan camps, to attack the financial and logistical support on which the hijackers depended--just might have rendered it incapable of carrying out the Sept. 11 attacks. Perhaps some of those who had to approve the operation might have been killed, or the money trail to Florida disrupted. We will never know, because we never tried. This is the secret history of that failure.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS Berger was determined that when he left office, Rice should have a full understanding of the terrorist threat. In a sense, this was an admission of failure. For the Clinton years had been marked by a drumbeat of terror attacks against American targets, and they didn't seem to be stopping.

In 1993 the World Trade Center had been bombed for the first time; in 1996 19 American servicemen had been killed when the Khobar Towers, in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, was bombed; two years later, American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were attacked. As the millennium celebrations at the end of 1999 approached, the CIA warned that it expected five to 15 attacks against American targets over the New Year's weekend. But three times, the U.S. got lucky. The Jordanians broke up an al-Qaeda cell in Amman; Ahmed Ressam, an Algerian based in Montreal, panicked when stopped at a border crossing from Canada while carrying explosives intended for Los Angeles International Airport; and on Jan. 3, 2000, an al-Qaeda attack on the U.S.S. The Sullivans in Yemen foundered after terrorists overloaded their small boat.

From the start of the Clinton Administration, the job of thwarting terror had fallen to Clarke. A bureaucratic survivor who now leads the Bush Administration's office on cyberterrorism, he has served four Presidents from both parties--staff members joke that the framed photos in his office have two sides, one for a Republican President to admire, the other for a Democrat. Aggressive and legendarily abrasive, Clarke was desperate to persuade skeptics to take the terror threat as seriously as he did. "Clarke is unbelievably determined, high-energy, focused and imaginative," says a senior Clinton Administration official. "But he's totally insensitive to rolling over others who are in his way." By the end of 2000, Clarke didn't need to roll over his boss; Berger was just as sure of the danger.

The two men had an ally in George Tenet, who had been appointed Director of Central Intelligence in 1997. "He wasn't sleeping on the job on this," says a senior Clinton aide of Tenet, "whatever inherent problems there were in the agency." Those problems were immense. Although the CIA claims it had penetrated al-Qaeda, Republican Congressman Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, chairman of the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland Security, doubts that it ever got anywhere near the top of the organization. "The CIA," he says, "were not able to recruit human assets to penetrate al-Qaeda and the al-Qaeda leadership." Nobody pretends that such an exercise would have been easy. Says a counterterrorism official: "Where are you going to find a person loyal to the U.S. who's willing to eat dung beetles and sleep on the ground in a cave for two or three years? You don't find people willing to do that who also speak fluent Pashtu or Arabic."

In the absence of men sleeping with the beetles, the CIA had to depend on less reliable allies. The agency attempted to recruit tribal leaders in Afghanistan who might be persuaded to take on bin Laden; contingency plans had been made for the CIA to fly one of its planes to a desert landing strip in Afghanistan if he was ever captured. (Clinton had signed presidential "findings" that were ambiguous on the question of whether bin Laden could be killed in such an attack.) But the tribal groups' loyalty was always in doubt. Despite the occasional abortive raid, they never seemed to get close to bin Laden. That meant that the Clinton team had to fall back on a second strategy: taking out bin Laden by cruise missile, which had been tried after the embassy bombings in 1998. For all of 2000, sources tell TIME, Clinton ordered two U.S. Navy submarines to stay on station in the northern Arabian Sea, ready to attack if bin Laden's coordinates could be determined.

But the plan was twice flawed. First, the missiles could be used only if bin Laden's whereabouts were known, and the CIA never definitively delivered that information. By early 2000, Clinton was becoming infuriated by the lack of intelligence on bin Laden's movements. "We've got to do better than this," he scribbled on one memo. "This is unsatisfactory." Second, even if a target could ever be found, the missiles might take too long to hit it. The Pentagon thought it could dump a Tomahawk missile on bin Laden's camp within six hours of a decision to attack, but the experts in the White House thought that was impossibly long. Any missiles fired at Afghanistan would have to fly over Pakistan, and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) was close to the Taliban. White House aides were sure bin Laden would be tipped off as soon as the Pakistanis detected the missiles.

Berger and Clarke wanted something more robust. On Nov. 7, Berger met with William Cohen, then Secretary of Defense, in the Pentagon. The time had come, said Berger, for the Pentagon to rethink its approach to operations against bin Laden. "We've been hit many times, and we'll be hit again," Berger said. "Yet we have no option beyond cruise missiles." He wanted "boots on the ground"--U.S. special-ops forces deployed inside Afghanistan on a search-and-destroy mission targeting bin Laden. Cohen said he would look at the idea, but he and General Hugh Shelton, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were dead set against it. They feared a repeat of Desert One, the 1980 fiasco in which special-ops commandos crashed in Iran during an abortive mission to rescue American hostages.

It wasn't just Pentagon nerves that got in the way of a more aggressive counterterrorism policy. So did politics. After the U.S.S. Cole was bombed, the secretive Joint Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, N.C., drew up plans to have Delta Force members swoop into Afghanistan and grab bin Laden. But the warriors were never given the go-ahead; the Clinton Administration did not order an American retaliation for the attack. "We didn't do diddly," gripes a counterterrorism official. "We didn't even blow up a baby-milk factory." In fact, despite strong suspicion that bin Laden was behind the attack in Yemen, the CIA and FBI had not officially concluded that he was, and would be unable to do so before Clinton left office. That made it politically impossible for Clinton to strike--especially given the upcoming election and his own lack of credibility on national security. "If we had done anything, say, two weeks before the election," says a former senior Clinton aide, "we'd be accused of helping Al Gore."

For Clarke, the bombing of the Cole was final proof that the old policy hadn't worked. It was time for something more aggressive--a plan to make war against al-Qaeda. One element was vital. The Taliban's control of Afghanistan was not yet complete; in the northeast of the country, Northern Alliance forces led by Ahmed Shah Massoud, a legendary guerrilla leader who had fought against the Soviet invaders of Afghanistan in the 1980s, were still resisting Taliban rule. Clarke argued that Massoud should be given the resources to develop a viable fighting force. That way, terrorists leaving al-Qaeda's training camps in Afghanistan would have been forced to join the Taliban forces fighting in the north. "You keep them on the front lines in Afghanistan," says a counterterrorism official. "Hopefully you're killing them in the process, and they're not leaving Afghanistan to plot terrorist operations. That was the general approach." But the approach meant that Americans had to engage directly in the snake pit of Afghan politics.

THE LAST MAN STANDING In the spring of 2001, Afghanistan was as rough a place as it ever is. Four sets of forces battled for position. Most of the country was under the authority of the Taliban, but it was not a homogeneous group. Some of its leaders, like Mullah Mohammed Omar, the self-styled emir of Afghanistan, were dyed-in-the-wool Islamic radicals; others were fierce Afghan nationalists. The Taliban's principal support had come from Pakistan--another interested party, which wanted a reasonably peaceful border to its west--and in particular from the hard men of the ISI. But Pakistan's policy was not all of a piece either. Since General Pervez Musharraf had taken power in a 1999 coup, some Pakistani officials, desperate to curry favor with the U.S.--which had cut off aid to Pakistan after it tested a nuclear device in 1998--had seen the wisdom of distancing themselves from the Taliban, or at the least attempting to moderate its more radical behavior.

The third element was the Northern Alliance, a resistance movement whose stronghold was in northeast Afghanistan. Most of the Alliance's forces and leaders were, like Massoud, ethnic Tajiks--a minority in Afghanistan. Massoud controlled less than 10% of the country and had been beaten back by the Taliban in 2000. Nonetheless, by dint of his personality and reputation, Massoud was "the only military threat to the Taliban," says Francesc Vendrell, who was then the special representative in Afghanistan of the U.N. Secretary-General.

And then there was al-Qaeda. The group had been born in Afghanistan when Islamic radicals began flocking there in 1979, after the Soviets invaded. Bin Laden and his closest associates had returned in 1996, when they were expelled from Sudan. Al-Qaeda's terrorist training camps were in Afghanistan, and bin Laden's forces and money were vital to sustaining the Taliban's offensives against Massoud.

By last spring, the uneasy equilibrium among the four forces was beginning to break down. "Moderates" in the Taliban--those who tried to keep lines open to intermediaries in the U.N. and the U.S.--were losing ground. In 2000, Mullah Mohammed Rabbani, thought to be the second most powerful member of the Taliban, had reached out clandestinely to Massoud. "He understood that our country had been sold out to al-Qaeda and Pakistan," says Ahmad Jamsheed, Massoud's secretary. But in April 2001, Rabbani died of liver cancer. By that month, says the U.N.'s Vendrell, "it was al-Qaeda that was running the Taliban, not vice versa."

A few weeks before Rabbani's death, Musharraf's government had started to come to the same conclusion: the Pakistanis were no longer able to moderate Taliban behavior. To worldwide condemnation, the Taliban had announced its intention to blow up the 1,700-year-old stone statues of the Buddha in the Bamiyan Valley. Musharraf dispatched his right-hand man, Interior Minister Moinuddin Haider, to plead with Mullah Omar for the Buddhas to be saved. The Taliban's Foreign Minister and its ambassador to Pakistan, says a Pakistani official close to the talks, were in favor of saving the Buddhas. But Mullah Omar, says a member of the Pakistani delegation, listened to what Haider had to say and replied, "If on Judgment Day I stand before Allah, I'll see those two statues floating before me, and I know that Allah will ask me why, when I had the power, I did not destroy them." A few days later, the Buddhas were blown up.

By summer, Pakistan had a deeper grievance. The country had suffered a wave of sectarian assassinations, with gangs throwing grenades into mosques and murdering clerics. The authorities in Islamabad knew that the murderers had fled to Afghanistan (one of them was openly running a store in Kabul) and sent a delegation to ask for their return. "We gave them lists of names, photos and the locations of training camps where these fellows could be found," says Brigadier Javid Iqbal Cheema, director of Pakistan's National Crisis Management Cell, "but not a single individual was ever handed over to us." The Pakistanis were furious.

As the snows cleared for the annual spring military campaign, a joint offensive against Massoud by the Taliban and al-Qaeda seemed likely. But the influence of al-Qaeda on the Taliban was proving deeply unpopular among ordinary Afghans, especially in the urban centers. "I thought at most 20% of the population supported the Taliban by early summer," says Vendrell. And bin Laden's power made Massoud's plea for outside assistance more urgent. "We told the Americans--we told everyone--that al-Qaeda was set upon a transnational program," says Abdullah Abdullah, once a close aide to Massoud and now the Afghan Foreign Minister. In April, Massoud addressed the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, seeking support for the Northern Alliance. "If President Bush doesn't help us," he told a reporter, "these terrorists will damage the U.S. and Europe very soon."

But Massoud never got the help that he needed--or that Clarke's plan had deemed necessary. Most of the time, Northern Alliance delegates to Washington had to be satisfied with meeting low-level bureaucrats. The Alliance craved recognition by the U.S. as a "legitimate resistance movement" but never got it, though on a visit in July, Abdullah did finally get to meet some top National Security Council (NSC) and State Department officials for the first time. The best the Americans seemed prepared to do was turn a blind eye to the trickle of aid from Iran, Russia and India. Vendrell remembers much talk that spring of increased support from the Americans. But in truth Massoud's best help came from Iran, which persuaded all supporters of the Northern Alliance to channel their aid through Massoud alone.

Only once did something happen that might have given Massoud hope that the U.S. would help. In late June, he was joined in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, by Abdul Haq, a leading Pashtun, based in Dubai, who was opposed to the Taliban. Haq was accompanied by someone Massoud knew well: Peter Tomsen, a retired ambassador who from 1989 to '92 had been the U.S. State Department's special envoy to the Afghan resistance. Also present was James Ritchie, a successful Chicago options trader who had spent part of his childhood in Afghanistan and was helping bankroll the groups opposed to the Taliban. (Haq was captured and executed by the Taliban last October while on a quixotic mission to Afghanistan.) Tomsen insists that the June 2001 trip was a private one, though he had told State Department officials of it in advance. Their message, he says, was limited to a noncommittal "good luck and be careful."

The purpose of the meeting, according to Tomsen, was to see if Massoud and Haq could forge a joint strategy against the Taliban. "The idea," says Sayeed Hussain Anwari, now the Afghan Minister of Agriculture, who was present at the meeting, "was to bring Abdul Haq inside the country to begin an armed struggle in the southeast." Still hoping for direct assistance from Washington, Massoud gave Tomsen all the intelligence he had on al-Qaeda and asked Tomsen to take it back to Washington. But when he briefed State Department officials after his trip, their reaction was muted. The American position was clear. If anything was to be done to change the realities in Afghanistan, it would have to be done not by the U.S. but by Pakistan. Massoud was on his own.

CLARKE: CRYING WOLF In Washington, Dick Clarke didn't seem to have a lot of friends either. His proposals were still grinding away. No other great power handles the transition from one government to another in so shambolic a way as the U.S.--new appointments take months to be confirmed by the Senate; incoming Administrations tinker with even the most sensible of existing policies. The fight against terrorism was one of the casualties of the transition, as Washington spent eight months going over and over a document whose outline had long been clear. "If we hadn't had a transition," says a senior Clinton Administration official, "probably in late October or early November 2000, we would have had [the plan to go on the offensive] as a presidential directive."

As the new Administration took office, Rice kept Clarke in his job as counterterrorism czar. In early February, he repeated to Vice President Dick Cheney the briefing he had given to Rice and Hadley. There are differing opinions on how seriously the Bush team took Clarke's warnings. Some members of the outgoing Administration got the sense that the Bush team thought the Clintonites had become obsessed with terrorism. "It was clear," says one, "that this was not the same priority to them that it was to us."

For other observers, however, the real point was not that the new Administration dismissed the terrorist theat. On the contrary, Rice, Hadley and Cheney, says an official, "all got that it was important." The question is, How high a priority did terrorism get? Clarke says that dealing with al-Qaeda "was in the top tier of issues reviewed by the Bush Administration." But other topics got far more attention. The whole Bush national-security team was obsessed with setting up a national system of missile defense. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was absorbed by a long review of the military's force structure. Attorney General John Ashcroft had come into office as a dedicated crime buster. Rice was desperately trying to keep in line a national-security team--including Rumsfeld, Cheney and Secretary of State Colin Powell--whose members had wildly different agendas and styles. "Terrorism," says a former Clinton White House official, speaking of the new Administration, "wasn't on their plate of key issues." Al-Qaeda had not been a feature of the landscape when the Republicans left office in 1993. The Bush team, says an official, "had to learn about [al-Qaeda] and figure out where it fit into their broader foreign policy." But doing so meant delay.

Some counterterrorism officials think there is another reason for the Bush Administration's dilatory response. Clarke's paper, says an official, "was a Clinton proposal." Keeping Clarke around was one thing; buying into the analysis of an Administration that the Bush team considered feckless and naive was quite another. So Rice instructed Clarke to initiate a new "policy review process" on the terrorism threat. Clarke dived into yet another round of meetings. And his proposals were nibbled nearly to death.

This was, after all, a White House plan, which means it was resented from the moment of conception. "When you look at the Pentagon and the CIA," says a former senior Clinton aide, "it's not their plan. The military will never accept the White House staff doing military planning." Terrorism, officials from the State Department suggested, needed to be put in the broader context of American policy in South Asia. The rollback plan was becoming the victim of a classic Washington power play between those with "functional" responsibilities--like terrorism--and those with "regional" ones--like relations with India and Pakistan. The State Department's South Asia bureau, according to a participant in the meetings, argued that a fistful of other issues--Kashmir, nuclear proliferation, Musharraf's dictatorship--were just as pressing as terrorism. By now, Clarke's famously short fuse was giving off sparks. A participant at one of the meetings paraphrases Clarke's attitude this way: "These people are trying to kill us. I could give a f___ if Musharraf was democratically elected. What I do care about is Pakistan's support for the Taliban and turning a blind eye to this terrorist cancer growing in their neighbor's backyard."

It was Bush who broke the deadlock. Each morning the CIA gives the Chief Executive a top-secret Presidential Daily Brief (PDB) on pressing issues of national security. One day in early spring, Tenet briefed Bush on the hunt for Abu Zubaydah, al-Qaeda's head of international operations, who was suspected of having been involved in the planning of the attack on the U.S.S. Cole. After the PDB, Bush told Rice that the approach to al-Qaeda was too scattershot. He was tired of "swatting at flies" and asked for a comprehensive plan for attacking terrorism. According to an official, Rice came back to the NSC and said, "The President wants a plan to eliminate al-Qaeda." Clarke reminded her that he already had one.

But having a plan isn't the same as executing it. Clarke's paper now had to go through three more stages: the Deputies' Committee, made up of the No. 2s to the main national-security officials; the Principals' Committee, which included Cheney, Rice, Tenet, Powell and Rumsfeld; and finally, the President. Only when Bush had signed off would the plan become what the Bush team called a national-security presidential directive.

On April 30, nearly six weeks after the Administration started holding deputies' meetings, Clarke presented a new plan to them. In addition to Hadley, who chaired the hour-long meeting, the gathering included Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis Libby; Richard Armitage, the barrel-chested Deputy Secretary of State; Paul Wolfowitz, the scholarly hawk from the Pentagon; and John McLaughlin from the CIA. Armitage was enthusiastic about Clarke's plan, according to a senior official. But the CIA was gun-shy. Tenet was a Clinton holdover and thus vulnerable if anything went wrong. His agency was unwilling to take risks; it wanted "top cover" from the White House. The deputies, says a senior official, decided to have "three parallel reviews--one on al-Qaeda, one on the Pakistani political situation and the third on Indo-Pakistani relations." The issues, the deputies thought, were interrelated. "They wanted to view them holistically," says the senior official, "and not until they'd had three separate meetings on each of these were they able to hold a fourth integrating them all."

There was more. Throughout the spring, one bureaucratic wrangle in particular rumbled on, poisoning the atmosphere. At issue: the Predator.

The Predator had first been used in Bosnia in 1995. Later, the CIA and the Pentagon began a highly classified program designed to produce pictures--viewable in real time--that would be fine-grained enough to identify individuals. The new, improved Predator was finally ready in September 2000, and the CIA flew it over Afghanistan in a two-week "test of concept." First results were promising; one video sent to the White House showed a man who might have been bin Laden. For the first time, the CIA now had a way to check out a tip by one of its agents among the Afghan tribes. If there was a report that bin Laden was in the vicinity, says a former aide to Clinton, "we could put the Predator over the location and have eyes on the target."

But in October 2000, the Predator crashed when landing at its base in a country bordering Afghanistan. The unmanned aerial vehicle needed repairs, and in any event, the CIA and the Pentagon decided that the winter weather over Afghanistan would make it difficult to take good pictures. The Clinton team left office assuming that the Predator would be back in the skies by March 2001.

In fact, the Predator wouldn't fly again until after Sept. 11. In early 2001 it was decided to develop a new version that would not just take photos but also be armed with Hellfire missiles. To the frustration of Clarke and other White House aides, the CIA and the Pentagon couldn't decide who controlled the new program or who should pay for it--though each craft cost only $1 million. While the new UAV was being rapidly developed at a site in the southwestern U.S., the CIA opposed using the old one for pure surveillance because it feared al-Qaeda might see it. "Once we were going to arm the thing," says a senior U.S. intelligence official, "we didn't want to expose the capability by just having it fly overhead and spot a bunch of guys we couldn't do anything about." Clarke and his supporters were livid. "Dick Clarke insisted that it be kept in the air," says a Bush Administration official. The counterterrorism team argued that the Taliban had shot at the UAV during the Clinton test, so its existence was hardly a secret. Besides, combined with on-the-ground intelligence, a Predator might just gather enough information in time to get a Tomahawk off to the target. But when the deputies held their fourth and final meeting on July 16, they still hadn't sorted out what to do with the Predator. Squabbles over who would pay for it continued into August.

Administration sources insist that they were not idle in the spring. They set up, for example, a new center in the Treasury to track suspicious foreign assets and reviewed Clinton's "findings" on whether the CIA could kill bin Laden. But by the summer, policy reviews were hardly what was needed.

Intelligence services were picking up enough chatter about a terrorist attack to scare the pants off top officials. On June 22, the Defense Department put its troops on full alert and ordered six ships from the Fifth Fleet, based in Bahrain, to steam out to sea, for fear that they might be attacked in port. U.S. officials thought an attack might be mounted on American forces at the nato base at Incirlik, Turkey, or maybe in Rome or Belgium, Germany or Southeast Asia, perhaps the Philippines--anywhere, it seems, but in the U.S. When Independence Day passed without incident, Clarke called a meeting and asked Ben Bonk, deputy director of the CIA's counterterrorism center, to brief on bin Laden's plans. Bonk's evidence that al-Qaeda was planning "something spectacular," says an official who was in the room, "was very gripping." But nobody knew what or when or where the spectacular would be. As if to crystallize how much and how little anyone in the know actually knew, the counterterrorism center released a report titled "Threat of Impending al-Qaeda Attack to Continue Indefinitely."

Predictably, nerves frayed. Clarke, who was widely loathed in the CIA, where he was accused of self-aggrandizement, began to lose credibility. He cried wolf, said his detractors; he had been in the job too long. "The guy was reading way too many fiction novels," says a counterterrorism official. "He turned into a Chicken Little. The sky was always falling for Dick Clarke. We had our strings jerked by him so many times, he was simply not taken seriously." Clarke wasn't the only one living on the edge. So, say senior officials, was Tenet. Every few days, the CIA director would call Tom Pickard, who had become acting director of the FBI in June, asking "What do you hear? Do you have anything?" Pickard never had to ask what the topic was.

In mid-July, Tenet sat down for a special meeting with Rice and aides. "George briefed Condi that there was going to be a major attack," says an official; another, who was present at the meeting, says Tenet broke out a huge wall chart ("They always have wall charts") with dozens of threats. Tenet couldn't rule out a domestic attack but thought it more likely that al-Qaeda would strike overseas. One date already worrying the Secret Service was July 20, when Bush would arrive in Genoa for the G-8 summit; Tenet had intelligence that al-Qaeda was planning to attack Bush there. The Italians, who had heard the same report (the way European intelligence sources tell it, everyone but the President's dog "knew" an attack was coming) put frogmen in the harbor, closed airspace around the town and ringed it with antiaircraft guns.

But nothing happened. After Genoa, says a senior intelligence official, there was a collective sigh of relief: "A lot of folks started letting their guard down." After the final deputies' meeting on Clarke's draft of a presidential directive, on July 16, it wasn't easy to find a date for the Principals' Committee to look at the plan--the last stage before the paper went to Bush. "There was one meeting scheduled for August," says a senior official, "but too many principals were out of town." Eventually a date was picked: the principals would look at the draft on Sept. 4. That was about nine months after Clarke first put his plan on paper.

A BURNED-OUT CASE Clarke wasn't the only person having a bad year. In New York City, John O'Neill led the FBI's National Security Division, commanding more than 100 experienced agents. By spring they were all overloaded. O'Neill's boss, Assistant FBI Director Barry Mawn, spent part of his time pleading with Washington for more agents, more linguists, more clerical help. He got nowhere. O'Neill was a legend both in New York, where he hung out at famous watering holes like Elaine's, and in the counterterrorism world. Since 1995, when he helped coordinate the arrest in Pakistan of Ramzi Yousef, the man responsible for the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, O'Neill had been one of the FBI's leading figures in the fight against terrorism. Brash, slick and ambitious, he had spent the late 1990s working closely with Clarke and the handful of other top officials for whom bin Laden had become an obsession.

Now O'Neill was having a lousy few months. The New York City field office had primary responsibility for the investigation of the attack on the U.S.S. Cole. But the case had gone badly from the start. The Yemeni authorities had been lethargic and uncooperative, and O'Neill, who led the team in Aden, had run afoul of Barbara Bodine, then the U.S. ambassador to Yemen, who believed the FBI's large presence was causing political problems for the Yemeni regime. When O'Neill left Yemen on a trip home for Thanksgiving, Bodine barred his return. Seething, O'Neill tried to supervise the investigation from afar. At the same time, his team in New York City was working double time preparing for the trial in January 2001 of four co-conspirators in the case of the 1998 African embassy bombings. That involved agents shuttling between Nairobi, Dar es Salaam and New York, escorting witnesses, ferrying documents and guarding al-Qaeda turncoats who would give evidence for the prosecution.

Yet the FBI as a whole was ill equipped to deal with the terrorist threat. It had neither the language skills nor the analytical savvy to understand al-Qaeda. The bureau's information-technology capability dated to pre-Internet days. Chambliss says the counterterrorism investigations were decentralized at the bureau's 56 field offices, which were actually discouraged from sharing information with one another or with headquarters.

That was if the cases ever got started. An investigation by Chambliss's subcommittee found that the FBI paid "insufficient attention" to tracking terrorists' finances. Most agents in the field were assigned to criminal units; few field squads were dedicated to gathering intelligence on radical fundamentalists. During the Clinton Administration, says a former senior aide, Clarke became so frustrated with the bureau that he began touring its field offices, giving agents "al-Qaeda 101" classes. The bureau was, in fact, wiretapping some suspected Islamic radicals and debriefing a few al-Qaeda hands who had flipped. But at the end of the Clinton years, the aide says, the FBI told the White House that "there's not a substantial al-Qaeda presence in the U.S., and to the extent there was a presence, they had it covered."

The FBI didn't, and O'Neill must have known that it didn't. So, as it happens, did some of his key allies, who were not in the U.S. at all but overseas. In Europe and especially in France the threat of Islamic terrorism had been particularly sharp ever since the Algerian Armed Islamic Group launched a bombing campaign in Paris in 1995. By 2000, counterterrorism experts in Europe knew the Islamic diaspora communities in Europe were seeded with cells of terrorists. And after the arrest of Ressam, European officials were convinced that terrorists would soon attack targets in the U.S. Jean-Louis Bruguiere, a French magistrate who has led many of the most prominent terrorist cases, says Ressam's arrest signaled that the U.S. "had to join the rest of the world in considering itself at acute risk of attack."

Throughout the winter and spring of 2001, European law-enforcement agencies scored a series of dramatic hits against al-Qaeda and associated radical Islamic cells, with some help from the CIA. The day after Christmas 2000, German authorities in Frankfurt arrested four Algerians on suspicion of plotting to bomb targets in Strasbourg. Two months later, the British arrested six Algerians on terrorism charges. In April, Italian police busted a cell whose members were suspected of plotting to bomb the American embassy in Rome. Two months later, the Spanish arrested Mohammed Bensakhria, an Algerian who had been in Afghanistan and had links to top al-Qaeda officials, including bin Laden. Bensakhria, the French alleged, had directed the Frankfurt cell involved in the Strasbourg plot. And in the most stunning coup of all, on July 28, Djamel Beghal, a Frenchman of Algerian descent who had been on France's terrorist watch list since 1997, was arrested in Dubai on his way back from Afghanistan. After being persuaded of terrorism's evil by Islamic scholars, Beghal told of a plot to attack the American embassy in Paris and gave investigators new details on al-Qaeda's top leadership, including the international-operations role of Abu Zubaydah. (Now back in France, he has tried to recant his confession.) French sources tell TIME they believe U.S. authorities knew about Beghal's testimony.

This action by cops in Europe was meat and drink to O'Neill. The problem was that it convinced some U.S. antiterrorism officials that if there was going to be an attack on American interests that summer, it would take place outside the U.S. In early June, for example, the FBI was so concerned about threats to investigators left in Yemen that it moved the agents from Aden to the American embassy in Sana'a. Then came a second, very specific warning about the team's safety, and Washington decided to pull out of Yemen entirely. "John [O'Neill] would say, 'There's a lot of traffic,'" recalls Mawn. "Everybody was saying, 'The drumbeats are going; something's going to happen.' I said, 'Where and what?' And they'd say, 'We don't know, but it seems to be overseas, probably.'"

Some didn't lose sight of the threat at home. On Aug. 6, while on vacation in Crawford, Texas, Bush was given a PDB, this one on the possibility of al-Qaeda attacks in the U.S. And not one but two FBI field offices had inklings of al-Qaeda activity in the U.S. that, had they been aggressively pursued, might have fleshed out the intelligence chatter about an upcoming attack. But the systemic weaknesses in the FBI's bureaucracy prevented anything from being done.

The first warning came from Phoenix, Ariz. On July 10, agent Kenneth Williams wrote a paper detailing his suspicions about some suspected Islamic radicals who had been taking flying lessons in Arizona. Williams proposed an investigation to see if al-Qaeda was using flight schools nationwide. He spoke with the voice of experience; he had been working on international terrorism cases for years. The Phoenix office, according to former FBI agent James Hauswirth, had been investigating men with possible Islamic terrorist links since 1994, though without much support from the FBI's local bosses. Williams had started work on his probe of flight schools in early 2001 but had spent much of the next months on nonterrorist cases. Once he was back on terrorism, it took only a few weeks for alarm bells to ring. He submitted his memo to headquarters and to two FBI field offices, including New York City. In all three places it died.

Five weeks after Williams wrote his memo, a second warning came in from another FBI field office, and once again, headquarters bungled the case. On Aug. 13, Zacarias Moussaoui, a 33-year-old Frenchman of Moroccan ancestry, arrived at Pan Am International Flight Academy in Minnesota for simulator training on a Boeing 747. Moussaoui, who had been in the U.S. since February and had already taken flying lessons at a school in Norman, Okla., was in a hurry. John Rosengren, who was director of operations at Pan Am until February this year, says Moussaoui wanted to learn how to fly the 747 in "four or five days." After just two days of training, Moussaoui's flight instructor expressed concern that his student didn't want it known that he was a Muslim. One of Pan Am's managers had a contact in the FBI; should the manager call him? "I said, 'No problem,'" says Rosengren. "The next day I got a call from a Minneapolis agent telling me Moussaoui had been detained at the Residence Inn in Eagan."

Though Moussaoui is the only person to be indicted in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks, his role in them is as clear as mud. (He is detained in Alexandria, Va., awaiting trial in federal district court.) German authorities have confirmed to TIME that--as alleged in the indictment--Ramzi Binalshibh, a Hamburg friend of Atta and Al-Shehhi, wired two money transfers to Moussaoui in August. Binalshibh, who was denied a visa to visit the U.S. four times in 2000, is thought to have been one of the conduits for funds to the hijackers, relaying cash that originated in the Persian Gulf. But no known telephone calls or other evidence links the hijackers directly to Moussaoui.

Whatever Moussaoui's true tale may be, the Minnesota field office was convinced he was worth checking out. Agents spent much of the next two weeks in an increasingly frantic--and ultimately fruitless--effort to persuade FBI headquarters to authorize a national-security warrant to search Moussaoui's computer. From Washington, requests were sent to authorities in Paris for background details on the suspect. Like most things having to do with Moussaoui, the contents of the dossier sent over from Paris are in dispute. One senior French law-enforcement source told TIME the Americans were given "everything they needed" to understand that Moussaoui was associated with Islamic terrorist groups. "Even a neophyte," says this source, "working in some remote corner of Florida, would have understood the threat based on what was sent." But several officials in FBI headquarters say that before Sept. 11 the French sent only a three-page document, which portrayed Moussaoui as a radical but was too sketchy to justify a search warrant for his computer.

The precise wording of the French letter isn't the issue. The extraordinary thing about Moussaoui's case--like the Phoenix memo--is that it was never brought to the attention of top officials in Washington who were, almost literally, sleepless with worry about an imminent terrorist attack. Nobody in the FBI or CIA ever informed anybody in the White House of Moussaoui's detention. That was unforgivable. "Do you think," says a White House antiterrorism official, "that if Dick Clarke had known the FBI had in custody a foreigner who was learning to fly a plane in midair, he wouldn't have done something?"

In blissless ignorance, Clarke and Tenet waited for the meeting of the Principals. But the odd little ways of Washington had one more trick to play. Heeding the pleas from the FBI's New York City office, where Mawn and O'Neill were desperate for new linguists and analysts, acting FBI director Pickard asked the Justice Department for some $50 million for the bureau's counterterrorism program. He was turned down. In August, a bureau source says, he appealed to Attorney General Ashcroft. The reply was a flat no.

Pickard got Ashcroft's letter on Sept. 10. A few days before, O'Neill had started a new job. He was burned out, and he knew it. Over the summer, he had come to realize that he had made too many enemies ever to succeed Mawn. O'Neill handed in his papers, left the FBI and began a new life as head of security at the World Trade Center.

THE TWO VISITORS As the first cool nights of fall settled on northeast Afghanistan, Ahmed Shah Massoud was barely hanging on. His summer offensive had been a bust. An attempt to capture the city of Taloqan, which he had lost to the Taliban in 2000, ended in failure. But old allies, like the brutal Uzbek warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum, had returned to the field, and Massoud still thought the unpopularity of the Taliban might yet make them vulnerable. "He was telling us not to worry, that we'd soon capture Kabul," says Shah Pacha, an infantry commander in the Northern Alliance.

Around Sept. 1, Massoud summoned his top men to his command post in Khoja Bahauddin. The intention was to plan an attack, but Zahir Akbar, one of Massoud's generals, remembers a phone call after which Massoud changed his plans. "He'd been told al-Qaeda and the Pakistanis were deploying five combat units to the front line," says Akbar. Northern Alliance soldiers reported a buildup of Taliban and al-Qaeda forces; there was no big push from the south, although there were a number of skirmishes in the first week in September. "We were puzzled and confused when they didn't attack," says a senior Afghan intelligence source. "And Taliban communications showed the units had been ordered to wait."

What were they waiting for? Some of Massoud's closest aides think they know. For about three weeks, two Arab journalists had been waiting in Khoja Bahauddin to interview Massoud. The men said they represented the Islamic Observation Center in London and had a letter of introduction from its head, Yasser al-Siri. The men, who had been given safe passage through the Taliban front lines, "said they'd like to document Islam in Afghanistan," recalls Faheem Dashty, who made films with the Northern Alliance and is editor in chief of the Kabul Weekly newspaper. By the night of Sept. 8, the visitors were getting antsy, pestering Massoud's officials to firm up the meeting with him and threatening to return to Kabul if they could not see Massoud in the next 24 hours. "They were so worried and excitable they were begging us," says Jamsheed, Massoud's secretary.

The interview was finally granted just before lunch on Sunday, Sept. 9. Dashty was asked to record it on his camera. Massoud sat next to his friend Masood Khalili, now Afghanistan's ambassador to India. "The commander said he wanted to sit with me and translate," says Khalili. "Then he and I would go and have lunch together by the Oxus River." The Arabs entered and set up a TV camera in front of Massoud; the guests, says Khalili, were "very calm, very quiet." Khalili asked them which newspaper they represented. When they replied that they were acting for "Islamic Centers," says Khalili, he became reluctant to continue, but Massoud said they should all go ahead.

Khalili says Massoud asked to know the Arabs' questions before they started recording. "I remember that out of 15 questions, eight were about bin Laden," says Khalili. "I looked over at Massoud. He looked uncomfortable; there were five worry lines on his forehead instead of the one he usually had. But he said, 'O.K. Let's film.'" Khalili started translating the first question into Dari; Dashty was fiddling with the lighting on his camera. "Then," says Dashty, "I felt the explosion." The bomb was in the camera, and it killed one of the Arabs; the second was shot dead by Massoud's guards while trying to escape. Khalili believes he was saved by his passport, which was in his left breast pocket--eight pieces of shrapnel were found embedded in it. Dashty remembers being rushed to a helicopter with Massoud, who had terrible wounds. The chopper flew them both to a hospital in Tajikistan. By the time they arrived, Massoud was dead.

The killers had come from Europe, and they were members of a group allied with al-Qaeda. Massoud's enemies had been waiting for the news. Within hours, Taliban radio began to crackle: "Your father is dead. Now you can't resist us." "They were clever," says a member of Massoud's staff. "Their offensive was primed to begin after the assassination." That night the Taliban attacked Massoud's front lines. One last time, his forces held out on their own.

As the battle raged, Clarke's plan awaited Bush's signature. Soon enough, the Northern Alliance would get all the aid it had been seeking--U.S. special forces, money, B-52 bombers, and, of course, as many Predators as the CIA and Pentagon could get into the sky. The decision that had been put off for so long had suddenly become easy because a little more than 50 hours after Massoud's death, Atta, sitting on American Airlines Flight 11 on the runway at Boston's Logan Airport, had used his mobile phone to speak for the last time to his friend Al-Shehhi, on United Flight 175. Their plot was a go.

That morning, O'Neill, Clarke's former partner in the fight against international terrorism, arrived at his new place of work. He had been on the job just two weeks. After Atta and Al-Shehhi crashed their planes into the World Trade Center, O'Neill called his son and a girlfriend from outside the Towers to say he was safe. Then he rushed back in. His body was identified 10 days later.

#2 ocsrazor

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Posted 19 March 2003 - 01:29 AM

Interesting Reading Lazarus

Thought this was relevant :)

The trouble with lessons from history is that we usually read them best after falling flat on our chins. -Robert Heinlein


Best, Ocsrazor

#3 kevin

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Posted 19 March 2003 - 03:19 AM

a worthwhile read for anyone..

reality sucks.. things should be so much simpler..

thnx for the background..

Edited by kperrott, 19 March 2003 - 03:20 AM.


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#4 Mind

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Posted 19 March 2003 - 03:53 AM

Even though the article is an unabashed political hit piece (no author listed), it was still interesting.

Clinton friends are trying their darndest to put the best positive spin on 8 years doing nothing but "creating plans" to combat terrorism.

#5 Lazarus Long

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Posted 19 March 2003 - 04:23 AM

Your comment caught my attention Mind so I went back to my source on the article, which was CNN at the above posted link.

I think you can find the author at the source, which was the cover story for "Time" magazine. Back in Aug.'02 I believe

Posted Image

Here is the link back to the original.
Could 9/11 Have Been Prevented?

Could 9/11 Have Been Prevented?
Long before the tragic events of September 11th, the White House debated taking the fight to al-Qaeda. It didn't happen and soon it was too late. The saga of a lost chance
By MICHAEL ELLIOTT

And here is the author's link if you would care to take issue with any of its substance.
mailto: daily@timeinc.net

By the way Mind, when I read the article I don't get the impression that the Clinton admistration was all that keen to do anything until it was too late either. I don't read this as vindication of anybody. What I find fascinating is the chain of events and the chosen strategies, along with the tactical analysies that leave much to be desired... Still.

#6 Mind

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Posted 19 March 2003 - 04:19 PM

What I find fascinating is the chain of events and the chosen strategies, along with the tactical analysies that leave much to be desired... Still.


As a mostly libertarian thinker, I do not find it fascinating that the government was "slow to move" or "followed the wrong strategies"...lol....that is what the government always does. The Clinton Administration never seemed to do anything until it registered in polls. The Bush team, is "doing things" and that is just as dangerous. Bush may end up doing a couple good things for the world, but it is a treacherous path.

Another thing I found interesting in the article was the political situtation in Afganistan and the relation to Pakistan. The same infighting seems to be continuing today.

#7 DJS

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Posted 20 March 2003 - 05:02 AM

Even though the article is an unabashed political hit piece (no author listed), it was still interesting.

Clinton friends are trying their darndest to put the best positive spin on 8 years doing nothing but "creating plans" to combat terrorism.


I agree. Revisionist Clinton History is becoming common place. Take North Korea. I heard a audio clip on WABC where Clinton said he was prepared to take pre emptive military action against North Korea back in 1994.

Oh really?? Why didn't I hear about it. In fact, why didn't anyone hear about it--even ranking military officials? Preparing for a military conflict can't be kept hush hush for very long. Lies, lies and more lies. If I were Clinton, I wouldn't be able to look in the mirror knowing how weakened I left my country. But then again, that's the way he wants it, isn't it?? [ph34r]

#8 Lazarus Long

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Posted 11 April 2003 - 05:58 PM

Baby ohhh baby this promises to be much more fun than the Hansen scandal. Two? I hope she didn't have SARS too. ;)

So who is better at this; the Russians or the Chinese, maybe the French, or maybe the Israeli's? ON the scale of whose best at BOTH acquiring and keeping secrets I am unconvinced the US is even in the Top Ten and I am not clear which secrets are worth keeping. But it sure appears like there are some Great Perks at the FBI. :)

You go ahead and call it Revisionism and Real Politick It looks I get to call it "Around the World with a Mandarin Matahari [!] [ggg] [!]

http://story.news.ya...i_agent_charged

Second Ex-FBI Agent Resigns From Lab
2 hours, 29 minutes ago Add U.S. National
By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - A second former FBI (news - web sites) agent who acknowledged an affair with a suspected Chinese double agent has resigned his sensitive security post at a California nuclear weapons lab, law enforcement officials said Friday.

William Cleveland Jr. worked in Chinese counterintelligence before taking a job at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He resigned Thursday as chief of security, according to two law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity. Livermore spokeswoman Lynda Seaver did not immediately respond to a message left early Friday morning.

Livermore, operated by the University of California, is one of the nation's major labs dealing with nuclear weapons development and also does sensitive work in biomedicine, energy and environmental science. Cleveland's job required a U.S. security clearance and gave him access to classified information, according to court documents.

Cleveland is one of two former FBI counterintelligence agents who acknowledged lengthy affairs with the alleged double agent, Katrina Leung. Leung is being held without bond on charges of passing secrets to the People's Republic of China while also an intelligence "asset" on the FBI payroll.

The other agent, James J. Smith, is free on $250,000 bond on charges of gross negligence for allegedly allowing Leung access to classified materials during their two-decade affair.

Cleveland is not charged and is not referred to by name in affidavits filed after Smith and Leung were arrested. But law enforcement officials confirmed he is the former agent referred to in the documents.

Throughout the affidavits, Cleveland is referred to as an unnamed supervisor in Chinese counterintelligence in the FBI's San Francisco office who retired in 1993. Smith worked in Chinese counterintelligence until his 2000 retirement in Los Angeles, where Leung is a prominent political activist and socialite.

The court documents say Cleveland acknowledged a lengthy sexual relationship with Leung that continued in 1997 and 1999, after he left the FBI and went to work at the Livermore lab. The documents also say that in 1991, he listened to a tape of Leung and her Chinese intelligence contact that made clear to him she was passing secrets to China.

After Cleveland confronted Smith about it, Smith insisted that he had addressed the problem — and nothing more was done until an investigation that began a few months after FBI Director Robert Mueller took office in September 2001.

The documents do not say whether Leung obtained any classified information from Cleveland. The items that she allegedly obtained from Smith include lists of FBI agents' names, a memo about Chinese fugitives and a telephone list involving an investigation into Peter Lee, an employee at defense contractor TRW Inc. who pleaded guilty in 1997 to passing secret information to China.

FBI officials say the investigation is continuing and that more charges are possible, but they add that Cleveland is cooperating in the probe. They also say that so far, nothing has emerged to indicate that the information provided by Leung constitutes a major breach of national security.

In congressional testimony Thursday, Mueller called the case "an isolated event" and that ongoing changes at the FBI would ensure better oversight and management of intelligence sources.

"We as an organization must learn from the mistakes of the past so we do not repeat them," Mueller told a Senate appropriations panel.

Neither Smith nor Cleveland was ever given a polygraph exam during their long tenure as senior FBI counterintelligence officials. Routine polygraphs for FBI agents did not begin until after the case of Robert Hanssen (news - web sites), the agent convicted in 2001 for spying for the former Soviet Union.

#9 Lazarus Long

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Posted 12 April 2003 - 03:51 PM

http://story.news.ya...day/5062377&e=3

Spy suspicions unexamined for years
Fri Apr 11, 5:44 AM ET - USA TODAY
Kevin Johnson USA TODAY

WASHINGTON -- Eight times during the two decades that Katrina Leung was paid about $1.7 million by the FBI (news - web sites) to spy on the Chinese government, U.S. agents in California discussed the possibility that she might be a double agent for China. At least once, a report of the agents' suspicions reached FBI headquarters here.

For years, nothing happened. But in late 2001, new FBI Director Robert Mueller ordered an investigation, and on Wednesday, Leung was accused of illegally obtaining classified information for the benefit of a foreign nation. Her FBI handler, retired counterterrorism agent James Smith, was charged with gross negligence in the latest embarrassing example of the bureau's failure in recent years to closely monitor problems in its ranks.

Smith, 59, was released from custody in Los Angeles on Wednesday after posting a $250,000 bond. Leung, 49, remains in custody.

Senior law enforcement officials say Leung, who became a prominent fundraiser for the Republican Party, was never questioned seriously before Mueller's order was issued. Nor was Smith. Meanwhile, authorities now allege, a romantic relationship between Leung and Smith flourished, and Smith allowed Leung access to classified FBI information, including reports on secret operations in China.


The arrests underscored Mueller's emphasis on uncovering bad agents, as well the bureau's lapses in identifying internal problems. Those lapses were evident two years ago, when former counterterrorism agent Robert Hanssen (news - web sites) was charged with selling secrets to Moscow. He is serving a life sentence in prison.

Smith's position as a long-time supervisor in the FBI's Los Angeles field office gave him unlimited access to information involving Chinese counterintelligence operations. That led top FBI officials to fear that he could have compromised the identities of all U.S. agents working in China. So far, however, there is no evidence indicating that those agents have been executed or arrested by the Chinese government, law enforcement sources said.

''We are just beginning the investigation,'' a senior law enforcement official said Thursday. ''There is cause for serious concern. We believe that there is precious little he knew that she didn't know.''

Smith's attorney, Brian Sun, has said Leung acquired FBI information without his client's knowledge. Court documents say Leung told investigators that that she ''would remove (documents) and copy them'' when Smith left his briefcase open and unattended.

Leung's attorneys, Janet Levine and John Vandevelde, said she is innocent. Chinese officials in the USA were not available for comment.

Officials said it could take months to assess the damage allegedly caused by Smith and Leung. But it is not believed to approach that of Hanssen's actions, which authorities say led to the deaths of two Russians working as agents for the United States.

Court documents unsealed in Los Angeles this week say that FBI agents found classified bureau reports in Leung's home in San Marino, Calif., and in secret searches of her luggage before she traveled to China last year. In Leung's home, according to the court records, agents found FBI telephone and personnel directories that identify agents assigned to posts around the world. Agents also found a secret FBI memo from 1997 that contained ''national defense information.''

U.S. officials also are reviewing whether Leung intentionally passed false information to Smith about Chinese government operations while she worked as an FBI informant.

#10 Lazarus Long

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Posted 12 April 2003 - 03:56 PM

http://story.news.ya...i_agent_charged

FBI Reviews Agent in Alleged Spy Affair
Sat Apr 12, 2:59 AM ET U.S. National AP
By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - In 1991, two former FBI (news - web sites) counterintelligence agents learned that the lover they shared might be a Chinese double agent. But government documents say they did little about it.

Former agent James J. Smith and former FBI supervisor William Cleveland Jr. kept under wraps their knowledge that Katrina Leung, an FBI intelligence "asset" for two decades, also had contacts with intelligence services of the Chinese government.

Cleveland, who retired from the FBI in 1993, resigned from his counterintelligence position at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, according to two law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The lab, which develops nuclear weapons and possesses some of the nation's most sensitive scientific secrets, is doing a review of Cleveland's work, officials said Friday.


Smith, 59, and Leung both face federal charges stemming from the case, which marks another embarrassing episode for an FBI trying to demonstrate it can police itself in the aftermath of the highly damaging Robert Hanssen (news - web sites) spy case and the intelligence failures prior to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Cleveland was an FBI counterintelligence supervisor in San Francisco when his affair with Leung began in 1988, according to court documents filed when Smith was charged Wednesday with gross negligence. Cleveland is not referred to by name in the court documents, but several law enforcement officials confirmed his identity.

Cleveland recognized Leung's voice on a 1991 tape provided by a source in which she was overheard discussing classified U.S. defense information with a Chinese contact known only as "Mao."


Cleveland immediately called Smith, based in the FBI's Los Angeles office, who became "visibly upset at the news of Leung's unauthorized communication" with China's Ministry of State Security intelligence services, according to the documents. Smith, who served as the FBI's "handler" for Leung, also was having a sexual relationship with her that dated to the early 1980s, the documents said.

It's unclear whether the two men knew about each other's affair. But neither man took the case to a superior or to FBI headquarters as required, which probably would have resulted in a polygraph test for Leung. The court documents say Cleveland relied on Smith to address the situation, and Smith later told Cleveland that he had.

Instead, both men continued their sexual relationships with Leung. Smith even invited her to his retirement party in 2000 and allowed her to videotape it although FBI and CIA (news - web sites) officers were present, court documents show. She also continued to have access to classified material Smith carried with him when he visited her.

FBI Director Robert Mueller learned about Smith, Cleveland and Leung five months after taking over the agency in September 2001. He ordered an investigation and transferred and demoted Sheila Horan, then acting director of the FBI's national security division, which oversees spy investigations.

Mueller called the Leung case "an isolated event" and said an overhaul of the handling of intelligence assets would prevent such occurrences in the future. This will include greater headquarters oversight and less independence for FBI field offices, which once operated as fiefdoms. He also assigned an inspection team to review the management of the China counterintelligence program.

Leung, a 49-year-old Los Angeles socialite and Republican Party activist, appeared in court Friday and waived her right to a preliminary hearing within 10 days. Her attorney said Leung is innocent.


Neither Smith nor Cleveland was ever given a polygraph test, which did not become routine for agents in sensitive jobs until after Hanssen, a top counterespionage official at FBI headquarters, was charged with passing secrets to the Soviet Union. Hanssen was sent to prison for life without parole.

The Leung investigation so far has not disclosed any security breach to equal those of the Hanssen case, which led to the deaths of at least three U.S. spies. And no evidence has surfaced yet to indicate that Cleveland allowed Leung access to classified material, either from the FBI or the Livermore lab. Cleveland is cooperating and has not been charged.

The items that Leung allegedly obtained from Smith include lists of FBI agents' names, a memo about Chinese fugitives and a telephone list involving an investigation into Peter Lee, an employee at defense contractor TRW Inc. who pleaded guilty in 1997 to passing secret information to China.

Part of the investigation involves the information provided by Leung to the FBI to determine whether it was faulty or fabricated. Although officials declined to discuss what she provided over 20 years, they said that payment of $1.7 million indicates that FBI officials believed it was of high quality.

Another unresolved issue is whether Leung provided information regarding China's alleged attempt to influence the 1996 congressional elections through campaign contributions. Smith was the main FBI contact for Johnny Chung, a key figure in the fund-raising scandal who cooperated in the federal probe after pleading guilty to tax evasion and campaign finance violations. [


#11 Lazarus Long

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Posted 12 April 2003 - 04:20 PM

http://www.latimes.c.....adlines-world

April 12, 2003
IN BRIEF / YEMEN
10 Suspects in Bombing of U.S. Ship Cole Escape
From Times Wire Reports

Ten key suspects in the bombing of the U.S. destroyer Cole escaped from a prison in Aden, Yemen, dealing a major blow to the investigation into the attack, blamed on Al Qaeda.

Seventeen U.S. sailors were killed in the Oct. 12, 2000, bombing. A massive manhunt was underway for the suspects. An Interior Ministry official said the fugitives escaped through a hole in a bathroom wall. Earlier, officials close to the investigation said the men smashed a window inside the building and fled.

The different accounts could not immediately be reconciled.

http://story.news.ya...World&cat=Yemen

Suspects in USS Cole Attack Escape Prison
Fri Apr 11, 7:14 AM ET
By AHMED AL-HAJ, Associated Press Writer

SAN`A, Yemen - Yemeni authorities were hunting for 10 of the main suspects in the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole (news - web sites) after they escaped from prison Friday, officials said.

The fugitives, including chief suspect Jamal al-Badawi, had been jailed in the port city of Aden since shortly after the destroyer was bombed, killing 17 American sailors.

Officials at Aden's governor's office would not say how the men escaped early Friday. But they quoted intelligence sources as saying security forces were out in force in a major search operation.

Photographs of the men were distributed to police and houses of the escaped men's relatives were searched, the officials said on condition of anonymity.

The Oct. 12, 2000, attack was blamed on Osama bin Laden (news - web sites)'s al-Qaida network.

Al-Badawi allegedly helped buy the dinghy used by the two suicide bombers, who rammed the destroyer as it was refueling in Aden.

The 10 men, some of whom are believed to be linked to al-Qaida, were part of a 17-man group arrested after the Cole bombing.

Officials said that the men might have left Aden and headed to al-Qaida strongholds in the northern province of Shabwah.

Last July, Walid Abdullah Habib, a Yemeni member of al-Qaida who was arrested while trying to enter the country illegally, escaped from prison.
Habib was arrested this year in a desert area near the Oman-Yemen border and handed over to Yemeni authorities. Habib is from Shabwah.

Yemen, the ancestral home of bin Laden, has been a hotbed of terrorist activity. Supporters of al-Qaida have claimed responsibility for several bombings targeting security officials and government offices in the past few months.

Yemen committed itself to joining the war on terrorism following the Sept. 11 attacks in America and has allowed U.S. forces to enter the country and train its military.

Edited by Lazarus Long, 12 April 2003 - 04:21 PM.


#12 Lazarus Long

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Posted 08 October 2003 - 02:21 PM

There has actually been an incredible level of subtle events going on with respect to the topic of this thread that I haven't had a chance amid the also competing issues, to have an idea where to begin. I am throwing in this cookie about a quiet scandal on methods brewing in the background at the same time we are all the while being subjected to a banquet of examples with respect to the entire subject of evidence and analysis regarding the Iraq invasion and the War on Terror.

The smörgåsbord actually is of such enormous scope as the collapse of the effectiveness of Security Council at the United Nations, along with the background of its IAEA and the investigations of Nuclear Weapons in Iran and Korea and the seemingly lackadaisical search for Saddam and Bin Laden are only eclipsed by by the publics' demand for symbolic and "highly publicized" popular lynchings at the polls and the real media wars being fought out in the legislatures, courts, boardrooms, and banks. There's even the virtually totally uncovered rising sabotage against laboratories, universities, and industry being blamed on and claimed by environmental "terrorists" while feeding the masses their daily dose of ever more palatable pabulum.

God it is great to be alive in exciting times and life does make better theater than anything Hollywood could ever script. Even if they erroneously claim copyright privilege for all California elections, the hackers will steal that too and publish it on peer to peer sharing networks that will have to figure out how to not have their own databases entering courtrooms for them to continue existing, although if they actually cease to exist independently then the police forces will have to make them exist if only to create sting operations.

Sorry I am still laughing hysterically over the Triumph of the Democratic California Capitalist Will .

Too bad Leni Riefenstahl just died as it will take a while for her clone to make another movie unless the boys from Brazil have been very busy for a long while with her eggs.

At least the Circus part of Bread and Circuses is putting on a good show at the moment with lots of laughing all the way to the bank. [lol]

http://www.nytimes.c...ics/08HAMA.html
Posted Image
F.B.I. Agents Are Examined for Tactics With Hamas
By TIMOTHY L. O'BRIEN
Published: October 8, 2003

The Justice Department is examining the conduct of F.B.I. agents in Phoenix for possible improprieties related to their use of front companies to gather intelligence on China, the Middle East and the activities of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, an F.B.I. spokesman said Tuesday.

The spokesman said the investigation was prompted by allegations about the front companies made by a former operative of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Harry Ellen.

Mr. Ellen said in a telephone interview that the Justice Department's inspector general's office had interviewed him about front companies he dealt with while providing investigative assistance to the Phoenix agents from 1994 to 1999.

Mr. Ellen declined to provide further details but said he believed that the officials who spoke to him were on a straightforward fact-finding mission, not "a witch hunt or on a cover-up investigation."

The Justice Department inquiry, first reported by The Associated Press, is apparently examining whether F.B.I. agents in Phoenix enriched themselves through the front companies that the field office was using to gather intelligence.

The Phoenix office has earned some notoriety since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks because an agent there, Kenneth Williams, had warned his superiors before the attacks about a suspiciously large number of Arabs attending flight schools in the United States. Mr. Williams was also Mr. Ellen's handler but could not be reached for comment.

According to a transcript of an immigration court proceeding in June 2002, Mr. Ellen testified that Mr. Williams had asked him to transfer money to Hamas and other Palestinian organizations for "violent purposes" so the F.B.I. could monitor the money trail.

"He said they would be terrorist activities," Mr. Ellen testified. "I refused to do that. I did take some funds and they ended up helping two, three orphanages. I made sure where the money went. But I refused to do the firearm thing."

The proceeding involved an acquaintance of Mr. Ellen, Joanne Xie, a Chinese citizen seeking asylum in the United States. The F.B.I. was monitoring her as a possible Chinese spy. After Mr. Ellen became romantically involved with her, he and Mr. Williams ended their relationship.

Mr. Ellen said he and Ms. Xie filed a complaint with the F.B.I. in 1999, accusing the Phoenix office of leaking his identity to the news media, improperly investigating Ms. Xie and allowing Chinese operatives to penetrate the Phoenix office's counterintelligence unit.

Mr. Ellen operated in the Palestinian territories under the alias Abu Yusef and set up a charity in the territories called Al Sadaqua Foundation, according to a 1999 letter written on Mr. Ellen's behalf by Gen. Mahmoud Abu Marzoug, head of civil defense for the Palestinian Authority. General Marzoug noted in his letter that Mr. Ellen had tried to help Chinese business executives establish a concern called the Red Phoenix Trading Company in the Palestinian territories, but that the plan was derailed when Mr. Ellen had his falling-out with the F.B.I.

Mr. Ellen's lawyer, Melvin McDonald said he had spoken to members of the Senate and the American intelligence community who attested to Mr. Ellen's value.

"We probably have a million people in Israel who provide us with intelligence on the Israelis," Mr. McDonald said, "but we can probably count on two hands the number of people we have in Palestine who can provide us with intelligence about the Palestinians."

**********************

Are you ready to rock & roll? [":)]

#13 Lazarus Long

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Posted 08 October 2003 - 02:32 PM

Oh I almost forget the in house coup going at the US State and Pentagon Departments along with ritual bloodletting for "who spilled the beans" at the Texan barbecue on the White(whore)house lawn and how many times can Parliament hack up Kelly's corpse before they get the facts straight and are finally convinced that Dead Men tell no tales?

Or do they?

And for those of you that are so convinced that Foster didn't kill himself are you so sure that Kelly did?

What's a little conspiracy between friends and we who have never met in person from many cultures and lands that want to be independently immortal are trying to write a Constitution for how to treat one another. Come on it has just got to make you laugh a little too. [g:)]

At least we have no diamalloy thrones. :))

#14 DJS

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Posted 08 October 2003 - 07:01 PM

Two quick points regarding the Middle East.

1) Israel's air strike on Syria is completely unacceptable and should have been punished severly by the Administration immediately after it happened. Even if you are a neo-con you don't want those zionist bastards dictating policy. Actions such as these by the Israelis make me more and more distrustful of their ultimate intentions. And messages of support by the current Administration make me wonder how well the conservative intelligencia sleeps at night.

By almost any domestic political standard this was an unwarranted and unnecessary escalation in the violence.

2) Word is finally starting to get circulated through the world wires about the very serious condition of General Arafat. Heck, Arafat has looked like a dead man walking since my childhood, but I think that the Guardian has it right. There will be no need for Israel to expel Arafat.

#15 Lazarus Long

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Posted 09 October 2003 - 03:18 PM

So you are noticing that the tail is wagging the dog finally. Well there is more to come before it gets better. We are now the most important power broker in the Mideast but we are losing credibility faster than we are exercising authority. Did you read Putin's analysis of the US Iraq situation over last weekend?

It was an interview that I should have linked to our discussion and it is thoughtful even if you don't agree with it. Most people don't have clue as to the actual players anymore and I return to the idea that these old cold warriors are still fighting the wrong war with the wrong methods and for the worst possible objectives, because our objectives are very clear to the enemy and they are laying traps that we are more, and more just tripping with our numbers to find.

By any measure we have now lost more troops since the "formal" end of the conflict than in the whole battle to take the country and stability is not spreading throughout the region though a few calming reports are coming out of Iraq. Syria is going to dig in now and Iran hasn't even bothered to scream too loud at our cross border incursions. Afghanistan is disintegrating again as supposedly loyal warlords start to fight among one another and Arafat...

They say it was the flu.

So what do you think would happen if he did die? Do you really think it is international pressure that is staying Sharon's hand?

If Sharon really wanted him dead he would already be dead; did it occur to you once Arafat dies there is going to be a terrible level of in-fighting at first that will be desirable to some factions as it divides the Palestinians, but in the long run will produce a unified, organized, and even more radicalized opposition to Israel than ever before, exactly as it did in Lebanon when the occupation created Hizbollah. Arafat only wishes that history will get to record him as a martyr, it is the way the individual in that mindset achieves immortality.

The reason we and many nations want a functional governmental structure in place now is BECAUSE Arafat is sooner or later going to die anyway and without it already operational the likelihood of a cathartic chaos in the aftermath is ever more likely instead. That chaos will coincide with the radicalization of Iraq and deteriorating border security we are already witness to from the Balkans to the Horn of Africa, from Pakistan to frankly our own borders.

I have been doing an informal analysis of undocumented immigrants that are in my area and evaluating their home of origin, route, travel-time, and arrival period and I would have to say that more, not less numbers are now coming across the border since 9/11 and they are starting from much farther away and traveling farther throughout the nation.

They are coming over the US/Mexico border but they are South Americans and their journey is overland from Peru, Ecuador, and Central America, it takes an average of three weeks and is costing them as much as 6K$ that they must continue paying off to coyotes, even after paying at least 50-75% upfront (usually full payment is required though).

One aspect of the al Qaeda link is that is one of their basic income sources, you see they are black market smugglers and have been for thousands of years, they usually traffic in contraband but have also always moved refugees and undocumented persons. IN other words these groups don't just violate one border, or just our border, they violate borders worldwide daily and do it professionally. When we wanted to run weapons to the Mohjadeen that eventually became al Qaeda, the CIA hired these groups to do it.

The various drug cartels that rule the borders of the Americas are more powerful than the governmental Customs groups arrayed against them and this should be obvious by the scope of what actually crosses. If these groups ever see it in their interests to convey a WMD we are in serious trouble but what shields us at the moment is the "Golden Goose Principle." Do you know the history of J. Edgar Hoover's pact with Lucky Luciano to defend the US ports of entry during WWII?

The cartels themselves do not see it in their self interest to allow such an attack on the US as this more than anything would perhaps finally make us serious about closing our borders to their profitable traffic. One irony however is that the more difficult the crossing the more costly and thus potentially more profitable this underground trade becomes drawing ever more moths to this deadly flame.

Let me lay it out again for those that do not understand it. WW III has already begun. The drug & terrorism wars are only two flanks of this same global campaign of conflict, and while most of the fighting (as has often been the case) will be fought in the Third World where it began, it will inevitably rise continuously in scope for the next decade destabilizing large-scale regions and producing millions of cross border refugees by a kind of inverse domino effect.

If millions of Palestinians simply disarmed themselves and went home they would force Israel to recapitulate its worst nightmare or realize that they cannot play at being a non-secular democracy. The wall being built around Palestinian territories is going to become a doppleganger of the Warsaw ghetto before it is completed.

World War Three began as a Third World War but now more than ever before is the possibility of regional disputes going nuclear becoming more probable, not less. Even if the use of nukes is less likely to escalate to immediately larger conflicts involving direct exchanges between the major Industrialized nations under the old fashioned idea of Mutually Assured Destruction; the ultra violence, like the fallout, will fly in the breeze and eventually reach a neighborhood near you.

This is already WW III and will be understood historically as such, because it is an only semi organized form of pandemonium on a global scale. So far our "Official" strategies are not really producing the results we only wish and claim they were. It is time that a very different perspective on how to prevent what is happening is applied and for this we need the UN more than ever before.

Saying that "the United Nations is incapable," is just begging the question and not an acceptable response. We, along with all rationally interested parties must work to MAKE it a viable organization again because there is not enough time to reinvent the wheel.

And failure is not an option.

#16 Lazarus Long

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Posted 09 October 2003 - 04:13 PM

Add Friedman's recent Opinion piece to this mix to clarify some aspects. I think it is simplistic but on the right track. I was wholly and still against the war in Iraq because I felt it wasn't likely to produce the claimed and intended results, and it hasn't. That said I happen to agree with one aspect of the sentiment expressed in this opinion, we cannot allow the failure of the Iraq mission. I told you once Kissinger that I would hold you to the letter of those grandiose "altruistic promises" of bringing peace and security and democracy to the region.

Well it is definitely crunch time and the best methods of achieving this positive outcome are eluding us so we need:
A: Creative and novel approaches
B: A real commitment to longer term goals
C: An honest appraisal of the applied methods and options as well as a cleaning house of those that have only been giving lip service to the actual motives for this conflict.

I did not and still don't like this situation one bit but the world will only be worse off if we simply tuck tail, turn, and run. We screwed it up and now we MUST make it better.

One example of the "Law of Unintended Consequences" we are coping with is that by Israel making Arafat irrelevant what they have done is contribute to the power vacuum they face that makes it impossible to negotiate. What they also did was create a rally round the flag effect that has made Arafat more powerful symbolically in direct proportion to becoming ineffectual strategically.

I also suggest that one table needing to be set with these "long spoons" Friedman offers as tableware ought to be in New York with many of the Security Council representatives and the primary functionaries of the United Nations.

Posted Image
Long Spoon Diplomacy
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: October 9, 2003

There is an old proverb that says, "If you're going to sup with the devil, use a long spoon." Does the White House pantry have any long spoons? I ask because if President Bush really wants to achieve his objectives in Iraq, he may have to sup a little with Yasir Arafat, the Iranian leader Ali Khamenei and Syria's president, Bashar al-Assad.

First, let me state my own bias: Iraq is the whole ballgame. If we can produce a reasonably decent, constitutionally grounded Iraqi government, good things will happen all around the Middle East. If Iraq turns into a quagmire, it will be a disaster for U.S. interests all around the world. So, for me, everything should be focused on getting Iraq on the right path.

Which is why we may need to let some of the Axis of Evil out on parole — or at least out on work-release. We can't allow the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to spread into a Israeli-Syrian-Shiite-Hezbollah conflict. It would greatly complicate the ability of Iraqis to work openly with us and would greatly enhance the ability of anti-U.S. forces in Iraq to mobilize militants.

I have enormous sympathy for Israel's predicament in confronting the madness of suicide bombers. No society has ever faced such a thing. But every military strategy Ariel Sharon has tried has failed. Maybe the only way Israel can deal with this phenomenon is by trying anew to do business with Mr. Arafat — indirectly, through his new prime minister, Ahmed Qurei.

Here's the logic: Israel says Mr. Arafat is totally irrelevant as a negotiating partner and totally responsible for all Palestinian terrorism. But Israel keeps him totally powerless under house arrest, and the Bush team says Israel can't kill or deport him. Israel has the worst of all worlds: it's getting nothing for keeping Mr. Arafat locked up — except the inability to get any other Palestinian figure to work with Israel, because Mr. Arafat still holds the legitimacy.

The former Mideast envoy Dennis Ross has a useful suggestion: Israel should try to strike a deal with Mr. Qurei. Offer to give him what he needs: "a two-way ticket" for Mr. Arafat (so he can come and go without fear of deportation).

In return, Mr. Arafat would have to give Mr. Qurei "carte blanche," Mr. Ross says, to crack down on Islamic terrorists in exchange for Israel's easing up on Palestinians. I know there are no simple solutions or sure things here, but to not explore every alternative, again and again, is to invite total despair. Moreover, the best way to create an alternative to Mr. Arafat is to strengthen Mr. Qurei.

As for the Syrians, they got the message from the U.S. invasion of Iraq, but maybe too much so. They are so convinced they are next on the Bush hit parade that they have been easing the entry of anti-U.S. guerrillas into Iraq — because the more preoccupied the U.S. is there, the less likely it is to invade Syria. It may be worth a new high-level strategic dialogue with the Syrians to strike a deal assuring them they will not be treated as part of the Axis of Evil if they stem the flow of militants and arms into Iraq.

Finally, Iran. There is enormous pressure within the Bush team to confront the Iranians before they develop a nuclear option. Iran, though, is worried about a pending U.S. invasion. I would use that leverage to open a strategic dialogue with Iran about the nuclear issue and about using its considerable influence among some Iraqi Shiites to help stabilize Iraq.

As Ray Takeyh, an Iran expert at the U.S. National Defense University, wrote in the latest issue of The National Interest: "The Bush administration finally has the opportunity to arrive at the modus vivendi with Iran that has eluded previous U.S. administrations. Washington should capitalize on Iran's emerging pragmatic tendencies and reach a settlement with the theocracy on issues of common concern."

The Bush team's tough-minded approach to all of these bad actors has gotten their attention. Hats off. But now it has to decide whether U.S. interests can best be served by trying to take them all down at once, which the U.S. public has no energy for and which would clearly hamper us in Iraq, or by trying to engage them — with a long spoon — to maximize the chances of success in Iraq.

Trying to remake Iraq is hard enough — trying to do it with the opposition of all the neighbors would be even harder. And most important, a liberalized Iraq would be the greatest long-term force for change in Iran and Syria. I don't see what we have to lose by trying, but I sure know what we have to win.

**********
These articles actually belong under the Iran topic but as they are also currently serious situations relating to security I recommend a review.

Iran releases nuclear data.- Iran has begun releasing details of components it imported unofficially for its nuclear programme. The country's envoy to the United Nations nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said it was supplying a list of parts supplied through third parties.-BBC 6 October http://news.bbc.co.u...ast/3168150.stm


Iran says "not bound" by IAEA deadline, but promises quick answers.- Iran intends to answer International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) questions over its nuclear programme "as quickly as possible", even though it does not consider itself bound by an October 31 deadline to do so, the Islamic republic's representative to the IAEA said.-AFP 5 October http://www.iranexper...ine5october.htm

US and Iran in secret peace talks.- Secret 'back-door' diplomacy involving some of the Middle East's most influential figures has led to unexpected signals of a rapprochement between America and Iran despite angry public rhetoric on both sides.-Observer 5 October http://www.iranexper...lks5october.htm

Tehran looks likely to get the bomb – and there is no Plan B.- SHOULD we assume that Iran will get the nuclear bomb? The case for pessimism is now formidably strong, although there is still a sliver of room for hope, and probably several years’ grace.-Times 7 October http://www.iranexper...omb7october.htm

Breaking the Stalemate in Iran.- Washington,"We never asked Russia to not build the plant at Bushehr," Secretary of State Colin Powell said last month. That's strange. When I was in the Clinton administration, we told the Russians, and more than once, not to build that nuclear power plant in Iran.-New York Times 7 October http://www.iranexper...ran7october.htm

Defying IAEA ultimatum, Iran sticks to right to enrich uranium.- Iran's foreign minister has reiterated his government's refusal to stop enriching uranium, despite an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resolution demanding a halt to the process, the state news agency reported.- AFP 6 October http://www.iranexper...ium6october.htm

#17 DJS

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Posted 10 October 2003 - 12:16 AM

Ken,

I know you told me so. :) Please, please do not view me as the same person I was a few months ago. I am changing.

I have gained a great deal of humility over the past few months as I have become more exposed to the Immortalist meme. It's funny how one minute you can be so sure of yourself and everything fits into place so nicely. And then the next minute...absolute chaos.

The deck of cards that was my world view died a hard death. One of the valuable things I gained from the experience was that I will always truly understand the perspective of the political right.

PS -- I am having a great deal of fun being a political chameleon, perfecting the art of playing which ever side appeals to me at the moment, while underneath not really subscribing to either perspective. It amazes me that people can't detect that I'm faking it.

#18 Lazarus Long

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Posted 10 October 2003 - 03:11 PM

I apologize for sounding like I am saying "I told you so." Frankly it was not my intention. I was trying to establish that current events were predicable and current methods are predictably going to fail. I am also saying that the stakes are getting higher and hence the risks worse. We need bold and creative solutions that few are willing to contemplate and their conservative cowardice is also a form of "risk aversion" that will doom us if we do not soon alter course.

On a separate note I have noticed your marked change in tone for some time and now wholesale rejection of your Neo-Con Icon moniker and an adoption of a remarkably similar attitude to my own with respect to the parochialism of politics. So I must warn you, the parties of politics are more jealous in their lovelessness than churches and spouses. They don't take kindly to catching "chameleons" stepping outside the boundaries of doctrine.

We are all changing all the time Don, some of us more than others, that is growth. It is true for myself as well as you even at such different ages. We grow and survive or we become rigid and die. This is a paradoxical aspect of immortality few understand in its contradiction that to preserve life we may find that we are destroying the way we have become accustomed to living it.

Living longer will not likely mean living like we do now and only those able to make the adaptation will likely survive the psychological metamorphosis needed even with all the technology money can buy.

I only posted the intelligence issues above to show that while you and I took a break from our sparring the insiders at the White House began to fight in earnest and that now the stakes are even higher. The Nobel committee's choice for Peace Prize today demonstrates why. Remember my dire prediction that Iran would accelerate its quest for a nuclear weapon because of pushing into Iraq? Well that is now a "fait accompli" along with Kim Jong Il's accelerated enrichment programs.

The intelligence lesson here is that we didn't need the battle in Iraq when we chose to do it. We didn't need that fight in the manner we chose to make it, and most definitely we didn't need it where we chose it. The objectives were so short sighted that now the objectives claimed must be closely scrutinized. Bush must shoulder the blame but it is not likely he actually understood how he was being manipulated by extremist demagogues within his own administration.

The fact that he probably didn't understand bodes ill, not innocence, for things are likely to get more complex before they get sorted out. He was played by the groups that wanted (and still do) to finally override the UN completely and destroy the organization in favor of what amounts to traditional hegemony and utilizing NATO as an Elite guard.

The problem is that it wont work either and this is creating a power vacuum at a time when we most need a broad international commitment to peaceful resolution, a the rule of law and a combined legitimate global police force.

In my Pax Americana piece I mentioned how we were behaving like a "Bad Cop" and we did. So now we need to remember that we rule by virtue of the legitimacy of the Institutions that we helped to create not that we rule "over" them. We need the good cop by our side and to reaffirm the United Nations. When a Bad Cop decides to be the law onto themselves it defines going "rogue" and why many people around the world think it is the United States that is becoming the rogue nation.

We can blame it on a moment of excess but it is not too late for us to report to work and remember that in order to stay inside the bounds of legitimate force we need balance and it is through our relationship with globally recognized organizations, (for all their obvious and inherent faults) that we are recognized as righteous, not through mere force of arms.

The problem is that for this Administration to do this it doesn't need to learn how to eat with a "long spoon" it needs to learn how to "eat crow."

#19 Lazarus Long

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Posted 10 October 2003 - 03:52 PM

By the way add these articles to the list here:

More Agents Are Added to Leak Case
http://www.nytimes.c...ics/10LEAK.html

Ex-F.B.I. Agent Is Charged in a 1981 Gangland Killing
http://www.nytimes.c...nal/10ARRE.html

Russian Official Cautions U.S. on Use of Central Asian Bases
http://www.nytimes.c...cas/10NATO.html

Since I mentioned it above add this assessment of our policy from the now loyal opposition and a professional intelligence officer in his own right.

http://www.nytimes.c...ope/06PUTI.html
NY Times
Putin Says U.S. Faces Big Risks in Effort in Iraq
By STEVEN LEE MYERS
Published: October 6, 2003

MOSCOW, Monday, Oct. 6 — President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia says the United States now faces in Iraq the possibility of a prolonged, violent and ultimately futile war like the one that mired the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

In an expansive interview on Saturday evening, Mr. Putin warned that Iraq could "become a new center, a new magnet for all destructive elements." He added, without naming them, that "a great number of members of different terrorist organizations" have been drawn into the country since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

To respond to this emerging threat, he said, the Bush administration must move quickly to restore sovereignty to Iraqis and to secure a new United Nations resolution that would clearly define how long international forces remain there.

"How would the local population treat forces whose official name is the occupying forces?" he asked, suggesting that further hostility to the United States was inevitable unless its occupation received the international legitimacy it now lacks.

Mr. Putin said for the first time that Russia was prepared to offer partial relief on the $8 billion it is owed by Iraq, but only in coordination with other major creditor nations in the Paris Club. The United States has been struggling to persuade its European allies to make significant contributions to the multibillion-dollar rebuilding of Iraq.

During an interview that lasted nearly three hours and ranged from Iraq to Russia's economic development to the state of democracy here, Mr. Putin repeatedly characterized Russia's relations with the United States, and his own with President Bush, as close and frank — those of a partner, even, at times, an ally.

But at the same time, he was sharply critical of American complaints about Chechnya, of humiliating new visa requirements for Russians, of what he called lingering cold-war habits of mind, and of the Bush administration's decision to invade Iraq, which he simply called "an error."

Mr. Hussein's government had, with reason, been called "a criminal one," Mr. Putin said, but he disputed one of the core reasons given by President Bush for attacking Iraq in March: the assertion that it had ties to international Islamic militancy and terrorism. Rather, he suggested that the invasion of Iraq had created a terrorist haven where one did not previously exist.

"It struggled against the fundamentalists," he said of Mr. Hussein's government. "He either exterminated them physically or put them in jail or just sent them into exile."

Now, he added, with Mr. Hussein ousted, "The coalition forces received two enemies at once — both the remains of the Saddam regime, who fight with them, and those who Saddam himself had fought in the past — the fundamentalists."

Mr. Putin did not identify the militants entering Iraq, but he said they came "from all the Muslim world." Those militants, he suggested, may now find themselves at ease in Iraq, as they once were among the Afghans, and the "danger exists" of a decade-long struggle like the one fought by the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980's. Such fears, he added, "are not groundless."

Mr. Putin spoke at his wooded presidential compound in Novo-Ogaryovo, outside Moscow, appearing relaxed but also fiercely concentrated. His growing understanding of English was on display in the not infrequent correction of an interpreter on his use of particular words.

As he did during his recent trip to the United States, he seemed eager to present a softer, more congenial image — perhaps in response to a flurry of advertisements, protests and newspaper columns suggesting that he was an autocrat bent on reversing Russia's democracy. Mr. Putin affectionately stroked his black Labrador, Koni, who bounded in — seemingly on cue for the kinder-Russian-ruler campaign — halfway through the interview.

Repeatedly, Mr. Putin used American analogies to drive home his points. Why, he asked, was his wide use of the Russian security services any different from the creation of the Department of Homeland Security? Why should terrorism in Chechnya provoke any lesser response here than America's if the same problems arose in Texas? Why should his former role as a K.G.B. agent prompt concern when the first President Bush was once head of the C.I.A.?

Turning to Iran, Mr. Putin said Russia had sought to address American concerns about its aid in the construction of a civilian nuclear reactor in Iran by insisting that Iran return any spent nuclear fuel — a demand not yet ironed out in talks with Iran. Without identifying them, he complained that American and European companies also assisted Iran's nuclear ambitions but did not face sanctions, as some Russian companies had.

He made it clear that Russia reserved the right to complete Iran's reactor at Bushehr. But he also reiterated his call for Iranian leaders to accept expanded international inspections of Iran's nuclear facilities, saying they had no reason to object if they had nothing to hide. "We are not only hearing what our U.S. partners are telling us, we are listening to what they have to say," Mr. Putin said. "And we are finding that some of their assertions are justified."

On the conflict in Chechnya, an open sore in Russia's standing in the world, Mr. Putin portrayed the presidential election being held on Sunday as an important step toward a political settlement to end four years of conflict — not unlike, he said, what was needed in Iraq. On Monday, the election commission chief in Chechnya, Abdul-Karim Arsakhanov, said the Kremlin's hand-picked candidate, Akhmad Kadyrov, had secured victory by gaining more than half the votes, the Interfax news agency reported. The election has been widely criticized as a farce.

Mr. Putin dismissed the criticism and bemoaned what he called an American double standard in which Islamic fighters in Chechnya were called democrats, while those in Afghanistan and Iraq were viewed as criminals. He also joked that when it came to elections, the United States had its own problems. "As yet you have not yet mastered well the situation in California," he said.

Mr. Bush was "courageous" for expressing support for Russian policies in Chechnya, he said, but he complained that other United States "agencies and ministries" were far less helpful — a legacy, he said, of a cold-war mentality he also perceived in a recent American decision, now revoked, to send surveillance flights over the Black Sea.

Mr. Putin spoke a week after a four-day trip to the United States that ended with an overnight stay with President Bush at Camp David. A qualitatively new relationship now exists between Russia and the United States — one mature enough to withstand pointed criticism and frank advice, Mr. Putin said. "Our interests in the sphere of the fight against radicalism and terrorism coincide," he said.

But on Iraq, differences clearly remain. Mr. Putin ruled out, for now, sending Russian troops to help there and said that although a variety of international military contingents provided political support for America in Iraq, they were not much use in other respects because they "abuse alcohol," "begin to sell weapons" and only thought about "fleeing as soon as possible."

He declined to say which countries' soldiers he had in mind, but described the troops as "motley" rather than multinational. Several dozen nations have contributed to the America-led force in Iraq — including Poland, Romania, Ukraine, Spain, Portugal and Mongolia — usually with small contingents.

As to the postwar looting and chaos in Iraq, Mr. Putin said Russia had not been surprised by the collapse of Iraqi institutions. But, like the Bush administration, Russia believed before the war that unconventional weapons might be found. "The question is what has happened" to the weapons, he said.

Although Russia seeks a rapid return of sovereignty to Iraq, it would accept a dominant role for the American military in providing security, he said, as well as a gradual rather than a rapid transfer of actual power to the Iraqi authorities. Given the money it has spent and is spending there, America has to play a leading role in Iraq, he suggested.

This position — calling for a greater United Nations role in Iraq but apparently acknowledging American primacy — puts Russia at odds with some countries, like France, that have been more critical of the United States. Mr. Putin described the Russian position as "very pragmatic and flexible."

Asked if he believed that the United States now treated Russia as a junior partner, he offered a striking admission, saying he was "fully aware of what Russia is, what place it occupies in the world, what are our capabilities." At the same time, however, he said Russia "with all the problems it has" would not subsume its national interests to those of the United States or any other country.

Turning to the rift between the United States and its European allies, particularly France and Germany, Mr. Putin said the difficulties would be overcome. "We think that it is kind of a quarrel in a holy family — and sooner or later it will heal," he said. "The less emotion expressed here the better."

He noted that the European Union accounted for half of Russia's trade and said it would have a "special level of relationship" with the union that stopped short, he emphasized, of becoming a member. Russia, he said, was intent on "setting up a unified economic and humanitarian space in Europe," one that ensured that "no new divisive lines" are established on the continent.

As for the state of democracy in Russia — the state control of television, the harassment of some rights groups, the growing influence of former security agents, like himself — he said different countries had different identities.

"But on the whole, the main principles of humanism — human rights, freedom of speech — remain fundamental for all countries, and Russia enjoys no right to claim any exclusive status in this area," he said.

He described tremendous progress since the collapse of the Soviet Union — noting that it had taken centuries for democratic institutions to evolve in Western Europe and the United States. While the Inquisition in Europe ended centuries ago, Russia's own form of Inquisition ended barely a decade ago, he said.

The country, for all its problems, is following an irreversible trajectory toward democracy and a free market, he declared.

Russia would seek to spur foreign investment, including a possible deal involving ExxonMobil acquiring a stake in the Russian oil company, Yukos, he said, because "we favor foreign capital investment."

Mr. Putin alluded to Boris N. Yeltsin's decisive achievement in bringing freedom to Russia and suggested that his own mission was to consolidate his predecessor's by completing Russia's transition. "Even if someone wanted it to, it is impossible for the country to make a U-turn."

#20 Lazarus Long

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Posted 10 October 2003 - 04:33 PM

I encountered this op-ed piece from Herbert that so compliments my own that I think it deserves posting along with a mention on "civil speech" from Krugman.

Posted Image
Lessons in Civility
By PAUL KRUGMAN
When you're writing a book about this administration, sometimes it's hard to be both honest and polite.
http://www.nytimes.c...ion/10KRUG.html

http://www.nytimes.c...ion/10HERB.html
Hard Sell on Iraq
By BOB HERBERT
Published: October 10, 2003

The United States has tried again and again to get help from the United Nations as a way of legitimizing its tragic misadventure in Iraq. But the U.N., which was founded in 1945 to foster international cooperation as a way of promoting peace, is following the quiet guidance of its secretary general, Kofi Annan, whose response to the latest U.S. entreaty has been a polite but firm no.

At a private lunch last week with members of the Security Council, the secretary general made it clear that there was no chance he would go along with a U.S. proposal to have the U.N. assist in the effort to rebuild and reestablish security in Iraq even as the United States retains full control of the country.

"The U.S. would like to have its cake and eat it," said a diplomat who attended the lunch. "It wants to fly the U.N. flag to demonstrate to Iraqis and others that it is no longer an occupying power. But the U.S. would still be the occupying power because it would still be ruling the country."

The latest American request, a proposed Security Council resolution calling for a multinational security force in Iraq, is going nowhere, officials said. The word yesterday was that the U.S. might well abandon it.

There is a widespread feeling at the U.N. that the policies of the United States — its invasion and occupation of Iraq, its approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and its frequently contemptuous attitude toward the U.N. in particular and international cooperation in general — have made the Middle East and parts of the rest of the world substantially more dangerous, rather than less.

There is an especially emotional quality to discussions with U.N. diplomats about these matters because of the two suicide bomb attacks at the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad in the past two months. The first attack, on Aug. 19, killed 22 people, including Sergio Vieira de Mello, a highly respected and very well-liked official who was close to Mr. Annan and who led the U.N. mission in Iraq.

"We are not here to serve as a fig leaf for aggression," said one of the guests who attended last week's lunch at the U.N. "The U.S. does not want to share power in Iraq. It does not want to share authority. All it wants to share are the casualties and the costs. That is a very brutal, one-sided game, and we should not be playing it."

The U.N. would be more willing to help, officials said, if the United States were willing to more quickly, and sincerely, relinquish authority to an interim Iraqi government. Then, said one official, "we would be responding to a request for help from a government of Iraq, not an occupying power."

Another official said that if the U.S. insisted on running Iraq itself while having the U.N. serve only an "ancillary" function, "we are quite prepared to confine ourselves to a humanitarian role and wish you the best of luck."

Meanwhile, President Bush, whose poll numbers are sinking in part because of his Iraq policies, is leading a public relations initiative aimed at reigniting support for the war and convincing Americans that the situation on the ground is not as bad as it may seem.

"Americans must not forget the lessons of Sept. 11," said Mr. Bush, in a reprise of his administration's compulsion to somehow link Iraq to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. "A stable and democratic and hopeful Iraq will no longer be a breeding ground for terror, tyranny and aggression."

The timing of the president's comments was unfortunate. Even as he was speaking, reports were coming in about a series of tragic occurrences. A pair of suicide bombers killed eight Iraqis and themselves in an attack at a police station in Baghdad. An American soldier was killed when a rocket-propelled grenade hit his convoy in an area northeast of Baghdad. And an intelligence agent assigned to the Spanish Embassy in Baghdad was chased from his home wearing just his undershorts before being shot to death in cold blood in the street.

Despite the carnage, the American administrator in Iraq, Paul Bremer, did his best for the public relations initiative. He is optimistic, he said. Things are going better than anyone could have predicted, he said.

Selling a misguided war is a lot like selling cigarettes. You can never tell the tragic truth about your product.


#21 Lazarus Long

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Posted 31 March 2005 - 11:31 PM

I was tempted at first to put this in the Iraq Revisited thread but really it is old news and I feel no need to gloat over being right when it is about as irrelevant to the pragmatics of politics as well to clean up the phrase:

"Breasts on a Bull"

Anyway of late there have been a series of debacles and *confessions* not the least of which is the repeated hammering home of the fact that the Iraq War cost us the credibility to face down Iran on nucular weapons development and nobody seems to care that Kim Jong Ill is using nukes for a codpiece.

The oft touted and proclaimed value of *artificial intelligence* (sats, raptors and electronic eavesdropping) has turned out to be as much overblown as the second coming of AI. Well I still feel this report needs an honorable mention in our archives so here it is.

This Administration dances like Michael Jackson when it comes to spinning and *moon-talking* but I bet they stay farther from the courts. [wis]

http://www.nytimes.c...artner=homepage
Panel Says 'Dead Wrong' Data on Prewar Iraq Demands Overhaul
By DAVID STOUT
Published: March 31, 2005

WASHINGTON, March 31 - The American intelligence community was "dead wrong" about Iraq's weapons arsenal in large part because of an outdated Cold War mentality and a vast, lumbering bureaucracy that continues to shackle dedicated and capable people, a presidential commission said today.

"The intelligence community must be transformed - a goal that would be difficult to meet even in the best of all possible worlds," the commission said in its report to President Bush. "And we do not live in the best of worlds."

The commission said the erroneous assumption by intelligence agencies that Saddam Hussein possessed deadly chemical and biological weapons had damaged American credibility before a world audience, and that the damage would take years to undo.

Only systemic changes in thinking and acting - changes that will surely bring discomfort to agencies and individuals - will bring the intelligence system to a point where it can cope with the dangers of the 21st century, the commission said. It said, too, that some recent attempts at change - notably the intelligence reorganization act that created the powerful position of national intelligence director - did not go far enough.

The panel, whose nine members included Democrats and Republicans, noted pointedly that three and a half years after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States had built mighty industrial and military forces that helped force Germany to its knees and were about to vanquish Japan. Three and a half years after Sept. 11, 2001, the panel said, there has been no comparable awakening of the intelligence bureaucracy to defeat a network of deadly, far more elusive foes.

The Sept. 11 attacks did lead to creation of the Department of Homeland Security, which absorbed a number of agencies in the biggest government reorganization in half a century. The commission report today called for further government changes, including a new counter-proliferation center to coordinate data throughout the intelligence bureaucracy on nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, and a reorganization of the Justice Department to enable one office, not several, to handle intelligence, counterintelligence and counterterrorism.

Other, more mundane changes were recommended: better training "at all stages of an intelligence professional's career," for instance, and a rethinking of the intelligence briefing given daily to the president. "The daily intelligence briefings given to you before the Iraq war were flawed," the commission stated, addressing Mr. Bush.

Despite some conspicuous successes, like exposing a nuclear-proliferation network run by a rogue Pakistani scientist and gathering significant data on Libya's arsenal, America's intelligence agencies are not keeping up with the deadly threats the country now faces, the panel concluded.

"There is no more important intelligence mission than understanding the worst weapons that our enemies possess, and how they intend to use them against us," the commission declared. "These are their deepest secrets, and unlocking them must be our highest priority."

President Bush said today he agreed that the intelligence bureaucracy "needs fundamental change," and he pledged to try to bring it about. "I asked these distinguished individuals to give me an unvarnished look at our intelligence community, and they have delivered," he said.

Copies of the report were distributed to members of Congress, and the lawmakers are certain to debate its findings, and what to do about them. The report, several hundred pages long, contains portions that are classified and were not made public.

Senator Pat Roberts, the Kansas Republican who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee, said he was pleased by the report. "I don't think there should be any doubt that we have now heard it all regarding prewar intelligence," Mr. Roberts told The Associated Press.

Representative Ike Skelton of Missouri, leading Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told The A.P. that the faults were obviously widespread. "I don't think you can blame any one person, although the buck does stop at the top of every one of these agencies," Mr. Skelton said.

President Bush created the commission, headed by Laurence H. Silberman, a senior federal appeals court judge, and Charles S. Robb, a former Virginia governor and senator, early in 2004. The presidential order directed the panel to investigate intelligence-gathering and analysis - not the use that policymakers made of the intelligence.

The false assumptions about Iraq's arsenal were not the result of deliberate distortion, nor were they influenced by pressure from outside the agencies, the Silberman-Robb commission said. Rather, it said, they came about because the intelligence bureaucracy collected far too little information, "and much of what they did collect was either worthless or misleading."

Moreover, the commission concluded, intelligence officials failed to make it clear to policymakers how deficient their information was.

Describing the intelligence bureaucracy as "fragmented, loosely managed and poorly coordinated," the commission said the government's 15 intelligence organizations "are a 'community' in name only and rarely act with a unity of purpose."

The panel, officially called the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction, echoed some of the findings of earlier inquiries into American intelligence failures.

As did the 9/11 commission and the Senate Intelligence Committee, which also studied intelligence lapses leading up to the American-led war against Iraq, the Silberman-Robb commission singled out some of the most familiar entities in the bureaucracy - the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation - as well as the huge National Security Agency, much of whose function is electronic eavesdropping and analysis.

"The C.I.A. and N.S.A. may be sleek and omniscient in the movies, but in real life they and other intelligence agencies are vast government bureaucracies," the nine-member commission told the president.

"They are bureaucracies filled with talented people and armed with sophisticated technological tools, but talent and tools do not suspend the iron laws of bureaucratic behavior," the commission said. "The intelligence community is a closed world, and many insiders admitted to us that it has an almost perfect record of resisting external recommendations."

And despite the allusion to the talented people within the bureaucracies, the commission hinted that intelligence agencies need more diversity in their ranks, and new approaches to their jobs. "We need an intelligence community that is truly integrated, far more imaginative and willing to run risks, open to a new generation of Americans, and receptive to new technologies," the commission said. (Previous examinations of American intelligence agencies have said they need more people fluent in various languages, including Arabic.)

The F.B.I. has made progress in shifting itself into an intelligence-gathering organization, but "it still has a long way to go," the commission said. Moreover, it said, the intelligence reorganization act leaves the bureau's relationship to the new national intelligence director, John Negroponte, "especially murky."

The legislation that created Mr. Negroponte's position was fiercely debated on Capitol Hill. In the end, even though it invested the new national intelligence director with wide powers, those powers were still not as great as those envisioned by the commission that investigated the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. That panel called for a director of national intelligence who would truly deserve the title "intelligence czar," as the post is known informally in Washington, and break down resistance to change.

"The D.N.I. cannot make this work unless he takes his legal authorities over budget, programs, personnel and priorities to the limit," the commission said. "It won't be easy to provide this leadership to the intelligence components of the Defense Department, or to the C.I.A. They are some of the government's most headstrong agencies. Sooner or later, they will try to run around - or over - the D.N.I."

Mr. Negroponte, a former ambassador to the United Nations and to the new Iraq, is no stranger to the ways of Washington.

Response to the report on Capitol Hill came quickly from Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, who rekindled themes from his failed presidential bid last year.

"This is much more than a wake-up call," he said in a statement. "Not only was the intelligence dead wrong about Iraq, but with growing threats in Iran and North Korea, we must take deadly seriously the commission's conclusion that we know disturbingly little about the weapons programs of hostile nations."

"We need accountability and action, immediately," he added. "The president has enormous work to do to restore the credibility of American intelligence gathering, and the administration must start catching up now."

The Silberman-Robb panel sought to avoid a condemning tone. "We have been humbled by the difficult judgments that had to be made about Iraq and its weapons programs," it said at one point. "We are humbled too by the complexity of the management and technical challenges intelligence professionals face today."

Nevertheless, the commission's findings are likely to stoke the smoldering debates over the war in Iraq, whose main rationale was supposedly to neutralize the danger from Saddam Hussein's deadly weapons. And it will also stir new talk about whether architects of the Iraq policy - Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld; his deputy, Paul D. Wolfowitz; former national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, who is now secretary of state; and the former C.I.A. chief George J. Tenet - should have had to answer for mistaken assumptions.

Administration critics have said Mr. Rumsfeld should have been dismissed instead of being kept on as Pentagon chief, that Ms. Rice should not have been made secretary of state, and that Mr. Tenet should have gone into retirement without the Medal of Freedom bestowed on him by President Bush. The critics have also voiced anger over the choice of Mr. Wolfowitz to head the World Bank - a position in which he was installed today.

Despite the somber, alarming tone of the commission report, Mr. Silberman and Mr. Robb expressed optimism that improvements can be wrought. "It's a whole lot easier to instigate change when there is a major change in leadership taking place," Mr. Robb said, referring to Mr. Negroponte's nomination as national intelligence director and his approaching Senate confirmation.

"Was the war against Iraq a waste?" they were asked at a news briefing.

Mr. Silberman said that was a policy issue and "we didn't deal with policy."


Actual Full Report in PDF format
http://www.nytimes.c..._wmd_report.pdf

#22 knite

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Posted 10 April 2005 - 03:57 PM

QUOTE (DonSpanton)
Even though the article is an unabashed political hit piece (no author listed), it was still interesting.

Clinton friends are trying their darndest to put the best positive spin on 8 years doing nothing but "creating plans" to combat terrorism.

******

I agree.  Revisionist Clinton History is becoming common place.  Take North Korea.  I heard a audio clip on WABC where Clinton said he was prepared to take pre emptive military action against North Korea back in 1994.

Oh really??  Why didn't I hear about it.  In fact, why didn't anyone hear about it--even ranking military officials?  Preparing for a military conflict can't be kept hush hush for very long.  Lies, lies and more lies.  If I were Clinton, I wouldn't be able to look in the mirror knowing how weakened I left my country.  But then again, that's the way he wants it, isn't it?? [ph34r]


lol, thats the way it always is. nixon was praised when he died, many people believe had jfk lived he would never have made it to the end of his term before being impeached with all the scandals, but being assassinated he is one of the most celebrated presidents.

and you sure hate clinton..i mean, i think since bush has taken office this country has been weakened dramatically, in more ways than just foreign.

I had to correct a text glitch because of the quote function. If any text was lost Knite please reinsert it but don't use the {quote=name} command as it causes the glitch

Edited by Lazarus Long, 11 May 2005 - 06:14 PM.


#23 Lazarus Long

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Posted 11 May 2005 - 06:10 PM

Since I started this thread on *Intelligence Lesson* there have been many scandals that I hav not included, Abu Graib for example, because the lesson there is that torture doesn't work, but of course that was comon knowledge BEFORE the latest example and the story of how high the corruption goes and whether the policy really does emanate from the program at Gitmo is still being investigated and told.

However this story of failed intelligence certainly deseerves mention as it is now understood to be the tip of the iceberg. The ability to preserve everyone's personal informations appears to be harder and harder. It shuld also come as no surprise why the data is being targeted but who is doing the targeting is still kind of strange and how they did is certainly worth comment.

http://www.cnn.com/2...cker/index.html

Report: Hacker infiltrated government computers
U.S. military installations, laboratories, and NASA hit last year
Tuesday, May 10, 2005 Posted: 2:22 PM EDT (1822 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The FBI confirmed Tuesday the accuracy of a New York Times report that software on routers, computers that control the Internet, were compromised last year by a hacker who claimed that he had infiltrated systems serving U.S. military installations, research laboratories, and NASA.

The Times reported, and the FBI confirmed, that the focus of the investigation is a youth in Uppsala, Sweden, who has been charged as a juvenile.

The FBI said it is unclear to U.S. authorities what, if anything, can be done to prosecute the youth for violating U.S. laws.



here is the original report

http://www.nytimes.c...gy/10cisco.html

Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
By JOHN MARKOFF and LOWELL BERGMAN

Published: May 10, 2005

SAN FRANCISCO, May 9 - The incident seemed alarming enough: a breach of a Cisco Systems network in which an intruder seized programming instructions for many of the computers that control the flow of the Internet.

Now federal officials and computer security investigators have acknowledged that the Cisco break-in last year was only part of a more extensive operation - involving a single intruder or a small band, apparently based in Europe - in which thousands of computer systems were similarly penetrated.

Investigators in the United States and Europe say they have spent almost a year pursuing the case involving attacks on computer systems serving the American military, NASA and research laboratories.

The break-ins exploited security holes on those systems that the authorities say have now been plugged, and beyond the Cisco theft, it is not clear how much data was taken or destroyed. Still, the case illustrates the ease with which Internet-connected computers - even those of sophisticated corporate and government networks - can be penetrated, and also the difficulty in tracing those responsible.

Government investigators and other computer experts sometimes watched helplessly while monitoring the activity, unable to secure some systems as quickly as others were found compromised.

The case remains under investigation. But attention is focused on a 16-year-old in Uppsala, Sweden, who was charged in March with breaking into university computers in his hometown. Investigators in the American break-ins ultimately traced the intrusions back to the Uppsala university network.

The F.B.I. and the Swedish police said they were working together on the case, and one F.B.I. official said efforts in Britain and other countries were aimed at identifying accomplices. "As a result of recent actions" by law enforcement, an F.B.I. statement said, "the criminal activity appears to have stopped."

The Swedish authorities are examining computer equipment confiscated from the teenager, who was released to his parents' care. The matter is being treated as a juvenile case.

Investigators who described the break-ins did so on condition that they not be identified, saying that their continuing efforts could be jeopardized if their names, or in some cases their organizations, were disclosed.

Computer experts said the break-ins did not represent a fundamentally new kind of attack. Rather, they said, the primary intruder was particularly clever in the way he organized a system for automating the theft of computer log-ins and passwords, conducting attacks through a complicated maze of computers connected to the Internet in as many as seven countries.

The intrusions were first publicly reported in April 2004 when several of the nation's supercomputer laboratories acknowledged break-ins into computers connected to the TeraGrid, a high-speed data network serving those labs, which conduct unclassified research into a range of scientific problems.

The theft of the Cisco software was discovered last May when a small team of security specialists at the supercomputer laboratories, trying to investigate the intrusions there, watched electronically as passwords to Cisco's computers were compromised.

After discovering the passwords' theft, the security officials notified Cisco officials of the potential threat. But the company's software was taken almost immediately, before the company could respond.

Shortly after being stolen last May, a portion of the Cisco programming instructions appeared on a Russian Web site. With such information, sophisticated intruders would potentially be able to compromise security on router computers of Cisco customers running the affected programs.

There is no evidence that such use has occurred. "Cisco believes that the improper publication of this information does not create increased risk to customers' networks," the company said last week.

The crucial element in the password thefts that provided access at Cisco and elsewhere was the intruder's use of a corrupted version of a standard software program, SSH. The program is used in many computer research centers for a variety of tasks, ranging from administration of remote computers to data transfer over the Internet.

The intruder probed computers for vulnerabilities that allowed the installation of the corrupted program, known as a Trojan horse, in place of the legitimate program.

In many cases the corrupted program is distributed from a single computer and shared by tens or hundreds of users at a computing site, effectively making it possible for someone unleashing it to reel in large numbers of log-ins and passwords as they are entered.

Once passwords to the remote systems were obtained, an intruder could log in and use a variety of software "tool kits" to upgrade his privileges - known as gaining root access. That makes it possible to steal information and steal more passwords.

The operation took advantage of the vulnerability of Internet-connected computers whose security software had not been brought up to date.

In the Cisco case, the passwords to Cisco computers were sent from a compromised computer by a legitimate user unaware of the Trojan horse. The intruder captured the passwords and then used them to enter Cisco's computers and steal the programming instructions, according to the security investigators.

A security expert involved in the investigation speculated that the Cisco programming instructions were stolen as part of an effort to establish the intruder's credibility in online chat rooms he frequented.

Last May, the security investigators were able to install surveillance software on the University of Minnesota computer network when they discovered that an intruder was using it as a staging base for hundreds of Internet attacks. During a two-day period they watched as the intruder tried to break into more than 100 locations on the Internet and was successful in gaining root access to more than 50.

When possible, they alerted organizations that were victims of attacks, which would then shut out the intruder and patch their systems.

As the attacks were first noted in April 2004, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, found that her own computer had been invaded. The researcher, Wren Montgomery, began to receive taunting e-mail messages from someone going by the name Stakkato - now believed by the authorities to have been the primary intruder - who also boasted of breaking in to computers at military installations.

"Patuxent River totally closed their networks," he wrote in a message sent that month, referring to the Patuxent River Naval Air Station in Maryland. "They freaked out when I said I stole F-18 blueprints."

A Navy spokesman at Patuxent River, James Darcy, said Monday said that "if there was some sort of attempted breach on those addresses, it was not significant enough of an action to have generated a report."

Monte Marlin, a spokeswoman for the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, whose computers Stakkato also claimed to have breached, confirmed Monday that there had been "unauthorized access" but said, "The only information obtained was weather forecast information."

The messages also claimed an intrusion into seven computers serving NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. A computer security expert investigating the case confirmed that computers at several NASA sites, including the propulsion laboratory, had been breached. A spokesman said the laboratory did not comment on computer breaches.

Ms. Montgomery, a graduate student in geophysics, said that in a fit of anger, Stakkato had erased her computer file directory and had destroyed a year and a half of her e-mail stored on a university computer.

She guessed that she might have provoked him by referring to him as a "quaint hacker" in a communication with system administrators, which he monitored.

"It was inconvenient," she said of the loss of her e-mail, "and it's the thing that seems to happen when you have malicious teenage hackers running around with no sense of ethics."


Walter Gibbs, in Oslo, and Heather Timmons, in London, contributed reporting for this article.



#24 Lazarus Long

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Posted 24 September 2006 - 04:37 AM

Here is the hardest lesson of all to learn perhaps; the one that says that we must not only now recognize how badly this administration has screwed things up but begin the earnest search to figure out how to fix things from where we are now, not where we were "then."

It is way past [airquote] I told you all so [/airquote] and it is already too late for Plan B. It is not just time to throw away the play book, it is hightime to kick out the planners that got us into this mess; chickenhawks, incompetents and scoundrels.

Posted Image
Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Worsens Terror Threat

By MARK MAZZETTI
Published: September 24, 2006

WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 — A stark assessment of terrorism trends by American intelligence agencies has found that the American invasion and occupation of Iraq has helped spawn a new generation of Islamic radicalism and that the overall terrorist threat has grown since the Sept. 11 attacks.

The classified National Intelligence Estimate attributes a more direct role to the Iraq war in fueling radicalism than that presented either in recent White House documents or in a report released Wednesday by the House Intelligence Committee, according to several officials in Washington involved in preparing the assessment or who have read the final document.

The intelligence estimate, completed in April, is the first formal appraisal of global terrorism by United States intelligence agencies since the Iraq war began, and represents a consensus view of the 16 disparate spy services inside government. Titled “Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States,’’ it asserts that Islamic radicalism, rather than being in retreat, has metastasized and spread across the globe.

An opening section of the report, “Indicators of the Spread of the Global Jihadist Movement,” cites the Iraq war as a reason for the diffusion of jihad ideology.

The report “says that the Iraq war has made the overall terrorism problem worse,” said one American intelligence official.

More than a dozen United States government officials and outside experts were interviewed for this article, and all spoke only on condition of anonymity because they were discussing a classified intelligence document. The officials included employees of several government agencies, and both supporters and critics of the Bush administration. All of those interviewed had either seen the final version of the document or participated in the creation of earlier drafts. These officials discussed some of the document’s general conclusions but not details, which remain highly classified.

Officials with knowledge of the intelligence estimate said it avoided specific judgments about the likelihood that terrorists would once again strike on United States soil. The relationship between the Iraq war and terrorism, and the question of whether the United States is safer, have been subjects of persistent debate since the war began in 2003.

National Intelligence Estimates are the most authoritative documents that the intelligence community produces on a specific national security issue, and are approved by John D. Negroponte, director of national intelligence. Their conclusions are based on analysis of raw intelligence collected by all of the spy agencies.

Analysts began working on the estimate in 2004, but it was not finalized until this year. Part of the reason was that some government officials were unhappy with the structure and focus of earlier versions of the document, according to officials involved in the discussion.

Previous drafts described actions by the United States government that were determined to have stoked the jihad movement, like the indefinite detention of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay and the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal, and some policy makers argued that the intelligence estimate should be more focused on specific steps to mitigate the terror threat. It is unclear whether the final draft of the intelligence estimate criticizes individual policies of the United States, but intelligence officials involved in preparing the document said its conclusions were not softened or massaged for political purposes.

Frederick Jones, a White House spokesman, said the White House “played no role in drafting or reviewing the judgments expressed in the National Intelligence Estimate on terrorism.” The estimate’s judgments confirm some predictions of a National Intelligence Council report completed in January 2003, two months before the Iraq invasion. That report stated that the approaching war had the potential to increase support for political Islam worldwide and could increase support for some terrorist objectives.

Documents released by the White House timed to coincide with the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks emphasized the successes that the United States had made in dismantling the top tier of Al Qaeda.

“Since the Sept. 11 attacks, America and its allies are safer, but we are not yet safe,” concludes one, a report titled “9/11 Five Years Later: Success and Challenges.” “We have done much to degrade Al Qaeda and its affiliates and to undercut the perceived legitimacy of terrorism.”

On Wednesday, the Republican-controlled House Intelligence Committee released a more ominous report about the terrorist threat. That assessment, based entirely on unclassified documents, details a growing jihad movement and says, “Al Qaeda leaders wait patiently for the right opportunity to attack.”

The new National Intelligence Estimate was overseen by David B. Low, the national intelligence officer for transnational threats, who commissioned it in 2004 after he took up his post at the National Intelligence Council. Mr. Low declined to be interviewed for this article.

The estimate concludes that the radical Islamic movement has expanded from a core of Qaeda operatives and affiliated groups to include a new class of “self-generating” cells inspired by Al Qaeda’s leadership but without any direct connection to Osama bin Laden or his top lieutenants.

It also examines how the Internet has helped spread jihadist ideology, and how cyberspace has become a haven for terrorist operatives who no longer have geographical refuges in countries like Afghanistan.

In early 2005, the National Intelligence Council released a study concluding that Iraq had become the primary training ground for the next generation of terrorists, and that veterans of the Iraq war might ultimately overtake Al Qaeda’s current leadership in the constellation of the global jihad leadership.

But the new intelligence estimate is the first report since the war began to present a comprehensive picture about the trends in global terrorism.

In recent months, some senior American intelligence officials have offered glimpses into the estimate’s conclusions in public speeches.

“New jihadist networks and cells, sometimes united by little more than their anti-Western agendas, are increasingly likely to emerge,” said Gen. Michael V. Hayden, during a speech in San Antonio in April, the month that the new estimate was completed. “If this trend continues, threats to the U.S. at home and abroad will become more diverse and that could lead to increasing attacks worldwide,” said the general, who was then Mr. Negroponte’s top deputy and is now director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

For more than two years, there has been tension between the Bush administration and American spy agencies over the violence in Iraq and the prospects for a stable democracy in the country. Some intelligence officials have said the White House has consistently presented a more optimistic picture of the situation in Iraq than justified by intelligence reports from the field.

Spy agencies usually produce several national intelligence estimates each year on a variety of subjects. The most controversial of these in recent years was an October 2002 document assessing Iraq’s illicit weapons programs. Several government investigations have discredited that report, and the intelligence community is overhauling how it analyzes data, largely as a result of those investigations.

The broad judgments of the new intelligence estimate are consistent with assessments of global terrorist threats by American allies and independent terrorism experts.

The panel investigating the London terrorist bombings of July 2005 reported in May that the leaders of Britain’s domestic and international intelligence services, MI5 and MI6, “emphasized to the committee the growing scale of the Islamist terrorist threat.”

More recently, the Council on Global Terrorism, an independent research group of respected terrorism experts, assigned a grade of “D+” to United States efforts over the past five years to combat Islamic extremism. The council concluded that “there is every sign that radicalization in the Muslim world is spreading rather than shrinking.”


This was then

TERRORISM TRENDS AND PROSPECTS

COUNTERING THE NEW TERRORISM: COUNTERING THE NEW TERRORISM:

Global Trends and the Implications of the 11 September Attacks

Global Threats and Challenges Through 2015

And here are even rosier assessments than what we now face

The RAND Center for Terrorism Risk Management Policy (CTRMP)

Terrorism and National Security: Terrorism and National Security:

Trends in Terrorism: 2006

#25 Lazarus Long

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Posted 06 October 2006 - 01:46 AM

Well here is an obvious approach that only the big boys can play for now but eventually will alter the effectiveness our one of or critical intelligence gathering methods. And now we don't even have the human Intel to replace it if it falls.

This happening immediately prior to the possible N Korea nuclear test bodes very ill. Things just got a lot more confusing in the midst of the usual sideshow politics.

China jamming test sparks U.S. satellite concerns

By Andrea Shalal-Esa
Thu Oct 5, 5:20 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China has beamed a ground-based laser at U.S. spy satellites over its territory, a U.S. agency said, in an action that exposed the potential vulnerability of space systems that provide crucial data to American troops and consumers around the world.

The Defense Department remains tight-lipped about details, including which satellite was involved or when it occurred.

The Pentagon's National Reconnaissance Office Director Donald Kerr last week acknowledged the incident, first reported by Defense News, but said it did not materially damage the U.S. satellite's ability to collect information.

"It makes us think," Kerr told reporters.

The issue looms large, given that U.S. military operations have rapidly grown more reliant on satellite data for everything from targeting bombs to relaying communications to spying on enemy nations.Critical U.S. space assets include a constellation of 30 Global Positioning Satellites that help target bombs and find enemy locations. This system is also widely used in commercial applications, ranging from car navigation systems to automatic teller machines.

The Pentagon also depends on communications satellites that relay sensitive messages to battlefield commanders, and satellites that track weather in critical areas so U.S. troops can plan their missions.

"Space is a much bigger part of our military posture than it used to be, so any effort by the Chinese or anybody else to jam our satellites is potentially a big deal," said Loren Thompson, defense analyst with the Virginia-based Lexington Institute.


FRESH CONCERNS

Clearly, the incident sparked fresh concerns among U.S. officials and watchdog groups about the U.S. ability to determine if satellite problems are caused by malfunctions, weather anomalies like solar flares, or targeted attacks. Air Force Space Commander Gen. Kevin Chilton said it was often difficult to know exactly what happened to satellites orbiting from 125 to 22,400 miles above the earth.

"We're at a point where the technology's out there and the capability for people to do things to our satellites is there. I'm focused on it beyond any single event," Chilton said.

Satellites are also vulnerable to man-made and natural events affecting their ground stations and the links between the station and the satellite, he told reporters last week. Theresa Hitchens of the Center for Defense Information cautioned against jumping to conclusions about the Chinese incident.

Beijing may have been testing its capability to track satellites, not damage them, Hitchens said. "We don't know their intent, and we don't have the capability to know."

Hitchens also noted current technology made it difficult to identify anything smaller than a baseball in the orbits where spy satellites fly, a capability that needed to be improved. At the same time, she said, the Pentagon would be prudent to use lower-cost and lower-risk systems closer to earth to do some critical tasks like surveillance and communications.


ANTI-SATELLITE WEAPONS?

Hitchens also emphasized that it would be extremely difficult to disable a satellite with a laser -- and even U.S. scientists had not developed a system to do that. But there is growing concern among lawmakers about U.S. efforts to develop such anti-satellite weapons.

House of Representatives lawmakers tried to block a planned test of Starfire, a satellite and star tracking program, for fiscal 2007 after learning it could also be used as an anti-satellite weapon. The funds were reinstated only after the Air Force assured lawmakers it would be used only for tracking.

The Chinese incident also underscored the need to develop an international code of conduct for space. Currently, there are no specific rules or treaties governing behavior of the 40 countries that operate satellites, and about a dozen countries that have launch capability, Hitchens said.



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It also looms large because it was the US that capriciously set aside the ABM treaty, SALT2 and the Peaceful Use of Space treaty. Looks like they wanted another weapons race and the Administration just may be getting it.




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