9/11 Panel Suspected Deception by Pentagon
Allegations Brought to Inspectors General
By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
08/02/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- Some staff members and
commissioners of the Sept. 11 panel concluded that the Pentagon's
initial story of how it reacted to the 2001 terrorist attacks may
have been part of a deliberate effort to mislead the commission and
the public rather than a reflection of the fog of events on that
day, according to sources involved in the debate.
Suspicion of wrongdoing ran so deep that the 10-member commission,
in a secret meeting at the end of its tenure in summer 2004, debated
referring the matter to the Justice Department for criminal
investigation, according to several commission sources. Staff
members and some commissioners thought that e-mails and other
evidence provided enough probable cause to believe that military and
aviation officials violated the law by making false statements to
Congress and to the commission, hoping to hide the bungled response
to the hijackings, these sources said.
In the end, the panel agreed to a compromise, turning over the
allegations to the inspectors general for the Defense and
Transportation departments, who can make criminal referrals if they
believe they are warranted, officials said.
"We to this day don't know why NORAD [the North American Aerospace
Command] told us what they told us," said Thomas H. Kean, the former
New Jersey Republican governor who led the commission. "It was just
so far from the truth. . . . It's one of those loose ends that never
got tied."
Although the commission's landmark report made it clear that the
Defense Department's early versions of events on the day of the
attacks were inaccurate, the revelation that it considered criminal
referrals reveals how skeptically those reports were viewed by the
panel and provides a glimpse of the tension between it and the Bush
administration.
A Pentagon spokesman said yesterday that the inspector general's
office will soon release a report addressing whether testimony
delivered to the commission was "knowingly false." A separate
report, delivered secretly to Congress in May 2005, blamed
inaccuracies in part on problems with the way the Defense Department
kept its records, according to a summary released yesterday.
A spokesman for the Transportation Department's inspector general's
office said its investigation is complete and that a final report is
being drafted. Laura Brown, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation
Administration, said she could not comment on the inspector
general's inquiry.
In an article scheduled to be on newsstands today, Vanity Fair
magazine reports aspects of the commission debate -- though it does
not mention the possible criminal referrals -- and publishes lengthy
excerpts from military audiotapes recorded on Sept. 11. ABC News
aired excerpts last night.
For more than two years after the attacks, officials with NORAD and
the FAA provided inaccurate information about the response to the
hijackings in testimony and media appearances. Authorities suggested
that U.S. air defenses had reacted quickly, that jets had been
scrambled in response to the last two hijackings and that fighters
were prepared to shoot down United Airlines Flight 93 if it
threatened Washington.
In fact, the commission reported a year later, audiotapes from
NORAD's Northeast headquarters and other evidence showed clearly
that the military never had any of the hijacked airliners in its
sights and at one point chased a phantom aircraft -- American
Airlines Flight 11 -- long after it had crashed into the World Trade
Center.
Maj. Gen. Larry Arnold and Col. Alan Scott told the commission that
NORAD had begun tracking United 93 at 9:16 a.m., but the commission
determined that the airliner was not hijacked until 12 minutes
later. The military was not aware of the flight until after it had
crashed in Pennsylvania.
These and other discrepancies did not become clear until the
commission, forced to use subpoenas, obtained audiotapes from the
FAA and NORAD, officials said. The agencies' reluctance to release
the tapes -- along with e-mails, erroneous public statements and
other evidence -- led some of the panel's staff members and
commissioners to believe that authorities sought to mislead the
commission and the public about what happened on Sept. 11.
"I was shocked at how different the truth was from the way it was
described," John Farmer, a former New Jersey attorney general who
led the staff inquiry into events on Sept. 11, said in a recent
interview. "The tapes told a radically different story from what had
been told to us and the public for two years. . . . This is not
spin. This is not true."
Arnold, who could not be reached for comment yesterday, told the
commission in 2004 that he did not have all the information
unearthed by the panel when he testified earlier. Other military
officials also denied any intent to mislead the panel.
John F. Lehman, a Republican commission member and former Navy
secretary, said in a recent interview that he believed the panel may
have been lied to but that he did not believe the evidence was
sufficient to support a criminal referral.
"My view of that was that whether it was willful or just the fog of
stupid bureaucracy, I don't know," Lehman said. "But in the order of
magnitude of things, going after bureaucrats because they misled the
commission didn't seem to make sense to me."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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