Rumsfeld, Ashcroft received warning of al Qaida attack before
9/11
By JONATHAN S. LANDAY, WARREN P. STROBEL and JOHN WALCOTT
McClatchy Newspapers
10/03/06 "McClatchy
Newspapers" -- -- WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld and former Attorney General John Ashcroft received
the same CIA briefing about an imminent al-Qaida strike on an
American target that was given to the White House two months
before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
The State Department's disclosure Monday that the pair was
briefed within a week after then-National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice was told about the threat on July 10, 2001,
raised new questions about what the Bush administration did in
response, and about why so many officials have claimed they
never received or don't remember the warning.
One official who helped to prepare the briefing, which included
a PowerPoint presentation, described it as a "10 on a scale of 1
to 10" that "connected the dots" in earlier intelligence reports
to present a stark warning that al-Qaida, which had already
killed Americans in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and East Africa, was
poised to strike again.
Former CIA Director George Tenet gave the independent Sept. 11,
2001, commission the same briefing on Jan. 28, 2004, but the
commission made no mention of the warning in its 428-page final
report. According to three former senior intelligence officials,
Tenet testified to commissioner Richard Ben-Veniste and to
Philip Zelikow, the panel's executive director and the principal
author of its report, who's now Rice's top adviser.
A new book by Bob Woodward of The Washington Post alleges that
Rice failed to take the July 2001 warning seriously when it was
delivered at a White House meeting by Tenet, Cofer Black, then
the agency's chief of top counterterrorism, and a third CIA
official whose identity remains protected.
Rice's deputy, Stephen J. Hadley, who became national security
adviser after she became secretary of state, and Rice's top
counterterrorism aide, Richard Clarke, also were present.
Woodward wrote that Tenet and Black considered the briefing the
"starkest warning they had given the White House" on the threat
posed by Osama bin Laden's terrorist network. But, he wrote, the
pair felt as if Rice gave them "the brush-off."
Speaking to reporters late Sunday en route to the Middle East,
Rice said she had no recollection of what she called "the
supposed meeting."
"What I'm quite certain of, is that it was not a meeting in
which I was told that there was an impending attack and I
refused to respond," she said.
Ashcroft, who resigned as attorney general on Nov. 9, 2004, told
the Associated Press on Monday that it was "disappointing" that
he never received the briefing, either.
But on Monday evening, Rice's spokesman Sean McCormack issued a
statement confirming that she'd received the CIA briefing "on or
around July 10" and had asked that it be given to Ashcroft and
Rumsfeld.
"The information presented in this meeting was not new, rather
it was a good summary from the threat reporting from the
previous several weeks," McCormack said. "After this meeting,
Dr. Rice asked that this same information be briefed to
Secretary Rumsfeld and Attorney General Ashcroft. That briefing
took place by July 17."
Lt. Cmdr. Joe Carpenter, a Pentagon spokesman, said he had no
information "about what may or may not have been briefed" to
Rumsfeld at Rice's request.
David Ayres, who was Ashcroft's chief of staff at the Justice
Department, said that the former attorney general also has no
recollection of a July 17, 2001, terrorist threat briefing.
Later, Ayres said that Ashcroft could recall only a July 5
briefing on threats to U.S. interests abroad.
He said Ashcroft doesn't remember any briefing that summer that
indicated that al-Qaida was planning to attack within the United
States.
The CIA briefing didn't provide the exact timing or nature of a
possible attack, nor did it predict whether it was likely to
take place in the United States or overseas, said three former
senior intelligence officials.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because the report remains
highly classified.
The briefing "didn't say within the United States," said one
former senior intelligence official. "It said on the United
States, which could mean a ship, an embassy or inside the United
States."
In the briefing, Tenet warned in very strong terms that
intelligence from a variety of sources indicated that bin
Laden's terrorist network was planning an attack on a U.S.
target in the near future, said one of the officials.
"The briefing was intended to `connect the dots' contained in
other intelligence reports and paint a very clear picture of the
threat posed by bin Laden," said the official, who described the
tone of the report as "scary."
It isn't clear what action, if any, the administration took in
response, but officials said Rumsfeld was focused mostly on his
plans to remake the Army into a smaller, high-tech force and
deploy a national ballistic missile defense system.
Nor is it clear why the 9/11 commission never reported the
briefing, which the intelligence officials said Tenet outlined
to commission members Ben-Veniste and Zelikow in secret
testimony at CIA headquarters. The State Department confirmed
that the briefing materials were "made available to the 9/11
Commission, and Director Tenet was asked about this meeting when
interviewed by the 9/11 Commission."
The three former senior intelligence officials, however, said
Tenet raised the matter with the panel himself, displayed slides
from the PowerPoint presentation and offered to testify on the
matter in public.
Ben-Veniste confirmed to McClatchy Newspapers that Tenet
outlined for the 9/11 commission the July 10 briefing to Rice in
secret testimony in January 2004. He referred questions about
why the commission omitted any mention of the briefing in its
report to Zelikow, the report's main author. Zelikow didn't
respond to e-mail and telephone queries from McClatchy
Newspapers.
Clarke, the former White House counterterrorism chief,
Ben-Veniste and the former senior intelligence officials all
challenged some aspects of Woodward's account of the briefing
given to Rice, including assertions that she failed to react to
the warning and that it concerned an imminent attack inside the
United States.
Clarke told McClatchy Newspapers that Rice focused in particular
on the possible threat to President Bush at an upcoming summit
meeting in Genoa, Italy, and promised to quickly schedule a
high-level White House meeting on al-Qaida. That meeting took
place on September 4, 2001.
Ben-Veniste said the commission was never told that Rice had
brushed off the warning. According to Tenet, he said, Rice
"understood the level of urgency he was communicating."
McClatchy Newspapers correspondents Matt Stearns and Drew Brown
contributed to this report.
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