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Fri, Dec 19, 2003

What Did They Know? When Did They Know It?

Kean Commission Finds 9/11 Should Have Been Prevented

There's a storm building over Washington, as the commission investigating the attacks on New York and Washington finds evidence that the Bush administration could have -- should have -- prevented the aerial assaults.

CBS Evening News Wednesday quoted former New Jersey Gov. Tom Kean, a Republican who was appointed by President Bush, as saying, "This was not something that had to happen" and he "is now pointing fingers inside the administration and laying blame." Kean said, "There are people that, if I was doing the job, would certainly not be in the position they were in at that time because they failed. They simply failed."

CBS reports Kean's final analysis could "shed light on one of the most controversial assertions of the Bush administration—that there was never any thought given to the idea that terrorists might fly an airplane into a building." As National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said on May 16, 2002, "I don't think anybody could have predicted that they would try to use an airplane as a missile, a hijacked airplane as a missile." Similarly, President Bush denied having any idea about the threat, saying on May 17, 2002 "Had I know that the enemy was going to use airplanes to kill on that fateful morning, I would have done everything in my power to protect the American people."

The story began to spread. Soon after the White House statements, ABC News reported, "White House officials acknowledged that US intelligence officials informed President Bush weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks that bin Laden's terrorist network might try to hijack American planes." The president received that briefing around the same time the FBI was receiving information that a large number of Arabs were training at US flight schools.

When CBS asked other Administration officials about Rice and Bush's denials, they got nothing: "The usually talkative Attorney General John Ashcroft just stared when reporters asked him about the terror warnings. FBI Chief Robert Mueller also refused to comment."

The warnings picked up by intelligence officers before 9/11 were so specific that the White House acknowledges at least one prominent member of the administration was already taking precautions. Attorney General John Ashcroft (right) was "traveling exclusively by leased jet aircraft instead of commercial airlines" because of "what the Justice Department called a 'threat assessment.'"

Since the attacks, the White House has tried to prevent an independent investigation into the governments inability to stop the attacks. TomPain.com reports, "first, the administration opposed the creation of the commission. Then, when public outcry forced Congress to create the commission, the White House tried to choke off its funding. The administration then classified key portions of a bipartisan 9/11 congressional inquiry. Then the White House dragged its feet in providing documents to the commission. And now it continues to refuse to hand over key documents, forcing the commission to threaten court subpoenas. But it seems like the White House should have learned by now that that kind of obfuscation and denial is only going to backfire."

It always does.

FMI: www.911commission.gov

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