Posted on 05/05/2004 7:49:54 PM PDT by Jean S
The good news is that the Sept. 11 commission has stopped playing the blame-Bush game, at least for a while.
The brethren (to use Democratic Commissioner Jamie Gorelicks phrase) will gather again May 18 in New York to discuss the performance of emergency-response agencies after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
The commissions last session, with President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, has left some lingering questions.
Like, whats going on between the White House and the Justice Department?
After the meeting with Bush, the commissioners were quoted as saying how well it had gone, how cordial both sides had been and how generous the president had been to answer questions for more than three hours.
The only substantive leak to come out of the whole thing was a report that Bush had told the commissioners he was irritated with Attorney General John Ashcroft.
The president said he did not approve of Ashcrofts release of documents showing that Gorelick (a former top official in the Clinton Justice Department) had played a key role in the often ineffectual anti-terrorism efforts of the 1990s.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan made it crystal clear when he said of the document release, Thats what the Justice Department did. We were not involved in it. I think the president was disappointed about that.
The president does not believe we ought to be pointing fingers in this time period, McClellan continued. We ought to be working together to help the commission complete its work.
The news immediately set off intense speculation inside the Justice Department.
Was the White House really mad?
Or was the president making a nod-and-wink gesture to pacify the commission?
As it turns out, it was a bit of both.
There is little doubt that the White House liked Ashcrofts aggressive testimony before the commission April 13.
More than liked it. They loved it, says one administration source. They definitely appreciated Ashcrofts testimony because after a month of being pummeled with leaks from the commission, whether it was about Condi Rice, or the presidents daily brief, or Cheney, or you name it, he was the first offense that they had had.
And a good offense it was.
By focusing attention on the so-called wall between intelligence and law enforcement, Ashcroft performed three services.
One, he emphasized a serious problem in the governments anti-terrorism efforts, in both the Clinton and Bush administrations.
Two, he turned a spotlight on Gorelicks role in the Clinton anti-terrorism program.
Whether or not Gorelick was guilty of raising the wall, the extent of her involvement in the 90s made clear that she had a serious conflict of interest in the investigation.
And three, Ashcroft changed the subject.
Before Ashcroft, the commission was all about Bush-whacking.
After Ashcroft, a more balanced picture emerged, and the White House was happy about that.
In the days after the attorney generals testimony, the president had more than one face-to-face meeting with Ashcroft.
Bush had time when he could have slapped Ashcroft down, says the source. But the president didnt do it.
The White House was also happy that Ashcroft splashed a bit of reality on the Democratic commissioners constant citation of the Clinton administrations handling of the so-called millennium plot as a model of effective anti-terrorism policy.
Justice Department officials knew the story was a bit different.
They knew the potential bomber in that case had been caught by luck, not as a result of savvy anti-terrorism work.
Justice also knows that the Clinton administration had done an after action review of the millennium matter a study conducted by none other than Richard Clarke, the White House counterterrorism chief-turned-Bush antagonist.
The review was a scathing indictment of the last administrations actions, says the administration source. It was exactly how things shouldnt be run.
Indeed, Clarke is quite critical of the handling of the millennium plot in his book Against All Enemies.
The virtue of Ashcrofts testimony is that he came out and said it.
This [National Security Council] millennium after-action review declares that the United States barely missed major terrorist attacks in 1999 and cites luck as playing a major role, Ashcroft testified.
It is clear from the review that actions taken in the millennium period should not be the operating model for the U.S. government.
So what made Bush unhappy?
Its possible the president was displeased when the Justice Department released still more documents about Gorelicks role in the 1990s.
But Justice acted only after Gorelick had made many assertions about her actions in a Washington Post op-ed, and after the commission itself requested more information about the wall.
Whatever the reason, in the end, Bush took a shot at Ashcroft.
Maybe he needed to do so for political reasons.
But White House officials should keep in mind that the attorney general has been the best friend theyve had in this hopelessly politicized investigation.
York is a White House correspondent for National Review. His column appears in The Hill each week. E-mail: byork@thehill.com
And the near-pathologic protection of the Clinton admin by the Bush admin continues. I wonder why?
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