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To: yoe
For the record, Mr. Clinton:

The final policy paper on national security that President Clinton submitted to Congress — 45,000 words long — makes no mention of al Qaeda and refers to Osama bin Laden by name just four times.

The scarce references to bin Laden and his terror network undercut claims by former White House terrorism analyst Richard A. Clarke that the Clinton administration considered al Qaeda an "urgent" threat, while President Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, "ignored" it.

The Clinton document, titled "A National Security Strategy for a Global Age," is dated December 2000 and is the final official assessment of national security policy and strategy by the Clinton team. The document is publicly available, though no U.S. media outlets have examined it in the context of Mr. Clarke's testimony and new book.

Source.

32 posted on 09/07/2006 9:45:59 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: Quilla

Also, the documents Sandy Burglar was stealing - some still missing BTW - were reports or Clintonian response to terrorism written by Richard Clarke at the direction of Sandy. At the time Sandy was tasked with reviewing documents in order to present the Clinton version for the 9/11 commission.

Now, Sandy is saying the movie doesn't fit the commission report.

I wish ABC would tell Slick "we'll be happy to review new documents for accuracy, as soon as Sandy Berger finds them."


58 posted on 09/07/2006 9:56:17 AM PDT by D-fendr
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