Posted on 05/19/2002 6:06:32 PM PDT by SpyderTim
May 17, 2002 8:45 a.m. Call Off the Dogs This hindsight second-guessing helps no one.
When I teach strategy, a topic that deals largely with the future, I frequently refer to Ambrose Bierce's observation that "it is the unexpected that occurs... it is also the unlikely one might almost say the impossible." Predictions rarely come true, despite the best efforts of deep thinkers everywhere. And the maddening thing is that in retrospect, events all seem so obvious, so foreseeable, so inevitable. Once the veil of ignorance is lifted, it is hard to remember what it was like not knowing. Some fool themselves into thinking they could have known all along.
I thought about this this week as a feeding frenzy erupted over the news that the president had received word of a possible al Qaeda hijacking plot a month before the Sept. 11 attack. "BUSH KNEW" the New York Post headline screamed the more staid Times fronting with "Bush Was Warned Bin Laden Wanted to Hijack Planes" the ever-reliable Washington Post offering the more accurate "Bush Was Told of Hijacking Dangers: Aug Report Had No Details on Sept Plot." The story, which by now most people know: Last August 6, in a routine daily intelligence briefing, the commander in chief was told that al Qaeda might try to hijack some aircraft. No dates, targets, or methods were mentioned. The appropriate authorities were notified to be on alert. Not much of a story for the kind of reaction it got. Then again, who reads Ambrose Bierce these days?
Al Qaeda took us by surprise. No one likes surprise, but it is a fact of life. The responsible reaction is to figure out what gaps the adversary exploited and close them. But the current working premise seems to be that al Qaeda should not have been able to surprise us, and the August 6 briefing "proved" that they didn't. Yesterday the politicians and press were seized with perfect hindsight. Why weren't the dots connected? If the president knew, why wasn't this prevented? And the truly irrelevant question: Why did it take eight months to learn about that routine briefing? The president's critics finally have an issue, or so they think
It is critical to understand the difference between information (the dots) and intelligence (the act of connecting them). Analysis is an art form, and intellectual process, a means of looking at a body of information and extracting important patterns based on a set of premises and objectives. Often the dots do not seem to connect, or only connect when forced to by reasonable inferences (sometimes called WAGs, or "wild-ass guesses"). Sometimes they connect easily, but erroneously. They are not numbered like pictures in a children's book. It is the job of the analyst to use his judgment to figure out what the mass of dots really mean. It is not a foolproof or objective process.
The dots themselves can be tricky. Frequently they include bits of information from informants. In that case, analysts have to make all kinds of judgment calls. Who is the source? Is the source credible, and if so how credible? Has the source supplied information in the past, and if so, how good was it? If this all adds up to a threat, how grave is it? How precisely can it be predicted? Who should be warned? Is it worth alarming the public? There are many judgment calls to make, none of them with obvious answers. Note that worldwide alerts were issued in January, May, and July of 2001, though nothing happened or at least no plan was successfully carried out. And in August the president did raise a flag though channels, though not publicly.
Some have averred that the very mention of hijacking in the briefing should have brought swift action, at the very least warning the public about this grave danger. However, before Sept. 11, hijacking was not perceived in the same way as it is today. Ari Fleischer made a very important point when he stated that the term hijack "might as well be a different word in a different language from what we have all unfortunately come to know about the post-9/11 world." Again, hindsight: Should the analysts have known all the implications of a hijacking? Well it would have been nice, but most intelligence analysts were focusing on weapons-of-mass destruction scenarios because they were seen as the most likely means of producing the kind of carnage witnessed in New York and Washington. The FBI agent who was writing prescient case notes about Zacarias Moussaoui was the exception and as we know, his analysis did not register.
But once an event happens and it all seems preordained, the dots connect themselves. It no longer takes a specialist to analyze the unknown practically anyone is free to state the obvious as though it always had been. This is the problem with hindsight you can instantly sift through the information and apply it in a way an analyst would love to do if he only had a time machine.
So what exactly did the president know on August 6? That a terrorist group with a history of violence against the United States was believed to be about to undertake the latest in a series of suspected operations. What did he do? He put law-enforcement authorities on alert. Seems reasonable to me. Now enter speculation and the question what should have happened. Enter journalists, pundits, politicians, and other non-specialists trying to answer this counterfactual and intrinsically unanswerable question with full benefit of hindsight. Enter people without with limited (if any) intelligence background saying these circumstances are "troubling" and "raise questions" and are cause for "grave concern" and other Washington-isms designed to sow doubt and confusion without evidence or accountability. It is an intellectually dishonest process. In time of war, it is demented.
"A sniff of politics?" It reeks. Once congressional committees begin sifting through information, I am sure they will find all kinds of interesting tidbits which, taken out of context, will prove some point or other. I'm awaiting the first use of the expression "smoking gun" ABC's Charles Gibson has already treated the public to "what did the president know and when did he know it?" (Get some new material guys, Nixon is long gone.) Every agenda will be pursued, from the crackpot to the merely partisan, to, perhaps, sincere attempts to reform the way of doing business in the intelligence community. This could be an opportunity to repair the damage done in the 1970s in the wake of the Church/Pike hearings, in which our intelligence services were eviscerated, and cooperation between the intelligence agencies was made illegal. Or, it could turn into a replay of that unfortunate spectacle. Mining the reams of data that the hearings will subpoena will give the politicians something to talk about and appear relevant give the Democrats an issue to use in place of an actual policy agenda give the press dramatic things to report and give pundits endless opportunities for mischief. Meanwhile our intelligence community will carry on its largely excellent work to the best of its ability, and our president will continue to prosecute the war, if he is allowed to. James S. Robbins is a national-security analyst & NRO contributor.
Bears repeating......"Mining the reams of data that the hearings will subpoena will give the politicians something to talk about and appear relevant give the Democrats an issue to use in place of an actual policy agenda give the press dramatic things to report and give pundits endless opportunities for mischief. Meanwhile our intelligence community will carry on its largely excellent work to the best of its ability, and our president will continue to prosecute the war, if he is allowed to. "
It's hilarious to watch the donkey-infested media leap-frog over Clinton and land on Nixon whenever they want to tie politics to corruption. The day the Left stops dragging Nixon out of his grave to reconvict him, should be the day the right stops dragging Clinton out of whatever bed he's in to remind the world what a pig he is.
Has this law been reversed? If not it should be the first thing on the congressional agenda Monday morning.
This is such a well-written and intelligent piece that I am not surprised the ideas have been so ignored. Such a shame.
The need to remember that hijacking used to mean negotiation cannot be stressed enough. Before September 11th, nobody could imagine that a plane would be hijack with the express intent of a kamakazi mission. Before September 11th the word was compliance to survive. By the third or fourth plane, Americans learned that resistance was their only recourse. Those Americans truly connected the dots and made a difference--unlike those who are trying to force the dots into a political agenda.
Well, of course. If you consider the fact that Clintoon waisted the entire eight years of his presidency that he should have spent destroying the al Qaeda forces, you'll get no arguement from me.
Ya know, I get really annoyed when someone maligns the good name of dog, refers to the crummy Lib-Dems with the honored moniker ...
:)
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