Posted on 05/26/2004 9:05:17 AM PDT by Mark Felton
Richard Clarke, who served as President Bushs chief of counterterrorism, has claimed sole responsibility for approving flights of Saudi Arabian citizens, including members of Osama bin Ladens family, from the United States immediately after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
pedro sa da bandeira Former White House counterterrorism adviser testifies before the 9-11 commission.
In an interview with The Hill yesterday, Clarke said, I take responsibility for it. I dont think it was a mistake, and Id do it again.
Most of the 26 passengers aboard one flight, which departed from the United States on Sept. 20, 2001, were relatives of Osama bin Laden, whom intelligence officials blamed for the attacks almost immediately after they happened.
Clarkes claim of responsibility is likely to put an end to a brewing political controversy on Capitol Hill over who approved the controversial flights of members of the Saudi elite at a time when the administration was preparing to detain dozens of Muslim-Americans and people with Muslim backgrounds as material witnesses to the attacks.
Several Democrats say that at a closed-door meeting May 6, they pressed members of the commission investigating the attacks of Sept. 11 to find out who approved the flights.
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), who attended the meeting, said she asked former Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-Ind.) and former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman, a Republican, Who authorized the flight[s] and why?
They said its been a part of their inquiry and they havent received satisfactory answers yet and they were pushing, Boxer added.
Another Democrat who attended the meeting confirmed Boxers account and reported that Hamilton said: We dont know who authorized it. Weve asked that question 50 times.
Referring to questions about who authorized the flights, former Rep. Tim Roemer (D-Ind.), one of the 10 members of the bipartisan Sept. 11 commission, said in an interview Monday: In my mind, this isnt resolved right now. We need more clarity and information from the relevant political sources and FBI sources.
But Clarke yesterday appeared to put an end to the mystery.
It didnt get any higher than me, he said. On 9-11, 9-12 and 9-13, many things didnt get any higher than me. I decided it in consultation with the FBI.
Clarkes explanation fit with a new stance Hamilton has taken on the issue of the Saudi flights.
Hamilton said in an interview Friday that when he told Democratic senators that the commission did not know who authorized the Saudi flights, he was not fully informed.
They asked the question Who authorized the flight? and I said I did not know and Id try to find out, Hamilton said. I learned subsequently from talking to the staff that we thought Clarke authorized the flight and it did not go higher.
I did not at any point say the White House was stalling, Hamilton added. They asked me who authorized it, and I said we didnt know.
Hamilton said, however, that we asked the question of who authorized the flight many times to many people.
The FBI cleared the names [of the passengers on the flights] and Clarkes CSG [Counterterrorism Security Group] team cleared the departure, Hamilton said.
He cautioned that this is a story that could shift, and we still have this under review.
This new account of the events seemed to contradict Clarkes sworn testimony before the Sept. 11 commission at the end of March about who approved the flights.
The request came to me, and I refused to approve it, Clarke testified. I suggested that it be routed to the FBI and that the FBI look at the names of the individuals who were going to be on the passenger manifest and that they approve it or not. I spoke with the at the time No. 2 person in the FBI, Dale Watson, and asked him to deal with this issue. The FBI then approved the flight.
Thats a little different than saying, I claim sole responsibility for it now, Roemer said yesterday.
However, the FBI has denied approving the flight.
FBI spokeswoman Donna Spiser said, We havent had anything to do with arranging and clearing the flights.
We did know who was on the flights and interviewed anyone we thought we needed to, she said. We didnt interview 100 percent of the [passengers on the] flight. We didnt think anyone on the flight was of investigative interest.
When Roemer asked Clarke during the commissions March hearing, Who gave the final approval, then, to say, Yes, youre clear to go, its all right with the United States government, Clarke seemed to suggest it came from the White House.
I believe after the FBI came back and said it was all right with them, we ran it through the decision process for all these decisions that we were making in those hours, which was the interagency Crisis Management Group on the video conference, Clarke testified. I was making or coordinating a lot of the decisions on 9-11 in the days immediately after. And I would love to be able to tell you who did it, who brought this proposal to me, but I dont know. The two since you press me, the two possibilities that are most likely are either the Department of State or the White House chief of staffs office.
Instead of putting the issue to rest, Clarkes testimony fueled speculation among Democrats that someone higher up in the administration, perhaps White House Chief of Staff Andy Card, approved the flights.
It couldnt have come from Clarke. It should have come from someone further up the chain, said a Democratic Senate aide who watched Clarkes testimony. Clarkes testimony did not settle the issue for Roemer, either.
It doesnt seem that Richard Clarke had enough information to clear it, Roemer said Monday.
I just dont think that the questions are resolved, and we need to dig deeper, Roemer added. Clarke sure didnt seem to say that he was the final decisionmaker. I believe we need to continue to look for some more answers.
Roemer said there are important policy issues to address, such as the need to develop a flight-departure control system.
Several Democrats on and off the Hill say that bin Ladens family should have been detained as material witnesses to the attacks. They note that after the attacks, the Bush administration lowered the threshold for detaining potential witnesses. The Department of Justice is estimated to have detained more than 50 material witnesses since Sept. 11.
Clarke said yesterday that the furor over the flights of Saudi citizens is much ado about nothing.
This is a tempest in a teapot, he said, adding that, since the attacks, the FBI has never said that any of the passengers aboard the flight shouldnt have been allowed to leave or were wanted for further investigation.
He said that many members of the bin Laden family had been subjects of FBI surveillance for years before the attacks and were well-known to law-enforcement officials.
Its very funny that people on the Hill are now trying to second-guess the FBI investigation.
The Sept. 11 commission released a statement last month declaring that six chartered flights that evacuated close to 140 Saudi citizens were handled properly by the Bush administration.
Okay, fine.
Thanks, btw. For putting the story well enough in order, after some initial misgivings.
IMO--It was NOT OK the Bin Rottens were here in the first place (our gov't know all about osama before 9/11), nor it is OK they snuck these jive-balls out of the country (during a nationwide air travel ban). In addition, I do not believe Clarke would have been allowed to authorized their little trip solely on his own.
"what security, all i have to do is said United Nations"
with the same person who wrote this treatise:
So, what very it is, welcome to Free Republic...
Learned well under his old boss, didn't he??
All this time, I have clearly recalled they were flown ot during the flight ban.
I cannot think of a reason why we should forgive them for not having 20/20 foresight under the circumstances.
I don't think that is correct. Check the article above. It says they departed on 9-20.
Which article are you referring to? Thanks.
Hani Hanjour's first attempt was Nov. 1997. What was going on at the end of '97 and the first of '98? Who else got through about that time? Where were they headed? What plan fell through?
Most of the 26 passengers aboard one flight, which departed from the United States on Sept. 20, 2001, were relatives of Osama bin Laden, whom intelligence officials blamed for the attacks almost immediately after they happened.
Flights were not grounded on Sept 20.
My position is that the President should not be blamed for something he did not authorize. Dick Clarke authorized it, so let's fault Dick Clarke
Sorry, I don't buy this. I remember news reports right after 9/11 that stated they were flown out during the flight ban, and there are other articles referred to in this thread that state the same.
It's a classic double-standard. If their guy does it, then there is no issue. If our guy does it, then it is a scandal.
And all this time you have been wrong.
Thanks, that is refreshing honesty.
The airspace was reopened on the 13th. I was wrong about the 20th, as is this article; it was between the 13th and the 19th.
The darling of the left just crapped on 'em.
This probably won't change anything. Clarke's admission will be rammed down the memory hole by the media. At the same time, the ravings of "Bush got his buddies the bin Ladens out of the country" put forth by the leftist conspiracy mongers like Mikey Moore will be dutifully echoed over and over again between now and November. Only after the elction is safely over will the media "discover" Clarke's admission of responsibility.
That's what I thought. I'm not going to even bother looking it up--someone may well have posted something down thread--but we ALL, who watched those hearings, have been saying for weeks and months now how Clarke took responsibility.
I think this is framed selectively to give Hamilton cover because he clearly was set to aid the dems as they tried to resurrect (is there an issue that won't be brought back time and again to imply wrongdoing by Bush? NO!) this story. Probably thought it was a good time due to the outrageous Moore movie. Clarke foiled it for some reason, by asserting *again* as we heard it, that he approved it.
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