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To: zook

Not a part of the 9/11 report...if true, it means Berger sucessfully removed all copies from the Archive.


17 posted on 07/23/2004 9:22:20 AM PDT by GRANGER (Must-issue states have safer streets.)
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To: GRANGER
Not a part of the 9/11 report...if true, it means Berger sucessfully removed all copies from the Archive.

If true, it means that the conclusions of the 9/11 report are demonstrably untrustworthy. That would be a HUGE story.

29 posted on 07/23/2004 9:24:15 AM PDT by r9etb
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To: GRANGER

I guess Berger can honestly say the commission got all the documents they requested... because they can't request documents they aren't aware of.


33 posted on 07/23/2004 9:24:58 AM PDT by ArcadeQuarters
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To: GRANGER

According to the article, the report claims that Berger nixed four separate opportunities to get Bin Laden. So I do think it's in there.


64 posted on 07/23/2004 9:32:09 AM PDT by mcg1969
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To: GRANGER

>>Not a part of the 9/11 report.<<

It appears that it is but I haven't read the report.




Well, look now to what the 9/11 report has to say about the man to whom President Clinton, under attack by an independent counsel,delegated so much in respect of national security, Samuel “Sandy” Berger. The report cites a 1998 meeting between Mr. Berger and the director of central intelligence, George Tenet, at which Mr. Tenet presented a plan to capture Osama bin Laden.

“In his meeting with Tenet, Berger focused most, however, on the question of what was to be done with Bin Ladin if he were actually captured. He worried that the hard evidence against Bin Ladin was still skimpy and that there was a danger of snatching him and bringing him to the United States only to see him acquitted,” the report says, citing a May 1, 1998, Central Intelligence Agency memo summarizing the weekly meeting between Messrs. Berger and Tenet.

In June of 1999, another plan for action against Mr. bin Laden was on the table. The potential target was a Qaeda terrorist camp in Afghanistan known as Tarnak Farms. The commission report released yesterday cites Mr. Berger’s “handwritten notes on the meeting paper” referring to “the presence of 7 to 11 families in the Tarnak Farms facility, which could mean 60-65 casualties.”According to the Berger notes, “if he responds, we’re blamed.”

On December 4, 1999, the National Security Council’s counterterrorism coordinator, Richard Clarke, sent Mr. Berger a memo suggesting a strike in the last week of 1999 against Al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan. Reports the commission: “In the margin next to Clarke’s suggestion to attack Al Qaeda facilities in the week before January 1, 2000, Berger wrote, ‘no.’ ”

In August of 2000, Mr. Berger was presented with another possible plan for attacking Mr. bin Laden.This time, the plan would be based on aerial surveillance from a “Predator” drone. Reports the commission: “In the memo’s margin,Berger wrote that before considering action, ‘I will want more than verified location: we will need, at least, data on pattern of movements to provide some assurance he will remain in place.’ ”

In other words, according to the commission report, Mr. Berger was presented with plans to take action against the threat of Al Qaeda four separate times — Spring 1998, June 1999, December 1999, and August 2000. Each time, Mr. Berger was an obstacle to action. Had he been a little less reluctant to act, a little more open to taking pre-emptive action, maybe the 2,973 killed in the September 11, 2001, attacks would be alive today.


73 posted on 07/23/2004 9:34:10 AM PDT by cinFLA
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