Posted on 02/24/2006 10:05:16 AM PST by bigsky
Before President Bush gets anywhere near casting his first veto to ensure that the government of the United Arab Emirates can manage elements of six U.S. ports, someone ought to put before him pages 137-139 of The 9/11 Commission Report.
If Bush doesnt then cancel the UAE port deal, Congress must demand testimony from every person named in those pages and the footnotes. That includes former Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet; former CIA Deputy Director for Operations James Pavitt; former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger; Gen. Hugh Shelton, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Maj. Gen. John Maher, Sheltons vice director of operations; Gary Schroen, the CIA field officer tracking Bin Laden; Mike, the pseudonym the 9/11 Commission gave the U.S.s Osama bin Laden unit chief; and, most importantly, Richard Clarke, Bergers assistant for counter-terrorism.
Tipped Off
The story the commission tells is that Clarke made a call to a high-ranking UAE official that may have inadvertently saved bin Laden from a U.S. missile strike. The commissions reporting strongly suggests someone in the UAE government tipped off someone in Afghanistan, protecting bin Laden.
In early 1999, the Clinton Administration wanted to fire missiles at bin Laden without risking civilian casualties. Bin Laden played into our hands. Intelligence reports from Afghan tribals indicated he was frequenting a small hunting camp adjacent to a larger camp outside Kandahar, Afghanistan. Here U.S. missiles could score a clean kill.
But then officials from the UAE got in the way. The commission said:
On February 8, the military began to ready itself for a possible strike. The next day, national technical intelligence confirmed the location and description of the larger camp and showed the nearby presence of an official aircraft of the United Arab Emirates. But the location of Bin Ladens quarters could not be pinned down so precisely. According to reporting from the tribals, bin Laden regularly went from his adjacent camp to the larger camp where he visited the Emiratis. The tribals expected him to be at the hunting camp for such a visit at least until midmorning on February 11. Clarke wrote to Bergers deputy on February 10 that the military was then doing targeting work to hit the main camp with cruise missiles and should be in position to strike the following morning. Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert appears to have been briefed on the situation.
No strike was launched. By February 12 bin Laden had apparently moved on, and the immediate strike plans became moot. According to CIA and Defense officials, policymakers were concerned about the danger that a strike would kill an Emirati prince or other senior officials who might be with bin Laden or close by. Clarke told us the strike was called off after consultations with Director Tenet because the intelligence was dubious, and it seemed to Clarke as if the CIA was presenting an option to attack Americas best counterterrorism ally in the Gulf. The lead CIA official in the field, Gary Schroen, felt that the intelligence reporting in this case was very reliable. The bin Laden unit chief, Mike, agreed. Schroen believes today that this was a lost opportunity to kill bin Laden before 9/11.
Even after bin Ladens departure from the area, CIA officers hoped he might return, seeing the camp as a magnet that could draw him for as long as it was still set up. The military maintained readiness for another strike opportunity. On March 7, 1999, Clarke called a UAE official to express his concerns about possible associations between Emirati officials and bin Laden. Clarke later wrote in a memorandum of this conversation that the call had been approved at an interagency meeting and cleared with the CIA. When the former bin Laden unit chief found out about Clarkes call, he questioned CIA officials, who denied having given such a clearance. Imagery confirmed that less than a week after Clarkes phone call the camp was hurriedly dismantled, and the site was deserted. CIA officers, including Deputy Director for Operations Pavitt, were irate. Mike thought the dismantling of the camp erased a possible site for targeting bin Laden.
Clarke Visited UAE
Footnotes spell out more details. One names the UAE official Clarke called: NSC memo, Clarke, secure teleconference between UAE Chief of Staff Muhammad bin Zayid and Clarke, Mar. 7, 1999.
Another notes that Joint Chiefs deputy operations director Maher was incredulous the CIA would approve this call: Maher told us he thinks it almost impossible that the CIA cleared Clarkes call.
Another indicates Clarke had been in the UAE just before the contemplated strike at bin Laden and had been assured by both bin Zayid and Dubais leader, Sheikh Muhammad bin Rashid, that the UAE would help the U.S. against bin Laden. Bin Zayid even insisted UAE officials were not in Afghanistan, even though it turned out that the UAE chief of staff himself had gone hunting in Afghanistan at about the same time as the contemplated U.S. attacks. The commission said:
Days before overhead imagery confirmed the location of the hunting camp, Clarke had returned from a visit to the UAE His visit included one-on-one meetings with Army Chief of Staff bin Zayid, as well as talks with Sheikh Muhammad bin Rashid, the ruler of Dubai. Both agreed to try to work with the United States in their efforts against Bin Laden. On February 10, as the United States considered striking the camp, Clarke reported that during his visit bin Zayid had vehemently denied rumors that high-level UAE officials were in Afghanistan. Subsequent reporting, however, suggested that high-level UAE officials had indeed been at the desert camp. CIA memo, Recent High Level UAE Visits to Afghanistan, Feb. 19, 1999. Gen. Shelton also told us that his UAE counterpart said he had been hunting at a desert camp in Afghanistan at about this time.
Another footnote says that talking points prepared for DCI Tenet that March mention the UAE being tipped off to the CIAs knowledge of the camp.
Richard Clarke believed the UAE was a counter-terrorism ally then. Bush believes it now. Clarke apparently was fooled. But that, at least, was before 9/11.
Well then, I will await your clarification with baited breath.
Which is it? Option 1, or option 2.
Of course I know what your choice is...Bush is all evil.
Cute. Now that you've answered your own question...answer mine or just admit that you can't without looking stupid.
And try to compete with how stupid you look. No thanks, I'll stick with the only answer that is qualified...that DP World is already providing these services for our troops.
Read it before you mock it.
No thanks, you read it. No self respecting American would put one ounce of credibility in anything that came out that farce..
"Rumor and hearsay. Seems the Port Deal foes are getting desperate."
Clearly. And if I intended to side with them, I would visit the DU.
No the REALLY REALLY damning line is -
"may have ***inadvertently*** saved bin Laden"
If this is the judging criteria look no further than Leaky Lehey and others in gov't who leak on purpose!
Exxon, Sasol, Shell, KBR and the UAE?
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Why? If there was ever a national embarassment, it was the 9-11 Commission. Cobbled together by Clintonistas, its makeup ensured its irrelevance. Jamie Gorelick, who smirked after anything an "R" or anyone who placed ANY blame or responsibility on Clinton, is as much a cause of 9-11 as the hijackers were. Worse, I "watched in amazement" when Bob Kerrey berated Condi Rice for "Putting a Christian army into Muslim Iraq". The Commission, its members, findings and conclusions are as irrelevant is Tom Daschle. The very presence of the two abovementioned in this circus was insulting to America, and Im really sorry to see it posted here in an attempt to sway opinion on the Port debate.
This administration has done nothing but praise the 9/11 commission. If I missed otherwise, post it.
W thinks Islam is a religion of peace, of course he is going to praise it. Honest and reasonable Americans saw the Comm for what it was-an absolute circus. But if you want to inject more irrationality into an already irrational debate, perhaps you should review the hearings. Im confident if you watch them again you see the Commission's true purpose-deflect blame away from Clinton, and pile it on W in the run up to 2004. As I said, Im really sorry to see it referred to here..
Bin Laden visited London in 1994 and lived for a few months in Wembley establishing the committee.
Intersting how that commission seemed to be organized crass political posturing. Kind of like this whole fabricated non-issue.
Ok.. I will play. It is called supporting our President and Commander and Chief and trusting him. He knows what he is doing - he has proven that and his detractors do not have a clue they have proven that.
Now align yourselves as you will- I am hanging out with the GW.
The answer is "NO" thanks for asking.
Did lamebrain Clinton officials blow or sluf off every chance to kill or capture Osama? YES
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