Posted on 09/23/2006 10:59:28 PM PDT by Gail Wynand
Laurie Mylroie, a noted author and middle east expert as well as 1992 Clinton campaign advisor on Iraq, evaluated the Richard Clarke book which President Clinton repeatedly and heatedly based his defense of his terror record to Chris Wallace on Fox News. Ms. Mylroie, described the Clarke book as "riddled with errors" and statues further that, "Clarke's book, Against All Enemies is, essentially, an attempt to blame the Bush administration for 9/11, while exonerating Clinton (and therefore Clarke). The reality is quite the reverse." Ms. Mylroie contends that Clarke's story "systematically distorts" key information, and she explains the central failing of the Clinton terror policy was its emphasis on treating terror incidents as subject for criminal prosecution rather than foreign policy matters, effectively denying intelligence agencies access to key evidence and information.
Clinton on the other hand repeatedly told Fox News that " And all Id say anybody who wonders whether we did wrong or right. Anybody who wants to see what everybody else did, read his [Clarke's] book" in response to question over the sufficiency of his administrations responses to terror over eight years, roughly the entire period from the 1993 WTC attack, until just before 9/11.
Another mistaken 'conceptzia'
by Laurie Mylroie
Al-Qaida has struck again, or so it seems. "A virtual enemy," as a Clinton administration official describes it, al-Qaida is everywhere and anywhere. It is no less a threat than it was a year ago, according to CIA director George Tenet although the Taliban are defeated; al-Qaida's leadership is dead or on the run; and more than 3,000 others have been detained. "You see it in Bali. You see it in Kuwait," Tenet affirmed. And now, presumably, we saw it in Mombasa. |
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"Study of Revenge," the sequel to the New York Times best-seller "Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf," co-authored by Laurie Mylroie and Judith Miller, exposes the threat Saddam Hussein still poses to Americans. The Gulf War never ended for Saddam Hussein. He had already recovered sufficiently by 1993 to undertake a campaign of terror, of which only the first two acts were planned in advance: the January shootings outside CIA headquarters in Virginia and the February bombing of one tower of the World Trade Center in New York, in an attempt to topple it against its twin. "Study of Revenge" is, first of all, the story of the Trade Center bombing. Mylroie contends that the mastermind behind the bombing was an Iraqi intelligence agent, Ramzi Yousef, who escaped and left behind the Muslim fundamentalists who participated in the plot and were meant to be caught. She argues that the Clinton administration's mishandling of the event led to the emergence of a fraudulent and dangerous theory about Middle East terrorism--that it is no longer primarily state-sponsored but is carried out by individuals or "loose networks." The misunderstanding is particularly dangerous in light of the prospects for biological terrorism. In addition to her account of events around the bombing, Mylroie describes how Saddam Hussein has steadily regained strength and eroded the system of postwar constraints that were supposed to hold him in check. She suggests that because of the proscribed unconventional-weapons capabilities Saddam retained in violation of the Gulf War cease-fire--and without the check of U.N. weapons inspectors--he is far more dangerous than is generally recognized. Mylroie bases her case on a meticulous analysis of the government's evidence in the terrorism trials that followed the Trade Center bombing. Her book is written as a detective story, and the reader is invited to conduct the investigation into state sponsorship of the terrorism that the U.S. government failed to conduct. |
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Paul Wolfowitz, Deputy Secretary of Defense The destruction of the twin towers of the World Trade Center and the attack on the Pentagon -- all within one hour on September 11, 2001 -- demonstrated America's shocking vulnerability to terrorism. Yet terror had already emerged on America's shores eight years earlier, when the mysterious terrorist mastermind, Ramzi Yousef (arrested after a botched attempt to down a dozen U.S. airlines) bombed the World Trade Center in an attempt to fell the buildings. His attacks were viewed as the harbinger of a new terrorism, carried out by an elusive enemy driven by religious fanaticism to unprecedented hatred of the United States. But is that perception accurate? A real-life detective story, The War Against America engages the reader in a gripping examination of the evidence regarding Yousef and his terrorism. It reveals the split between New York and Washington that emerged during the investigation and tells a terrifying tale of America left exposed and vulnerable following the mishandling of what was once the most ambitious terrorist attack ever attempted on U.S. soil.
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You have some interesting info above. However, the fact that the author was linked to Judith Miller is a bit unnerving as Miller's sourcing did not hold up and much of what she said turned out not to be true.
My everlasting memory of kilnton will be that he will be remembered as the bj president.
Hypocrisy abounds in this Age of clinton, a Postmodern Oz rife with constitutional deconstruction and semantic subversion, a virtual surreality polymarked by presidential alleles peccantly misplaced or, in the case of Jefferson, posthumously misappropriated. Mia T, 01.11.99 bill clinton's Convenient Postmodern Pose: "G-word"shame presages "W-word" horror by Mia T, 4.6.04 |
Clinton's Keystone Cops (DUmocrats) long for the days when terrorism was just a "nuisance".
Sunday AM bump
BJ Clinton thought he could buy off the Taliban, in effect he purchased 9-11.
Absolutely brilliant!
That is not unexpected from you. ;o)
Thank you so much for your post.
You are one of FRee Republic's finest.
Westlander, it was nice to meet you.
VIRTUAL KILL
THE CHRIS WALLACE-BILL CLINTON INTERVIEW DECONSTRUCTED
A virtual kill of bin Laden seems apt. One should never expect more of bill clinton. And there is a certain symmetry, a perfect parry for clinton's 'virtual obsession.'
READ MORE
TEXT AND VIDEO INCLUDE:
- the only idea clinton was promoting during the interview
- the devastating case made against bill clinton by:
- Michael Scheuer, former 'hunting bin Laden' CIA Division Chief, and
- Richard Miniter, author of Losing Bin Laden: How Bill Clinton's Failures Unleashed Global Terror
Not kind at all.
Just the truth. ;o)
"Michael Scheuer, former 'hunting bin Laden' CIA Division Chief, and
Richard Miniter, author of Losing Bin Laden: How Bill Clinton's Failures Unleashed Global Terror"
Those two need to be heard far and wide.
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