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Rudy's Pants On Fire (9/11 Commission testimony exposes Giuliani's lack of terrorism knowledge)
Village Voice ^ | October 23, 2007 | Wayne Barrett

Posted on 10/28/2007 10:40:39 AM PDT by calcowgirl

Runnin' Scared
Rudy's Pants On Fire
Secret testimony shows that Rudy's stump speech is inflated, at best
by Wayne Barrett
October 23rd, 2007 9:25 PM

In a recent broadside deriding the Clinton administration's response to Al Qaeda, Rudy Giuliani told an audience at Pat Robertson's Regent University: "Bin Laden declared war on us. We didn't hear it. I thought it was pretty clear at the time, but a lot of people didn't see it, couldn't see it." Other tenets of his standard stump speech include the assertion that he's been "studying terrorism" for more than 30 years, and that "the thing that distinguishes me on terrorism is that I have more experience in dealing with it" than the other presidential candidates.

However, in private testimony before the 9/11 Commission in 2004, Rudy gave a very different version of how much he knew about terrorism when the World Trade Center was attacked. That testimony isn't scheduled to be released publicly until after the 2008 presidential election, but the Voice has obtained a copy of it. And it reveals a New York mayor who was anything but an "expert on terrorism."

A 15-page "memorandum for the record," prepared by a commission counsel and dated April 20, 2004, quotes Giuliani conceding that it wasn't until "after 9/11" that "we brought in people to brief us on al Qaeda." According to the memorandum, Giuliani told two commission members and five staffers: "But we had nothing like this pre 9/11, which was a mistake, because if experts share a lot of info," there would be a "better chance of someone making heads and tails" of the "situation." (Such memoranda are not verbatim transcripts of the confidential commission interviews, but are described on the cover page as "100 percent accurate" notes taken by staffers, stamped "commission sensitive/unclassified" on the top of each page.)

Asked about the “flow of information about al Qaeda threats from 1998-2001,” Giuliani said: “At the time, I wasn’t told it was al Qaeda, but now that I look back at it, I think it was al Qaeda.” He also said that as part of one of his post-9/11 briefings, “we had in Bodansky, who had written a book on bin Laden.” Giuliani was referring to Yossef Bodanksy, the author of Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War on America, which was published in 1999 and predicted “spectacular terrorist strikes in Washington and/or New York.” Giuliani wrote in his own book, Leadership, that Judi Nathan got him a copy of Bodansky’s prophetic work “shortly after 9/11,” and that he covered it in “highlighter and notes,” citing his study of it as an example of how he “mastered a subject.” Apparently, he also invited Bodansky to address key members of his staff.

Giuliani attributed his pre-9/11 shortcomings in part to the FBI, which was run by his close friend (and current endorser) Louis Freeh, and to the Joint Terrorism Task Force, an FBI-directed partnership with the NYPD. "We already had JTTF, and got flow information no one else got," he explained. "But did we get the flow of information we wanted? No. We would be told about a threat, but not about the underlying nature of the threat. I wanted all the same information the FBI had, and we didn't get that until after 9/11. Immediately after 9/11, we were made a complete partner." He added: "Without 9/11, I never would have been able to send an adviser to FBI briefings."

Tom Von Essen, who was Giuliani’s fire commissioner and is now a partner in his consulting company, Giuliani Partners, was asked at a confidential interview on April 7, 2004, what information he had “re terrorism prior to 9/11” and said: “I was told nothing at all.” Bernard Kerik, the police commissioner on 9/11, who also later joined Giuliani Partners, appeared to contradict Giuliani, insisting in his April 6 private appearance: “I never had a problem with the FBI.” Kerik, who did not become commissioner until August 2000, testified, however, that he did have a problem with his own department. “When I took over,” he said, “I was not happy with NYPD’s intelligence in general.” He said the intelligence division “had more to do with fighting criminal activity than terrorism” and that “within 3-4 months, I directed a total merger of NYPD intelligence.” In other words, Kerik indicated that he’d begun a reorganization of the department’s counterterrorism intelligence operations in 2001, as the Giuliani administration entered its final year—hardly a testament to its urgent understanding of the threat.

Despite conceding his lack of information to the 9/11 Commission, Giuliani recently told New York Times Magazine reporter Matt Bai that he wished he could discuss "all the things he knew about terrorism," but that he "could not, unfortunately, share" this information with Bai "because they probably remain classified." Giuliani went on at great length in Bai's cover story—as he has repeatedly on the campaign trail—about how, as president, he would apply CompStat, the famous anti-crime measurement and action program instituted at the NYPD during Giuliani's mayoralty, to the fight against terrorism. Bai called Giuliani's argument an "impressive case."

Compare that to Giuliani's response when he was asked by the 9/11 Commission if CompStat could be used as a "resource in the war on terror." He replied: "Bernie knows more than I," referring the commission to Kerik, who became President Bush's nominee for Homeland Security secretary a few months later. According to the commission's memorandum, Giuliani also urged them to "talk to the current NYPD re current terrorism Compstat," a reference to Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. Though Giuliani thought the application of CompStat to terrorism was "an excellent idea," he offered no suggestions of his own.

Twice, Giuliani dodged the commission's questions about the radios used by first responders—one of the key critiques of the city's 9/11 response made by New York and national firefighters' unions. The city's firefighters were stuck with the same analog radios that had malfunctioned in 1993, when the World Trade Center was first attacked, because the department had had to recall newer digital radios in the spring of 2001. Pressed about this nearly three years after 9/11, Giuliani deflected the question with a suggestion that the memorandum summarizes as follows: "Speak with Richie re whether digital would have worked better." Giuliani was referring to Richard Sheirer, the former director of emergency management, who had virtually nothing to do with the selection of the firefighters' radios (and who, like Von Essen, is also now at Giuliani Partners). Sheirer had already appeared before the commission and was questioned, appropriately, about his own agency's radios, not the fire department's. He declared that their radios "worked very well" on 9/11, "allowing me to communicate" with the command center, though the bunker was actually abandoned shortly after the second plane hit.

Similarly, when Giuliani was pressed about the "repeater" or amplifier that was installed at the World Trade Center after the 1993 bombing to aid firefighter radio communications there, the memorandum indicates simply: "No knowledge." Not only was this answer an indication of how little attention Giuliani paid to fire response and other security issues at the complex prior to 9/11, it was an indication that he wasn't taking the critique of the city's response seriously even years later. In response to a recent video released by the firefighters' union attacking Giuliani on this issue, his campaign has been trying to shift the blame to the repeater, suggesting that it was the failure to trigger this system that caused the firefighters not to hear evacuation orders.

While candidate Giuliani has also begun blaming Sheirer's predecessor, Jerry Hauer, for the decision to put the command center in the WTC complex, he did no such thing when asked about it during his commission appearance. He said his administration "wanted a place in lower Manhattan" and "that was probably the primary reason for it"—which is exactly what Hauer says about why it wound up there. Once Giuliani ruled that the center had to be within "walking distance" of City Hall, the World Trade Center became a likely location, since the downtown area is entirely below the flood plain, barring any below-ground site.

In his testimony, Giuliani also expressed "sympathy for President Bush being taken to task for not picking up on one detail in a briefing which in retrospect is very important when the President receives so many, many briefings." This was a reference to the presidential daily briefing that Bush received on August 6, 2001, titled "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." According to the commission's final report, this briefing was the 36th related to Osama bin Laden or Al Qaeda that Bush had received, but the first that highlighted an attack on the U.S. It made specific references to a "bin Laden cell in New York" that was "recruiting Muslim-American youth for attacks," and also reported that the FBI had found "patterns of suspicious activity in this country consistent with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks, including recent surveillance of federal buildings in New York." Ironically, it was precisely this kind of information that Giuliani had complained about not receiving from the FBI just minutes earlier in the same testimony.

Though Giuliani has been presenting himself on the campaign trail as the person who can best safeguard America, he told the commission: "The only thing to protect you against terrorism is to find out about a plot in advance." And thus far, he has presented no plausible evidence to suggest that he'd be better than anyone else running for president at doing that.

 



TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 911commission; elections; giuliani; giulianitruthfile; rudyonterrorism; terrorism; villagevoice; wot
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To: calcowgirl; narby; Liz; stephenjohnbanker; Carry_Okie
"Nothing is more destructive than an enemy within."

The funny thing is how I'm developing an "extreme prejudice" against ANY "celebrity" or former "prosecuter" on either side of the isle. That functions causes "terminal arrogance" because they never get rid of the god-like feeling of power over people's lives... Think about it!!!

101 posted on 10/30/2007 1:24:59 PM PDT by SierraWasp (GovernMental EnvironMentalism is making a monstrous mockery of the proper role of CA government!!!)
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To: SierraWasp

Like this guy, ya mean?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1918497/posts


102 posted on 10/30/2007 1:32:53 PM PDT by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: KC_Conspirator
The Media Matters crowd would love nothing more to see Republicans attacking each other especially when we end up using their distorted 9/11 talking points.

It doesn't really matter that their target is Rudy for the moment. It really could be any of our GOP candidates being attacked except for Ron Paul because he is already on their side

103 posted on 10/30/2007 1:34:50 PM PDT by april15Bendovr
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To: SUSSA
Nixon and Bush advanced more of the Left’s issues than Clinton and Carter were able to do. Yet they love Clinton and Carter but hate Nixon and Bush.

Yeah, Bush advanced the lefts issues such as tax reduction and confronting the islamists.

Clinton appointed Ginsberg, Bush appointed Alito and Roberts. If you can't tell the difference between the presidents, I think you need to research a bit more. The left knows who its enemy is, but you apparently don't.

104 posted on 10/30/2007 3:08:30 PM PDT by narby
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To: indylindy
Mainstream is mediocrity and nothing else. It is a spark with no fire.

So you would rather have the excitement and emotion of being on the right fringe, rather than drag the mainstream over to where you are and then have no conflict. Ok.

105 posted on 10/30/2007 3:10:30 PM PDT by narby
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To: narby

You have to be kidding. Right?

Mainstream have no opinion, and rely on those that do, to see them through. They only bitch if they feel that ones that are supposed to do all the caring, that cover their butts, let them down. How the heck do you think that there are activists in both parties? If we had to rely on the mainstream, Stalin might take over.

Would you really expect anything different from them?


106 posted on 10/30/2007 3:26:26 PM PDT by dforest (Duncan Hunter is the best hope we have on both fronts.)
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To: indylindy
Mainstream have no opinion,

Apparently you are unable to imagine a future where the "Mainstream" is conservative, because you are entirely missing my point.

107 posted on 10/30/2007 3:38:55 PM PDT by narby
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To: calcowgirl
Yeah, and like that one that screwed up the lives of the Rugby players and like the one that's runnin for President right now and like Eliot Spitzer and like Jerry Brown and like that idiot we used to have here in CA in the AG's office... In fact I can no longer think of a single one that I wouldn't wash my hand thouroghly after shakin hands with one of 'em!!! They slither through the grass and are slimey like banana slugs!!! Yuck!!! Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!!
108 posted on 10/30/2007 3:43:22 PM PDT by SierraWasp (GovernMental EnvironMentalism is making a monstrous mockery of the proper role of CA government!!!)
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To: narby

I think you are off in la la land. You will never have “mainstream conservatives” by electing a liberal.

I think you believe folks are into redefining what a conservative is. Believe me, it ain’t Rudy.

Well, gee, okay, we can now call a liberal a conservative if we nominate Rudy. argh.

Problem y’all have, is we are not democrat sheeple, we are conservatives.

When something don’t fit, quit trying to make it it so. It will never happen.


109 posted on 10/30/2007 3:54:47 PM PDT by dforest (Duncan Hunter is the best hope we have on both fronts.)
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To: calcowgirl

I don’t heed anything that Jamie Gorelick had a hand in writing.


110 posted on 10/30/2007 3:58:05 PM PDT by Senator Goldwater
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To: SierraWasp

Ya left out Johnny Sutton, prosecutor extraordinairre who likes to go after border patrol officer.
I hear ya—in fact, seein’ so many of ‘em mentioned in one post is makin’ me feel dirty. LOL


111 posted on 10/30/2007 4:06:43 PM PDT by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: Senator Goldwater

As far as I know, Gorelick didn’t write Rudy’s testimony—unless he hired her to talk for him.


112 posted on 10/30/2007 4:07:26 PM PDT by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: Alberta's Child

“.... . the lack of any search results dating back before 9/11 speaks volumes. This administration was no better prepared to deal with al-Qaeda than the last one was.”
10 posted on 10/28/2007 1:54

Kinda makes you wonder what info the Previous president, ahhh Mr Clinkstones, had on Al Q and why didn’t he share that info with Rudy?...Oh, that’s right...Forgot that he never spoke to Louis Freeh for 4 years and he didn’t trust the FBI....well daggone..Guess the Mayor didnt know he had to run National Security AND run NY City too....


113 posted on 10/30/2007 5:09:10 PM PDT by billmor
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To: indylindy
I think you are off in la la land.

Maybe that's because you didn't understand a single thing I said.

114 posted on 10/30/2007 5:14:42 PM PDT by narby
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To: calcowgirl

As for terrorism, let’s put something in perspective...Rudy did clean up the crime in NY City and in his days as a Prosecutor he helped to break the Mob-—the Mafia...It was great !...not only did he and the Feds break the Mob but they gave the Italians and the Sicilians courage to go after the Mob and break them up in Italy and Sicily too, or at least to get a good start...He was DYNOMITE and he was Italian-American too, which really grated on the mob guys....If he were just a bit more conservative in his social views, he’d beat Hillary hands down...or up...LOL...


115 posted on 10/30/2007 5:14:56 PM PDT by billmor
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To: CaptainK
I respect no one at the Village Voice.

I don't care if you hate them or not. If they wouldn't have printed this, the MSM and Democrats would've done so if Rudy secures the nomination. You can stew in your juices all you want, but them's the facts.

116 posted on 10/30/2007 5:27:38 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: narby
Even weirder that some on FR have joined common cause with the Village Voice in their hatred of Rudy.

The far left hates Rudy just as much as conservatives do. The only people who like Rudy are the regular liberals & Rockefeller Republicans in the MSM now who'll immediately turn on him when he's safely nominated. You guys completely do not get it.

117 posted on 10/30/2007 5:30:34 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: xsmommy

Post #28 well said! GET SOME, GET SOME!


118 posted on 10/30/2007 5:31:26 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: narby
So you would rather have the excitement and emotion of being on the right fringe

Define the "right fringe" though. Conservatism IS mainstream, it is moderate, it is "the middle of the road."

Rudy would destroy the GOP, and conservatism. There's no way conservatives are going to vote for him and undo 28 years of progress.

Rudy's nominated = 3rd party

119 posted on 10/30/2007 5:41:23 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: narby

Oh, I got your point, and you are wrong.


120 posted on 10/30/2007 5:43:46 PM PDT by dforest (Duncan Hunter is the best hope we have on both fronts.)
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