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SO LONG URGENCY, HELLO INDULGENCE (or Dems put USA at risk)
Townhall ^ | 9/28/02 | Diana West

Posted on 09/28/2002 2:47:13 AM PDT by Elkiejg

This must be what a phony war feels like. Having first ventured out of the bunker united as we clutched our flags, fought fear and braced for battle, we now enjoy the fragile complacence of daily routines that can no longer be taken for granted. Except, of course, that they are being taken for granted. Strangely enough, there's little sense of having returned to "life as usual" with any understanding of the essential urgency of the mission before us: to neutralize the terrorist forces of jihadist Islam. Having accepted the basic survival strategies of life as civilian targets -- invasive security checks, time-consuming travel routines and the rest -- we now face the metaphysical danger that one day a yellow security alert will be considered downright cozy. Adaptability is an asset, but there comes a point at which it has more to do with defeat than survival.

It may sound as if I'm still not over the quilts, ballets and anchor soliloquies of Sept. 11 -- the network extravaganza -- but that's not it. Nor does this disaffection have anything to do with those ghastly commemoratives in marble and bronze that keep popping up to bring us revels of pain and death when what we really need is a sculpture of an avenging angel or two on a white steed. Somewhat amazingly, it doesn't even stem from this week's Democratic efforts to depict the administration's war policy, long in the making, as a suddenly concocted political ploy that doesn't merit electoral consideration.

What is most perplexing is the U.S. Senate's idea of what it means to take action. After two weeks of public hearings on intelligence failures leading up to Sept. 11, it voted overwhelmingly to create a blue-ribbon panel to ... investigate such failures further. Imagine: Senators could hear, for example, the harrowing testimony of a special agent whose repeated requests to launch a manhunt for Khalid Almihdhar, one of the Sept. 11 hijackers, as late as Aug. 29, 2001, were turned down by the FBI's legal arm, and be inspired only to initiate another inquiry. "Someday, someone will die," the agent wrote nearly two weeks before the attacks in a scathingly bitter and prophetic e-mail to headquarters, "and (legal) wall or not, the public will not understand why we were not effective and throwing every resource we had at certain 'problems.' Let's hope the National Security Law Unit will stand behind their decisions then, especially since the biggest threat to us now, UBL [Osama bin Laden], is getting the most protection.'"

I'm just wondering whether a VIP panel is really necessary to look up who runs the National Security Law Unit, see whether they're standing behind their decisions, and determine how long it will take them to clean out their desks. But maybe I'm missing something. Indeed, as the Washington Post explained, the 90-8 vote authorizing the commission "reflected a mounting consensus in both parties that the current congressional probe into intelligence failures pointed to the need for a more far-reaching inquiry." Seems that we needed a "probe" to determine that we really needed an "inquiry."

Accordingly, congressional leaders will soon pick a panel of worthies from outside government (if such exist) and give them subpoena powers, a $3 million budget and a mandate to file an "initial" report in six months. The final report, the one with the actual recommendations, won't appear for another year after that. Assuming the panel is chosen before Congress adjourns, that means no blue-ribbon advice before May 2004. At this rate, even the U.N. arms inspectors should beat them back to town.

Feel more secure? Frankly, it's a bit scary to imagine senators believing a report 18 or 20 months down the road could be anything other than a historical curio. That is, the panel's findings might well serve scholars and archivists (should they still be in business), but it's hard to imagine them being of use to a nation at war. More disturbing still is the thought of our leaders believing we have 20 months to wait -- for anything. What this vote reveals is a troubling indulgence in leisure that certainly should have been a casualty of last year's attacks.

President Bush long opposed this independent commission, believing it would open a new sluice gate of security leaks and monopolize the time of those whose job it is to prosecute a war. Too bad he changed his mind. The big, broad bipartisan inquiry is a task for peacetime. In a war, even a phony war, the government is too busy -- or should be -- working out the future to use precious time and resources sorting out the past.

Diana West is a columnist for The Washington Times.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: ratobstruction
Ms. West sums up in one article how ridiculous government - especially RATS - is about the threat to our country. Maybe when the next attack hits their home state, they'll wake up.

FROM FBI website:

The Office of the General Counsel (OGC) provides legal advice to the Director and other FBI officials. In addition, OGC personnel research legal questions regarding law enforcement and national security matters and coordinate the defense of civil litigation and administrative claims involving the FBI, its personnel, and its records.

The National Security Law Branch exists to provide legal services that support operational elements which are related to the national security functions of the FBI. These matters include foreign counterintelligence (FCI), international terrorism, and domestic security/terrorism (including weapons of mass destruction, and counter-proliferation). The National Security Law Branch provides advice when intelligence or national security information is disseminated to, requested by, or otherwise used in the context of a criminal investigation, prosecution or analytical project, including dissemination to a foreign power. A major mission element is to develop and maintain liaison relationships with the intelligence community, Department of Defense, and other U.S. Government agencies on legal issues and operational requirements relating to the national security. The branch is comprised of the following units: the National Security Law Unit, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Unit.

1 posted on 09/28/2002 2:47:13 AM PDT by Elkiejg
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To: Elkiejg
It continues to amaze and astound me that anyone can be blase' about something that might kill millions of Americans-- here's what's available in the public domain, readily accessable to anyone with an hour or two of research time:

-Iraq...NBC Warfare...Terror--

2 posted on 09/28/2002 2:59:18 AM PDT by backhoe
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To: backhoe
Good morning backhoe - thanks for your hard work on these links - they're so valuable. What is so disgusting to me is the playing of political games while our country is at risk. Every time I hear a RAT politican say there's not enough proof that Iraq has WMD, I wonder how they will react if their home district is bombed next. Just MAYBE then they'll get the picture!
3 posted on 09/28/2002 3:53:22 AM PDT by Elkiejg
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To: Elkiejg
Thanks for looking- what's truly appalling is that some of this information has been out there for years, and since political operatives like Senators & Congresscritters have access to a higher level of intelligence ( no bad jokes, please! ) than we do, you can only conclude that the "not enough proof" crowd is pulling a blatantly partisan spin.

It's utterly revolting, and if a weapon of mass murder is used on America- or even more probably, Israel- they will be eye-deep in the blood of innocents...

4 posted on 09/28/2002 4:16:59 AM PDT by backhoe
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