Posted on 04/12/2004 9:44:47 AM PDT by kattracks
In her first year as Deputy U.S. Attorney General in the Clinton administration, Sept. 11 Commissioner Jamie Gorelick was warned that lax U.S. immigration policies made the U.S. a tempting target for terrorists, former FBI Director Louis Freeh revealed on Monday, suggesting that Gorelick did little to remedy the situation.
"Protecting our homeland from attacks by foreign terrorists had long been the FBI's priority," said Freeh, in a lengthy Wall Street Journal op-ed piece.
"Back in September 1994, I recommended to Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick that the DoJ strengthen investigative powers against suspected 'undesirable aliens,' accelerating deportation appeal proceedings and limiting U.S. participation in a visa waiver pilot program under which 9.5 million foreigners entered the U.S. in 1994."
Freeh that he also recommended "that we include provisions for the detention and removal of undesirable aliens, under a special, closed-court procedure."
"I also criticized alien deportation appeal procedures which often took years to conclude. Finally, I recommended legislation to provide the FBI with roving wiretap authority to investigate terrorist activities in the U.S."
But if Gorelick took Freeh's warnings seriously, she didn't make much headway with her superiors.
By 1996, under the Clinton administration's Citizenship USA program, thousands of criminal suspects were rushed through the naturalization process without proper background checks in order to get them on the voting roles on time for that year's presidential election.
According to former Justice Department investigator David Schippers, under the accelerated procedures, the U.S. was swarmed with:
More than 75,000 new citizens who had arrest records when they applied.
An additional 115,000 citizens whose fingerprints were unclassifiable for various technical reasons and we're never resubmitted.
Another 61,000 people who were given citizenship with no fingerprints submitted at all.
At least one new citizen was already in jail by the time he was naturalized under the Clinton administration program.
According to Schippers's 1999 book, "Sell Out," Jamie Gorelick was tasked with expediting the new rules under which criminal background checks were suspended for new immigrants.
Freeh took off 6 WEEKS during all this terrorist stuff when one of his kids were born....6 WEEKS OFF...the FBI DIRECTOR took 6 WEEKS of family leave during some of this stuff!! As I said....PATHETIC!
He is a she and you missed out the apostrophe however J'aime votre prise.
I don't know if there was any discussion. But speaking of Tom Clancy's prediction, I also remember that the pilot episode of the X-Files spinoff The Lone Gunmen, which aired March 4, 2001, involved a plane crashing into the World Trade Center:
The Lone Gunmen: 1AEB79 Pilot (4th March 2001)
They realize that the airplane will be remote controlled, just like Bert's car was. Talking by phone to the Gunmen's office, Byers asks Langly and Frohike to hack into the aircraft controls. They do and discover that the plane is programmed to crash into the World Trade Center.
So both Clancy and X-Files writer Chris Carter had thought of the idea; and usually those guys base their plots on researching the topics they're writing about by consulting experts, so it tends to follow that counterterrorism experts had also at least entertained that as a possible terrorist scenario. Whether they considered it as likely as other possible scenarios is another issue.
Without linking to any articles we're not supposed to, can you give some keywords for those of us who want to do our own Google search for the article/s? Alternatively, you might post a link to a Google search on those keywords, without linking to any specific article per se.
Don't think so. Les Aspin was SecDef during Black Hawk Down; he took responsibility (imagine, a Clinton appointee doing that) by resigning. And was replaced by a Republican - justifying my point that there hasn't been a successful Democrat SecDef in a long time. I don't know how good anyone thinks Carter's SecDef was, but other than that you'd have to go back to Robert S. McNamara of Vietnam "fame." And if you don't take that for a good reputation for SecDef, you'd have to go all the way back to Truman for a good Democratic SecDef . . .
Yes, I know that a paper, upon receiving 100 mass e-mails will regard it as 100 mass e-mails. Sure, they know your're listening but they're unlikely to print more than one. The one represents the all.
Our Congressmen FILTER our e-mails limiting their interest to ones not mass generated and only paying attention to those within their district.
But go ahead, mass e-mail all you want. I've also submitted my e-mails through the Bush/Cheney website and will continue to do so. But, they will limited effectiveness. It's not meant to be effective. It's meant to generate numbers. To that end, it will be successful.
This woman is a BIG ole rat, in the rats nest! I think they are finding the culprits at last.
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