Condi
Rice, 9/11 and Another Nest of Lies
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday 02 October
2006
Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice may have committed perjury in her testimony before the 9/11
Commission in May of 2004. At a minimum, her testimony was a convenient
mishmash of half-truths and omissions which served to paint the White House
as innocent bystanders as the attacks of 9/11 unfolded. Certainly, her
testimony omitted the fact that the two most senior intelligence officials
in the nation delivered a stern warning regarding an impending terror attack
two full months before 9/11.
Sunday's edition
of the Washington Post carried a story titled "Two Months Before 9/11, an
Urgent Warning to Rice." The story described a desperate attempt by CIA
chief George Tenet and CIA counterterrorism chief J. Cofer Black to draw
Rice's attention to the looming threat of an al-Qaeda strike against the
United States. Tenet and Black insisted on a meeting with Rice on July 10,
2001. This meeting was first reported by Bob Woodward in his new book,
"State of Denial."
"Tenet had the NSA
review all the intercepts," read the Post story, "and the agency concluded
they were of genuine al-Qaeda communications. On June 30, a top-secret
senior executive intelligence brief contained an article headlined 'Bin
Laden Threats Are Real.' Tenet hoped his abrupt request for an immediate
meeting would shake Rice. He and Black, a veteran covert operator, had two
main points when they met with her. First, al-Qaeda was going to attack
American interests, possibly in the United States itself ... Second, this
was a major foreign policy problem that needed to be addressed immediately.
They needed to take action that moment - covert, military, whatever - to
thwart bin Laden."
The meeting,
according to Tenet and Black, went nowhere. "Tenet and Black felt they were
not getting through to Rice. She was polite, but they felt the brush-off.
President Bush had said he didn't want to swat at flies," the Post story
reported. "Rice seemed focused on other administration priorities,
especially the ballistic missile defense system that Bush had campaigned on.
She was in a different place."
"Tenet left the
meeting feeling frustrated," continued the Post story. "Though Rice had
given them a fair hearing, no immediate action meant great risk. Black felt
the decision to just keep planning was a sustained policy failure. Rice and
the Bush team had been in hibernation too long. Afterward, Tenet looked back
on the meeting with Rice as a tremendous lost opportunity to prevent or
disrupt the Sept. 11 attacks. Black later said, 'The only thing we didn't do
was pull the trigger to the gun we were holding to her head.'"
The Post story
concluded with a remarkable Editor's Note: "How much effort the Bush
administration made in going after Osama bin Laden before the attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001, became an issue last week after former president Bill
Clinton accused President Bush's 'neocons' and other Republicans of ignoring
bin Laden until the attacks. Rice responded in an interview that 'what we
did in the eight months was at least as aggressive as what the Clinton
administration did in the preceding years.'"
This comment
suggests the entire Post story was inspired by former President Clinton's
remarkable denunciation of the Bush administration's efforts to thwart bin
Laden in a recent Fox News interview. The seriousness of this meeting,
however, goes far beyond political sniping and gamesmanship.
Peter Rundlet
served as counsel to the 9/11 Commission, and has accused the White House of
hiding the meeting between Tenet, Black and Rice from the commission.
Rundlet practiced at the influential law firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, and was formerly associate counsel to the president and a
White House Fellow, serving in the Office of Chief of Staff to the
President, before joining the commission.
Writing for the
online news magazine Think Progress, Rundlet stated, "Many, many questions
need to be asked and answered about this revelation, questions that the 9/11
Commission would have asked, had the commission been told about this
significant meeting. Suspiciously, the commissioners and the staff
investigating the administration's actions prior to 9/11 were never informed
of the meeting. As Commissioner Jamie Gorelick pointed out, 'We didn't know
about the meeting itself. I can assure you it would have been in our report
if we had known to ask about it.'"
This is a
remarkable revelation in and of itself. The head of CIA and the head of
CIA's counterterrorism branch delivered a warning in the strongest possible
terms to Ms. Rice two months before the attack, yet this meeting was not
revealed to the 9/11 Commission. It may well have remained a historical
non-event had Woodward not written about it.
Which brings us to
Ms. Rice's sworn testimony in May 2004 before the commission.
At one point in
this hearing, Commission Vice-Chair Lee Hamilton directly asked Rice about
the so-called intelligence failures leading up to 9/11: "At the end of the
day, of course, we were unable to protect our people. And you suggest in
your statement - and I want you to elaborate on this, if you want to - that
in hindsight it would have been - better information about the threats would
have been the single - the single most important thing for us to have done,
from your point of view, prior to 9/11, would have been better intelligence,
better information about the threats. Is that right? Are there other things
that you think stand out?"
Rice responded,
"Well, Mr. Chairman, I took an oath of office on the day that I took this
job to protect and defend. And like most government officials, I take it
very seriously. And so, as you might imagine, I've asked myself a thousand
times what more we could have done. I know that, had we thought that there
was an attack coming in Washington or New York, we would have moved heaven
and earth to try and stop it. And I know that there was no single thing that
might have prevented that attack."
Not only did Rice
fail to mention the dramatic warnings given to her by Tenet and Black, she
goes on to flatly state that neither she nor the administration had a clue
that an attack was coming. Further, she claims that "no single thing could
have prevented that attack."
"The July 10
meeting between Tenet, Black and Rice went unmentioned in the various
reports of investigations into the Sept. 11 attacks," read the Post report
on Sunday, "but it stood out in the minds of Tenet and Black as the starkest
warning they had given the White House on bin Laden and al-Qaeda."
Combined with the
August 6, 2001, Presidential Daily Briefing delivered to Bush, which
explicitly stated that bin Laden intended to attack the United States, the
revelation of this meeting between Tenet, Black and Rice indicates that the
Bush White House should have and could have made a far greater effort at
thwarting the 9/11 attacks. Rice's testimony before the 9/11 Commission on
the matter may rise to the level of perjury. At a minimum, it exposes yet
another nest of lies delivered by a member of this administration.
"A mixture of
shock, anger, and sadness overcame me," wrote Peter Rundlet in his Think
Progress article, "when I read about revelations in Bob Woodward's new book
about a special surprise visit that George Tenet and his counterterrorism
chief Cofer Black made to Condi Rice, also on July 10, 2001. If true, it is
shocking that the administration failed to heed such an overwhelming alert
from the two officials in the best position to know."
Indeed.

William
Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author
of two books:
War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know and
The Greatest Sedition Is Silence. His newest book,
House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged
Reputation, will be available this winter from PoliPointPress.