Cheney Misleads
Russert--Threat to Air Force One
The White House
September 16, 2001
The Vice President appears on Meet the Press with Tim
Russert
MR. TIM RUSSERT: And we are Greentop in the shadows of the
presidential retreat at Camp David. Mr. Vice President, good
morning and welcome.
VICE PRES. DICK CHENEY: Good morning, Tim.
MR. RUSSERT: This is the first television program to originate
from here, which underscores the seriousness of our discussion
this morning. The president, the vice president, the national
security team have been meeting for the last 36 hours. What can
you share with the American people this morning?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, Tim, this is the first chance we've
had really since the events this week to sit down and really
focus on various plans and propositions, things we ought to be
doing going forward. Up till now it's been focused very much on
trying to manage the crisis and to deal with the problems of the
immediate situation. But yesterday we've been able to come up and
get everybody together, a lot of work done, staff work done in
preparation for it and sit down and really spend some time
looking at what our strategy ought to be and how we ought to
proceed.
MR. RUSSERT: When the president went to the World Trade Center
on Friday he said, "The people who did this will hear from all of
us soon." There's an expectation in the country that we're about
to pay back big time, quickly. What should the American people
think or feel about that?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think the important thing here, Tim, is
for people to understand that, you know, things have changed
since last Tuesday. The world shifted in some respects. Clearly,
what we're faced with here is a situation where terrorism is
struck home in the United States. We've been subject to targets
of terrorist attacks before, especially overseas with our forces
and American personnel overseas, but this time because of what
happened in New York and what happened in Washington, it's a
qualitatively different set of circumstances.
It's also important for people to understand that this is a
long-term proposition. It's not like, well, even Desert Storm
where we had a buildup for a few months, four days of combat, and
it was over with. This is going to be the kind of work that will
probably take years because the focus has to be not just on any
one individual, the problem here is terrorism. And even in this
particular instance, it looks as though the responsible
organization was a group called al-Qaida. It's Arabic for "The
Base."
MR. RUSSERT: That's Osama bin Laden.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: He headed it up and organized it, but it's
a very broad, kind of loose coalition of groupings that includes
not only his forces but it also includes, for example, Islamic
Jihad from Egypt. It includes a movement from is Uzbekistan. The
groups that are terrorist organizations, people that oftentimes
move around them, sometimes share common ideologies that operate
on a worldwide basis. And what we have to do is take down those
networks of terrorist organizations, and as say I think this is
going to be a struggle that the United States is going to be
involved in for the foreseeable future. There's not going to be
an end date that we say, "There, it's all over with." It's going
to require constant vigilance on our part to avoid problems in
the future, but it's also going to require a major effort and,
obviously, quite possibly use of military force.
MR. RUSSERT: Do you believe that anyone who participated in
the events on Tuesday or, in fact, even in a support role, or on
a plane that wasn't successfully hijacked, are they still at
large in the United States?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We don't know. The possibility clearly
exists that there could be additional terrorists out there that
were part of this operation that maybe got cold feet and didn't
get on the airplane, or for one reason or another were thwarted
in their efforts. We have to assume that possibility exists. We
had these 19 individuals in the United States, some of them for
several years, training, preparing, getting ready for this
operation and we can by no means assume now that that's all there
is. There may well be other operations that have been planned and
are, in fact, in the works.
MR. RUSSERT: When the president said, "Everyone in uniform get
ready," did that--does that suggest a massive call-up of
reserves?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We've had some reserve call-up. We called
up, of course, 35,000 reservists. We felt that was important to
do here. I think the way to think about it, Tim, is to think
about the target and what our objectives are here. Obviously,
we're interested in individuals who were directly involved in
planning, coordinating, ordering the attack. And--but those tend
to be individuals or small groupings of individuals, cells,
perhaps, various places around the world. We need to go find them
and root them out. And--but we also--what's different here,
what's changed in terms of U.S. policy, is the president's
determination to also go after those nations and organizations
and people that lend support to these terrorist operators.
If you've got a nation out there now that has provided a base,
training facilities, a sanctuary, as has been true, for example,
in this case, probably with Afghanistan, then they have to
understand, and others like them around the world have to
understand, that if you provide sanctuary to terrorists, you face
the full wrath of the United States of America. And that we will,
in fact, aggressively go after these nations to make certain that
they cease and desist from providing support for these kinds of
organizations.
MR. RUSSERT: Full wrath. That's a very strong statement to the
Afghans this morning.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: It is, indeed. It is, indeed.
MR. RUSSERT: The president said that Osama bin Laden was the
prime suspect. Why?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: There is just a lot of evidence to link his
organization, the al-Qaida organization, and he is the head of
al-Qaida, to this operation. There are some ties, for example, to
some of the people involved here back to the U.S.S. Cole bombing
in Yemen. We're able to tell--going back now looking at
relationships and the way they've operated in the past, we're
quite confident that, in fact, as the president said, he is the
prime suspect. That doesn't mean we know all there is to know
yet. That doesn't mean there weren't others involved. As I
mentioned, the Egyptian Islamic Jihad has a very close working
relationship with this organization. So there may well be others.
We want to continue to investigate aggressively to make sure
we've wrapped up and understand fully all who were involved. But
clearly, the evidence at this point takes us very much in that
direction.
MR. RUSSERT: You have no doubt that Osama bin Laden played
some role in this.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I have no doubt that he and his
organization played a significant role in this.
MR. RUSSERT: Were you surprised by the precision and
sophistication of the operation?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, certainly, we were surprised in the
sense that, you know, there had been information coming in that a
big operation was planned, but that's sort of a trend that you
see all the time in these kinds of reports. But we didn't...
MR. RUSSERT: No specific threat?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No specific threat involving really a
domestic operation or involving what happened, obviously, the
cities, airliner and so forth. We did go on alert with our
overseas forces a number of times during the course of the summer
when we thought the threat level had risen significantly. So
clearly, we were surprised by what happened here. On the other
hand, in terms of the sophistication of it, it's interesting to
look at, because clearly what happened is you got some people
committed to die in the course of the operation, you got them
visas, you got them entered into the United States. They came
here. Some of them enrolled in our commercial aviation schools
and learned to fly, courtesy of our own capabilities here in the
United States. Then what they needed in order to execute was some
degree of coordination, obviously, in terms of timing. But they
needed knives, cardboard cutters, razor blades, whatever it was,
and an airline ticket. And that's it. They then were able to take
over the aircraft and use our own, you know, heavily loaded with
fuel large aircraft to take over and use it.
MR. RUSSERT: Intentionally choosing planes that had lots of
fuel and a few passengers?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: It certainly looks that way. And the--so
the sophisticated--on the one hand it's very simple. It doesn't
involve a lot of hardware or complex devices that they have to
bring into the United States. They, in effect, turned some of our
own system against us, but its simplicity does, in fact, also
speak volumes in terms of planning, creativity, ingenuity in
terms of how they go about these kinds of operations.
MR. RUSSERT: We clearly will have to revisit our visa
procedures.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We ought to look at all aspects of the
operation here in terms of what happened. Clearly there are going
to be a lot of lessons to be learned from it. But it's important
for us, too, not to get trapped into thinking if we just guard
against another situation where terrorists can hijack airplanes
and use them to hit vital targets in the U.S. that we've dealt
with the problem. I'm sure they're out there right now thinking
about new, creative ways to come after us that don't involve any
of those techniques at all, but something totally new.
MR. RUSSERT: Osama bin Laden released a training video, 100
minutes long, which was obtained by the Western media this
summer, and I want to show a portion of that to you and give you
a chance to respond to it, and we'll play it right now. These are
followers of his chanting, "We have to fight every day, even to
the shedding of blood in God's righteous path." There he is
himself with his own rifle. They go on to say, "We thank God for
granting us victory the day we destroyed the Cole in the sea."
That's the U.S.S. destroyer that was hit last year. Those are his
supporters marching. There you are as secretary of Defense
visiting Saudi Arabia, used in this video to rally support for
Osama bin Laden. And bin Laden himself, "We have to practice the
way of the suicidal commandos of faith and the heroism of the
resistance fighter and we refuse their culture and we will take
advantage of their misfortunes and the blood of their wounded."
He goes on to say, Mr. Secretary, that, "With small capabilities
we can defeat the U.S. America is much weaker than it appears."
What's your message this morning to Osama bin Laden?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I think he seriously misreads the
American people. I think the--I mean, you have to ask yourself,
why somebody would do what he does. Why is someone so motivated?
Obviously he's filled with hate for the United States and for
everything we stand for...
MR. RUSSERT: Why?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: ...freedom and democracy.
MR. RUSSERT: Why does he hate us so much?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: It must have something to do with his
background, his own upbringing. He's the son of a prominent Saudi
family, successful business group with significant wealth. He
went and served in Afghanistan with the mujahedeen during the war
against the Russians, and he has, for whatever reason, developed
this intense hatred of everything that relates to the United
States. And his objective, obviously, is to try to influence our
behavior to force us to withdraw from that part of the world, and
clearly he's not going to be successful. And...
MR. RUSSERT: He has stated unequivocally that he wants the
United States out of the Middle East. He no longer wants the
United States to be the ally of Israel. Will our relationship
with Israel change in any way, shape or form because of this
event?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No. The fact of the matter is that
the--we'll not allow him to achieve his aims. We're not about to
change our policies or change our basic fundamental beliefs. What
we are going to do is aggressively go after Mr. bin Laden,
obviously, and all of his associates, and even if it takes a long
time, I'm convinced eventually we'll prevail.
MR. RUSSERT: There is an FBI wanted poster, and there he is
himself, wanted for the murder of US nationals outside the United
States. He's under indictment for his involvement in blowing up
embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. Could we say to the Afghanistan
government, "You are harboring a fugitive from justice. Give him
over in 48 hours or we're coming in and taking him"?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We could say such a thing.
MR. RUSSERT: Legally?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, legally certainly. I'll simply
restate again, Tim, I don't want to get into the business of
predicting what specific steps we will take. But without
question, the president has been very, very clear that to harbor
terrorists is to, in effect, accept a certain degree of guilt for
the acts that they commit. And the government of Afghanistan has
to understand that we believe they have, indeed, been harboring a
man who committed, and whose organization committed, this most
recent egregious act.
MR. RUSSERT: You're convinced he's still in Afghanistan?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We don't know.
MR. RUSSERT: Is there any international law or United States
law which would prohibit us from killing him if we found him?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Not in my estimation, Tim. But I'd have to
check with the lawyers on that, obviously. Lawyers always have a
role to play, but one of the intriguing things here is the way in
which people have rallied around, other governments have rallied
around this notion that, in fact, this is a war. We've seen our
NATO allies for the first time in history invoke Article 5, an
attack against one is an attack against all. It's never before
been done. They unanimously agreed to that proposition earlier
this week in Brussels.
I think the world increasingly will understand what we have
here are a group of barbarians, that they threaten all of us,
that the U.S. is the target at the moment, but one of the things
to remember is if you look at the roster of countries who lost
people in the bombing in New York, over 40 countries have had
someone killed or have significant numbers missing. The British,
for example, have an estimated 100 dead and 500 to 700 still
missing. So it's an attack not just upon the United States but
upon, you know, civilized society.
MR. RUSSERT: A very important country in all this is Pakistan,
on the border of Afghanistan. Pakistan--there are reports on the
wires today--has sent a delegation to the Taliban government in
Afghanistan saying it's time to turn Osama bin Laden over. The
Pakistan government is also saying to its people this morning,
"We will get more aid from the United States. The United States
will lift economic sanctions against us. And we've been given
assurances that the Indian government and the Israeli government
will not be part of any military operation based in Pakistan."
Can you confirm that?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I've seen some communication back and forth
at this point. Let me simply say we have had discussions with the
Paks. President Bush called President Musharraf just yesterday
afternoon from Camp David. They've had a good conversation. We
have made certain requests of the Pakistanis. They have agreed to
work with us in this endeavor, and some of that's covered in the
statement they've made there.
MR. RUSSERT: They will get more assistance from us.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, we'd like to be able to work with
them. You've got to remember, Pakistan's been a close friend and
ally of the United States in the past. The relationship's been
somewhat strained in recent years primarily because
congressionally imposed sanctions have had an adverse effect,
clearly, on the relationship, and the sanctions were imposed as
the Pakistanis developed nuclear weapons. But we're clearly in a
situation here where that relationship is important. It's
important to us. It's important to Pakistan. Pakistan borders
Afghanistan; they one of only three countries that have
diplomatic relations with the Taliban in Afghanistan. They can be
very helpful in this case, and we expect they will be.
MR. RUSSERT: And there's nothing wrong with providing economic
rewards for helpful behavior.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No. I think you're going to want both the
carrot and the stick approach.
MR. RUSSERT: Pakistan also has a nuclear capability. How
dangerous is it for that government to come out against Osama bin
Laden or be helpful to the United States? Are we concerned about
destabilizing Pakistan with nuclear capability, a capability that
could fall in the hands of the Taliban or Osama bin Laden?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, we're clearly very sensitive to those
kinds of problems. Any time you're dealing in that part of the
world in the Middle East, the potential for instability always
exists. You could have a change in government in relatively short
notice, and we're well aware of all that. But it also--it's one
of the reasons, frankly, you'll see the al-Qaida organization,
Osama bin Laden, choosing to locate in that part of the world
because it is an area of instability, because there are places
that nobody really controls. And those are the areas we're going
to have to operate in if we're going to be successful.
And again, the key here to keep in mind is that what we're
asking nations to do, and which the Paks have clearly made a
decision to do, is we're asking nations to step up and be
counted. They're going to have to decide. Are they going to stand
with the United States and believe in freedom and democracy and
civilization, or are they going to stand with the terrorists and
the barbarians, if you will? And it's a fairly clear-cut choice.
And I'm delighted to see that Pakistan has, in fact, stepped up
to the task.
MR. RUSSERT: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan--three critical
countries in the Middle East, who have been somewhat supportive
of the United States. They also have segments of their population
that look at Osama bin Laden as a hero. If we demand that they
support us, do we risk destabilizing those governments?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No, I think you've got to recognize from
the standpoint of the Saudis, for example, they're a prime target
for this organization of terrorists, Osama bin Laden. He
adamantly opposes the Saudi royal family. Probably second only to
the United States would be his hatred for the current government
in Saudi Arabia. With respect to Egypt, for example, the Egyptian
Islamic Jihad, these are groups and organizations that have
threatened the government of Egypt in the past. President
Mubarak's been the target of several assassination attempts
during the course of his career; some of them promulgated by
these kinds of groups and organizations. So I think governments,
friends of the United States, the governments you mentioned,
Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, etc., they understand very clearly
that it's as much in their interest as it is in ours that we end
these kinds of activities and that we put a stop to this kind of
international terrorism. And I think they'll be prepared to help
us.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. Vice President, how difficult and delicate is
it to send this message that we're going to uproot terrorism and
Osama bin Laden and some other cells, but that this is not a war
against Islam and not a war against all Arab people?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We have to continually remind folks of
that. The president has been very clear, and it would be a huge
mistake for we as Americans to assume that this represents some
kind of--or should lead us to some kind of condemnation of Islam.
It's clearly not the case. This is a perversion, if you will, of
some of these religious beliefs by an extremist group. We have
extremists associated with, you know, every imaginable religion
in the world. But this is by no means a war against Islam. We've
got a great many Arab Americans, for example, who are first
class, loyal American citizens. We need to make certain that we
don't make the mistake of assuming that everybody who comes from
a certain ethnic group or certain religious background is somehow
to be blamed for this. Clearly, that's not the case. They are as
appalled by it as we are.
MR. RUSSERT: When Osama bin Laden took responsibility for
blowing up the embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, U.S. embassies,
several hundred died, the United States launched 60 tomahawk
missiles into his training sites in Afghanistan. It only
emboldened him. It only inspired him and seemed even to increase
his recruitment. Is it safe to say that that kind of response is
not something we're considering, in that kind of minute
magnitude?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I'm going to be careful here, Tim, because
I--clearly it would be inappropriate for me to talk about
operational matters, specific options or the kinds of activities
we might undertake going forward. We do, indeed, though, have,
obviously, the world's finest military. They've got a broad range
of capabilities. And they may well be given missions in
connection with this overall task and strategy.
We also have to work, though, sort of the dark side, if you
will. We've got to spend time in the shadows in the intelligence
world. A lot of what needs to be done here will have to be done
quietly, without any discussion, using sources and methods that
are available to our intelligence agencies, if we're going to be
successful. That's the world these folks operate in, and so it's
going to be vital for us to use any means at our disposal,
basically, to achieve our objective.
MR. RUSSERT: There have been restrictions placed on the United
States intelligence gathering, reluctance to use unsavory
characters, those who violated human rights, to assist in
intelligence gathering. Will we lift some of those
restrictions?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Oh, I think so. I think the--one of the
by-products, if you will, of this tragic set of circumstances is
that we'll see a very thorough sort of reassessment of how we
operate and the kinds of people we deal with. There's--if you're
going to deal only with sort of officially approved, certified
good guys, you're not going to find out what the bad guys are
doing. You need to be able to penetrate these organizations. You
need to have on the payroll some very unsavory characters if, in
fact, you're going to be able to learn all that needs to be
learned in order to forestall these kinds of activities. It is a
mean, nasty, dangerous dirty business out there, and we have to
operate in that arena. I'm convinced we can do it; we can do it
successfully. But we need to make certain that we have not tied
the hands, if you will, of our intelligence communities in terms
of accomplishing their mission.
MR. RUSSERT: These terrorists play by a whole set of different
rules. It's going to force us, in your words, to get mean, dirty
and nasty in order to take them on, right? And they should
realize there will be more than simply a pinprick bombing.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yeah, the--I think it's--the thing that I
sense--and, of course, that's only been a few days, but I have
never seen such determination on the part of--well, my colleagues
in government, on the part of the American people, on the part of
our friends and allies overseas, and even on the part of some who
are not ordinarily deemed friends of the United States,
determined in this particular instance to shift and not be
tolerant any longer of these kinds of actions or activities.
MR. RUSSERT: Even if we take out Osama bin Laden, that will
not stop terrorism.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No. No. He's the target at the moment. But
I don't want to convey the impression that somehow, you know, if
we had his head on a platter today, that that would solve the
problem. It won't. You've got this organization, as I say, called
al-Qaida. It's--somebody described it the other day as--it's like
an Internet chat room, that people who come and participate in
it, for one reason or another, engage in terrorism, have
sometimes different motives and ideologies, but the tactics they
use, the way they operate, their targets, that will continue
until we go out, basically, and make the world unsafe for
terrorists. And that's a key part of the strategy, in terms of
working aggressively with those nations that have previously
provided support and sustenance and sanctuary, to see to it that
they no longer do that.
MR. RUSSERT: You wouldn't mind having his head on a
platter.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I would take it today.
MR. RUSSERT: Saddam Hussein, your old friend, his government
had this to say: "The American cowboy is rearing the fruits of
crime against humanity." If we determine that Saddam Hussein is
also harboring terrorists, and there's a track record there,
would we have any reluctance of going after Saddam Hussein?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No.
MR. RUSSERT: Do we have evidence that he's harboring
terrorists?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: There is--in the past, there have been some
activities related to terrorism by Saddam Hussein. But at this
stage, you know, the focus is over here on al-Qaida and the most
recent events in New York. Saddam Hussein's bottled up, at this
point, but clearly, we continue to have a fairly tough policy
where the Iraqis are concerned.
MR. RUSSERT: Do we have any evidence linking Saddam Hussein or
Iraqis to this operation?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me turn to the events of Tuesday. Where were
you when you first learned a plane had struck the World Trade
Center?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I was in my office Tuesday morning.
Monday, I had been in Kentucky, and the president had been in the
White House. Tuesday, our roles were sort of reversed. He was in
Florida, and I was in the White House Tuesday morning. And a
little before 9, my speechwriter came in. We were going to go
over some speeches coming up. And my secretary called in just as
we were starting to meet just before 9:00 and said an airplane
had hit the World Trade Center, and that was the first one that
went in. So we turned on the television and watched for a few
minutes, and then actually saw the second plane hit the World
Trade Center. And the--as soon as that second plane showed up,
that's what triggered the thought: terrorism, that this was an
attack...
MR. RUSSERT: You sensed it immediately, "This is
deliberate"?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yeah. Then I convened in my office. Condi
Rice came down. Her office is right near mine there in the West
Wing.
MR. RUSSERT: The national security adviser.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: National security adviser, my chief of
staff, Scooter Libby, Mary Matalin, who works for me, convened in
my office, and we started talking about getting the
Counterterrorism Task Force up and operating. I talked with the
president. I'd given word to Andy Card's staff, who is right next
door, to get hold of Andy and/or the president and that I wanted
to talk to him as soon as they could hook it up. This call came
in, and the president knew at this point about that. We discussed
a statement that he might make, and the first statement he made
describing this as an act of apparent terrorism flowed out of
those conversations. While I was there, over the next several
minutes, watching developments on the television and as we
started to get organized to figure out what to do, my Secret
Service agents came in and, under these circumstances, they just
move. They don't say "sir" or ask politely. They came in and
said, "Sir, we have to leave immediately," and grabbed me
and...
MR. RUSSERT: Literally grabbed you and moved you?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yeah. And, you know, your feet touch the
floor periodically. But they're bigger than I am, and they
hoisted me up and moved me very rapidly down the hallway, down
some stairs, through some doors and down some more stairs into an
underground facility under the White House, and, as a matter of
fact, it's a corridor, locked at both ends, and they did that
because they had received a report that an airplane was headed
for the White House.
MR. RUSSERT: This is Flight 77, which had left Dulles.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Which turned out to be Flight 77. It left
Dulles, flown west towards Ohio, been captured by the terrorists.
They turned off the transponder, which led to a later report that
a plane had gone down in Ohio, but it really hadn't. Of course,
then they turned back and headed back towards Washington. As best
we can tell, they came initially at the White House and...
MR. RUSSERT: The plane actually circled the White House?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Didn't circle it, but was headed on a track
into it. The Secret Service has an arrangement with the F.A.A.
They had open lines after the World Trade Center was...
MR. RUSSERT: Tracking it by radar.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: And when it entered the danger zone and
looked like it was headed for the White House was when they
grabbed me and evacuated me to the basement. The plane obviously
didn't hit the White House. It turned away and, we think, flew a
circle and came back in and then hit the Pentagon. And that's
what the radar track looks like. The result of that--once I got
down into the shelter, the first thing I did--there's a secure
phone there. First thing I did was pick up the telephone and call
the president again, who was still down in Florida, at that
point, and strongly urged him to delay his return.
MR. RUSSERT: You told him to stay away from Washington.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I said, `Delay your return. We don't know
what's going on here, but it looks like, you know, we've been
targeted.'
MR. RUSSERT: Why did you make that judgment?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, it goes to--you know, sort of my
basic role as vice president is to worry about presidential
succession. And my job, above all other things, is to be prepared
to take over if something happens to the president. But over the
years from my time with President Ford, as secretary of Defense,
on the Intel Committee and so forth, I've been involved in a
number of programs that were aimed at ensuring presidential
succession. We did a lot of planning during the Cold War, Tim,
with respect to the possibility of a nuclear incident. And one of
the key requirements always is to protect the presidency. It's
not about George Bush or Dick Cheney. It's about the occupant in
the office.
And one of the things that we did later on that day were tied
directly to guaranteeing presidential succession, and that our
enemies, whoever they might be, could not decapitate the federal
government and leave us leaderless in a moment of crisis. That's
why, for example, when we have a State of the Union speech and
we've got the entire government assembled--the president, vice
president, congressional leaders, Cabinet and so forth--we always
leave a Cabinet member out. He's always taken to a secure
location and set up there in case something should happen in the
House chambers so we still have a president.
MR. RUSSERT: Did you have any role in Speaker Hastert...
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yes.
MR. RUSSERT: ...speaker of the House being taken away?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We evacuated Speaker Hastert to a secure
facility, and later, the rest of the congressional leadership. I
also ordered the evacuation of Cabinet members. And so we sent
Tommy Thompson, Ann Veneman, Gale Norton also up to a secure
facility. And in the days since, we've always maintained to
say--I've spent a good deal of my time up at Camp David since the
president returned to the White House just so we weren't both
together in the same place so we could ensure the survival of the
government.
The president was on Air Force One. We
received a threat to Air Force One--came through the Secret
Service...
MR. RUSSERT: A credible threat to Air Force One. You're
convinced of that.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I'm convinced of that.Now,
you know, it may have been phoned in by a crank, but in the midst
of what was going on, there was no way to know that. I think it
was a credible threat, enough for the Secret Service to bring it
to me. Once I left that immediate shelter, after I talked to the
president, urged him to stay away for now, well, I went down into
what's call a PEOC, the Presidential Emergency Operations Center,
and there, I had Norm Mineta...
MR. RUSSERT: Secretary of Transportation.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: ...secretary of Transportation, access to
the FAA. I had Condi Rice with me and several of my key staff
people. We had access, secured communications with Air Force One,
with the secretary of Defense over in the Pentagon. We had also
the secure videoconference that ties together the White House,
CIA, State, Justice, Defense--a very useful and valuable
facility. We have the counterterrorism task force up on that net.
And so I was in a position to be able to see all the stuff coming
in, receive reports and then make decisions in terms of acting
with it.
But when I arrived there within a short order, we had word the
Pentagon's been hit. We had word the State Department had been
bombed, that a car bomb had gone off at the State Department.
Turned out not to be true, but we didn't know that at the time.
We had a report that Norm had provided that there were six
airplanes that might have been hijacked, and that's what we
started working off of, was that list of six.
Now we could account for two of them in New York. The third
one we didn't know what had happened to it. It turned out it had
hit the Pentagon. But the first reports on the Pentagon attack
suggested a helicopter, and then later, a private jet, and it was
only after we got ahold of some eyewitnesses that we knew it was
an American Airlines flight. So then we had three planes
accounted for, but we still have had three outstanding.
We had reports of planes down in Ohio, turned out not to be
true; down in Pennsylvania; turned out that was true. And all of
that--excuse me--added with the report of a perspective
attack on Air Force One itself, we'd have been absolute
fools not to go into button down mode, make sure we had
successors evacuated, make sure the president was safe and
secure. Offutt was a good location for that purpose, and also the
president...
MR. RUSSERT: In Nebraska.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: In Nebraska.
MR. RUSSERT: Are you convinced there were only four
hijackings, that there were not other hijacks attempted that we
don't know about?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I don't know. We know there were four, of
course. I don't think until we've completed our investigation,
looked at all the ties and relationships, we'll be able to say
that there were no other plans for additional planes.
MR. RUSSERT: When you made the recommendation to the
president, "Stay where you are, go to a secure facility in
Nebraska," were you ever concerned, did it ever enter your
thought process that there would be criticism of the president
for not coming back to Washington during a crisis?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I didn't really think about it. I mean, it
was such a clear-cut case, in my estimation, that the most
important thing here is to preserve the presidency. We don't know
what's happening. We know Washington's under attack. We don't
know by who, we don't know how many additional planes are coming.
We don't know what all is planned for us, at this point. Within
about 35 or 40 minutes, we'd seen this unfolding of this
monstrous terrorist attack, and it was absolutely the right
decision. I have no qualms about it at all. The president wanted
to come back. We talked repeatedly during the course of the day.
He made it clear he wanted him back as soon as we thought it made
sense. The Secret Service did not want him back. They even talked
to me to try to get me to evacuate a couple of times, but I
didn't want to leave the node that we'd established there, in
terms of having all of this capability tied together by
communications where we could, in fact, make decisions and act.
And if I'd have left, gotten on a helicopter and launched out of
the White House, all of that would have been broken down. And we
had the presidential succession pretty well guaranteed, so I
thought it was appropriate for me to stay in the White House.
MR. RUSSERT: Symbolisms are so important to terrorists. The
fact that George Bush stayed at the White House, you came to Camp
David. Are you concerned that that sends a mixed message to the
terrorists that they can disrupt our government, or do you err on
the side of caution and safety and keep the two key leaders
separated?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, we erred on the side of, I'd say,
responsibility. The--when something like this happens, we've got
certain obligations and responsibilities you've got to carry out.
And those took priority. They did for the president. They did for
me. Also with modern communications--I mean, the president was in
touch with me throughout the day. We talked repeatedly. He made
some key decisions that were very important to the operation.
Once he got to Offutt, he convened a meeting of the National
Security Council again using the secure video conference hookup
and...
MR. RUSSERT: What's the most important decision you think he
made during the course of the day?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, the--I suppose the toughest decision
was this question of whether or not we would intercept incoming
commercial aircraft.
MR. RUSSERT: And you decided?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We decided to do it. We'd, in effect, put a
flying combat air patrol up over the city; F-16s with an AWACS,
which is an airborne radar system, and tanker support so they
could stay up a long time. It doesn't do any good to put up a
combat air patrol if you don't give them instructions to act, if,
in fact, they feel it's appropriate.
MR. RUSSERT: So if the United States government became aware
that a hijacked commercial airline was destined for the White
House or the Capitol, we would take the plane down?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yes. The president made the decision, on my
recommendation as well, wholeheartedly conquered in the decision
he made, that if the plane would not divert, if they wouldn't pay
any attention to instructions to move away from the city, as a
last resort, our pilots were authorized to take them out. Now,
people say, you know, that's a horrendous decision to make. Well,
it is. You've got an airplane full of American citizens,
civilians, captured by hostages, captured by terrorists, headed
and are you going to, in fact, shoot it down, obviously, and kill
all those Americans on board? And you have to ask yourself, "If
we had had combat air patrol up over New York and we'd had the
opportunity to take out the two aircraft that hit the World Trade
Center, would we have been justified in doing that?" I think
absolutely we would have. Now, it turned out we did not have to
execute on that authorization. But there were some--a few moments
when we thought we might, when planes were incoming and we didn't
know whether or not they were a problem aircraft until they'd
diverted and gone elsewhere and been able to resolve it.
MR. RUSSERT: And that will be the policy of the United States
in the future?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, the president will, I'm sure, make a
decision, if those circumstances arise again. It's a
presidential-level decision, and the president made, I think,
exactly the right call in this case, to say, "I wished we'd had
combat air patrol up over New York."
MR. RUSSERT: More and more, Mr. Vice President, we're finding
out, it appears, that the fourth plane that crashed in
Pennsylvania crashed because of some real heroism by Americans.
Jeremy Glick had received a--called his wife to say he'd been
hijacked. She informed him that two planes had struck the World
Trade Center. And he said, "I think we have to do something."
VICE PRES. CHENEY: It's true. I think the Washington part of
the attack was significantly interfered with. I'm speculating.
Some of this is informed speculation; some of it's based on some
evidence. But clearly, we know the plane that crashed outside
Pittsburgh was headed for Washington. We know it was part of the
scheme. Mr. Glick and others--Mr. Burnett--were very courageous
when they made that decision, knowing that they were doomed.
MR. RUSSERT: And you've told his wife that, haven't you?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I called Mrs. Glick yesterday, as a matter
of fact. Haven't been able to reach Mrs. Burnett yet, but I'm
going to call her, too. And I'm sure there were probably others
on the aircraft who helped, but what they did was to foil, I
think, the attack on Washington. My guess is, speculation, that
target probably would have been the Capitol building. It's big;
it's easy to hit. I think one of the reasons that the White House
did not get hit, I think it turned out to be tougher to see than
they had anticipated. When you come in from the west, as American
77 did, unless you get up altitude a ways, you can't see the
White House because the Executive Office Building is there.
MR. RUSSERT: And Treasury on the other side.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Treasury on the other side. And I'm
speculating that the lack of ability to be able to acquire it
visually may, in fact, have led them to go back.
MR. RUSSERT: Gave it up as a target...
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: ...and went to the Pentagon, which is clearly
visible?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: And went to the Pentagon instead. And
speculation on my part. We'll never know for sure. But without
question, the attack would have been much worse if it hadn't been
for the courageous acts of those individuals on United 93.
MR. RUSSERT: Two important symbols. Should the World Trade
Center be rebuilt?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think we clearly want to redevelop that
area. Exactly what it ought to--what it ought to look like and
what will go in there, those are decisions that are going to have
to be made by New York officials. But the president's very
interested in supporting those efforts, and I'm absolutely
convinced that that's the right thing to do. We don't let
terrorists prevail in this day and age.
MR. RUSSERT: Should Ronald Reagan National Airport be
re-opened?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We've got to find ways to deal with that
problem. It's been controversial from time to time over the
years. But, of course, we've always kept Ronald Reagan open
because of its location. It's very convenient for people living
in Washington. The problem we have is, of course, that on the
approach or takeoff from Reagan, you fly right up the Potomac and
you're within seconds or a minute or two of being able to hit the
White House, the Congress, important facilities in Washington.
And finding the way to deal with those circumstances is going to
have to precede, I think, a re-opening of the airport.
MR. RUSSERT: So it may be closed for some time.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We don't know yet. I mean, Norm Mineta is
working aggressively on this and--but we did--especially this
week, we wanted to be supercautious. As long as there was the
possibility there might be other teams out there that, in fact,
planned the same kind of operation that the terrorists undertook
on Tuesday. We thought it was prudent to keep it closed for
now.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. Vice President, we have to take a quick
break. We'll be right back with more of our discussion with Vice
President Dick Cheney. We're at Greentop in the shadows of Camp
David. Be right back.
(Announcements)
MR. RUSSERT: A lot more questions for the vice president of
the United States, Dick Cheney, right after this.
(Announcements)
MR. RUSSERT: And we are back talking to Vice President Dick
Cheney. He's been here at Camp David speaking with the president
and the national security team for the last 36 hours at
least.
Mr. Vice President, a lot of discussion as to our
preparedness. The first hijacking was confirmed at 8:20, the
Pentagon was struck at 9:40, and yet, it seems we were not able
to scramble fighter jets in time to protect the Pentagon and
perhaps even more than that. There have been at least five
serious reports on domestic terrorism, how to cope with it, one
given to you in May, Cheney to Lead Anti-Terrorism Plan. Were we
ready for this?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Were we ready for it? I think the agencies
responded very well once it happened. I think the courage and the
bravery of the men and women of New York, for example, the first
responders, if you will, fire and rescue teams, many of whom gave
their lives when the towers collapsed, was superb. I don't think
you can take anything away from them. But the problem you have
here--I mean, if you think about it from the standpoint of
aircraft--do we train our pilots to shoot down commercial
airliners filled with American civilians? No. That's not a
mission they've ever been given before. Now we've got to think
about that.
With respect to the intelligence area, there'll be, I'm sure,
a lot of sort of Monday morning quarterbacking, second-guessing,
if you will, about whether or not there was an intelligence
failure. Clearly, we did not learn of this operation or we would
have stopped it if we had. But I think it's important to remember
that our men and women in the intelligence business out there all
over the world 365 days a year, defending and protecting us,
oftentimes very successful, oftentimes in ways we can never talk
about, but we clearly need to do everything we can to forestall
those kinds of activities by improving our intelligence
capabilities, and this offers a lot of lessons learned.
At the same time, the key, though, is to go eliminate the
terrorists. We may never have 100 percent perfection in terms of
our intelligence capabilities to be able to penetrate and know
about all these kinds of operations--Timothy McVeigh, for
example, in Oklahoma City. But if we go after the terrorists, if
we deny them sanctuary, if we take out their bases and their
locations where they operate, that's probably the most effective
way to deal with this threat. But we have to recognize, no matter
how good we are, no matter how aggressively we pursue this, we're
likely to be subject to that partly by the very nature of our
society. We're an open society, we love it that way, that's very
important to preserve that, and not to let the terrorists win by
turning ourselves into some kind of police state.
MR. RUSSERT: The chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee
said this is a failure of great dimension in terms of
intelligence. Will George Tenet remain as director of the
CIA?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think George clearly should remain as
director of the CIA. I think--I've had great confidence in him.
I've watched him operate now and worked closely with him for the
last seven or eight months. I think he and his people do superb
work for us. And I think it would be a tragedy if somehow we were
to go back now in the search for scapegoats and say that George
Tenet or any other official ought to be eliminated at this point.
I don't think you can say that.
MR. RUSSERT: When Air Force One returned to Washington, we saw
it accompanied by fighter jets.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Right.
MR. RUSSERT: General Norman Schwarzkopf, a man you know well,
has suggested that perhaps in the short term, at least, Air Force
One should be accompanied by fighter jets while flying over the
United States just as a precaution.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Perhaps. I don't know that we've made that
judgment yet, that decision yet. You know, what happened on
Tuesday--of course, once we got all the aircraft grounded, that
gave us a fairly high degree of confidence that we were in
control. The problem was, there were some 2,000 aircraft up when
this operation started, and it took several hours to get them all
down. And as long as there were aircraft up and there was a
report of a threat against Air Force One, and
there were aircraft we couldn't account for, that might, in fact,
have been taken by the terrorists, flying cover for Air Force One
was very important.
MR. RUSSERT: Would we consider using fighter jets to protect
Air Force One for the short...
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think if we believe it's necessary, we
absolutely will.
MR. RUSSERT: In Europe, the government provides security at
the airports, highly trained, well-paid specialists. Here in the
United States, it's a low-paying job hired by the airlines. Would
we consider having the government take over airline security,
airport security?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We're clearly going to have to look at this
whole question and find ways to improve and enhance our security,
without a doubt. And it's going to be a prime focus for Norm
Mineta and the folks over at the F.A.A. Exactly what the answer
ought to be, Tim, I don't have enough information now to be able
to judge that. But without question, this was a significant
failure there in the sense that they were able to take four
aircraft. But again, they didn't do it with guns or explosives;
they did it with knives.
MR. RUSSERT: The airline industry is losing $300 million a
day, several teetering on bankruptcy or at least Chapter 11.
Would you support a federal bailout of both loans and grants and
assistance to the airline industry?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: The president hasn't really taken a
position on any particular piece of legislation. And I think
we're very interested in finding ways to make certain that in
this particular instance, there is no sort of permanent damage,
if you will, to our civil aviation capacity. It's very important.
We've got people--Norm Mineta's working on it. Larry Lindsey, who
heads the economic council, is heavily engaged in it. We're
working with the airlines, and I'm sure we'll come up with
some...
MR. RUSSERT: So you're open to the concept?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Absolutely.
MR. RUSSERT: About a week ago, we were all discussing the
so-called Social Security trust fund and who...
VICE PRES. CHENEY: And the lockbox.
MR. RUSSERT: ...and the lockbox...
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Right.
MR. RUSSERT: ...and who spent the surplus. Is that debate now
moot?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think so. I certainly hope so. I think,
you know, we've all been concerned to make certain we protect
Social Security. But we clearly have a situation here--and that
debate was a little bit fallacious anyway, because, in fact,
there was never any question but what the United States
government was going to pay its obligations to our seniors. We've
never defaulted on a debt since Alexander Hamilton was Treasury
secretary, so that's never really been an issue.
But clearly, at this stage, we do have a surplus that's
generated primarily by the payroll tax, and as has been true
oftentimes in the past, that comes in, we were using it to retire
debt. Clearly, some of it now is going to be used to meet this
emergency, the urgent supplemental that the Congress passed this
weekend of some $40 billion; take those steps we need to take,
both to recover from this attack, as well as to do everything we
can to prevent future ones.
MR. RUSSERT: The president said he would use the Social
Security surplus in case of war and/or recession.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Right.
MR. RUSSERT: Do we now have both war and recession?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Quite possibly. We clearly have a war
against terrorism and we don't know yet what the third quarter is
going to be like. But if the economists come in and revise the
second quarter down into negative territory in terms of Gross
Domestic Product growth and the third quarter, fourth
quarter--third quarter of the calendar year, fourth quarter of
the fiscal year...
MR. RUSSERT: And the economic shock from this.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Yeah. If that comes in negative, then we'll
have the definition of two negative quarters. That would qualify
as a recession.
MR. RUSSERT: What about the debate over missile defense? Many
Democrats are saying this now proves that our focus should be on
terrorism and counterterrorism and preparedness, and that the
primary threat is not something the missile defense could take
care of.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I just fundamentally disagree. I
mean, there's no question but what there's a threat on the
terrorist front, and we've got to deal with that. We've been work
it. We'll continue to work it. But there are also--this does not,
in any way, diminish the threat with respect to ballistic
missiles down the road. A ballistic missile equipped with a
weapon of mass destruction, a nuke, for example, a nuclear weapon
would be far more devastating than what we just went through. If
one of those was to hit one of our cities or to hit a major base
overseas where US forces are deployed, the casualty list would be
higher. The consequences would be even greater than the terrible
tragedy we've just been through.
MR. RUSSERT: So we can afford this war on terrorism and a
missile defense system?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I don't see, Tim, how anybody can argue
that we cannot afford to defend America, and we're going to have
to defend it against conventional threats. We're going to have to
defend it against ballistic missile threats. We're going to have
to defend it against the threat of terrorism. And I think for
public officials to argue because we got hit with a terrorist
assault, we should ignore the ballistic missile threat out there
strikes me as irresponsible.
MR. RUSSERT: The stock market has been closed since Tuesday.
It reopens tomorrow. Are you concerned?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think that our economy is strong. I do
believe the market's going to open tomorrow. That's clearly the
current plan and expectation. I would hope--I'm not an investor
anymore, because I had to get out of the market since I'm now a
public official. But I would hope the American people would, in
effect, stick their thumb in the eye of the terrorists and say
that they've got great confidence in the country, great
confidence in our economy, and not let what's happened here in
any way throw off their normal level of economic activity. We
look forward to recovery later this year from the slowdown period
that we've been through, and I have every confidence that that
will, in fact, happen.
MR. RUSSERT: Would you ever consider undoing or holding off or
triggering part of the tax cut in the future if the resources
were necessary?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No, I think the tax cut's crucial. And
that's exactly what we needed in terms of the slowdown. Having
the tax cut out there now means we're going to have a more robust
year than would have been the case without the tax cut. It's a
key piece of stimulus. And I think the president did exactly the
right thing.
MR. RUSSERT: There is such fervor, such emotion, such anger in
the country right now. And as we conduct this war against
terrorism, as you said, it's going to take, days, months, years.
What do we ask of the American people? Will they have to
sacrifice in order to help win this war?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: I guess I would ask vigilance. Be aware of
what's going on around you. Don't operate on the assumption that
somehow because we live behind two oceans we're immune to attack.
We now know we're not. I would ask, obviously, that they be
understanding, if you will, of the importance of the effort that
we're going to have to undertake here. We may end up, you know,
with more stringent security measures at airports and things like
that. But I think there's a unity and a spirit out there that
I've not seen for a long time in this country. And I see it on
Capitol Hill between Republicans and Democrats. I see it--the
workers who were cleaning up the mess in New York where the
president visited yesterday. I see it in the people I've talked
with. And I think we have to recognize we are the strongest, most
powerful nation on Earth. We've got a tremendous set of
accomplishments and an enormously bright future ahead of us.
There are those in the world who hate us and that will do
everything they can to impose pain, and we can't let them
win.
MR. RUSSERT: And we'll find them.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: We'll find them.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. Vice President, we thank you for inviting us
up to the mountains here with you, and we'll be watching you very
carefully.
VICE PRES. CHENEY: Thanks, Tim.
MR. RUSSERT: Like all of you, I have spent this week wiping my
eyes and grinding my teeth and wondering why. I've drawn strength
from a story about a man I knew, Father Michael Judge. The
chaplain of the New York City Fire Department, a Franciscan, he
raced to the World Trade Center after the explosion to comfort
the injured. While administering the last rites to a dying rescue
worker, he, himself, was killed by flying debris.
New York's bravest physically carried Father Mike away. They
brought his body first to the altar of St. Peter's Church, where
it would be safe, then to their firehouse on 31st Street, Hook
and Ladder Company Number 24, directly across from the friary
where he lived. They wrapped him in sheets and placed him in one
of their own bunks. They asked his fellow Franciscans to cross
the street and join them. Together--firemen, priests, and
brothers--wept and sang the prayer of St. Francis, "May the Lord
bless and keep you and show his face to you and have mercy on
you." That is the way of New York. That is the spirit of America.
From February 1945 at Iwo Jima to September 2001 at the World
Trade Center.
END
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