The 9/11 Secret in the CIA's
Back Pocket
LA Times
Robert Scheer:
October 19, 2004
It is shocking: The Bush administration is suppressing a CIA
report on 9/11 until after the election, and this one names
names. Although the report by the inspector general's office of
the CIA was completed in June, it has not been made available to
the congressional intelligence committees that mandated the study
almost two years ago.
"It is infuriating that a report which shows that high-level
people were not doing their jobs in a satisfactory manner before
9/11 is being suppressed," an intelligence official who has read
the report told me, adding that "the report is potentially very
embarrassing for the administration, because it makes it look
like they weren't interested in terrorism before 9/11, or in
holding people in the government responsible afterward."
When I asked about the report, Rep. Jane Harman (D-Venice),
ranking Democratic member of the House Intelligence Committee,
said she and committee Chairman Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich.) sent a
letter 14 days ago asking for it to be delivered. "We believe
that the CIA has been told not to distribute the report," she
said. "We are very concerned."
According to the intelligence official, who spoke to me on
condition of anonymity, release of the report, which represents
an exhaustive 17-month investigation by an 11-member team within
the agency, has been "stalled." First by acting CIA Director John
McLaughlin and now by Porter J. Goss, the former Republican House
member (and chairman of the Intelligence Committee) who recently
was appointed CIA chief by President Bush.
The official stressed that the report was more blunt and more
specific than the earlier bipartisan reports produced by the
Bush-appointed Sept. 11 commission and Congress.
"What all the other reports on 9/11 did not do is point the
finger at individuals, and give the how and what of their
responsibility. This report does that," said the intelligence
official. "The report found very senior-level officials
responsible."
By law, the only legitimate reason the CIA director has for
holding back such a report is national security. Yet neither Goss
nor McLaughlin has invoked national security as an explanation
for not delivering the report to Congress.
"It surely does not involve issues of national security," said
the intelligence official.
"The agency directorate is basically sitting on the report
until after the election," the official continued. "No previous
director of CIA has ever tried to stop the inspector general from
releasing a report to the Congress, in this case a report
requested by Congress."
None of this should surprise us given the Bush
administration's great determination since 9/11 to resist any
serious investigation into how the security of this nation was so
easily breached. In Bush's much ballyhooed war on terror,
ignorance has been bliss.
The president fought against the creation of the Sept. 11
commission, for example, agreeing only after enormous political
pressure was applied by a grass-roots movement led by the
families of those slain.
And then Bush refused to testify to the commission under oath,
or on the record. Instead he deigned only to chat with the
commission members, with Vice President Dick Cheney present, in a
White House meeting in which commission members were not allowed
to take notes. All in all, strange behavior for a man who seeks
reelection to the top office in the land based on his handling of
the so-called war on terror.
In September, the New York Times reported that several family
members met with Goss privately to demand the release of the CIA
inspector general's report. "Three thousand people were killed on
9/11, and no one has been held accountable," 9/11 widow Kristen
Breitweiser told the paper.
The failure to furnish the report to Congress, said Harman,
"fuels the perception that no one is being held accountable. It
is unacceptable that we don't have [the report]; it not only
disrespects Congress but it disrespects the American people."
The stonewalling by the Bush administration and the failure of
Congress to gain release of the report have, said the
intelligence source, "led the management of the CIA to believe it
can engage in a cover-up with impunity. Unless the public demands
an accounting, the administration and CIA's leadership will have
won and the nation will have lost."
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