Joining the Clarke Chorus

Via De Novo.

It’s looking more and more like Clarke was not alone in trying to get the Bush administration to recognized the threat posed by Al Quaeda, nor in his astonishment at their ability to not “get it.”

In reporting for our book, “The Age of Sacred Terror,” Steven Simon and I found that Clarke was not alone. Several top U.S. government officials agreed in interviews that the new administration had been unwilling to revise its understanding of America’s security position and too slow to recognize the danger of Al Qaeda.

Brian Sheridan, President Clinton’s outgoing assistant secretary of Defense for special operations and low intensity conflict, was astonished when his offers during the transition to bring the new Pentagon leadership up to speed on terrorism were brushed aside. “I offered to brief anyone, any time on any topic. Never took it up.”

Even if one dismisses Sheridan’s remarks as those of a political appointee, the same cannot be done for Don Kerrick. A three-star general, Kerrick had served at the end of the Clinton administration as deputy national security advisor, and he spent the final four months of his military career in the Bush White House. He sent a memo to the NSC’s new leadership on “things you need to pay attention to.” He wrote about Al Qaeda: “We are going to be struck again.”

But he never heard back. “I don’t think it was above the waterline. They were gambling nothing would happen,” he said.

The most damaging remarks came from Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff until Oct. 1, 2001. Shelton told us that in the Bush administration terrorism had moved “farther to the back burner.” He also recounted how the Joint Chiefs of Staff, frustrated at the lack of progress in dealing with Al Qaeda, had begun a disinformation program in the last year of the Clinton administration to create dissent within the Taliban. But Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz shut it down. Counterterrorism, the new leadership felt, was not a military mission.

If more and more people from the inside say that the Bush administration didn’t give the threat of Al Quaeda the attention it clearly deserved — and less attention than it received in the outgoing administration — then they can’t all be lying. Can they? Can people really convince themselves of that.

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