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| A
cobra74 Creations Special Report |
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CONFRONTING
THE ANTI-BUSH HYPERBOLE |
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"ABLE
DANGER" claim is found baseless
The
Senate Intelligence Committee has rejected as untrue one of the most
disturbing claims about the Sept. 11 terrorist strikes — a
congressman's contention that a team of military analysts identified
Mohamed Atta or other hijackers before the attacks — according to
a summary of the panel's investigation.
The conclusion contradicts assertions by Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.)
and a few military officers that U.S. national security officials
ignored startling intelligence available in early 2001 that might
have helped to prevent the attacks.
In particular, Weldon and other officials have repeatedly claimed
that the military analysts' effort, known as Able Danger, produced a
chart that included a picture of Atta and identified him as being
tied to an Al Qaeda cell in Brooklyn, N.Y. Weldon has also said that
the chart was shared with White House officials, including Stephen
J. Hadley, then deputy national security advisor.
But after a 16-month investigation, the Intelligence Committee has
concluded that those assertions are unfounded.
"Able Danger did not identify Mohammed Atta or any other 9/11
hijacker at any time prior to Sept. 11, 2001," the committee
determined, according to an eight-page letter sent last week to
panel members by the top Republican and Democrat on the committee.
Weldon, the focus of an unrelated Justice Department corruption
probe, was defeated last month in his campaign for an 11th term in a
suburban Philadelphia district that has a large GOP majority in
voter registration. Attempts were unsuccessful Sunday to reach a
Weldon spokesman and an attorney representing Weldon in the Justice
Department investigation.
The Senate panel began investigating Able Danger in August 2005,
after Weldon and people close to the program went public with their
claims. At the time, Weldon was the vice chairman of the House Armed
Services Committee and the House Homeland Security Committee.
The recently completed probe also dismissed other assertions that
have fueled conspiracy theories surrounding the Sept. 11 attacks.
The panel said it found "no evidence" to support claims by
military officers connected to Able Danger that Defense Department
lawyers prevented the team's analysts from sharing their findings
with FBI counter-terrorism officials before the attacks.
Nor was the alleged chart or any information developed by Able
Danger improperly destroyed at the direction of Pentagon lawyers,
the panel concluded — a charge that had stoked claims of a
cover-up.
Though the committee concluded that claims about Able Danger were
unfounded, two of the hijackers were known to the U.S. intelligence
community before the Sept. 11 attacks. The two had been observed by
the CIA attending a meeting with Al Qaeda operatives in Malaysia,
but that information was not shared with other agencies in time to
locate them after they had entered the United States and moved to
San Diego.
Able Danger was the unclassified name given to a program launched in
1999 by the U.S. Special Operations Command as part of an effort to
develop military plans targeting the leadership ranks of Al Qaeda
and other terrorist networks.
Military analysts assigned to the effort did create charts with
pictures of Al Qaeda operatives whose identities were known publicly
at the time, the committee found. But the committee concluded that
none of those charts depicted Atta, and that the claims of Weldon
and others may have been caused by confusion.
One of the charts, titled "The Al Qaeda Network: Snapshots of
Typical Operational Cells Associated With UBL [Usama bin
Laden]," was attached to the letter sent to committee members
last week by Sens. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) and John D. "Jay"
Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), the panel's leaders.
"One of these individuals depicted on the chart arguably looked
like Mohammed Atta," the committee concluded. "In
addition, the chart contained names of Al Qaeda associates that
sound like Atta, as well as numerous variations of the common Arab
name Mohammed."
The committee also suggested that officials' memories may have been
clouded by the flurry of charts and photographs of Atta that
surfaced after the attacks. The panel noted that a defense
contractor that produced the chart at the center of the controversy
subsequently created a follow-up chart, after the attacks, that did
include Atta.
Atta, an Egyptian-born Islamic radical, was the ringleader of the
Sept. 11 attacks and pilot of one of the planes that struck the
World Trade Center.
In June 2005, Weldon generated controversy when he declared in a
speech on the House floor and in a book released that month that he
had met with Hadley at the White House shortly after the attacks and
had given the national security official a copy of a chart showing
that Atta had been identified by Able Danger.
But the committee concluded that the chart "was not a pre-9/11
chart" and that "at no time did Mr. Hadley ever see a
chart with pre-9/11 data bearing Atta's picture or name as described
by Congressman Weldon."
The Senate Intelligence Committee noted in its report that its
findings were consistent with those of a similar investigation of
Able Danger by the Defense Department inspector general's office,
released in September. |
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