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View Full Version : Confirmed: Tenet DID meet with Condi Rice on 7/10/01



PixelPusher
10-02-2006, 09:26 PM
Records Show Tenet Briefed Rice on Al Qaeda Threat (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/02/washington/03ricecnd.html?hp&ex=1159848000&en=5de194832d554019&ei=5094&partner=homepage)

By PHILIP SHENON and MARK MAZZETTI
Published: October 2, 2006

JIDDA, Saudi Arabia, Oct. 2 — A review of White House records has determined that George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, did brief Condoleezza Rice and other top officials on July 10, 2001, about the looming threat from Al Qaeda, a State Department spokesman said Monday.

The account by Sean McCormack came hours after Ms. Rice, the secretary of state, told reporters aboard her airplane that she did not recall the specific meeting on July 10, 2001, noting that she had met repeatedly with Mr. Tenet that summer about terrorist threats. Ms. Rice, the national security adviser at the time, said it was “incomprehensible” she ignored dire terrorist threats two months before the Sept. 11 attacks.

Mr. McCormack also said records show that the Sept. 11 commission was informed about the meeting, a fact that former intelligence officials and members of the commission confirmed on Monday.

When details of the meeting emerged last week in a new book by Bob Woodward of The Washington Post, Bush administration officials questioned Mr. Woodward’s reporting.

Now, after several days, both current and former Bush administration officials have confirmed parts of Mr. Woodward’s account.

Officials now agree that on July 10, 2001, Mr. Tenet and his counterterrorism deputy, J. Cofer Black, were so alarmed about an impending Al Qaeda attack that they demanded an emergency meeting at the White House with Ms. Rice and her National Security Council staff.

According to two former intelligence officials, Mr. Tenet told those assembled at the White House about the growing body of intelligence the Central Intelligence Agency had collected pointing to an impending Al Qaeda attack. But both current and former officials took issue with Mr. Woodward’s account that Mr. Tenet and his aides left the meeting in frustration, feeling as if Ms. Rice had ignored them.

Mr. Tenet told members of the Sept. 11 commission about the July 10 meeting when they interviewed him in early 2004, but committee members said the former C.I.A. director never indicated he had left the White House with the impression that he had been ignored.

“Tenet never told us that he was brushed off,” said Richard Ben-Veniste, a Democratic member of the commission. “We certainly would have followed that up.”

Mr. McCormack said the records showed that, far from ignoring Mr. Tenet’s warnings, Ms. Rice acted on the intelligence and requested that Mr. Tenet make the same presentation to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Atttorney General John Ashcroft.

But Mr. Ashcroft said by telephone on Monday evening that he never received a briefing that summer from Mr. Tenet.

“Frankly, I’m disappointed that I didn’t get that kind of briefing,” he said. “I’m surprised he didn’t think it was important enough to come by and tell me.”

The dispute that has played out in recent days gives further evidence of an escalating battle between the White House and Mr. Tenet over who should take the blame for such mistakes as the failure to stop the Sept. 11 attacks and assertions by Bush administration officials that Saddam Hussein was stockpiling chemical and biological weapons and cultivating ties to Al Qaeda.

Mr. Tenet resigned as director of central intelligence in the summer of 2004 and was honored that December with a Presidential Medal of Freedom during a White House ceremony. Since leaving the C.I.A., Mr. Tenet has stayed out of the public eye, largely declining to defend his record at the C.I.A. even after several government investigations have assailed the faulty intelligence that helped build the case for the Iraq war.

Mr. Tenet is now completing work on a memoir that is scheduled to be published early next year.

It is unclear how much Mr. Tenet will use the book to settle old scores, although recent books have portrayed Mr. Tenet both as dubious about the need for the Iraq war and angry that the White House has made the C.I.A. the primary scapegoat for the war.

In his book “The One Percent Doctrine,” the journalist and author Ron Suskind quotes Mr. Tenet’s former deputy at the C.I.A., John McLaughlin, saying that Mr. Tenet “wishes he could give that damn medal back.”

In his own book, Mr. Woodward wrote that over time Mr. Tenet developed a particular dislike for Ms. Rice, and that the former C.I.A. director was furious when she publicly blamed the agency for allowing President Bush to make the false claim in the 2003 State of the Union Address that Saddam Hussein was pursuing nuclear materials in Niger.

“If the C.I.A., the Director of National Intelligence, had said ‘take this out of the speech,’ it would have been gone, without question,” Ms. Rice told reporters in July 2003.

In fact, the C.I.A. had told the White House months before that the Niger intelligence was bogus and had managed to keep the claim out of an October 2002 speech that President Bush gave in Cincinnati.

More recently, Mr. Tenet has told friends that he was particularly angry when, appearing recently on Sunday talk shows, both Ms. Rice and Vice President Dick Cheney cited Mr. Tenet by name as the reason that Bush administration officials asserted that Mr. Hussein had stockpiles of banned weapons in Iraq and ties to Al Qaeda.

Mr. Cheney recalled during an appearance on “Meet the Press” on Sept. 10 of this year: “George Tenet sat in the Oval Office and the president of the United States asked him directly, he said, ‘George, how good is the case against Saddam on weapons of mass destruction?’ the director of the C.I.A. said, ‘It’s a slam dunk, Mr. President, it’s a slam dunk.’ ”

Philip Shenon reported from Jidda, Saudi Arabia, and Mark Mazzetti from Washington.

Looks like there's and assload of ass-covering going on here.

boutons_
10-02-2006, 09:37 PM
I told my mother as I watched the Towers burn that day,

"Somebody screwed up their jobs really, really big, and they're gonna pay equally big"

Repugs tried to buy off Tenet with the surprising Medal of Freedom.
Now we know that they were buying his silence. Didn't work. Tenet, a super dangerous-to-WH insider, has a book coming out. I bet he's revising furiously as he sees how the WH slash and trash is ass while they cover their own asses. And others will help him get it all down.

The Repugs knew immediately after the WTC attack that they were in sooper-dooper double-dip deep-shit at risk of being branded for eternity as

"The Presidency/Executive that allowed America to take a direct hit on American soil".

As I've always said, the truth will come out, and here it comes.

The entire WH will be left "turning slowly in the wind" (Nixon era phrase).

Same will happen with Iraq. The truth will come out.

RandomGuy
10-03-2006, 07:57 AM
A "medal of freedom". Isn't that the same onc that was given to the Iraq "war" planners?
I am surprised Mike "heckava job" Brown didn't get one either.

George Gervin's Afro
10-03-2006, 09:34 AM
It was an obvious oversight by Condi. :rolleyes We all know Condi is a brilliant woman so it means alot that she said " She didn't recall.." when she could have easily slammed the door shut on Woodward's claims by saying "it never happened"..

boutons_
10-03-2006, 09:43 AM
"a brilliant woman"

Dr. Condi used a $100 Stanford professorial word that it was "incomprehensible" that she could hear such a warning and not react.

Well, Condi it's very comprehensible that you are just a slavish team player in the WH bubble / Exec branch ass-protecting echo chamber, circling the wagons.

johnsmith
10-03-2006, 09:49 AM
Yes, this clearly shows that 9/11 occurred soley because of the current White House administration. :rolleyes :rolleyes :rolleyes

George Gervin's Afro
10-03-2006, 10:03 AM
Yes, this clearly shows that 9/11 occurred soley because of the current White House administration. :rolleyes :rolleyes :rolleyes



No one is saying that but don't you find it quite odd that Condi forgot about this meeting?

JoeChalupa
10-03-2006, 10:16 AM
Condi doesn't recall the meeting.

Ocotillo
10-03-2006, 10:19 AM
Too bad Tenet's book won't be ready this week.

boutons_
10-03-2006, 10:36 AM
"Condi doesn't recall the meeting."

... a euphemism for "I refuse to recall on the grounds that it may incriminate me"

101A
10-03-2006, 10:39 AM
"Brilliant" women in D.C., apparently consistently have convenient memories.

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 05:50 PM
Condi doesn't recall the meeting.
Where'd she say that? And, if it was just another meeting, why would she?

All I've heard is that she doesn't recall Tenet saying what Woodward claims he did and that if it had been said, she would have remembered.

Ocotillo
10-03-2006, 05:57 PM
Hey lighten up everyone, child predator congressmen, terrorists determined to attack the U.S., the Repubs have a lot of meetings. Who can remember everything.

clambake
10-03-2006, 05:57 PM
Oh Yoni, you'd eat a cat turd if they told you it was fillet!

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 06:03 PM
Oh Yoni, you'd eat a cat turd if they told you it was fillet!
Okay, thanks for the link. Pardon me if I don't believe your lying asses.

clambake
10-03-2006, 06:04 PM
Have more confidence in your party. They won't lose, even if they have to steal it.

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 06:05 PM
Have more confidence in your party. They won't lose, even if they have to steal it.
Hey! They're not Democrats.

clambake
10-03-2006, 06:10 PM
NO, NO Yoni! The new party line is "We're no worse than the Democrats"

Formally known as the party of moral high ground

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 06:13 PM
NO, NO Yoni! The new party line is "We're no worse than the Democrats"

Formally known as the party of moral high ground
Name a Republican caught in a sex scandal that remained in office.

clambake
10-03-2006, 06:14 PM
Hastart

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 06:15 PM
Hastart
Really? What's the sexual conduct? How many Democrats knew of Foley? Exactly what did they know? What did Hastert know?

clambake
10-03-2006, 06:22 PM
You said sexual scandel, caught in, add.

Hastart said he wanted to handle the problem enternally. Hence, knew of a problem. Hence, did nothing.

Now, desperately swimming for the shore.

Ocotillo
10-03-2006, 06:27 PM
Name a Republican caught in a sex scandal that remained in office.

Newt stuck around after his. It was other shenanigans that drove him to "retirement".

Some said he was going to run for prez in '08 but he's kinda shot himself in the foot with his Foley was entrapped meme.

Yonivore
10-03-2006, 06:59 PM
Newt stuck around after his. It was other shenanigans that drove him to "retirement".

Some said he was going to run for prez in '08 but he's kinda shot himself in the foot with his Foley was entrapped meme.
What was Newt's?

boutons_
10-03-2006, 07:26 PM
"What was Newt's?"

Cheating on his wife and then visiting her while she was in the hospital for cancer treatment to tell her he was divorcing her. Consenting sex between adults, not any more illegal than Clinton/Monica, but Newt outed himself, while Clinton was witch hunted.

clambake
10-03-2006, 07:36 PM
Sex with Newt. I think I just threw up a little.

boutons_
10-03-2006, 08:38 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/linkset/2005/04/11/LI2005041100879.html


The Meeting That Was

Is the White House downplaying the significance of a meeting that took place two months before 9/11, in an effort to cover up its deficient response to terror threats?

See yesterday's column for background.

It turns out this secret meeting wasn't quite so secret after all.

Dan Eggen and Robin Wright write in The Washington Post: "Former CIA director George Tenet told the 9/11 Commission that he had warned of an imminent threat from al-Qaeda in a July 2001 meeting with Condoleezza Rice, adding that he believed Rice took the warning seriously, according to a transcript of the interview and the recollection of a commissioner who was there.

"Tenet's statements to the commission in January 2004 confirm the outlines of an event in a new book by Washington Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob Woodward that has been disputed by some Bush administration officials. But the testimony also is at odds with Woodward's depiction of Tenet and former CIA counterterrorism chief J. Cofer Black as being frustrated that 'they were not getting through to Rice' after the July 10, 2001, meeting. . . .

"According to the transcript, Tenet told Rice there were signs that there could be an al-Qaeda attack in weeks or perhaps months, that there would be multiple, simultaneous attacks causing major human casualties, and that the focus would be U.S. targets, facilities or interests. But the intelligence reporting focused almost entirely on the attacks occurring overseas, Tenet told the commission. . . .

"Rice added to the confusion yesterday by strongly suggesting that the meeting may never have occurred at all -- even though administration officials had conceded for several days that it had. A State Department spokesman said later that while the meeting definitely happened, Rice and Tenet disputed Woodward's characterization of her response."

Philip Shenon and Mark Mazzetti write in the New York Times: "A review of White House records has determined that George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, did brief Condoleezza Rice and other top officials on July 10, 2001, about the looming threat from Al Qaeda, a State Department spokesman said Monday."

So what's the finger-pointing all about? Shenon and Mazzetti suggest it's all "further evidence of an escalating battle between the White House and Mr. Tenet over who should take the blame for the failure to stop the Sept. 11 attacks and assertions by Bush administration officials that Saddam Hussein was stockpiling chemical and biological weapons and cultivating ties to Al Qaeda."

But Jonathan S. Landay, Warren P. Strobel and John Walcott write for McClatchy Newspapers: "Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and former Attorney General John Ashcroft received the same CIA briefing about an imminent al-Qaida strike on an American target that was given to the White House two months before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

"The State Department's disclosure Monday that the pair was briefed within a week after then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice was told about the threat on July 10, 2001, raised new questions about what the Bush administration did in response, and about why so many officials have claimed they never received or don't remember the warning."

( what the did in reponse? fucking obvious, not enough, and I'm pretty sure it will be demonstrated that the Repugs did NOTHING at all about Tenet's warnings that almost exactly describe the 9/11 attack )


A Little History

The fact that the White House was warned, and warned, and warned again is not exactly new.

As Dana Priest wrote in The Washington Post in April 2004: "By the time a CIA briefer gave President Bush the Aug. 6, 2001, President's Daily Brief headlined 'Bin Ladin Determined To Strike in US,' the president had seen a stream of alarming reports on al Qaeda's intentions. So had Vice President Cheney and Bush's top national security team, according to newly declassified information released yesterday by the commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

"In April and May 2001, for example, the intelligence community headlined some of those reports 'Bin Laden planning multiple operations,' 'Bin Laden network's plans advancing' and 'Bin Laden threats are real.'"

=================

The Repugs did NOTHING in the way raising high, general alert to all FBI/CIA/FAA/NSA and all intelligence + law enforcement agencies.

Now the Repugs are trying to the blame on Tenet/CIA, and Tenet is fighting back.

RandomGuy
10-03-2006, 09:40 PM
Should we really be surprised that someone in this administration might have selective memory?

Or maybe she genuinely didn't remember, but it didn't make much of an impression because it really wasn't a priority of the Bush administration.

BIG IRISH
10-06-2006, 01:21 AM
I think Spiro Agnew said it quite appropriately in a (rare honest moment) public statement: "anybody who doesn't think that the American Government doesn't lie to them every day is nieve".

Not exactly the greatest person in the world to quote but oh such candor

j-6
10-06-2006, 09:05 AM
Name a Republican caught in a sex scandal that remained in office.

Ken Calvert? Don Sherwood? Dan Burton? I guess you could even include David Dreier if being a outed Republican qualifies.