A day of finger-pointing over 9/11
FBI accused of missing chances to disrupt attacks
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft is sworn in Tuesday before the panel investigating the Sept. 11 attacks.
Dennis Cook, Associated Press
WASHINGTON In a world "blinking red" with terrorist threats against the United States, the FBI missed a last-minute chance to detect a key al-Qaida cell and possibly disrupt the Sept. 11 attacks, the commission investigating the 2001 hijackings said Tuesday.
Delays and missteps in linking terrorism suspect Zacarias Moussaoui to al-Qaida in the weeks before the attacks were emblematic of chronic problems within the FBI, including limited intelligence and analysis capabilities, outdated technology, poor information-sharing and floundering attempts at reorganization, the commission said.
In a day of finger-pointing, the panel chairman, former New Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean, said two scathing reports compiled by the commission's investigators amounted to "an indictment of the FBI," while Attorney General John Ashcroft took a veiled swipe at the Clinton administration.
Louis J. Freeh, who headed the bureau from 1993 to mid-2001, bristled at Kean's words.
"I would ask that you balance what you call an indictment, and which I don't agree with at all, with the two primary findings of your staff," he said. "One is that there was a lack of resources. And two, there were legal impediments" that made it difficult for agents to pursue terrorism investigations.
Former Attorney General Janet Reno also spoke of a lack of resources but said the FBI under Freeh did a poor job keeping track of the information its agents gathered.
"The FBI didn't know what it had," she said. "The right hand didn't know what the left hand was doing."
Ashcroft, her successor and the last witness at Tuesday's hearing, said a key reason for the failures was a legal restriction, known as "the wall," that prevented sharing of FBI intelligence information with criminal investigators. Ashcroft blamed Reno for issuing "draconian" guidelines in 1995 that made such sharing even more difficult.
"The simple fact of Sept. 11 is this: We did not know an attack was coming because for nearly a decade our government had blinded itself to its enemies," Ashcroft said. "Our agents were isolated by government-imposed walls, handcuffed by government-imposed restrictions and starved for basic information technology."
Ashcroft buttressed his contentions by releasing a declassified memo from former Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick now a member of the Sept. 11 commission containing instructions that "more clearly separate" counterintelligence from criminal investigations.
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