I love this Washington Post hit piece on Condoleezza Rice. While attempting to paint Rice as having failed to heed the threat of Osama Bin Laden, it efficiently rebuts former President Clinton’s assertion that the the Bush Admin “didn’t have a single meeting about Bin Laden for the nine months after [he] left office.” Not only does the article report on a meeting between Rice and CIA Director George J. Tenet (and others) that was dedicated to the topic of Bin Laden, but it also contains this helpful little section in paragraph 11:
As they all knew, a coherent plan for covert action against bin Laden was in the pipeline, but it would take some time. In recent closed-door meetings the entire National Security Council apparatus had been considering action against bin Laden…
Huh, that’s odd. I thought Clinton handed them a fully-formed plan with a pretty pink bow and a cherry on top, and left them with the one guy (Clarke) who could make it all happen.
Wait, does that mean Clinton… lied? And people… died?
Somebody put that on a bumper sticker.
UPDATE: Think Progress has a related post, so we can probably expect this one to get some more attention.
UPDATE II: I didn’t realize this was an excerpt from Bob Woodward’s book, State of Denial. I clicked the link from an RSS reader, going directly to the page. I looked for an author, but it wasn’t listed in either of the familiar places — at the beginning or the end, and there was no clear indication that this was a book excerpt, either. Now I see that it has a little box in the sidebar with the headline “about the author.” I wouldn’t have guessed the only attribution would be found there. Seems like a strange place to put it, but maybe it’s just me.
UPDATE III: Rice disputes the story. [This link now points to a different story, for whatever reason. Do a search at the Washington Post site, and you get the same result. So, I don't know what to tell you. Updated link discovered.]
UPDATE IV: State Dept. confirms a meeting took place on that date. A State spokesman says “the information presented in this meeting was not new, rather it was a good summary from the threat reporting from the previous several weeks,” and that “materials from this meeting were made available to the independent Sept. 11 Commission, and Tenet was asked about the session when interviewed by the commission.” Rice apparently asked Tenet to give the same briefing to the Secretary of Defense and the Attorney General. Given AG John Ashcroft’s astonished reaction of not having received such a dire warning about an attack within the U.S., it’s difficult to imagine Woodward’s account of Tenet’s briefing holding up.
My wingman A.C. adds:
After some hem-hawing the White House now admits the meeting. Rice said there were ‘many such meetings’. Several present denied Woodward’s decription of a “brush off”. Clarke has apparently dummied up.
Here’s what we know. Rice briefed the federal agencies during that time about impending threats, confirmed by the 9/11 Commission and anecdotal sources. On Sunday two democrat members of the 9/11 Commission erupted into indignation about not being briefed on the meeting only to walk back their cats Monday after discovering it was included in their report. Obvisouly their faulty memories support Rice and strongly suggest there was nothing out of the ordinary about it.
Taken together it backs up Mick’s point–Clinton was once again bending the truth. It also suggests Woodward has either lost his edge, is a charlatan, or a double agent.
And wouldn’t it be cool if all parties were primarily interested in seeking the truth and defeating the enemy, rather than staging media controversies in an election season. At this point, Woodward and Clinton are looking the worst, but there’s also a degree of CYA on the Administration’s side. Everyone failed to a degree; but now that we’re taking it to the enemy, you’d expect a little more comity and seriousness.
UPDATE V: Another part of Woodward’s story disputed: “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.”
Woodward had said, “Tenet and Black felt they were not getting through to Rice. She was polite, but they felt the brush-off.”
Hmm, maybe not so much, Bob.
There’s also this:
Members of the commission — an independent, bipartisan panel created by Congress to investigate the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks — have said for days that they were not told about the July 10 meeting and were angry at being left out. As recently as yesterday afternoon, both commission chairman Thomas H. Kean and vice chairman Lee Hamilton said they believed the panel had not been told about the July 10 meeting.
But it turns out that the panel was, in fact, told about the meeting, according to the interview transcript and Democratic commission member Richard Ben-Veniste, who sat in on the interview with Tenet. The meeting was not identified by the July 10 date in the commission’s best-selling report.
Which knocks out our other friend Bob’s contention that “this meeting BTW, was deliberately withheld from the 911 Commission,” as we predicted.
To review: Woodward says Tenet told Rice about an imminent domestic attack, and that Rice brushed him off. Rice doesn’t remember it that way, neither does Rumsfeld or Ashcroft, neither does Richard Ben-Veniste, and neither does the 9/11 Commission. The only one who remembers the meeting going down as described is someone who wasn’t even there — Woodward himself.
UPDATE VI: Condi elaborates.
UPDATE VII: The White House issues “The Rest of the Story: The Rice-Tenet Meeting,” in its “Setting the Record Straight” area.
UPDATE VIII: Now the wheels are really starting to come off for Woodward, if we’re to believe this statement by Brent Scowcroft: “there are statements in the book, directly or implicitly attributed to me, that did not and never could have come from me.”
UPDATE IX: Here’s an intriguing find by the Kos crowd, via Bob of 55-40: An old CBS News hit piece on the AG now takes on new meaning; the FBI apparently advised Ashcroft against flying commerical airlines just after the period in question. It’s interesting given Ashcroft’s latest statement, “I didn’t get called on by Black or Tenet if they were going around doing such briefings [as suggested by Woodward]… If in fact they were making visits to emphasize the severity of the domestic threat, I’m a little disappointed they didn’t bring that information to my attention.” On the other hand, this move by the FBI wouldn’t necessarily have anything to do with any particular (or any, period) Al Qaida briefiing, seeing as how:
the intelligence reporting focused almost entirely on the attacks occurring overseas, Tenet told the commission.
Of course, Bob believes this latest development backs up his crackpot theory that “Condi didn’t take it seriously,” another notion contradicted by Tenet and the 9/11 Commission.
On the basis of this circumstantial evidence and a few now-disproved assertions by Bob Woodward, Bob and the Kossites would like us to believe the Administration’s only response was to save itself. But, as we know, the overall chatter was intense and the administration was aware of the looming threats from Al Qaeda, which explains the administration’s advance planning, including the intention to sweep through Afghanistan — a plan that quickly unfolded after the attacks, and wouldn’t have been possible without such preparation.
But we shall see where this latest turn takes us, and I’m sure we’ll be hearing from the FBI, Rice, Ashcroft and/or members the 9/11 Commission again soon. Interesting how the Left continues to jump to conclusions, each time falling flat on its face. The trend surely can’t continue indefinitely, but it’s been quite entertaining thus far.
