CRAWFORD,
Texas, April 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - In a heated
three-hour hearing on Thursday, April 8, the U.S. National Commission
on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States grilled National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice on the Bush administration’s response to
terrorism threats before the 9/11 attacks.
Rice
was sharply questioned -- sometimes testily -- by the 10-member
bipartisan commission investigating the attacks that killed about
3,000 people, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Richard
Ben-Veniste, a former member of the commission investigating the 1970s
Watergate scandal, told Rice the intelligence service gave President
George Bush on August 6, 2001, a memorandum titled "Bin Laden
Determined to Attack Inside the United States."
Playing
down the memo, Bush trusted advisor said "this briefing item was
not prompted by any specific threat information.
"And
it did not raise the possibility that terrorists might use airplanes
as missiles."
In
he sworn testimony, Rice defended the administration's
counter-terrorism action before the 9/11 attacks and insisted
"there was no silver bullet that could have prevented the 9/11
attacks."
She
said the "threat reporting that we received in the spring and
summer of 2001 was not specific as to time, nor place, nor manner of
attack."
Rice
recalled that intercepted messages spoke of "unbelievable news
coming in weeks", "Big event, there will be a very, very,
very big uproar" and "There will be attacks in the near
future."
And
continued: "Troubling, yes. But they don't tell us when, they
don't tell us where, they don't tell us who, and they don't tell us
how."
Bush's
trusted advisor said he understood the threat from Al-Qaeda as soon as
he took office and he immediately order crushing the network.
"It
was the very first major national security policy directive of the
Bush administration -- not Russia, not missile defense, not Iraq, but
the elimination of Al-Qaeda.
She
quoted the president as telling her he was "tired of swatting
flies," a phrase that drew immediate fire from commissioner
member Bob Kerrey who accused the administration of failing to act on
the available intelligence.
Kerrey
had earned himself an applaud from the people attending the hearing
when he deducted some of his ten-minute period to state for the record
that the U.S. military tactics in Iraq threaten to ignite a civil war.
He
stressed that the administration should reconsider what "a
Christian American army" was doing "in a Muslim country.
"
Contradiction
Her
statement contradicted earlier testimony by the White House's former
counter-terrorism czar Richard Clarke, who told the panel Bush had
failed to consider that Al-Qaeda was an urgent threat until the
attacks.
He
also accused Bush of
that were needed in Afghanistan to hunt down Osama Bin Laden.
But
Rice said none of Bush's advisers called for an attack on Iraq in the
days after September 11.
"I
can tell you that when he went around the table and asked his advisors
what he should do, not a single one of his principal advisors advised
doing anything against Iraq. It was all to Afghanistan," she told
the panel.
Unlike
Clarke in his testimony, Rice did not offer an apology for failing to
stop the attacks.
Blaming
Others
Bush's
national security advisor blamed the problem on a longstanding U.S.
failure to understand terrorism.
"The
terrorists were at war with us, but we were not yet at war with them.
For more than 20 years, the terrorist threat gathered, and America's
response across several administrations of both parties was
insufficient.
"Tragically,
for all the language of war spoken before September 11, this country
simply was not on a war footing," said Rice, who had for weeks
to the commission.
She
said the administration had decided before September 11 that defeating
Al-Qaeda needed a wider change of policy in South Asia.
"America's
Al-Qaeda policy wasn't working because our Afghanistan policy wasn't
working. And our Afghanistan policy wasn't working because our
Pakistan policy wasn't working."
Rice
said that one month after taking office Bush bluntly told Pakistan
President Pervez Musharraf to bring Bin Laden to justice, to abandon
support for the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan and close Al-Qaeda
training camps in Pakistan.
Bush’s
Future
Observers
say Rice's evidence could be vital for Bush's re-election chances,
according to the BBC News Online.
It
is also being seen as a key moment in her own political career, with
some tipping her as a future secretary of state or even president,
added the broadcaster.
Bush
must convince the electorate he had a strong counter-terrorism
strategy to ensure his re-election on November 2, when he will face
Democratic Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, said AFP.
Bush's
campaign has focused on creating an image of a leader who strongly
retaliated against terrorists in Afghanistan and who can defend the
U.S. against future attacks.
Rice's
testimony was the commission's last chance to hear a senior Bush
official publicly and under oath.
The
panel will hear from Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney within the
next few weeks, but the behind-closed-doors meeting will not be
recorded.
After
giving her testimony, Rice was due to spend the Easter weekend at
Bush's Texas ranch with the president and First Lady Laura Bush, their
twin daughters and Bush's parents, White House spokeswoman Claire
Buchan said.