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BOOKS: Thwarted Plots
By Zachary Munson
Zachary Munson on The Terrorist Watch: Inside the Desperate Race to Stop the Next Attack by Ronald Kessler
Ronald Kessler. The Terrorist Watch: Inside the Desperate Race to
Stop the Next Attack. Crown Forum. 272 pages.
$26.95
In
the years since 9/11, as elections have come
and gone and come again, as the war in Iraq has raged and
calmed, and even as congressmen have summoned government officials
before their committees to testify on torture and wiretapping, one
crucial fact seems occasionally to have been lost in the shuffle:
That the United States is engaged, at home and abroad, through
military and other means, in battle with an enemy with a murderous
ideology that is intent on our destruction. The urgency the vast
majority of Americans felt in fending off this threat after 9/11 seems to have
evaporated. The issue of an imminent threat of terrorist attack has
all but dropped from the public discourse, gaining only passing
mention from media outlets with a desire to criticize policies or
officials of the Bush administration.
Ronald Kessler’s The Terrorist Watch: Inside the Desperate Race to Stop the
Next Attack serves as a reminder of just
how engaged we actually are in this struggle, and the lengths to
which we must go to win. It lays out the prominent and often daring
and self-sacrificing role the intelligence community has assumed in
fighting the global war on terror. It also documents the wholesale
changes to that community’s basic functioning that have been
implemented since 9/11. And it shows how successful the U.S. has been in
fighting this war in the face of domestic opposition from the left,
obfuscation by the mainstream media, and the dogged persistence of
the terrorists themselves in their efforts to attack again.
Kessler’s book launches a defense of George W. Bush’s
vision of the post-9/11 world, as well as of the policies that vision
engendered.
Kessler, a former Washington
Post and Wall
Street Journal reporter and author of16 books (nine specifically
about the intelligence community), was granted unparalleled access
to intelligence officials, and it is their stories that he relates. He does so in a
refreshingly matter-of-fact and understated style that seems to
have been abandoned by many who cover the war on terror. In short,
he is a veteran reporter who reports, letting his sources tell the
tale.
The
book opens to a familiar scene:
President George W. Bush in Florida on September 11, 2001. He receives his daily
intelligence briefing, then heads to a photo-op at an elementary
school. But here the scene changes. Kessler doesn’t stick
with Bush, but rather follows the man who briefed him, cia Associate Deputy
Director Michael Morrell. We learn from Morrell of the scramble
back to Air Force One, and that by the time the president’s
plane reached Omaha a few hours later, the cia had already linked
three of the hijackers to al Qaeda. It is through the eyes of
intelligence officials that the story unfolds, and this inside
perspective informs the narrative from start to finish.
From interviews with fbi Director Robert Mueller and
then-Bush Chief of Staff Andy Card to lesser-known figures like fbi agents Pat
D’Amuro and Art Cummings, Kessler relates the story of a sea
change in the philosophy and practice of intelligence work. Prior
to 9/11, the
fbi focused
primarily on building cases for prosecution, compiling enough
evidence on a subject for an indictment. After 9/11, at the direction of the
president, the fbi’s priority shifted from prosecution to prevention.
Bush’s vision of a global war on terror, his belief that the
terrorists were already at war with us, required a new approach. As
Art Cummings tells Kessler of pre-9/11 days:
[W]e ran on the assumption that if you had an
indictment, you used the indictment. Slap it down on the table,
pick the guy up, you throw him on an airplane. You bring him home,
you put him in jail, and you go, “Okay, I’ve done a
great job today.”
If his agents took such an attitude today, he
adds, he would tell them that “they basically just put
Americans more in jeopardy rather than less in jeopardy.”
Furthermore, thanks to a Justice Department decision regarding
warrants obtained under provisions of the Foreign Intelligence
Service Act (fisa), any intelligence the fbi
did gather was kept secret from agents engaged in criminal
investigation, and vice versa, even if those agents were
investigating the same person. The fisa
decision had the added effect of completely cutting
off communication between the fbi
and other intelligence agencies (cia, dia, nsa). This wall finally began
to fall with the passage of the Patriot Act in 2001, and came down completely
with the creation of the National Counterterrorism Center in 2004.
This shift in priorities and the removal of the
wall between investigation and intelligence gathering was
accompanied by a long-overdue transformation of the Bureau’s
information technology. After 9/11, the fbi
was overwhelmed by information, which brought to
light just how backward-looking the Bureau had been with regard to
computers and the internet. An aide to Louis Freeh, Mueller’s
predecessor, reveals that Freeh never even turned on his computer.
And Kessler provides an astonishing list of the Bureau’s
myriad other technological deficiencies: ancient 386 computers; a nonfunctional
electronic filing system for casework; an inadequate email system;
the use of fax machines that often sent duplicate and triplicate
copies, sending two or three teams out to chase the same lead.
Mueller, unlike Freeh, was not averse to new technologies. He began
the slow process of bringing the fbi
into the twenty-first century, ordering thousands of
new computers, instituting a web-based system to track orders
issued by the fbi for phone, email, and internet search records, and
initiating the development of a virtual case file system. (This is
not yet complete, but even the stop-gap system now in place saves
thousands of hours of research, in contrast to the makeshift
data-basing the fbi used before 2002.)
Though
these failures have been well
documented, it is still shocking to see them all laid out here, and
equally so to be reminded of the steady stream of political
and journalistic efforts to discredit and compromise not simply the
Bush administration’s agenda, but also the work being done by
the American intelligence community in its effort to prevent
another attack.
The aclu’s campaign against the Patriot Act is a case
in point. Kessler devotes a whole chapter to the aclu’s objections to the fbi’s access to
library records and meets each overblown argument with a quiet
certitude, fully supported by his command of the facts:
“The fbi . . . is all over the library threat, seizing
library records at will under the Patriot Act,” Naomi Klein
wrote in the Nation. . . . Five years after the enactment of the Patriot Act,
the number of searches of charge-out or computer records conducted
at libraries under the business records provision of the new act
was one.
To the aclu’s claim, in response to this single request
for information, that “Such open-ended fishing expeditions
expose all library users to the search and seizure of their records
and to the invasion of their privacy,” Kessler responds:
In fact, the fbi had used what is called a national security letter
to try and find out who had sent a detailed, threatening email to a
government agency from one of the Library Connections computers.
The fbi was
not interested in anyone’s reading habits or general internet
usage, as the aclu claimed. Rather, it wanted to nab the person who had sent
the anonymous email before he killed hundreds of people. Moreover,
because it knew which computer had originated the email, the fbi only wanted
transmission data for that one computer during a forty-five minute
period on the day the email had been sent.
But beyond the openly avowed efforts of civil
liberties activists and left-wing publications to undermine the
administration’s anti-terror program, there is the question
of the mainstream media. In about as heated a denunciation as
Kessler offers in the book, he draws on his own journalistic
experience to illuminate how irresponsible the media have become:
Under the journalistic standards that
prevailed during the Watergate years, editors at responsible media
outlets insisted that any fact that undercuts the lead of a story
appear no later than the second paragraph. Reporters who tried to
skew their stories to sensationalize them or distort or suppress
the truth found themselves looking for jobs. . . . All that has
changed. Under the current journalistic standards, it has become
not only acceptable but routine practice to bury mitigating facts
near the end of a story to give it greater spin — or to omit
the other side entirely.
Kessler cites example after example of
mainstream media outlets, including the Washington Post and the New York Times,
sensationalizing headlines and stories to give the appearance of
civil-liberties abuses by the federal government. In November 2005 the Washington Post ran a
story headlined “The fbi’s Secret Scrutiny.” The story, Kessler
reports, “claimed the fbi issues
30,000 national security letters a year, allowing the
bureau to ‘sweep up the records of many people’ and
‘extending the bureau’s reach as never before into the
telephone calls, correspondence, and financial lives of ordinary
Americans.’” Yet, he continues:
Despite the chilling language of the article,
national security letters are similar to grand jury subpoenas,
which are normally issued at the direction of a prosecutor and
allow the fbi to obtain records of calls, e-mails, and searches of the
web in criminal investigations. National security letters are
issued in international terrorism and espionage investigations.
They do not allow the fbi to wiretap or to see the contents of e-mails.
In contrast to grand jury subpoenas, compliance is not required.
Even worse, Kessler reminds us, publications
have run stories over the years that have actually impeded the
intelligence community’s ability to gather intelligence. For
example, after the New York Times exposed
the program the cia had been using to monitor international financial
transactions, al Qaeda operatives stopped using such transactions.
Also, shockingly, a Washington Post story in
1998 revealed that the U.S. was intercepting Osama
bin Laden’s satellite phone calls. A few days after the story
ran, bin Laden stopped using the phone.
Yet,
in the face of all this, the U.S.
intelligence community has not only made great strides in
correcting pre-9/11 deficiencies, it has also had many successes in defending
us against the terrorist threat. Kessler details cooperative
efforts among domestic and foreign intelligence agencies to bring
in terrorists and bring down terrorist plots, including the
captures of al Qaeda field commander Abu Zubaydah and Khaled Sheik
Mohammed, among others. He also tells the story of the successful
thwarting of a massive operation to blow up ten British airliners
over the Atlantic Ocean. “By the end of 2002,” he reports,
“fbi
Director Mueller could point to about a hundred terrorist attacks
that had been thwarted by the U.S. government since 9/11, including some
intended to take place on U.S. soil.”
The stories of these successes are the stories
of piecing one bit of information with another and monitoring
subjects for months. Of balancing the interests of getting a
dangerous subject off the street against the value of keeping him
on the street to collect more information. Of coercive
interrogations, and flattering a murderer to gain his trust.1 Of
information sharing, international cooperation, and the application
of tremendous new technologies. They are stories of intelligence
work and the dedication of the people doing it. However distracted
and complacent their fellow citizens have become in the years since
9/11, they
are convinced of the need to go on working to keep this country
safe and free. And The Terrorist Watch is a matter-of-fact rebuke to those who believe
that the war on terror is over, those who believe it never really
existed, and those who simply believe it is not worth fighting.
Zachary Munson is a writer in Washington, D.C.
1 A fascinating
chapter on George Piro, the agent who debriefed Saddam Hussein, relates how
Piro flattered Saddam — by asking about his novels and
displaying a knowledge of Iraqi history — into admitting that
he’d used chemical weapons against the Kurds and, further, that
he’d used the weapons inspection regime as a tool to trick the world,
and especially Iran, into thinking he had wmd.
Piro even got Saddam, in response to questions about his
sons, to bite back, “Look. Leave me alone. You don’t get to
pick your kids.”
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