The following is the full text of
Condoleezza Rice's sworn testimony before the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks
April 8, 2004
Speakers:
THOMAS H. KEAN,
Commission Chairman
LEE H. HAMILTON, Commission Vice Chair
RICHARD BEN-VENISTE, Commission Member
MAX CLELAND, Commission Member
FRED F. FIELDING, Commission Member
JAMIE S. GORELICK, Commission Member
SLADE GORTON, Commission Member
JOHN F. LEHMAN, Commission Member
TIMOTHY J. ROEMER, Commission Member
JAMES R. THOMPSON, Commission Member
BOB KERREY, Commission Member
PHILIP ZELIKOW, Commission Executive Director
CHRISTOPHER KOJM, Commission Deputy Executive Director
Witnesses:
CONDOLEEZZA RICE,
National Security Adviser
Hearing Transcript:
KEAN: Good morning. As chair
of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, I hereby convene
this hearing. This is a continuation of the commission's previous hearings on the
formulation and conduct of U.S. counterterrorism policy. The record of that hearing, by
the way, including staff statements, is available on our Web site, www.911commission.gov.
We will hear from only one
witness this morning, the distinguished Dr. Rice, Condoleezza Rice, assistant to the
president for national security affairs.
Dr. Rice, we bid you a most
cordial welcome to the commission.
Before I call on Dr. Rice, I
would like to turn to our vice chair for brief opening remarks.
HAMILTON: Good morning.
Good morning, Dr. Rice.
We're very pleased to have you with us this morning.
Mr. Chairman, I appreciate
the opportunity to make a statement. I will be very brief.
The purpose of our hearing
this morning is very straightforward. We want to get information, and we wanted to get it
out into the public record. If we are going to fulfill our mandate, a comprehensive and
sweeping mandate, then we will have to provide a full and complete accounting of the
events of 9/11. And that means that we are going to ask some searching and difficult
questions.
HAMILTON: Our purpose is not
to embarrass, it is not to put any witness on the spot. Our purpose is to understand and
to inform.
Questions do not represent
opinions. Our views will follow later after reflection on answers.
We want to be thorough this
morning, and as you will see in a few minutes, the commissioners will show that they have
mastered their briefs. But we also want to be fair.
Most of us on this
commission have been in the policymaking world at some time in our careers. Policymakers
face terrible dilemmas: information is incomplete; the inbox is huge; resources are
limited; there are only so many hours in the day. The choices are tough, and none is
tougher than deciding what is a priority and what is not. We will want to explore with Dr.
Rice, as we have with other witnesses, the choices that were made.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
KEAN: Thank you.
Dr. Rice, would you please
rise and raise your right hand?
Do you swear or affirm to
tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth?
RICE: I do.
KEAN: Thank you.
I understand, Dr. Rice, that
you have an opening statement. Your prepared statement will be entered into the record in
full, and we look forward to it. If it's a summary statement, that's fine.
Dr. Rice?
RICE: Thank you very much,
Mr. Chairman.
I thank the Commission for
arranging this special session. Thank you for helping to find a way to meet the Nation's
need to learn all we can about the September 11th attacks, while preserving important
Constitutional principles.
This Commission, and those
who appear before it, have a vital charge. We owe it to those we lost, and to their loved
ones, and to our country, to learn all we can about that tragic day, and the events that
led to it. Many families of the victims are here today, and I thank them for their
contributions to the Commission's work.
The terrorist threat to our
Nation did not emerge on September 11th, 2001. Long before that day, radical,
freedom-hating terrorists declared war on America and on the civilized world. The attack
on the Marine barracks in Lebanon in 1983, the hijacking of the Achille Lauro in 1985, the
rise of al-Qaida and the bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993, the attacks on
American installations in Saudi Arabia in 1995 and 1996, the East Africa embassy bombings
of 1998, the attack on the USS Cole in 2000, these and other atrocities were part of a
sustained, systematic campaign to spread devastation and chaos and to murder innocent
Americans.
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. Historically, democratic societies have been slow to react to gathering
threats, tending instead to wait to confront threats until they are too dangerous to
ignore or until it is too late. Despite the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 and continued
German harassment of American shipping, the United States did not enter the First World
War until two years later. Despite Nazi Germany's repeated violations of the Versailles
Treaty and its string of provocation's throughout the mid-1930s, the Western democracies
did not take action until 1939. The U.S. Government did not act against the growing threat
from Imperial Japan until the threat became all too evident at Pearl Harbor. And,
tragically, for all the language of war spoken before September 11th, this country simply
was not on a war footing.
Since then, America has been
at war. And under President Bush's leadership, we will remain at war until the terrorist
threat to our Nation is ended. The world has changed so much that it is hard to remember
what our lives were like before that day. But I do want to describe the actions this
Administration was taking to fight terrorism before September 11th, 2001.
After President Bush was
elected, we were briefed by the Clinton Administration on many national security issues
during the transition. The President-elect and I were briefed by George Tenet on terrorism
and on the al-Qaida network. Members of Sandy Berger's NSC staff briefed me, along with
other members of the new national security team, on counterterrorism and al-Qaida. This
briefing lasted about one hour, and it reviewed the Clinton Administration's
counterterrorism approach and the various counterterrorism activities then underway. Sandy
and I personally discussed a variety of other topics, including North Korea, Iraq, the
Middle East, and the Balkans.
Because of these briefings
and because we had watched the rise of al-Qaida over the years, we understood that the
network posed a serious threat to the United States. We wanted to ensure there was no
respite in the fight against al-Qaida. On an operational level, we decided immediately to
continue pursuing the Clinton Administration's covert action authorities and other efforts
to fight the network. President Bush retained George Tenet as Director of Central
Intelligence, and Louis Freeh remained the Director of the FBI. I took the unusual step of
retaining Dick Clarke and the entire Clinton Administration's counterterrorism team on the
NSC staff. I knew Dick to be an expert in his field, as well as an experienced crisis
manager. Our goal was to ensure continuity of operations while we developed new and more
aggressive policies.
At the beginning of the
Administration, President Bush revived the practice of meeting with the Director of
Central Intelligence almost every day in the Oval Office - - meetings which I attended,
along with the Vice President and the Chief of Staff. At these meetings, the President
received up-to-date intelligence and asked questions of his most senior intelligence
officials. From January 20 through September 10, the President received at these daily
meetings more than 40 briefing items on al-Qaida, and 13 of these were in response to
questions he or his top advisers had posed. In addition to seeing DCI Tenet almost every
morning, I generally spoke by telephone every morning at 7:15 with Secretaries Powell and
Rumsfeld. I also met and spoke regularly with the DCI about al-Qaida and terrorism.
Of course, we also had other
responsibilities. President Bush had set a broad foreign policy agenda. We were determined
to confront the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. We were improving America's
relations with the world's great powers. We had to change an Iraq policy that was making
no progress against a hostile regime which regularly shot at U.S. planes enforcing U.N.
Security Council Resolutions. And we had to deal with the occasional crisis, for instance,
when the crew of a Navy plane was detained in China for 11 days.
We also moved to develop a
new and comprehensive strategy to eliminate the al-Qaida terrorist network. President Bush
understood the threat, and he understood its importance. He made clear to us that he did
not want to respond to al-Qaida one attack at a time. He told me he was "tired of
swatting flies."
This new strategy was
developed over the Spring and Summer of 2001, and was approved by the President's senior
national security officials on September 4. 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-Qaida.
Although this National
Security Presidential Directive was originally a highly classified document, we arranged
for portions to be declassified to help the Commission in its work, and I will describe
some of those today. The strategy set as its goal the elimination of the al-Qaida network.
It ordered the leadership of relevant U.S. departments and agencies to make the
elimination of al-Qaida a high priority and to use all aspects of our national power - -
intelligence, financial, diplomatic, and military - - to meet this goal. And it gave
Cabinet Secretaries and department heads specific responsibilities. For instance:
It directed the Secretary of
State to work with other countries to end all sanctuaries given to al-Qaida.
It directed the Secretaries
of the Treasury and State to work with foreign governments to seize or freeze assets and
holdings of al-Qaida and its benefactors.
It directed the Director of
Central Intelligence to prepare an aggressive program of covert activities to disrupt
al-Qaida and provide assistance to anti-Taliban groups operating against al-Qaida in
Afghanistan.
It tasked the Director of
OMB with ensuring that sufficient funds were available in the budgets over the next five
years to meet the goals laid out in the strategy.
And it directed the
Secretary of Defense to - - and I quote - - "ensure that the contingency planning
process include plans: against al-Qaida and associated terrorist facilities in
Afghanistan, including leadership, command-control-communications, training, and logistics
facilities; against Taliban targets in Afghanistan, including leadership, command-control,
air and air defense, ground forces, and logistics; to eliminate weapons of mass
destruction which al-Qaida and associated terrorist groups may acquire or manufacture,
including those stored in underground bunkers." This was a change from the prior
strategy -- Presidential Decision Directive 62, signed in 1998 - - which ordered the
Secretary of Defense to provide transportation to bring individual terrorists to the U.S.
for trial, to protect DOD forces overseas, and to be prepared to respond to terrorist and
weapons of mass destruction incidents.
More importantly, we
recognized that no counterterrorism strategy could succeed in isolation. As you know from
the Pakistan and Afghanistan strategy documents that we made available to the Commission,
our counterterrorism strategy was part of a broader package of strategies that addressed
the complexities of the region.
Integrating our
counterterrorism and regional strategies was the most difficult and the most important
aspect of the new strategy to get right. Al-Qaida was both client of and patron to the
Taliban, which in turn was supported by Pakistan. Those relationships provided al-Qaida
with a powerful umbrella of protection, and we had to sever them. This was not easy.
Not that we hadn't tried.
Within a month of taking office, President Bush sent a strong, private message to
President Musharraf urging him to use his influence with the Taliban to bring Bin Laden to
justice and to close down al-Qaida training camps. Secretary Powell actively urged the
Pakistanis, including Musharraf himself, to abandon support for the Taliban. I met with
Pakistan's Foreign Minister in my office in June of 2001. I delivered a very tough
message, which was met with a rote, expressionless response.
America's al-Qaida 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. We recognized that America's
counterterrorism policy had to be connected to our regional strategies and to our overall
foreign policy.
To address these problems, I
made sure to involve key regional experts. I brought in Zalmay Khalilzad, an expert on
Afghanistan who, as a senior diplomat in the 1980s, had worked closely with the Afghan
Mujahedeen, helping them to turn back the Soviet invasion. I also ensured the
participation of the NSC experts on South Asia, as well as the Secretary of State and his
regional specialists. Together, we developed a new strategic approach to Afghanistan.
Instead of the intense focus on the Northern Alliance, we emphasized the importance of the
south - - the social and political heartland of the country. Our new approach to Pakistan
combined the use of carrots and sticks to persuade Pakistan to drop its support for the
Taliban. And we began to change our approach to India, to preserve stability on the
subcontinent.
While we were developing
this new strategy to deal with al-Qaida, we also made decisions on a number of specific
anti-al-Qaida initiatives that had been proposed by Dick Clarke. Many of these ideas had
been deferred by the last Administration, and some had been on the table since 1998. We
increased counterterror assistance to Uzbekistan; we bolstered the Treasury Department's
activities to track and seize terrorist assets; we increased funding for counterterrorism
activities across several agencies; and we moved quickly to arm Predator unmanned
surveillance vehicles for action against al-Qaida.
When threat reporting
increased during the Spring and Summer of 2001, we moved the U.S. Government at all levels
to a high state of alert and activity. Let me clear up any confusion about the
relationship between the development of our new strategy and the many actions we took to
respond to threats that summer. Policy development and crisis management require different
approaches. Throughout this period, we did both simultaneously.
For the essential crisis
management task, we depended on the Counterterrorism Security Group chaired by Dick Clarke
to be the interagency nerve center. The CSG consisted of senior counterterrorism experts
from CIA, the FBI, the Department of Justice, the Defense Department (including the Joint
Chiefs), the State Department, and the Secret Service. The CSG had met regularly for many
years, and its members had worked through numerous periods of heightened threat activity.
As threat information increased, the CSG met more frequently, sometimes daily, to review
and analyze the threat reporting and to coordinate actions in response. CSG members also
had ready access to their Cabinet Secretaries and could raise any concerns they had at the
highest levels.
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. Almost all of the reports focused on al-Qaida activities outside the
United States, especially in the Middle East and North Africa. In fact, the information
that was specific enough to be actionable referred to terrorist operations overseas. More
often, it was frustratingly vague. Let me read you some of the actual chatter that we
picked up that Spring and Summer:
"Unbelievable news in
coming weeks"
"Big event ... there
will be a very, very, very, very big uproar"
"There will be attacks
in the near future"
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.
In this context, I want to
address in some detail one of the briefing items we received, since its content has
frequently been mischaracterize. On August 6, 2001, the President's intelligence briefing
included a response to questions he had earlier raised about any al-Qaida intentions to
strike our homeland. The briefing item reviewed past intelligence reporting, mostly dating
from the 1990s, regarding possible al-Qaida plans to attack inside the United States. It
referred to uncorroborated reporting from 1998 that terrorists might attempt to hijack a
U.S. aircraft in an attempt to blackmail the government into releasing U.S.-held
terrorists who had participated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. 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.
Despite the fact that the
vast majority of the threat information we received was focused overseas, I was also
concerned about possible threats inside the United States. On July 5, Chief of Staff Andy
Card and I met with Dick Clarke, and I asked Dick to make sure that domestic agencies were
aware of the heightened threat period and were taking appropriate steps to respond, even
though we did not have specific threats to the homeland. Later that same day, Clarke
convened a special meeting of his CSG, as well as representatives from the FAA, the INS,
Customs, and the Coast Guard. At that meeting, these agencies were asked to take
additional measures to increase security and surveillance.
Throughout this period of
heightened threat information, we worked hard on multiple fronts to detect, protect
against, and disrupt any terrorist plans or operations that might lead to an attack. For
instance:
The Department of Defense
issued at least five urgent warnings to U.S. military forces that al-Qaida might be
planning a near-term attack, and placed our military forces in certain regions on
heightened alert.
The State Department issued
at least four urgent security advisories and public worldwide cautions on terrorist
threats, enhanced security measures at certain embassies, and warned the Taliban that they
would be held responsible for any al-Qaida attack on U.S. interests. The FBI issued
at least three nationwide warnings to Federal, State, and local law enforcement agencies,
and specifically stated that, although the vast majority of the information indicated
overseas targets, attacks against the homeland could not be ruled out. The FBI also tasked
all 56 of its U.S. Field Offices to increase surveillance of known or suspected terrorists
and reach out to known informants who might have information on terrorist activities.
The FAA issued at least five
Civil Aviation Security Information Circulars to all U.S. airlines and airport security
personnel, including specific warnings about the possibility of hijackings.
The CIA worked round the
clock to disrupt threats worldwide. Agency officials launched a wide-ranging disruption
effort against al-Qaida in more than 20 countries.
During this period, the Vice
President, DCI Tenet, and the NSC's Counterterrorism staff called senior foreign officials
requesting that they increase their intelligence assistance and report to us any relevant
threat information.
This is a brief sample of
our intense activity over the Summer of 2001.
Yet, as your hearings have
shown, there was no silver bullet that could have prevented the 9/11 attacks. In
hindsight, if anything might have helped stop 9/11, it would have been better information
about threats inside the United States, something made difficult by structural and legal
impediments that prevented the collection and sharing of information by our law
enforcement and intelligence agencies.
So the attacks came. A band
of vicious terrorists tried to decapitate our government, destroy our financial system,
and break the spirit of America. As an officer of government on duty that day, I will
never forget the sorrow and the anger I felt. Nor will I forget the courage and resilience
shown by the American people and the leadership of the President that day.
Now, we have an opportunity
and an obligation to move forward together. Bold and comprehensive changes are sometimes
only possible in the wake of catastrophic events - - events which create a new consensus
that allows us to transcend old ways of thinking and acting. Just as World War II led to a
fundamental reorganization of our national defense structure and to the creation of the
National Security Council, so has September 11th made possible sweeping changes in the
ways we protect our homeland.
President Bush is leading
the country during this time of crisis and change. He has unified and streamlined our
efforts to secure the American Homeland by creating the Department of Homeland Security,
established a new center to integrate and analyze terrorist threat information, directed
the transformation of the FBI into an agency dedicated to fighting terror, broken down the
bureaucratic walls and legal barriers that prevented the sharing of vital threat
information between our domestic law enforcement and our foreign intelligence agencies,
and, working with the Congress, given officials new tools, such as the USA PATRIOT Act, to
find and stop terrorists. And he has done all of this in a way that is consistent with
protecting America's cherished civil liberties and with preserving our character as a free
and open society.
But the President also
recognizes that our work is far from complete. More structural reform will likely be
necessary. Our intelligence gathering and analysis have improved dramatically in the last
two years, but they must be stronger still. The President and all of us in his
Administration welcome new ideas and fresh thinking. We are eager to do whatever is
necessary to protect the American people. And we look forward to receiving the
recommendations of this Commission.
We are at war and our
security as a nation depends on winning that war. We must and we will do everything we can
to harden terrorist targets within the United States. Dedicated law enforcement and
security professionals continue to risk their lives every day to make us all safer, and we
owe them a debt of gratitude. And, let's remember, those charged with protecting us from
attack have to succeed 100 percent of the time. To inflict devastation on a massive scale,
the terrorists only have to succeed once, and we know they are trying every day.
That is why we must address
the source of the problem. We must stay on offense, to find and defeat the terrorists
wherever they live, hide, and plot around the world. If we learned anything on September
11th, 2001, it is that we cannot wait while dangers gather.
After the September 11th
attacks, our Nation faced hard choices. We could fight a narrow war against al-Qaida and
the Taliban or we could fight a broad war against a global menace. We could seek a narrow
victory or we could work for a lasting peace and a better world. President Bush chose the
bolder course.
He recognizes that the War
on Terror is a broad war. Under his leadership, the United States and our allies are
disrupting terrorist operations, cutting off their funding, and hunting down terrorists
one-by-one. Their world is getting smaller. The terrorists have lost a home-base and
training camps in Afghanistan. The Governments of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia now pursue
them with energy and force.
We are confronting the nexus
between terror and weapons of mass destruction. We are working to stop the spread of
deadly weapons and prevent then from getting into the hands of terrorists, seizing
dangerous materials in transit, where necessary. Because we acted in Iraq, Saddam Hussein
will never again use weapons of mass destruction against his people or his neighbors. And
we have convinced Libya to give up all its WMD-related programs and materials.
And as we attack the threat
at its sources, we are also addressing its roots. Thanks to the bravery and skill of our
men and women in uniform, we removed from power two of the world's most brutal regimes --
sources of violence, and fear, and instability in the region. Today, along with many
allies, we are helping the people of Iraq and Afghanistan to build free societies. And we
are working with the people of the Middle East to spread the blessings of liberty and
democracy as the alternatives to instability, hatred, and terror. This work is hard and
dangerous, yet it is worthy of our effort and our sacrifice. The defeat of terror and the
success of freedom in those nations will serve the interests of our Nation and inspire
hope and encourage reform throughout the greater Middle East.
In the aftermath of
September 11th, those were the right choices for America to make -- the only choices that
can ensure the safety of our Nation in the decades to come.
Thank you. Now I am happy to
answer your questions.
KEAN: Thank you very much,
Dr. Rice. I appreciate your statement, your attendance and your service.
I have a couple of
questions. As we understand it, when you first came into office, you just been through a
very difficult campaign. In that campaign, neither the president nor the opponent, to the
best of my knowledge, ever mentioned al-Qaida. There had been almost no congressional
action or hearings about al-Qaida, very little bit in the newspapers.
And yet, you walk in and
Dick Clarke is talking about al-Qaida should be our number-one priority. Sandy Berger
tells you you'll be spending more time on that than anything else.
What did you think, and what
did you tell the president, as you get that kind of, I suppose, new information for you?
RICE: Well, in fact, Mr.
Chairman, it was not new information. I think we all knew about the 1998 bombings. We knew
that there was speculation that the 2000 Cole attack was al-Qaida. There had been, I
think, documentaries about Osama bin Laden.
I, myself, had written for
an introduction to a volume on bioterrorism done at Sanford that I thought that we wanted
not to wake up one day and find that Osama bin Laden had succeeded on our soil.
It was on the radar screen
of any person who studied or worked in the international security field.
But there is no doubt that I
think the briefing by Dick Clarke, the earlier briefing during the transition by Director
Tenet, and of course what we talked with about Sandy Berger, it gave you a heightened
sense of the problem and a sense that this was something that the United States had to
deal with.
I have to say that of course
there were other priorities. And indeed, in the briefings with the Clinton administration,
they emphasized other priorities: North Korea, the Middle East, the Balkans.
One doesn't have the luxury
of dealing only with one issue if you are the United States of America. There are many
urgent and important issues.
But we all had a strong
sense that this was a very crucial issue. The question was, what do you then do about it?
And the decision that we
made was to, first of all, have no drop-off in what the Clinton administration was doing,
because clearly they had done a lot of work to deal with this very important priority.
And so we kept the
counterterrorism team on board. We knew that George Tenet was there. We had the comfort of
knowing that Louis Freeh was there.
And then we set out -- I
talked to Dick Clarke almost immediately after his -- or, I should say, shortly after his
memo to me saying that al-Qaida was a major threat, we set out to try and craft a better
strategy.
But we were quite cognizant
of this group, of the fact that something had to be done.
I do think, early on in
these discussions, we asked a lot of questions about whether Osama bin Laden himself ought
to be so much the target of interest, or whether what was that going to do to the
organization if, in fact, he was put out of commission. And I remember very well the
director saying to President Bush, Well, it would help, but it would not stop attacks by
al-Qaida, nor destroy the network.
KEAN: I've got a question
now I'd like to ask you. It was given to me by a number of members of the families.
Did you ever see or hear
from the FBI, from the CIA, from any other intelligence agency, any memos or discussions
or anything else between the time you got into office and 9-11 that talked about using
planes as bombs?
RICE: Let me address this
question because it has been on the table.
I think that concern about
what I might have known or we might have known was provoked by some statements that I made
in a press conference. I was in a press conference to try and describe the August 6th
memo, which I've talked about here in my opening remarks and which I talked about with you
in the private session.
And I said, at one point,
that this was a historical memo, that it was -- it was not based on new threat
information. And I said, No one could have imagined them taking a plane, slamming it into
the Pentagon -- I'm paraphrasing now -- into the World Trade Center, using planes as a
missile.
As I said to you in the
private session, I probably should have said, I could not have imagined, because within
two days, people started to come to me and say, Oh, but there were these reports in 1998
and 1999. The intelligence community did look at information about this.
To the best of my knowledge,
Mr. Chairman, this kind of analysis about the use of airplanes as weapons actually was
never briefed to us.
I cannot tell you that there
might not have been a report here or a report there that reached somebody in our midst.
Part of the problem is --
and I think Sandy Berger made this point when he was asked the same question -- that you
have thousands of pieces of information -- car bombs and this method and that method --
and you have to depend to a certain degree on the intelligence agencies to sort to tell
you what is actually relevant, what is actually based on sound sources, what is
speculative.
RICE: And I can only assume
or believe that perhaps the intelligence agencies thought that the sourcing was
speculative.
All that I can tell you is
that it was not in the August 6th memo, using planes as a weapon. And I do not remember
any reports to us, a kind of strategic warning, that planes might be used as weapons. In
fact, there were some reports done in '98 and '99. I was certainly not aware of them at
the time that I spoke.
KEAN: You didn't see any
memos to you or any documents to you?
RICE: No, I did not.
KEAN: Some Americans have
wondered whether you or the president worried too much about Iraq in the days after the
9-11 attack and perhaps not enough about the fight ahead against al-Qaida.
We know that at the Camp
David meeting on the weekend of September 15th and 16th, the president rejected the idea
of immediate action against Iraq. Others have told that the president decided Afghanistan
had to come first.
We also know that, even
after those Camp David meetings, the administration was still readying plans for possible
action against Iraq.
So can you help us
understand where, in those early days after 9-11, the administration placed Iraq in the
strategy for responding to the attack?
RICE: Certainly. Let me
start with the period in which you're trying to figure out who did this to you.
And I think, given our
exceedingly hostile relationship with Iraq at the time -- this is, after all, a place that
tried to assassinate an American president, was still shooting at our planes in the no-fly
zone -- it was a reasonable question to ask whether, indeed, Iraq might have been behind
this.
I remember, later on, in a
conversation with Prime Minister Blair, President Bush also said that he wondered could it
have been Iran, because the attack was so sophisticated, was this really just a network
that had done this.
When we got to Camp David --
and let me just be very clear: In the days between September 11th and getting to Camp
David, I was with the president a lot. I know what was on his mind. What was on his mind
was follow-on attacks, trying to reassure the American people.
He virtually badgered poor
Larry Lindsey about when could we get Wall Street back up and running, because he didn't
want them to have succeeded against our financial system. We were concerned about air
security, and he worked very hard on trying to get particularly Reagan reopened. So there
was a lot on our minds.
But by the time that we got
to Camp David and began to plan for what we would do in response, what was rolled out on
the table was Afghanistan -- a map of Afghanistan.
And I will tell you, that
was a daunting enough task to figure out how to avoid some of the pitfalls that great
powers had in Afghanistan, mostly recently the Soviet Union and, of course, the British
before that.
There was a discussion of
Iraq. I think it was raised by Don Rumsfeld. It was pressed a bit by Paul Wolfowitz. Given
that this was a global war on terror, should we look not just at Afghanistan but should we
look at doing something against Iraq? There was a discussion of that.
The president listened to
all of his advisers. I can tell you that when he went around the table and asked his
advisers what he should do, not a single one of his principal advisers advised doing
anything against Iraq. It was all to Afghanistan.
When I got back to the White
House with the president, he laid out for me what he wanted to do. And one of the points,
after a long list of things about Afghanistan, a long list of things about protecting the
homeland, the president said that he wanted contingency plans against Iraq should Iraq act
against our interests.
There was a kind of concern
that they might try and take advantage of us in that period. They were still -- we were
still flying no-fly zones. And there was also, he said, in case we find that they were
behind 9-11, we should have contingency plans.
But this was not along the
lines of what later was discussed about Iraq, which was how to deal with Iraq on a grand
scale. This was really about -- we went to planning Afghanistan, you can look at what we
did. From that time on, this was about Afghanistan.
KEAN: So when Mr. Clarke
writes that the president pushed him to find a link between Iraq and the attack, is that
right? Was the president trying to twist the facts for an Iraqi war, or was he just
puzzled about what was behind this attack?
RICE: I don't remember the
discussion that Dick Clarke relates. Initially, he said that the president was wandering
the situation room -- this is in the book, I gather -- looking for something to do, and
they had a conversation. Later on, he said that he was pulled aside. So I don't know the
context of the discussion. I don't personally remember it.
But it's not surprising that
the president would say, What about Iraq, given our hostile relationship with Iraq. And
I'm quite certain that the president never pushed anybody to twist the facts.
KEAN: Congressman Hamilton?
HAMILTON: Thank you, Mr.
Chairman.
Dr. Rice, you've given us a
very strong statement, with regard to the actions taken by the administration in this
pre-9-11 period, and we appreciate that very much for the record.
I want to call to your
attention some comments and some events on the other side of that question and give you an
opportunity to respond.
You know very well that the
commission is focusing on this whole question of, what priority did the Clinton
administration and the Bush administration give to terrorism?
The president told Bob
Woodward that he did not feel that sense of urgency. I think that's a quote from his book,
or roughly a quote from Woodward's book.
The deputy director for
Central Intelligence, Mr. McLaughlin, told us that he was concerned about the pace of
policymaking in the summer of 2001, given the urgency of the threat.
The deputy secretary of
state, Mr. Armitage, was here and expressed his concerns about the speed of the process.
And if I recall, his comment is that, We weren't going fast enough. I think that's a
direct quote.
There was no response to the
Cole attack in the Clinton administration and none in the Bush administration.
Your public statements
focused largely on China and Russia and missile defense. You did make comments on
terrorism, but they were connected -- the link between terrorism and the rogue regimes,
like North Korea and Iran and Iraq.
And by our count here, there
were some 100 meetings by the national security principals before the first meeting was
held on terrorism, September 4th. And General Shelton, who was chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, said that terrorism had been pushed farther to the back burner.
Now, this is what we're
trying to assess. We have your statements. We have these other statements. And I know, as
I indicated in my opening comments, how difficult the role of the policymaker is and how
many things press upon you.
But I did want to give you
an opportunity to comment on some of these other matters.
RICE: Thank you very much,
Mr. Chairman.
Let me begin with the
Woodward quote, because that has gotten a lot of press. And I actually think that the
quote, put in context, gives a very different picture.
The question that the
president was asked by Mr. Woodward was,
Did you want to have bin
Laden killed before September 11th? That was the question.
The president said, Well, I
hadn't seen a plan to do that. I knew that we needed to -- I think the appropriate word is
'bring him to justice.' And, of course, this is something of a trick question in that
notion of self-defense which is appropriate for ...
I think you can see here a
president struggling with whether he ought to be talking about pre-9-11 attempts to kill
bin Laden. And so, that is the context for this quote.
And, quite frankly, I
remember the director sitting here and saying he didn't want to talk about authorities on
assassination. I think you can understand the discomfort of the president.
The president goes on. When
Bob Woodward says, Well, I don't mean it as a trick question; I'm just trying to your
state of mind, the president says, Let me put it this way. I was not -- there was a
significant difference in my attitude after September 11th. I was not on point, but I knew
he was a menace and I knew he was a problem. I knew he was responsible. We felt he was
responsible for bombings that had killed Americans. And I was prepared to look at a plan
that would be a thoughtful plan that would bring him to justice and would have given the
order to do just that.
I have no hesitancy about
going after him, but I didn't feel that sense of urgency and my blood was not nearly as
boiling. Whose blood was nearly as boiling prior to September 11th?
And I think the context
helps here.
It is also the case that the
president had been told by the director of central intelligence that it was not going to
be a silver bullet to kill bin Laden, that you had to do much more.
And, in fact, I think that
some of us felt that the focus, so much focus, on what you did with bin Laden, not what
you did with the network, not what you did with the regional circumstances, might, in
fact, have been misplaced.
So I think the president is
responding to go a specific set of questions.
All that I can tell you is
that what the president wanted was a plan to eliminate al-Qaida so he could stop swatting
at flies. He knew that we had in place the same crisis-management mechanism, indeed the
same personnel, that the Clinton administration, which clearly thought it a very high
priority, had in place.
And so, I think that he saw
the priority as continuing the current operations and then getting a plan in place.
Now, as to the number of
PCs. I'm sorry, there is some difference in our records here.
RICE: We show 33 Principals
Committee meetings during this period of time, not 100. We show that three of those dealt
at least partially with issues of terrorism not related to al-Qaida. And so we can check
the numbers, but we have looked at our files and we show 33, not 100.
The quotes by others about
how the process is moving, again, it's important to realize that had parallel tracks here.
We were continuing to do what the Clinton administration had been doing under all the same
authorities that were operating. George Tenet was continuing to try to disrupt al-Qaida.
We were continuing the diplomatic efforts.
But we did want to take the
time to get in place a policy that was more strategic toward al-Qaida, more robust. It
takes some time to think about how to reorient your policy toward Pakistan. It takes some
time to think about how to have a more effective policy toward Afghanistan. It
particularly takes some time when you don't get your people on board for several months.
So I understand that there
are those who have said they felt it wasn't moving along fast enough. I talked to George
Tenet about this at least every couple of weeks, sometimes more often. How can we move
forward on the Predator? What do you want to do about the Northern Alliance? So I think we
were putting the energy into it.
And I should just make one
other point, Mr. Hamilton, if you don't mind, which is that we also moved forward on some
of the specific ideas that Dick Clarke had put forward prior to completing the strategy
review. We increased assistance to Uzbekistan, for instance, which had been one of the
recommendations. We moved along the armed Predator, the development of the armed Predator.
We increased counterterrorism funding.
But there were a couple of
things that we did not want to do.
I'm now convinced that,
while nothing that in this strategy would have done anything about 9-11, if we had, in
fact, moved on the things that were in the original memos that we got from our
counterterrorism people, we might have even gone off course, because it was very Northern
Alliance-focused. That was going to cause a huge problem with Pakistan. It was not going
to put us in the center of action in Afghanistan, which is the south.
And so, we simply had to
take some time to get this right. But I think we need not confuse that with either what we
did during the threat period where we were urgently working the operational issues every
day or with the continuation of the Clinton policy.
HAMILTON: Well, I thank you
for a careful answer.
Another question. At the end
of the day, of course, we were unable to protect our people. And you suggest in your
statement -- and I want you to elaborate on this, if you want to -- that in hindsight it
would have been -- better information about the threats would have been the single -- the
single most important thing for us to have done, from your point of view, prior to 9-11,
would have been better intelligence, better information about the threats.
Is that right? Are there
other things that you think stand out?
RICE: Well, Mr. Chairman, I
took an oath of office on the day that I took this job to protect and defend. And like
most government officials, I take it very seriously. And so, as you might imagine, I've
asked myself a thousand times what more we could have done.
I know that, had we thought
that there was an attack coming in Washington or New York, we would have moved heaven and
earth to try and stop it. And I know that there was no single thing that might have
prevented that attack.
In looking back, I believe
that the absence of light, so to speak, on what was going on inside the country, the
inability to connect the dots, was really structural. We couldn't be dependent on chance
that something might come together.
And the legal impediments
and the bureaucratic impediments -- but I want to emphasize the legal impediments. To keep
the FBI and the CIA from functioning really as one, so that there was no seam between
domestic and foreign intelligence, was probably the greatest one.
The director of central
intelligence and I think Director Freeh had an excellent relationship. They were trying
hard to bridge that seam. I know that Louis Freeh had developed legal attaches abroad to
try to help bridge that.
But when it came right down
to it, this country, for reasons of history and culture and therefore law, had an allergy
to the notion of domestic intelligence, and we were organized on that basis. And it just
made it very hard to have all of the pieces come together.
We've made good changes
since then. I think that having a Homeland Security Department that can bring together the
FAA and the INS and Customs and all of the various agencies is a very important step.
I think that the creation of
the terrorism threat information center, which brings together all of the intelligence
from various aspects, is a very important step forward.
Clearly, the Patriot Act,
which has allowed the kind of sharing, indeed demands the kind of sharing between
intelligence agencies, including the FBI and the CIA, is a very big step forward.
I think one thing that we
will learn from you is whether the structural work is done.
HAMILTON: Final question
would be: One of your sentences kind of jumped out at me in your statement, and that was
on page 9, where you said, We must address the source of the problem.
I'm very concerned about
that. I was pleased to see it in your statement. And I'm very worried about the threat of
terrorism, as I know you are, over a very long period of time -- a generation or more.
There are a lot of very,
very fine -- 2 billion Muslims. Most of them, we know, are very fine people. Some don't
like us; they hate us. They don't like what modernization does to their culture. They
don't like the fact that economic prosperity has passed them by. They don't like some of
the policies of the United States government. They don't like the way their own
governments treat them.
And I'd like you to
elaborate a little bit, if you would, on how we get at the source of the problem. How do
we get at this discontent, this dislocation, if you would, across a big swathe of the
Islamic world?
RICE: I believe very
strongly, and the president believes very strongly, that this is really the generational
challenge. The kinds of issues that you are addressing have to be addressed, but we're not
going to see success on our watch.
We will see some small
victories on our watch. One of the most difficult problems in the Middle East is that the
United States has been associated for a long time, decades, with a policy that looks the
other way on the freedom deficit in the Middle East, that looks the other way at the
absence of individual liberties in the Middle East.
And I think that that has
tended to alienate us from the populations of the Middle East. And when the president, at
White Hall in London, said that that was no longer going to be the stance of the United
States, we were expecting more from our friends, we were going to try and engage those in
those in those countries who wanted to have a different kind of Middle East, I believe
that he was resonating with trends that are there in the Middle East. There are reformist
trends in places like Bahrain and Jordan. And recently there was a marvelous conference in
Alexandria in Egypt, where reform was actually was on the agenda.
So it's going to be a slow
process. We know that the building of democracy is tough. It doesn't come easily. We have
our own history. When our Founding Fathers said, We the people, they didn't mean me. It's
taken us a while to get to a multiethnic democracy that works.
But if America is avowedly
values-centered in its foreign policy, we do better than when we do not stand up for those
values.
So I think that it's going
to be very hard. It's going to take time.
One of the things that we've
been very interested, for instance, in is issues of educational reform in some of these
countries. As you know, the madrassas are a big difficulty. I've met, myself, personally
two or three times with the Pakistani -- a wonderful woman who's the Pakistani education
minister.
We can't do it for them.
They have to have it for themselves, but we have to stand for those values.
And over the long run, we
will change -- I believe we will change the nature of the Middle East, particularly if
there are examples that this can work in the Middle East.
And this is why Iraq is so
important. The Iraqi people are struggling to find a way to create a multiethnic democracy
that works. And it's going to be hard.
And if we stay with them,
and when they succeed, I think we will have made a big change -- they will have made a big
change in the middle of the Arab world, and we will be on our way to addressing the
source.
HAMILTON: Thank you, Dr.
Rice.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
KEAN: Thank you.
Commissioner Ben-Veniste.
BEN-VENISTE: Good morning,
Dr. Rice.
RICE: Good morning.
BEN-VENISTE: Nice to see you
again.
RICE: Nice to see you.
BEN-VENISTE: I want to ask
you some questions about the August 6, 2001, PDB. We had been advised in writing by CIA on
March 19, 2004, that the August 6th PDB was prepared and self-generated by a CIA employee.
Following Director Tenet's testimony on March 26th before us, the CIA clarified its
version of events, saying that questions by the president prompted them to prepare the
August 6th PDB.
Now, you have said to us in
our meeting together earlier in February, that the president directed the CIA to prepare
the August 6th PDB.
The extraordinary high
terrorist attack threat level in the summer of 2001 is well-documented. And Richard
Clarke's testimony about the possibility of an attack against the United States homeland
was repeatedly discussed from May to August within the intelligence community, and that is
well-documented.
You acknowledged to us in
your interview of February 7, 2004, that Richard Clarke told you that al-Qaida cells were
in the United States.
BEN-VENISTE: Did you tell
the president, at any time prior to August 6th, of the existence of al-Qaida cells in the
United States?
RICE: First, let me just
make certain ...
BEN-VENISTE: If you could
just answer that question, because I only have a very limited ...
RICE: I understand,
Commissioner, but it's important ...
BEN-VENISTE: Did you tell
the president ...
RICE: ... that I also
address ...
(APPLAUSE)
It's also important that,
Commissioner, that I address the other issues that you have raised. So I will do it
quickly, but if you'll just give me a moment.
BEN-VENISTE: Well, my only
question to you is whether you ...
RICE: I understand,
Commissioner, but I will ...
BEN-VENISTE: ... told the
president.
RICE: If you'll just give me
a moment, I will address fully the questions that you've asked.
First of all, yes, the
August 6th PDB was in response to questions of the president -- and that since he asked
that this be done. It was not a particular threat report. And there was historical
information in there about various aspects of al-Qaida's operations.
Dick Clarke had told me, I
think in a memorandum -- I remember it as being only a line or two -- that there were
al-Qaida cells in the United States.
Now, the question is, what
did we need to do about that?
And I also understood that
that was what the FBI was doing, that the FBI was pursuing these al-Qaida cells. I believe
in the August 6th memorandum it says that there were 70 full field investigations under
way of these cells. And so there was no recommendation that we do something about this;
the FBI was pursuing it.
I really don't remember,
Commissioner, whether I discussed this with the president.
BEN-VENISTE: Thank you.
RICE: I remember very well
that the president was aware that there were issues inside the United States. He talked to
people about this. But I don't remember the al-Qaida cells as being something that we were
told we needed to do something about.
BEN-VENISTE: Isn't it a
fact, Dr. Rice, that the August 6th PDB warned against possible attacks in this country?
And I ask you whether you recall the title of that PDB?
RICE: I believe the title
was, Bin Laden Determined to Attack Inside the United States.
Now, the ...
BEN-VENISTE: Thank you.
RICE: No, Mr. Ben-Veniste
...
BEN-VENISTE: I will get into
the ...
RICE: I would like to finish
my point here.
BEN-VENISTE: I didn't know
there was a point.
RICE: Given that -- you
asked me whether or not it warned of attacks.
BEN-VENISTE: I asked you
what the title was.
RICE: You said, did it not
warn of attacks. It did not warn of attacks inside the United States. It was historical
information based on old reporting. There was no new threat information. And it did not,
in fact, warn of any coming attacks inside the United States.
BEN-VENISTE: Now, you knew
by August 2001 of al-Qaida involvement in the first World Trade Center bombing, is that
correct?
You knew that in 1999, late
'99, in the millennium threat period, that we had thwarted an al-Qaida attempt to blow up
Los Angeles International Airport and thwarted cells operating in Brooklyn, New York, and
Boston, Massachusetts.
As of the August 6th
briefing, you learned that al-Qaida members have resided or traveled to the United States
for years and maintained a support system in the United States.
And you learned that FBI
information since the 1998 blind sheik warning of hijackings to free the blind sheik
indicated a pattern of suspicious activity in the country up until August 6th consistent
with preparation for hijackings. Isn't that so?
RICE: Do you have other
questions that you want me to answer as a part of the sequence?
BEN-VENISTE: Well, did you
not -- you have indicated here that this was some historical document. And I am asking you
whether it is not the case that you learned in the PDB memo of August 6th that the FBI was
saying that it had information suggesting that preparations -- not historically, but
ongoing, along with these numerous full field investigations against al-Qaida cells, that
preparations were being made consistent with hijackings within the United States?
RICE: What the August 6th
PDB said, and perhaps I should read it to you...
BEN-VENISTE: We would be
happy to have it declassified in full at this time, including its title.
(APPLAUSE)
RICE: I believe, Mr.
Ben-Veniste, that you've had access to this PDB. But let me just...
BEN-VENISTE: But we have not
had it declassified so that it can be shown publicly, as you know.
RICE: I believe you've had
access to this PDB -- exceptional access. But let me address your question.
BEN-VENISTE: Nor could we,
prior to today, reveal the title of that PDB.
RICE: May I address the
question, sir?
The fact is that this August
6th PDB was in response to the president's questions about whether or not something might
happen or something might be planned by al-Qaida inside the United States. He asked
because all of the threat reporting or the threat reporting that was actionable was about
the threats abroad, not about the United States.
This particular PDB had a
long section on what bin Laden had wanted to do -- speculative, much of it -- in '97, '98;
that he had, in fact, liked the results of the 1993 bombing.
RICE: It had a number of
discussions of -- it had a discussion of whether or not they might use hijacking to try
and free a prisoner who was being held in the United States -- Ressam. It reported that
the FBI had full field investigations under way.
And we checked on the issue
of whether or not there was something going on with surveillance of buildings, and we were
told, I believe, that the issue was the courthouse in which this might take place.
Commissioner, this was not a
warning. This was a historic memo -- historical memo prepared by the agency because the
president was asking questions about what we knew about the inside.
BEN-VENISTE: Well, if you
are willing ...
RICE: Now, we had already
taken ...
BEN-VENISTE: If you are
willing to declassify that document, then others can make up their minds about it.
Let me ask you a general
matter, beyond the fact that this memorandum provided information, not speculative, but
based on intelligence information, that bin Laden had threatened to attack the United
States and specifically Washington, D.C.
There was nothing
reassuring, was there, in that PDB?
RICE: Certainly not. There
was nothing reassuring.
But I can also tell you that
there was nothing in this memo that suggested that an attack was coming on New York or
Washington, D.C. There was nothing in this memo as to time, place, how or where. This was
not a threat report to the president or a threat report to me.
BEN-VENISTE: We agree that
there were no specifics. Let me move on, if I may.
RICE: There were no
specifics, and, in fact, the country had already taken steps through the FAA to warn of
potential hijackings. The country had already taken steps through the FBI to task their 56
field offices to increase their activity. The country had taken the steps that it could
given that there was no threat reporting about what might happen inside the United States.
BEN-VENISTE: We have
explored that and we will continue to with respect to the muscularity and the specifics of
those efforts.
The president was in
Crawford, Texas, at the time he received the PDB, you were not with him, correct?
RICE: That is correct.
BEN-VENISTE: Now, was the
president, in words or substance, alarmed or in any way motivated to take any action, such
as meeting with the director of the FBI, meeting with the attorney general, as a result of
receiving the information contained in the PDB?
RICE: I want to repeat that
when this document was presented, it was presented as, yes, there were some frightening
things -- and by the way, I was not at Crawford, but the president and I were in contact
and I might have even been, though I can't remember, with him by video link during that
time.
The president was told this
is historical information. I'm told he was told this is historical information and there
was nothing actionable in this. The president knew that the FBI was pursuing this issue.
The president knew that the director of central intelligence was pursuing this issue. And
there was no new threat information in this document to pursue.
BEN-VENISTE: Final question,
because my time has almost expired.
Do you believe that, had the
president taken action to issue a directive to the director of CIA to ensure that the FBI
had pulsed the agency, to make sure that any information which we know now had been
collected was transmitted to the director, that the president might have been able to
receive information from CIA with respect to the fact that two al-Qaida operatives who
took part in the 9-11 catastrophe were in the United States -- Alhazmi and Almidhar; and
that Moussaoui, who Dick Clarke was never even made aware of, who had jihadist
connections, who the FBI had arrested, and who had been in a flight school in Minnesota
trying to learn the avionics of a commercial jetliner despite the fact that he had no
training previously, had no explanation for the funds in his bank account, and no
explanation for why he was in the United States -- would that have possibly, in your view,
in hindsight, made a difference in the ability to collect this information, shake the
trees, as Richard Clarke had said, and possibly, possibly interrupt the plotters?
RICE: My view, Commissioner
Ben-Veniste, as I said to Chairman Kean, is that, first of all, the director of central
intelligence and the director of the FBI, given the level of threat, were doing what they
thought they could do to deal with the threat that we faced.
There was no threat
reporting of any substance about an attack coming in the United States.
RICE: And the director of
the FBI and the director of the CIA, had they received information, I am quite certain --
given that the director of the CIA met frequently face to face with the president of the
United States -- that he would have made that available to the president or to me.
I do not believe that it is
a good analysis to go back and assume that somehow maybe we would have gotten lucky by,
quote, shaking the trees. Dick Clarke was shaking the trees, director of central
intelligence was shaking the trees, director of the FBI was shaking the trees. We had a
structural problem in the United States.
BEN-VENISTE: Did the
president meet with the director of the FBI?
RICE: We had a structural
problem in the United States, and that structural problem was that we did not share
domestic and foreign intelligence in a way to make a product for policymakers, for good
reasons -- for legal reasons, for cultural reasons -- a product that people could depend
upon.
BEN-VENISTE: Did the
president meet with the director of ...
KEAN: Commissioner, we got
to move on ...
BEN-VENISTE: ... the FBI
between August 6th and September 11th?
KEAN: ... to Commissioner
Fielding.
RICE: I will have to get
back to you on that. I am not certain.
KEAN: Commissioner Fielding?
FIELDING: Thank you, Mr.
Chairman.
Dr. Rice, good morning.
RICE: Good morning.
FIELDING: Thank you for
being here, and thank you for all your service presently and in the past to your country.
RICE: Thank you.
FIELDING: As you know, our
task is to assemble facts in order to inform ourselves and then ultimately to inform the
American public of the cause of this horrible event, and also to make recommendations to
mitigate against the possibility that there will ever be another terrorist triumph on our
homeland or against our people.
And as we do this with the
aid of testimony of people like yourself, of course there will be some discrepancies, as
there always will, and we will have to try as best we can to resolve those discrepancies.
And obviously that's an important thing for us to do.
But as important as that
ultimately might be, it also is our responsibility to really come up with ways, and valid
ways, to prevent another intelligence failure like we suffered. And I don't think anybody
will kid ourselves that we didn't suffer one.
So we must try to look at
the systems and the policies that were in place and to evaluate them and to see -- getting
a view of the landscape, and I know it's difficult to do it through a pre-9-11 lens, but
we must try to do that, so that we can do better the next time.
And I'd like to follow up
with a couple of areas with that sort of specificity, and one is the one that you were
just discussing with Commissioner Ben-Veniste.
We've all heard over the
years the problem between the CIA, the FBI, coordination, et cetera. And you made
reference to an introduction you'd done to a book, but you also, in October 2000, while
you were a part of the campaign team for candidate Bush, you told a radio station, WJR,
which is in Detroit, you're talking about the threat and how to deal with al-Qaida.
And if I may quote, you
said, Osama bin Laden, the first is you really have to get intelligence agencies better
organized to deal with the terrorist threat to the United States itself. One of the
problems that we have is kind of a split responsibility, of course, between the CIA and
foreign intelligence and the FBI and domestic intelligence. There needs to be better
cooperation, because we don't want to wake up one day and find that Osama bin Laden has
been successful on our territory, end of your quote.
Well, in fact, sadly, we did
wake up and that did happen.
And obviously, there is a
systemic problem.
And what I'd really like you
to address right now is what steps were taken by you and the administration, to your
knowledge, in the first several months of the administration to assess and address this
problem?
RICE: Well, thank you.
We did have a structural
problem, and structural problems take some time to address.
We did have a national
security policy directive asking the CIA, through the foreign intelligence board, headed
by Brent Scowcroft, to review its intelligence activities, the way that it gathered
intelligence. And that was a study that was to be completed.
The vice president was, a
little later in, I think, in May, tasked by the president to put together a group to look
at all of the recommendations that had been made about domestic preparedness and all of
the questions associated with that; to take the Gilmore report and the Hart-Rudman report
and so forth and to try to make recommendations about what might have been done.
We were in office 233 days.
And the kinds of structural changes that have been needed by this country for some time
did not get made in that period of time.
I'm told that after the
millennium plot was discovered, that there was an after-action report done and that some
steps were taken. To my recollection, that was not briefed to us during the transition
period or during the threat spike.
But clearly, what needed to
be done was that we needed systems in place that would bring all of this together. It is
not enough to leave this to chance.
If you look at this period,
I think you see that everybody -- the director of the CIA -- Louis Freeh had left, but the
key counterterrorism person was a part of Dick Clarke's group.
And with meeting with him
and, I'm sure, shaking the trees and doing all of the things that you would want people to
do, we were being given reports all the time that they were doing everything they could.
But there was a systemic problem in getting that kind of shared intelligence.
One of the first things that
Bob Mueller did post-9-11 was to recognize that the issue of prevention meant that you had
to break down some of the walls between criminal and counterterrorism, between criminal
and intelligence.
RICE: The way that we went
about this was to have individual cases where you were trying to build a criminal case,
individual offices with responsibility for those cases. Much was not coming to the FBI in
a way that it could then engage the policymakers.
So these were big structural
reforms. We did some things to try and get the CIA reforming. We did some things to try
and get a better sense of how to put all of this together.
But structural reform is
hard, and in seven months we didn't have time to make the changes that were necessary. We
made them almost immediately after September 11th.
FIELDING: Well, would you
consider the problem as solved today?
RICE: I would not consider
the problem solved. I believe that we have made some very important structural changes.
The creation of a Department
of Homeland Security is an absolutely critical issue, because the Department of Homeland
Security brings together INS and the Customs Department and the border people and all of
the people who were scattered -- Customs and Treasury and INS and Justice and so forth --
brings them together in a way that a single secretary is looking after the homeland every
day.
He's looking at what
infrastructure needs to be protected. He's looking at what state and local governments
need to do their work. That is an extremely important innovation.
I hope that he will have the
freedom to manage that organization in a way that will make it fully effective, because
there are a lot of issues for Congress in how that's managed.
We have created a threat
terrorism information center, the TTIC, which does bring together all of the sources of
information from all of the intelligence agencies -- the FBI and the Department of
Homeland Security and the INS and the CIA and the DIA -- so that there's one place where
all of this is coming together.
And of course the Patriot
Act, which permits the kind of sharing that we need between the CIA and the FBI, is also
an important innovation.
But I would be the first to
tell you -- I'm a student of institutional change. I know that you get few chances to make
really transformative institutional change.
And I think that when we've
heard from this commission and others who are working on other pieces of the problem,
like, for instance, the issues of intelligence and weapons of mass destruction, that this
president will be open to new ideas.
I really don't believe that
all of our work is done, despite the tremendous progress that we've made thus far.
FIELDING: Well, I promise
you that we're going to respond to that, because that is really a problem that's bothering
us, is that it doesn't appear to us, even with the changes up until now, that it's solved
the institutional versus institutional issues, which -- maybe it has, but, you know, it's
of grave concern to us.
I would also ask -- I don't
want to take the time today, but I would ask that you provide our commission, if you would
with your analysis on the MI-5 issue. As you know, it's something we're going to have to
deal with, and we're taking all information aboard that we may. So we'd appreciate that if
you could supply that to us.
RICE: I appreciate that.
I want to be very clear. I
think that we've made very important changes. I think that they are helping us
tremendously.
Every day now in the Oval
Office in the morning, the FBI director and the CIA director sit with the president,
sharing information in ways that they would have been prohibited to share that information
before.
So very important changes
have taken place. We need to see them mature. We need to know how it's working. But we
also have to be open to see what more needs to be done.
FIELDING: It may be solved
at the top. We've got to make sure it's solved at the bottom.
RICE: I agree completely.
FIELDING: And kind of
related to that, we've heard testimony, a great deal of it, about the coordination that
took place during the millennium threat in 1999 where there were a series of principals
meetings and a lot of activity, as we are told, which stopped and prevented incidents. It
was a success. It was an intelligence success. And there had to be domestic coordination
with foreign intelligence, but it seemed to work.
The time ended, the threat
ended, and apparently the guard was let down a little, too, as the threat diminished.
Now, we've also heard
testimony about what we would call the summer threat, the spike threat, whatever it is in
2001. A lot of chatter -- you shared some of it with us directly -- a lot of traffic, and
a lot of threats.
And during that period --
actually you put in context, I guess it was the first draft of the NSPD was circulated to
deputies. But right then, when that was happening, the threats were coming in, and it's
been described as a crescendo and hair on fire and all these different things.
At that time the CSG handled
the alert, if you will. And we've heard testimony about Clarke warning you and the NSC
that State and CIA and the Pentagon had concerns and were convinced there was going to be
a major terrorist attack.
On July 5th, I believe it
was, domestic agencies, including the FBI and the FAA, were briefed by the White House.
Alerts were issued. The next day, the CIA told the CSG participants, and I think they said
they believed the upcoming attack would be spectacular, something quantitatively different
from anything that had been done to date.
So everybody was worried
about it. Everybody was concentrating on it. And then later the crescendo ended, and again
it abated.
But of course, that time the
end of the story wasn't pleasant.
FIELDING: Now, during this
period of time, what -- and I'd like you to just respond to several points -- what
involvement did you have in this alert? And how did it come about that the CSG was
handling this thing as opposed to the principals?
Because candidly it's been
suggested that the difference between the 1999 handling and this one was that you didn't
have the principals dealing with it; therefore, it wasn't given the priority; therefore,
the people weren't forced to do what they would otherwise have done, et cetera. You've
heard the same things I've heard.
And would it have made a
real difference in enhancing the exchange of intelligence, for instance, if it had been
the principals?
I would like your comments,
both on your involvement and your comments to that question. Thank you.
RICE: Of course. Let me
start by talking about what we were doing and the structure we used. I've mentioned this.
The CSG, yes, was the
counterterrorism group, was the nerve center, if you will. And that's been true through
all crises. I think it was, in fact, a nerve center as well during the millennium, that
they were the counterterrorism experts, they were able to get together. They got together
frequently. They came up with taskings that needed to be done.
I would say that if you look
at the list of taskings that they came up with, it reflected the fact that the threat
information was from abroad. It was that the agencies like the Department of State needed
to make clear to Americans traveling abroad that there was a danger, that embassies needed
to be on alert, that our force protection needed to be strong for our military forces.
The Central Intelligence
Agency was asked to do some things. It was very foreign policy or foreign threat-based as
well. And of course, the warning to the FBI to go out and task their field agents.
RICE: The CSG was made up of
not junior people, but the top level of counterterrorism experts. Now, they were in
contact with their principals.
Dick Clarke was in contact
with me quite frequently during this period of time. When the CSG would meet, he would
come back usually through e-mail, sometimes personally, and say, here's what we've done. I
would talk everyday, several times a day, with George Tenet about what the threat spike
looked like.
In fact, George Tenet was
meeting with the president during this period of time so the president was hearing
directly about what was being done about the threats to -- the only really specific
threats we had -- to Genoa, to the Persian Gulf, there was one to Israel. So the president
was hearing what was being done.
The CSG was the nerve
center. But I just don't believe that bringing the principals over to the White House
every day and having their counterterrorism people have to come with them and be pulled
away from what they were doing to disrupt was a good way to go about this. It wasn't an
efficient way to go about it.
I talked to Powell, I talked
to Rumsfeld about what was happening with the threats and with the alerts. I talked to
George. I asked that the attorney general be briefed, because even though there were no
domestic threats, I didn't want him to be without that briefing.
It's also the case that I
think if you actually look back at the millennium period, it's questionable to me whether
the argument that has been made that somehow shaking the trees is what broke up the
millennium period is actually accurate -- and I was not there, clearly.
But I will tell you this. I
will say this. That the millennium, of course, was a period of high threat by its very
nature. We all knew that the millennium was a period of high threat.
And after September 11th,
Dick Clarke sent us the after-action report that had been done after the millennium plot
and their assessment was that Ressam had been caught by chance -- Ressam being the person
who was entering the United States over the Canadian border with bomb-making materials in
store.
I think it actually wasn't
by chance, which was Washington's view of it. It was because a very alert customs agent
named Diana Dean and her colleagues sniffed something about Ressam. They saw that
something was wrong. They tried to apprehend him. He tried to run. They then apprehended
him, found that there was bomb-making material and a map of Los Angeles.
Now, at that point, you have
pretty clear indication that you've got a problem inside the United States.
I don't think it was shaking
the trees that produced the breakthrough in the millennium plot. It was that you got a --
Dick Clarke would say a lucky break -- I would say you got an alert customs agent who got
it right.
And the interesting thing is
that I've checked with Customs and according to their records, they weren't actually on
alert at that point.
So I just don't buy the
argument that we weren't shaking the trees enough and that something was going to fall out
that gave us somehow that little piece of information that would have led to connecting
all of those dots.
In any case, you cannot be
dependent on the chance that something might come together. That's why the structural
reforms are important.
And the president of the
United States had us at battle station during this period of time. He expected his
secretary of state to be locking down embassies. He expected his secretary of defense to
be providing force protection.
RICE: He expected his FBI
director to be tasking his agents and getting people out there. He expected his director
of central intelligence to be out and doing what needed to be done in terms of disruption,
and he expected his national security adviser to be looking to see that -- or talking to
people to see that that was done.
But I think we've created a
kind of false impression -- or a not quite correct impression -- of how one does this in
the threat period. I might just add that during the China period, the 11 days of the China
crisis, I also didn't have a principals meeting.
FIELDING: Thank you, Dr.
Rice.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
KEAN: Thank you,
Commissioner Fielding.
Commissioner Gorelick?
GORELICK: Dr. Rice, thank
you for being here today.
I'd like to pick up where
Fred Fielding and you left off, which is this issue of the extent to which raising the
level to the Cabinet level and bringing people together makes a difference.
And let me just give you
some facts as I see them and let you comment on them.
First of all, while it may
be that Dick Clarke was informing you, many of the other people at the CSG-level, and the
people who were brought to the table from the domestic agencies, were not telling their
principals.
Secretary Mineta, the
secretary of transportation, had no idea of the threat. The administrator of the FAA,
responsible for security on our airlines, had no idea. Yes, the attorney general was
briefed, but there was no evidence of any activity by him about this.
You indicate in your
statement that the FBI tasked its field offices to find out what was going on out there.
We have no record of that.
The Washington field office
international terrorism people say they never heard about the threat, they never heard
about the warnings, they were not asked to come to the table and shake those trees.
SACs, special agents in
charge, around the country -- Miami in particular -- no knowledge of this.
And so, I really come back
to you -- and let me add one other thing. Have you actually looked at the -- analyzed the
messages that the FBI put out?
RICE: Yes.
GORELICK: To me, and you're
free to comment on them, they are feckless. They don't tell anybody anything. They don't
bring anyone to battle stations.
And I personally believe,
having heard Coleen Rowley's testimony about her frustrations in the Moussaoui incident,
that if someone had really gone out to the agents who were working these issues on the
ground and said, We are at battle stations. We need to know what's happening out there.
Come to us, she would have broken through barriers to have that happen, because she was
knocking on doors and they weren't opening.
(APPLAUSE)
So I just ask you this
question as a student of government myself, because I don't believe it's functionally
equivalent to have people three, four, five levels down in an agency working an issue even
if there's a specialist. And you get a greater degree of intensity when it comes from the
top. And I would like to give you the opportunity to comment on this, because it bothers
me.
RICE: Of course.
First of all, it was coming
from the top because the president was meeting with his director of central intelligence.
And one of the changes that this president made was to meet face to face with his director
of central intelligence almost every day.
I can assure you, knowing
government, that that was well understood at the Central Intelligence Agency, that now
their director, the DCI had direct access to the president.
Yes, the president met with
the director of the FBI -- I'll have to see when and how many times -- but of course he
did, and with the attorney general and with others.
But in a threat period --
and I don't think it's a proper characterization of the CSG to say that it was four or
five levels down, these were people who had been together in numerous crises before and it
was their responsibility to develop plans for how to respond to a threat.
Now, I would be speculating,
but if you would like, I will go ahead and speculate to say that one of the problems here
was there really was nothing that looked like it was going to happen inside the United
States.
The threat reporting was --
the specific threat reporting was about external threats: about the Persian Gulf, about
Israel, about perhaps the Genoa event.
It is just not the case that
the August 6th memorandum did anything but put together what the CIA decided that they
wanted to put together about historical knowledge about what was going on and a few things
about what the FBI might be doing.
And so, the light was
shining abroad. And if you look at what was going -- I was in constant contact to make
sure that those things were getting done with the relevant agencies -- with State, with
Defense and so forth.
GORELICK: Now ...
RICE: We just have a
different view of this.
GORELICK: Yes, I understand
that. But I think it's one thing to talk to George Tenet, but he can't tell domestic
agencies what to do.
Let me finish.
RICE: Yes.
GORELICK: And it is clear
that you were worried about the domestic problem, because, after all, your testimony is
you asked Dick Clarke to summons the domestic agencies.
Now, you say that -- and I
think quite rightly -- that the big problem was systemic, that the FBI could not function
as it should, and it didn't have the right methods of communicating with the CIA and vice
versa.
At the outset of the
administration, a commission that was chartered by Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich, two
very different people covering pretty much the political spectrum, put together a terrific
panel to study the issue of terrorism and report to the new administration as it began.
And you took that briefing, I know.
That commission said we are
going to get hit in the domestic, the United States, and we are going to get hit big;
that's number one. And number two, we have big systemic problems. The FBI doesn't work the
way it should, and it doesn't communicate with the intelligence community. rice1629-----
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04-08-2004 11:08
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GORELICK: Now, you have said
to us that your policy review was meant to be comprehensive. You took your time because
you wanted to get at the hard issues and have a hard-hitting, comprehensive policy. And
yet there is nothing in it about the vast domestic landscape that we were all warned
needed so much attention.
Can you give me the answer
to the question why?
RICE: I would ask the
following. We were there for 233 days. There had been recognition for a number of years
before -- after the '93 bombing, and certainly after the millennium -- that there were
challenges, if I could say it that way, inside the United States, and that there were
challenges concerning our domestic agencies and the challenges concerning the FBI and the
CIA.
We were in office 233 days.
It's absolutely the case that we did not begin structural reform of the FBI.
Now, the vice president was
asked by the president, and that was tasked in May, to put all of this together and to see
if he could put together, from all of the recommendations, a program for protection of the
homeland against WMD, what else needed to be done. And in fact, he had hired Admiral Steve
Abbot to do that work. And it was on that basis that we were able to put together the
Homeland Security Council, which Tom Ridge came to head very, very quickly.
But I think the question is,
why, over all of these years, did we not address the structural problems that were there,
with the FBI, with the CIA, the homeland departments being scattered among many different
departments?
RICE: And why, given all of
the opportunities that we'd had to do it, had we not done it?
And I think that the
unfortunate -- and I really do think it's extremely tragic -- fact is that sometimes until
there is a catastrophic event that forces people to think differently, that forces people
to overcome all customs and old culture and old fears about domestic intelligence and the
relationship, that you don't get that kind of change.
And I want to say just one
more thing, if you don't mind, about the issue of high-level attention.
The reason that I asked Andy
Card to come with me to that meeting with Dick Clarke was that I wanted him to know --
wanted Dick Clarke to know -- that he had the weight not just of the national security
advisor, but the weight of the chief of staff if he needed it. I didn't manage the
domestic agencies. No national security advisor does.
And not once during this
period of time did my very experienced crisis manager say to me, You know, I don't think
this is getting done in the agencies. I'd really like you to call them together or make a
phone call.
In fact, after the fact, on
September 15th, what Dick Clarke sent me -- and he was my crisis manager -- what he sent
me was a memorandum, or an e-mail that said, After national unity begins to break down --
again, I'm paraphrasing -- people will ask, did we do all that we needed to do to arm the
domestic agencies, to warn the domestic agencies and to respond to the possibility of
domestic threat?
That, I think, was his view
at the time. And I have to tell you, I think given the circumstances and given the context
and given the structures that we had, we did.
GORELICK: Well, I have lots
of other questions on this issue. But I am trying to get out what will probably be my
third and last question to you. So if we could move through this reasonably quickly.
I was struck by your
characterization of the NSPD, the policy that you arrived at at the end of the
administration, as having the goal of the elimination of Al Qaida.
Because as I look at it --
and I thank you for declassifying this this morning, although I would have liked to have
known it a little earlier, but I think people will find this interesting reading -- it
doesn't call for the elimination of Al Qaida.
And it may be a semantic
difference, but I don't think so. It calls for the elimination of the Al Qaida threat. And
that's a very big difference, because, to me, the elimination of Al Qaida means you're
going to go into Afghanistan and you're going to get them.
And as I read it, and as
I've heard your public statements recently, there was not, I take it, a decision taken in
this document to put U.S. troops on the ground in Afghanistan to get Al Qaida. Is that
correct?
RICE: That is correct.
GORELICK: Now, you have
pointed out that in this document there is a tasking to the Defense Department for
contingency planning as part of this exercise -- contingency planning, and you've listed
the goals of the contingency plans.
And you have suggested that
this takes the policy, with regard to terrorism for our country, to a new level, a more
aggressive level.
Were you briefed on
Operation Infinite Resolve that was put in place in '98 and updated in the year 2000?
Because as I read Infinite
Resolve, and as our staff reads Infinite Resolve, it was a plan that had been tasked by
the Clinton administration to the Defense Department to develop precisely analogous plans.
And it was extant at the time.
GORELICK: And so I ask you
-- and there are many, many places where you indicate there are differences between the
Clinton program and yours. This one jumps out at me.
Was there a material
difference between your view of the military assignment and the Clinton administration's
extant plan? And if so, what was it?
RICE: Yes, I think that
there were significant differences.
First of all, Secretary
Rumsfeld, I think, has testified that he was briefed on Infinite Resolve. It would have
been highly unusual for me to me to be briefed on military plans were we not, in fact,
planning to use them for employment. And so I'm not surprised...
GORELICK: Well, except that
you were tasking them -- pardon me for interrupting -- you were tasking the military to do
something as part of this seven-and-a-half-month process. So it would strike me as likely
that you would have wanted to know what the predicate was.
RICE: We were tasking the
secretary of defense, who in fact had been briefed on Infinite Resolve, to develop within
the context of a broader strategy military plans that were now linked to certain political
purposes.
I worked in the Pentagon. I
worked for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. There are plans and plans and plans. And the problem
is that unless those plans are engaged by the civilian leadership on behalf of the
president, unless those plans have an adequate political basis and political purpose in
mind, those plans simply sit and they in fact rarely get used.
Now, the whole tortured
history of trying to use military power in support of counterterrorism objectives has
been, I think, very admirably and adequately discussed by your staff in the military
paper. RICE: And what is quite clear from that paper is that, from the time of
Presidential Directive 62, which keeps the Defense Department focused on force protection
and rendition of terrorists and so forth, all the way up through the period when we take
office, this issue of military plans and how to use military power with counterterrorism
objectives just doesn't get addressed.
What we were doing was to
put together a policy that brought all of the elements together. It tasked the secretary
of defense within the context of a plan that really focused not just on Al Qaida and bin
Laden, but also on what we might be able to do against the Taliban. And that gave the kind
of regional context that might make it possible to use military force more robustly, to
work plans in that context.
I think without that
context, you're just going to have military plans that never get used.
I read Sandy Berger -- or
saw Sandy Berger's testimony. He talked about the fact whenever they started to look at
the use of military plans, the issue of whether you would get regional cooperation always
arose. That was precisely what I was saying, when I said that we had to get the regional
context right.
I am not going to tell thaw
we were looking to invade Afghanistan during that seven months. We were not.
But we were looking in the
context of a plan that gave you a better regional context that looked to eliminate the Al
Qaida threat or Al Qaida that looked to eliminate Taliban support for them -- how to use
military power within that context.
KEAN: Last follow-up.
GORELICK: In order to keep
us to our schedule, I'll just make this comment, and we'll, I think, profitably follow up
with you in a private session.
PDD 62, which was the
presidential directive in the Clinton administration, was not the only way in which the
Defense Department was tasked. I mean, Infinite Resolve went well beyond what you describe
PDD 62 as doing. That's number one.
And number two, however good
it might have been to change the text in which the military planning was ongoing, neither
I, nor, I think, our staff, can find any functional difference between the two sets of
plans. I'll leave it to my colleagues.
RICE: Well, thank you very
much. But I continue to believe that unless you can tell the military in the context what
it is they're going after and for what purpose, you're going to have military plans that,
every time you ask for the briefing, turn out to be unusable.
GORELICK: I'm sure that this
debate will continue.
RICE: Yes.
KEAN: Senator Gorton?
GORTON: Before 9/11, did any
adviser to you, or to your knowledge to this administration or to its predecessor, counsel
the kind of all-out war against the Taliban and Al Qaida in Afghanistan that the United
States actually conducted after 9/11?
RICE: No, sir. No one
counseled an all-out war against Afghanistan of the kind that we did after 9/11.
RICE: There was a good deal
of talk about the inadequacy of military options to go after Al Qaida. Dick Clarke was
quite clear in his view that the very things that had been tasked were inadequate to the
task.
And so, people were looking
for other kinds of military options. But no, an all-out invasion of Afghanistan, it was
not recommended.
GORTON: Was it possible to
conduct that kind of war in Afghanistan without the cooperation of Pakistan?
RICE: It was absolutely not
possible.
And this goes also to the
point that I was making to Commissioner Gorelick. You can have lots of plans but unless --
since the United States sits protected by oceans, or no longer protected -- the United
States sits across oceans -- unless you find a way to get regional cooperation from
Pakistan, from the Central Asian countries, you're going to be left with essentially
stand-off options, meaning bombers and cruise missiles, because you're not going to have
the full range of military options.
GORTON: Now, your written
and oral statement spoke of a frustrating and unproductive meeting with the president of
Pakistan in June. Let me go beyond that.
How much progress had the
United States made toward the kind of necessary cooperation from Pakistan by say the 10th
of September, 2001?
RICE: The United States had
a comprehensive plan that the deputies had approved that would have been coming to the
principals shortly -- and I think approved easily, because the deputies are, of course,
very senior people who have the consonance of their principals -- that was going to try to
unravel this overlapping set of sanctions that were on Pakistan. Some because of the way
Musharraf had come to power, some because of nuclear issues. We were looking to do that.
Rich Armitage tells me that
when he approached the Pakistanis after September 11th, he did presage that we would try
and do this also with a positive side, but the plans were not in place. Changing
Pakistan's strategic direction was going to take some time.
GORTON: Would the program
recommended on September 4th have prevented 9/11 had it been adopted in, say, February or
March of 2001?
RICE: Commissioner, it would
not have prevented September 11th if it had been approved the day after we came to office.
GORTON: Now, in retrospect,
and given the knowledge that you had, you and the administration simply believed that you
had more time to meet this challenge of Al Qaida than was in fact the case. Is that not
true?
RICE: It is true that we
understood that to meet this challenge it was going to take time. It was a multiyear
program to try and meet the challenge of Al Qaida.
That doesn't mean that when
you get immediate threat reporting that you don't do everything that you can to disrupt at
that particular point in time.
But in terms of the strategy
of trying to improve the prospects of Pakistan withdrawing support from Taliban, with
presenting the Taliban with possible defeat because you were dealing not just with the
Northern Alliance but with the southern tribes, that, we believed, we going to take time.
GORTON: It turned out, in
retrospect, you didn't have the time to do it.
RICE: We didn't. Although, I
will say that the document that was then approved by the president after September 11th,
what happened was that the NSPD was then forwarded to the president in a post- September
11th context, and many of the same aspects of it were used to guide the policy that we
actually did take against Afghanistan.
And the truth of the matter
is that, as the president said on September 20th, this is going to take time. We're still
trying to unravel Al Qaida. We're still trying to deal with worldwide terrorist threats.
So it's obvious that, even
with all of the force of the country after September 11th, this is a long-term project.
GORTON: One subject that
certainly any administration in your place would not like to bring up but I want to bring
up in any event is, the fact is that we've now gone two and a half years and we have not
had another incident in the United States even remotely comparable to 9/11.
GORTON: In your view --
there have been many such horrific incidents in other parts of the world, from Al Qaida or
Al Qaida lookalikes.
In your view, have the
measures that have been taken here in the United States actually reduced the amount of
terrorism, or simply displaced it and caused it to move elsewhere?
RICE: I believe that we have
really hurt the Al Qaida network. We have not destroyed it. And it is clear that it was
much more entrenched and had relationships with many more organizations than I think
people generally recognize.
I don't think it's been
displaced. But they realize that they are in an all-out war. And so you're starting to see
them try to fight back. And I think that's one reason that you're getting the terrorist
attacks that you are.
But I don't think it's been
displaced; I think it's just coming to the surface.
GORTON: Well, maybe you
don't understand what I mean by displacement. Do you not think that Al Qaida and these
terrorist entities are now engaged in terrorism where they think it's easier than it would
be in the United States? That's what I mean about displacement.
RICE: Oh, I see. I'm sorry.
I didn't understand the question.
I think that it is possible
that they recognize the heightened security profile that we have post-September 11th, and
I believe that we have made it harder for them to attack here.
I will tell you that I get
up every day concerned because I don't think we've made it impossible for them.
RICE: We're safer, but we're
not safe.
And as I said, they have to
be right once; we have to be right 100 percent of the time.
But I do think some of the
security measures that we have taken, some of the systemic and systematic security
measures that we have taken, have made it a lot harder for them.
GORTON: I think, in one
sense, there are three ways in which one can deal with a threat like this, and I would
like your views on how well you think we've done in each of them and maybe even their
relative importance.
So one is hardening targets,
like kind of disruptions we have every time we try to travel on an airplane.
The second is prevention.
And a lot has been spoken here about that, whether we're better able to find out what
their plans are and frustrate those plans.
And the third is one that
you talked about in your opening statement: preemption, going at the cause.
How do you balance, in a
free society, those three generic methods of going after terrorism?
RICE: I sincerely hope that
one of the outcomes of this commission is that we will talk about balance between those,
because we want to prevent the next terrorist attack. We don't want to do it at the
expense of who we are as an open society.
And I think that, in terms
of hardening, we've done a lot. If you look at the airport security now, it's considerably
very much different than it was prior. And there's a transportation security agency that's
charged with that.
Tom Ridge and his people
have an actual unit that sits around and worried about critical infrastructure protection
and works with local and state governments to make sure the critical infrastructure is
protected.
I think we're making a lot
of progress in hardening. In terms of -- but we're never going to be able to harden enough
to prevent every attack.
We have, in terms of
prevention, increased the worldwide attention to this problem.
When Louis Freeh put
together the Legat System, the Legal Attache System, abroad, it was -- and I'm sure that
you, Commissioner Gorelick, as a former deputy attorney general, will remember that -- it
became a very important tool also post-9/11 to be able to work with the law enforcement
agencies abroad now married up with foreign intelligence in a way that helps us to be able
to disrupt abroad in ways that I think we were not capable of disrupting before.
RICE: Many of our democratic
partners are having some of the same debates that we are about how to have prevention
without issues of civil liberties being exposed.
We think the Patriot Act
gets just the right balance and that it's extremely important to prevention because it
makes law enforcement -- usually in law enforcement you wait until a crime is committed
and then you act. We cannot afford in terrorism to wait until a crime is committed.
And finally, in terms of
preemption, I have to say that the one thing I've been struck by in the hearings is when I
was listening to the former secretaries and the current secretaries the other day, is the
persistent argument, the persistent question of whether we should have acted against
Afghanistan sooner.
Given that the threats were
gathering, given that we knew Al Qaida had launched attacks against us, why did we wait
until you had a catastrophic attack to use strategic military power -- not tit for tat,
not a little tactical military strike -- but strategic military power against this
country.
And the president has said
many times that after September 11th, we have learned not to let threats gather. And yet
we continue to have a debate about whether or not you have to go against threats before
they fully materialize on your soil.
GORTON: Well, Ms. Rice, one
final comment.
I asked both the secretary
of state and secretary of defense that question about whether or not they didn't think we
had more time than we were actually granted the luxury of having; they both ducked the
question totally. You at least partly answered it.
Thank you very much.
RICE: Thank you.
KEAN: Thank you, Senator.
Senator Kerrey?
KERREY: Thank you very much,
Mr. Chairman.
And thank you, Dr. Rice.
Let me say at the beginning
I'm very impressed, and indeed I'd go as far as to say moved by your story, the story of
your life and what you've accomplished. It's quite extraordinary.
And I want to say at the
outset that, notwithstanding perhaps the tone of some of my questions, I'm not sure had I
been in your position or Sandy Berger's position or President Bush or President Clinton's
position that I would have done things differently. I simply don't know.
But the line of questioning
will suggest that I'm trying to ascertain why things weren't done differently.
Let me ask a question that
-- well, actually, let me say -- I can't pass this up. I know it'll take into my 10-minute
time. But as somebody who supported the war in Iraq, I'm not going to get the national
security adviser 30 feet away from me very often over the next 90 days, and I've got to
tell you, I believe a number of things.
I believe, first of all,
that we underestimate that this war on terrorism is really a war against radical Islam.
Terrorism is a tactic. It's not a war itself.
Secondly, let me say that I
don't think we understand how the Muslim world views us, and I'm terribly worried that the
military tactics in Iraq are going to do a number of things, and they're all bad. One
is...
(APPLAUSE)
No, please don't -- please
do not do that. Do not applaud.
I think we're going to end
up with civil war if we continue down the military operation strategies that we have in
place. I say that sincerely as someone that supported the war in the first place.
Let me say, secondly, that I
don't know how it could be otherwise, given the way that we're able to see these military
operations, even the restrictions that are imposed upon the press, that this doesn't
provide an opportunity for Al Qaida to have increasing success at recruiting people to
attack the United States.
KERREY: It worries me. And I
wanted to make that declaration. You needn't comment on it, but as I said, I'm not going
to have an opportunity to talk to you this closely.
And I wanted to tell you
that I think the military operations are dangerously off track. And it's largely a U.S.
Army -- 125,000 out of 145,000 -- largely a Christian army in a Muslim nation. So I take
that on board for what it's worth.
Let me ask you, first of
all, a question that's been a concern for me from the first day I came on the commission,
and that is the relationship of our executive director to you.
Let me just ask you
directly, and you can just give me -- keep it relatively short, but I wanted to get it on
the record.
KERREY: Since he was an
expert on terrorism, did you ask Philip Zelikow any questions about terrorism during
transition, since he was the second person carded in the national security office and had
considerable expertise?
RICE: Philip and I had
numerous conversations about the issues that we were facing. Philip, as you know, had
worked in the campaign and helped with the transition plans, so yes.
KERREY: Yes, you did talk to
him about terrorism?
RICE: We talked -- Philip
and I over a period of -- you know, we had worked closely together as academics...
KERREY: During the
transition, did you instruct him to do anything on terrorism?
RICE: Oh, to do anything on
terrorism?
KERREY: Yes.
RICE: To help us think about
the structure of the terrorism -- Dick Clarke's operations, yes.
KERREY: You've used the
phrase a number of times, and I'm hoping with my question to disabuse you of using it in
the future.
You said the president was
tired of swatting flies.
KERREY: Can you tell me one
example where the president swatted a fly when it came to Al Qaida prior to 9/11?
RICE: I think what the
president was speaking to was...
KERREY: No, no. What fly had
he swatted?
RICE: Well, the disruptions
abroad was what he was really focusing on...
KERREY: No, no...
RICE: ... when the CIA would
go after Abu Zubaydah...
KERREY: He hadn't swatted...
RICE: ... or go after this
guy...
KERREY: Dr. Rice, we
didn't...
RICE: That was what was
meant.
KERREY: We only swatted a
fly once on the 20th of August 1998. We didn't swat any flies afterwards. How the hell
could he be tired?
RICE: We swatted at -- I
think he felt that what the agency was doing was going after individual terrorists here
and there, and that's what he meant by swatting flies. It was simply a figure of speech.
KERREY: Well, I think it's
an unfortunate figure of speech because I think, especially after the attack on the Cole
on the 12th of October, 2000, it would not have been swatting a fly. It would not have
been -- we did not need to wait to get a strategic plan.
Dick Clarke had in his memo
on the 20th of January overt military operations. He turned that memo around in 24 hours,
Dr. Clarke. There were a lot of plans in place in the Clinton administration -- military
plans in the Clinton administration.
In fact, since we're in the
mood to declassify stuff, there was -- he included in his January 25th memo two appendices
-- Appendix A:
Strategy for the elimination
of the jihadist threat of Al Qaida, Appendix B: Political military plan for Al Qaida.
So I just -- why didn't we
respond to the Cole?
RICE: Well, we...
KERREY: Why didn't we swat
that fly?
RICE: I believe that there's
a question of whether or not you respond in a tactical sense or whether you respond in a
strategic sense; whether or not you decide that you're going to respond to every attack
with minimal use of military force and go after every -- on a kind of tit-for-tat basis.
By the way, in that memo,
Dick Clarke talks about not doing this tit-for-tat, doing this on the time of our
choosing.
RICE: I'm aware, Mr. Kerrey,
of a speech that you gave at that time that said that perhaps the best thing that we could
do to respond to the Cole and to the memories was to do something about the threat of
Saddam Hussein.
That's a strategic view...
(APPLAUSE)
And we took a strategic
view. We didn't take a tactical view. I mean, it was really -- quite frankly, I was blown
away when I read the speech, because it's a brilliant speech. It talks about really...
(LAUGHTER)
... an asymmetric...
KERREY: I presume you read
it in the last few days?
RICE: Oh no, I read it quite
a bit before that. It's an asymmetric approach.
Now, you can decide that
every time Al Qaida...
KERREY: So you're saying
that you didn't have a military response against the Cole because of my speech?
RICE: I'm saying, I'm
saying...
(LAUGHTER)
RICE: No.
KERREY: That had I not given
that speech you would have attacked them?
RICE: No, I'm just saying
that I think it was a brilliant way to think about it.
KERREY: I think it's...
RICE: It was a way of
thinking about it strategically, not tactically. But if I may answer the question that
you've asked me.
The issue of whether to
respond -- or how to respond to the Cole -- I think Don Rumsfeld has also talked about
this.
Yes, the Cole had happened.
We received, I think on January 25th, the same assessment -- or roughly the same
assessment -- of who was responsible for the Cole that Sandy Berger talked to you about.
It was preliminary. It was
not clear. But that was not the reason that we felt that we did not want to, quote,
respond to the Cole.
We knew that the options
that had been employed by the Clinton administration had been standoff options. The
president had -- meaning missile strikes or perhaps bombers would have been possible,
long-range bombers. Although getting in place the apparatus to use long-range bombers is
even a matter of whether you have basing in the region.
RICE: We knew that Osama Bin
Laden had been, in something that was provided to me, bragging that he was going to
withstand any response and then he was going to emerge and come out stronger.
KERREY: But you're figuring
this out. You've got to give a very long answer.
RICE: We simply believed
that the best approach was to put in place a plan that was going to eliminate this threat,
not respond to an attack.
KERREY: Let me say, I think
you would have come in there if you said, We screwed up. We made a lot of mistakes. You
obviously don't want to use the M-word in here. And I would say fine, it's game, set,
match. I understand that.
But this strategic and
tactical, I mean, I just -- it sounds like something from a seminar. It doesn't...
RICE: I do not believe to
this day that it would have been a good thing to respond to the Cole, given the kinds of
options that we were going to have.
And with all due respect to
Dick Clarke, if you're speaking about the Delenda plan, my understanding is that it was,
A, never adopted, and that Dick Clarke himself has said that the military portion of this
was not taken up by the Clinton administration.
KERREY: Let me move into
another area.
RICE: So we were not
presented -- I just want to be very clear on this, because it's been a source of
controversy -- we were not presented with a plan.
KERREY: Well, that's not
true. It is not...
RICE: We were not presented.
We were presented with...
KERREY: I've heard you say
that, Dr. Clarke, that 25 January, 2001, memo was declassified, I don't believe...
RICE: That January 25 memo
has a series of actionable items having to do with Afghanistan, the Northern Alliance.
KERREY: Let me move to
another area.
RICE: May I finish answering
your question, though, because this is an important...
KERREY: I know it's
important. Everything that's going on here is important. But I get 10 minutes.
RICE: But since we have a
point of disagreement, I'd like to have a chance to address it.
KERREY: Well, no, no,
actually, we have many points of disagreement, Dr. Clarke, but we'll have a chance to do
in closed session. Please don't filibuster me. It's not fair. It is not fair. I have been
polite. I have been courteous. It is not fair to me.
(APPLAUSE)
I understand that we have a
disagreement.
RICE: Commissioner, I am
here to answer questions. And you've asked me a question, and I'd like to have an
opportunity to answer it.
The fact is that what we
were presented on January the 25th was a set of ideas and a paper, most of which was about
what the Clinton administration had done and something called the Delenda plan which had
been considered in 1998 and never adopted. We decided to take a different track.
RICE: We decided to put
together a strategic approach to this that would get the regional powers -- the problem
wasn't that you didn't have a good counterterrorism person.
The problem was you didn't
have an approach against Al Qaida because you didn't have an approach against Afghanistan.
And you didn't have an approach against Afghanistan because you didn't have an approach
against Pakistan. And until we could get that right, we didn't have a policy.
KERREY: Thank you for
answering my question.
RICE: You're welcome.
KERREY: Let me ask you
another question. Here's the problem that I have as I -- again, it's hindsight. I
appreciate that. But here's the problem that a lot of people are having with this July 5th
meeting.
You and Andy Card meet with
Dick Clarke in the morning. You say you have a meeting, he meets in the afternoon. It's
July 5th.
Kristen Breitweiser, who's a
part of the families group, testified at the Joint Committee. She brings very painful
testimony, I must say.
But here's what Agent
Kenneth Williams said five days later. He said that the FBI should investigate whether Al
Qaida operatives are training at U.S. flight schools. He posited that Osama bin Laden
followers might be trying to infiltrate the civil aviation system as pilots, security
guards and other personnel. He recommended a national program to track suspicious flight
schools.
Now, one of the first things
that I learned when I came into this town was the FBI and the CIA don't talk. I mean, I
don't need a catastrophic event to know that the CIA and the FBI don't do a very good job
of communicating.
And the problem we've got
with this and the Moussaoui facts, which were revealed on the 15th of August, all it had
to do was to be put on Intelink. All it had to do is go out on Intelink, and the game's
over. It ends. This conspiracy would have been rolled up.
KERREY: And so I...
RICE: Commissioner, with all
due respect, I don't agree that we know that we had somehow a silver bullet here that was
going to work.
What we do know is that we
did have a systemic problem, a structural problem between the FBI and the CIA. It was a
long time in coming into being. It was there because there were legal impediments, as well
as bureaucratic impediments. Those needed to be overcome.
Obviously, the structure of
the FBI that did not get information from the field offices up to FBI Central, in a way
that FBI Central could react to the whole range of information reports, was a problem..
KERREY: But, Dr. Rice,
everybody...
RICE: But the structure of
the FBI, the restructuring of the FBI, was not going to be done in the 233 days in which
we were in office...
KERREY: Dr. Rice, everybody
who does national security in this town knows the FBI and the CIA don't talk. So if you
have a meeting on the 5th of July, where you're trying to make certain that your domestic
agencies are preparing a defense against a possible attack, you knew Al Qaida cells were
in the United States, you've got to follow up.
KERRY: And the question is,
what was your follow-up? What's the paper trail that shows that you and Andy Card followed
up from this meeting, and...
RICE: I followed...
KERREY: ... made certain
that the FBI and the CIA were talking?
RICE: I followed up with
Dick Clarke, who had in his group, and with him, the key counterterrorism person for the
FBI. You have to remember that Louis Freeh was, by this time, gone. And so, the chief
counterterrorism person was the second -- Louis Freeh had left in late June. And so the
chief counterterrorism person for the FBI was working these issues, was working with Dick
Clarke. I talked to Dick Clarke about this all the time.
RICE: But let's be very
clear, the threat information that we were dealing with -- and when you have something
that says, something very big may happen, you have no time, you have no place, you have no
how, the ability to somehow respond to that threat is just not there.
Now, you said...
KERREY: Dr. Clarke, in the
spirit of further declassification...
RICE: Sir, with all...
KERREY: The spirit...
RICE: I don't think I look
like Dick Clarke, but...
(LAUGHTER)
KERREY: Dr. Rice, excuse me.
RICE: Thank you.
KEAN: This is the last
question, Senator.
KERREY: Actually it won't be
a question.
In the spirit of further
declassification, this is what the August 6th memo said to the president: that the FBI
indicates patterns of suspicious activity in the United States consistent with
preparations for hijacking.
That's the language of the
memo that was briefed to the president on the 6th of August.
RICE: And that was checked
out and steps were taken through FAA circulars to warn of hijackings.
But when you cannot tell
people where a hijacking might occur, under what circumstances -- I can tell you that I
think the best antidote to what happened in that regard would have been many years before
to think about what you could do for instance to harden cockpits.
That would have made a
difference. We weren't going to harden cockpits in the three months that we had a threat
spike.
The really difficult thing
for all of us, and I'm sure for those who came before us as well as for those of us who
are here, is that the structural and systematic changes that needed to be made -- not on
July 5th or not on June 25th or not on January 1st -- those structures and those changes
needed to be made a long time ago so that the country was in fact hardened against the
kind of threat that we faced on September 11th.
The problem was that for a
country that had not been attacked on its territory in a major way in almost 200 years,
there were a lot of structural impediments to those kinds of attacks. RICE: Those changes
should have been made over a long period of time.
I fully agree with you that,
in hindsight, now looking back, there are many things structurally that were out of
kilter. And one reason that we're here is to look at what was out of kilter structurally,
to look at needed to be done, to look at what we already have done, and to see what more
we need to do.
But I think it is really
quite unfair to suggest that something that was a threat spike in June or July gave you
the kind of opportunity to make the changes in air security that could have been -- that
needed to be made.
KEAN: Secretary Lehman?
LEHMAN: Thank you.
Dr. Rice, I'd like to ask
you whether you agree with the testimony we had from Mr. Clarke that, when asked whether
if all of his recommendations during the transition or during the period when his, quote,
hair was on fire, had been followed immediately, would it have prevented 9/11, he said no.
Do you agree with that?
RICE: I agree completely
with that.
LEHMAN: In a way, one of the
criticisms that has been made -- or one of the, perhaps, excuses for an inefficient
hand-off of power at the change, the transition, is, indeed, something we're going to be
looking into in depth.
Because of the circumstances
of the election, it was the shortest handover in memory. But in many ways, really, it was
the longest handover, certainly in my memory. Because while the Cabinet changed, virtually
all of the national and domestic security agencies and executive action agencies remained
the same -- combination of political appointees from the previous administration and
career appointees -- CIA, FBI, JCS, the CTC, the Counter-Terrorism Center, the DIA, the
NSA, the director of operations in CIA, the director of intelligence.
LEHMAN: So you really up
almost until, with the exception of the INS head leaving and there be an acting, and Louis
Freeh leaving in June, you essentially had the same government.
Now, that raises two
questions in my mind.
One, a whole series of
questions. What were you told by this short transition from Mr. Berger and associates and
the long transition leading up to 9/11 by those officials about a number of key issues?
And I'd like to ask them
quickly in turn.
And the other is, I'm struck
by the continuity of the policies rather than the differences.
And both of these sets of
questions are really directed toward what I think is the real purpose of this commission.
While it's certainly a lot
more fun to be doing the, Who struck John? and pointing fingers as which policy was more
urgent or more important, so forth, the real business of this commission is to learn the
lessons and to find the ways to fix those dysfunction's. And that's why we have unanimity
and true nonpartisanship on this commission. So that's what's behind the rhetoric that's
behind the questioning that we have.
First, during the short or
long transition, were you told before the summer that there were functioning Al Qaida
cells in the United States?
RICE: In the memorandum that
Dick Clarke sent me on January 25th, he mentions sleeper cells. There is no mention or
recommendation of anything that needs to be done about them. And the FBI was pursuing
them.
And usually when things come
to me, it's because I'm supposed to do something about it, and there was no indication
that the FBI was not adequately pursuing the sleeper cells.
LEHMAN: Were you told that
there were numerous young Arab males in flight training, had taken flight training, were
in flight training?
RICE: I was not. And I'm not
sure that that was known at the center.
LEHMAN: Were you told that
the U.S. Marshal program had been changed to drop any U.S. marshals on domestic flights?
RICE: I was not told that.
LEHMAN: Were you told that
the red team in FAA -- the red teams for 10 years had reported their hard data that the
U.S. airport security system never got higher than 20 percent effective and was usually
down around 10 percent for 10 straight years?
RICE: To the best of my
recollection, I was not told that.
LEHMAN: Were you aware that
INS had been lobbying for years to get the airlines to drop the transit without visa
loophole that enabled terrorists and Illegals to simply buy a ticket through the
transit-without- visa-waiver and pay the airlines extra money and come in?
RICE: I learned about that
after September 11th.
LEHMAN: Were you aware that
the INS had quietly, internally, halved its internal security enforcement budget?
RICE: I was not made aware
of that. I don't remember being made aware of that, no.
LEHMAN: Were you aware that
it was the U.S. government established policy not to question or oppose the sanctuary
policies of New York, Los Angeles, Houston, Chicago, San Diego for political reasons,
which policy in those cities prohibited the local police from cooperating at all with
federal immigration authorities?
RICE: I do not believe I was
aware of that.
LEHMAN: Were you aware -- to
shift a little bit to Saudi Arabia -- were you aware of the program that was well
established that allowed Saudi citizens to get visas without interviews?
RICE: I learned of that
after 9/11.
LEHMAN: Were you aware of
the activities of the Saudi ministry of religious affairs here in the United States during
that transition?
RICE: I believe that only
after September 11th did the full extent of what was going on with the ministry of
religious affairs became evident.
LEHMAN: Were you aware of
the extensive activities of the Saudi government in supporting over 300 radical teaching
schools and mosques around the country, including right here in the United States?
RICE: I believe we've
learned a great deal more about this and addressed it with the Saudi government since
9/11.
LEHMAN: Were you aware at
the time of the fact that Saudi Arabia had and were you told that they had in their
custody the CFO and the closest confidant of Al Qaida -- of Osama bin Laden, and refused
direct access to the United States?
RICE: I don't remember
anything of that kind.
LEHMAN: Were you aware that
they would not cooperate and give us access to the perpetrators of the Khobar Towers
attack?
RICE: I was very involved in
issues concerning Khobar Towers and our relations with several governments concerning
Khobar Towers.
LEHMAN: Thank you.
Were you aware -- and it
disturbs me a bit, and again, let me shift to the continuity issues here.
Were you aware that it was
the policy of the Justice Department -- and I'd like you to comment as to whether these
continuities are still in place -- before I go to Justice, were you aware that it was the
policy and I believe remains the policy today to fine airlines if they have more than two
young Arab males in secondary questioning because that's discriminatory?
RICE: No, I have to say that
the kind of inside arrangements for the FAA are not really in my...
LEHMAN: Well, these are not
so inside.
Were you aware that the FAA
up until 9/11 thought it was perfectly permissible to allow four-inch knife blades aboard?
RICE: I was not aware.
LEHMAN: OK.
Back to Justice. I was
disturbed to hear you say on the continuity line that President Bush's first reaction to
9/11 and the question of Al Qaida's involvement was we must bring him to justice, because
we have had dozens and dozens of interviewees and witnesses say that a fundamental problem
of the dysfunction between CIA and Justice was the criminal -- the attitude that law
enforcement was what terrorism was all about and not prevention and foreign policy.
I think that there was at
the time a very strictly enforced wall in the Justice Department between law enforcement
and intelligence and that repeatedly, there are many statements from presidents and
attorneys general and so forth that say that the first priority is bring these people to
justice, protect the evidence, seal the evidence and so forth.
LEHMAN: Do you believe this
has changed?
RICE: I certainly believe
that that has changed, Commissioner Lehman.
Let me just go back for one
second, though, on the long list of questions that you asked.
I think another structural
problem for the United States is that we really didn't have anyone trying to put together
all of the kinds of issues that you raised, about what we were doing with INS, what we
were doing with borders, what we were doing with visas, what we were doing with airport
security. And that's the reason that, first, the Homeland Security Council, and then Tom
Ridge's initial job, and then the Homeland Security Department is so important, because
you can then look at the whole spectrum of protecting our borders from all kinds of
threats and say, what kinds of policies make sense and what kinds of policies don't?
And they now actually have
someone who looks at critical infrastructure protection, looks at airport security,
understands in greater detail than I think the national security adviser could ever
understand all of the practices of what is going on in transportation security. That's why
it is important that we made the change that we did.
As to some of the questions
concerning the Saudis: I think that we have had, really, very good cooperation with Saudi
Arabia since 9/11, and since the May 12th attacks on Riyadh even greater cooperation,
because Saudi Arabia is I think fully enlisted in the war on terrorism. And we need to
understand that there were certain things that we didn't even understand were going on
inside the United States.
RICE: It's not terribly
surprising that the Saudis didn't understand some of the things that were going on in
their country.
As to your last question,
though, I think that that's actually where we've had the biggest change. The president
doesn't think of this as law enforcement. He thinks of this as war.
And for all of the rhetoric
of war prior to 9/11 -- people who said we're at war with the jihadist network, people who
said that they've declared war on us and we're at war with them -- we weren't at war. We
weren't on war footing. We weren't behaving in that way.
We were still very focused
on rendition of terrorists, on law enforcement. And, yes, from time to time we did
military plans, or use the cruise missile strike here or there, but we did not have a
sustained systematic effort to destroy Al Qaida, to deal with those who harbored Al Qaida.
One of the points that the
president made in his very first speech on the night of September 11th was that it's not
just the terrorists, it's those who harbor them, too. And he put states on notice that
they were going to be responsible if they sponsor terrorists or if they acquiesced in
terrorists being there.
And when he said, I want to
bring them to justice, again, I think there was a little bit of nervousness about talking
about exactly what that means.
But I don't think there's
anyone in America who doesn't understand that this president believes that we're at war,
it's a war we have to win, and that it is a war that cannot be fought on the defensive.
It's a war that has to be fought on the offense.
LEHMAN: Thank you. Are you
sure that the...
KEAN: Last question,
Secretary.
LEHMAN: As a last question,
tell us what you really recommend we should address our attentions to to fix this as the
highest priority. Not just moving boxes around, but what can you tell us in public here
that we could do, since we are outside the legislature and outside the executive branch
and can bring the focus of attention for change? Tell us what you recommend we do.
RICE: My greatest concern is
that, as September 11th recedes from memory, that we will begin to unlearn the lessons of
what we've learned.
RICE: And I think this
commission can be very important in helping us to focus on those lessons and then to make
sure that the structures of government reflect those lessons, because those structures of
government now are going to have to last us for a very long time.
I think we've done, under
the president's leadership, we've done extremely important structural change. We've
reorganized the government in a greater way than has been done since the 1947 National
Security Act created the Department of Defense, the CIA and the National Security Council.
I think that we need to --
we have a major reorganization of the FBI, where Bob Mueller is trying very hard not to
just move boxes but to change incentives, to change culture. Those are all very hard
things to do.
I think there have been very
important changes made between the CIA and FBI. Yes, everybody knew that they had trouble
sharing, but in fact, we had legal restrictions to their sharing. And George Tenet and
Louis Freeh and others have worked very hard at that. But until the Patriot Act, we
couldn't do what we needed to do.
And now I hear people who
question the need for the Patriot Act, question whether or not the Patriot Act is
infringing on our civil liberties. I think that you can address this hard question of the
balance that we as an open society need to achieve between the protection of our country
and the need to remain the open society, the welcoming society that we are. And I think
you're in a better position to address that than anyone.
And I do want you to know
that when you have addressed it, the president is not going to just be interested in the
recommendations. I think he's going to be interested in knowing how we can press forward
in ways that will make us safer.
The other thing that I hope
you will do is to take a look back again at the question that keeps arising. I think
Senator Gorton was going after this question. I've heard Senator Kerrey talk about it,
which is, you know, the country, like democracies do, waited and waited and waited as this
threat gathered.
KERRY: And the question is,
what was your follow-up? What's the paper trail that shows that you and Andy Card followed
up from this meeting, and ...
RICE: I followed ...
KERREY: ... made certain
that the FBI and the CIA were talking?
RICE: I followed up with
Dick Clarke, who had in his group, and with him, the key counterterrorism person for the
FBI. You have to remember that Louis Freeh was, by this time, gone. And so, the chief
counterterrorism person was the second -- Louis Freeh had left in late June. And so the
chief counterterrorism person for the FBI was working these issues, was working with Dick
Clarke. I talked to Dick Clarke about this all the time.
RICE: But let's be very
clear, the threat information that we were dealing with -- and when you have something
that says, something very big may happen, you have no time, you have no place, you have no
how, the ability to somehow respond to that threat is just not there.
Now, you said ...
KERREY: Dr. Clarke, in the
spirit of further declassification ...
RICE: Sir, with all ...
KERREY: The spirit ...
RICE: I don't think I look
like Dick Clarke, but ...
(LAUGHTER)
KERREY: Dr. Rice, excuse me.
RICE: Thank you.
KEAN: This is the last
question, Senator.
KERREY: Actually it won't be
a question.
In the spirit of further
declassification, this is what the August 6th memo said to the president: that the FBI
indicates patterns of suspicious activity in the United States consistent with
preparations for hijacking.
That's the language of the
memo that was briefed to the president on the 6th of August.
RICE: And that was checked
out and steps were taken through FAA circulars to warn of hijackings.
But when you cannot tell
people where a hijacking might occur, under what circumstances -- I can tell you that I
think the best antidote to what happened in that regard would have been many years before
to think about what you could do for instance to harden cockpits.
That would have made a
difference. We weren't going to harden cockpits in the three months that we had a threat
spike.
The really difficult thing
for all of us, and I'm sure for those who came before us as well as for those of us who
are here, is that the structural and systematic changes that needed to be made -- not on
July 5th or not on June 25th or not on January 1st -- those structures and those changes
needed to be made a long time ago so that the country was in fact hardened against the
kind of threat that we faced on September 11th.
The problem was that for a
country that had not been attacked on its territory in a major way in almost 200 years,
there were a lot of structural impediments to those kinds of attacks. Those changes should
have been made over a long period of time.
I fully agree with you that,
in hindsight, now looking back, there are many things structurally that were out of
kilter. And one reason that we're here is to look at what was out of kilter structurally,
to look at needed to be done, to look at what we already have done, and to see what more
we need to do.
But I think it is really
quite unfair to suggest that something that was a threat spike in June or July gave you
the kind of opportunity to make the changes in air security that could have been -- that
needed to be made.
KEAN: Secretary Lehman?
LEHMAN: Thank you.
Dr. Rice, I'd like to ask
you whether you agree with the testimony we had from Mr. Clarke that, when asked whether
if all of his recommendations during the transition or during the period when his, quote,
hair was on fire, had been followed immediately, would it have prevented 9-11, he said no.
Do you agree with that?
RICE: I agree completely
with that.
LEHMAN: In a way, one of the
criticisms that has been made -- or one of the, perhaps, excuses for an inefficient
hand-off of power at the change, the transition, is, indeed, something we're going to be
looking into in depth.
Because of the circumstances
of the election, it was the shortest handover in memory. But in many ways, really, it was
the longest handover, certainly in my memory. Because while the Cabinet changed, virtually
all of the national and domestic security agencies and executive action agencies remained
the same -- combination of political appointees from the previous administration and
career appointees -- CIA, FBI, JCS, the CTC, the Counter-Terrorism Center, the DIA, the
NSA, the director of operations in CIA, the director of intelligence.
LEHMAN: So you really up
almost until, with the exception of the INS head leaving and there be an acting, and Louis
Freeh leaving in June, you essentially had the same government.
Now, that raises two
questions in my mind.
One, a whole series of
questions. What were you told by this short transition from Mr. Berger and associates and
the long transition leading up to 9-11 by those officials about a number of key issues?
And I'd like to ask them
quickly in turn.
And the other is, I'm struck
by the continuity of the policies rather than the differences.
And both of these sets of
questions are really directed toward what I think is the real purpose of this commission.
While it's certainly a lot
more fun to be doing the Who-struck-John? and pointing fingers as which policy was more
urgent or more important, so forth, the real business of this commission is to learn the
lessons and to find the ways to fix those dysfunction's. And that's why we have unanimity
and true nonpartisanship on this commission. So that's what's behind the rhetoric that's
behind the questioning that we have.
First, during the short or
long transition, were you told before the summer that there were functioning al-Qaida
cells in the United States?
RICE: And we didn't respond
by saying, We're at war with them. Now we're going to use all means of our national assets
to go against them. There are other threats that gather against us.
And what we should have
learned from September 11th is that you have to be bold and you have to be decisive and
you have to be on the offensive, because we're never going to be able to completely
defend.
LEHMAN: Thank you very much.
KEAN: Congressman Roemer?
ROEMER: Thank you, Mr.
Chairman.
Welcome, Dr. Rice. And I
just want to say to you you've made it through 2 1/2 hours so far with only Governor
Thompson to go. And if you'd like a break of five minutes, I'd be happy to yield you some
of Governor Thompson's time.
(LAUGHTER)
Dr. Rice, you have said in
your statement, which I find very interesting, The terrorists were at war with us, but we
were not at war with them.
Across several
administrations of both parties, the response was insufficient. And tragically, for all
the language of war spoken before September 11th, this country simply was not on a war
footing.
You're the national security
advisor to the president of the United States. The buck may stop with the president; the
buck certainly goes directly through you as the principal advisor to the president on
these issues.
And it really seems to me
that there were failures and mistakes, structural problems, all kinds of issues here
leading up to September 11th that could have and should have been done better.
Doesn't that beg that there
should have been more accountability? That there should have been a resignation or two?
That there should have been you or the president saying to the rest of the administration,
somehow, somewhere, that this was not done well enough?
RICE: Mr. Roemer, by
definition, we didn't have enough information, we didn't have enough protection, because
the attack happened -- by definition. And I think we've all asked ourselves, what more
could have been done?
I will tell you if we had
known that an attack was coming against the United States, that an attack was coming
against New York and Washington, we would have moved heaven and earth to stop it.
But you heard the character
of the threat report we were getting: something very, very big is going to happen. How do
you act on
something very, very big is
going to happen beyond trying to put people on alert? Most of the threat reporting was
abroad.
I took an oath, as I've
said, to protect...
ROEMER: I've heard it --
I've heard you say this....
RICE: And I take it very
seriously. I know that those who attacked us that day -- and attacked us, by the way,
because of who we are, no other reason, but for who we are -- that they are the
responsible party for the war that they launched against us...
ROEMER: But Dr. Rice...
RICE: ... the attacks that
they made, and that our responsibility...
ROEMER: You have said
several times...
RICE: ... that our
responsibility is to...
ROEMER: You have said
several times that your responsibility, being in office for 230 days, was to defend and
protect the United States.
RICE: Of course.
ROEMER: You had an
opportunity, I think, with Mr. Clarke, who had served a number of presidents going back to
the Reagan administration; who you'd decided to keep on in office; who was a pile driver,
a bulldozer, so to speak -- but this person who you, in the Woodward interview -- he's the
very first name out of your mouth when you suspect that terrorists have attacked us on
September the 11th. You say, I think, immediately it was a terrorist attack; get Dick
Clarke, the terrorist guy.
ROEMER: Even before you
mentioned Tenet and Rumsfeld's names, Get Dick Clarke.
Why don't you get Dick
Clarke to brief the president before 9/11? Here is one of the consummate experts that
never has the opportunity to brief the president of the United States on one of the most
lethal, dynamic and agile threats to the United States of America.
Why don't you use this
asset? Why doesn't the president ask to meet with Dick Clarke?
RICE: Well, the president
was meeting with his director of central intelligence. And Dick Clarke is a very, very
fine counterterrorism expert -- and that's why I kept him on.
And what I wanted Dick
Clarke to do was to manage the crisis for us and help us develop a new strategy. And I can
guarantee you, when we had that new strategy in place, the president -- who was asking for
it and wondering what was happening to it -- was going to be in a position to engage it
fully.
The fact is that what Dick
Clarke recommended to us, as he has said, would not have prevented 9/11. I actually would
say that not only would it have not prevented 9/11, but if we had done everything on that
list, we would have actually been off in the wrong direction about the importance that we
needed to attach to a new policy for Afghanistan and a new policy for Pakistan.
Because even though Dick is
a very fine counterterrorism expert, he was not a specialist on Afghanistan. That's why I
brought somebody in who really understood Afghanistan. He was not a specialist on
Pakistan. That's why I brought somebody in to deal with Pakistan. He had some very good
ideas. We acted on them.
RICE: Dick Clarke -- let me
just step back for a second and say we had a very -- we had a very good relationship.
ROEMER: Yes. I'd appreciate
it if you could be very concise here, so I can get to some more issues.
RICE: But all that he needed
-- all that he needed to do was to say, I need time to brief the president on something.
But...
ROEMER: I think he did say
that. Dr. Rice, in a private interview to us he said he asked to brief the president...
RICE: Well, I have to say --
I have to say, Mr. Roemer, to my recollection...
ROEMER: You say he didn't.
RICE: ... Dick Clarke never
asked me to brief the president on counterterrorism. He did brief the president later on
cybersecurity, in July, but he, to my recollection, never asked.
And my senior directors have
an open door to come and say, I think the president needs to do this. I think the
president needs to do that. He needs to make this phone call. He needs to hear this
briefing. It's not hard to get done.
But I just think that...
ROEMER: Let me ask you a
question. You just said that the intelligence coming in indicated a big, big, big threat.
Something was going to happen very soon and be potentially catastrophic.
I don't understand, given
the big threat, why the big principals don't get together. The principals meet 33 times in
seven months, on Iraq, on the Middle East, on missile defense, China, on Russia. Not once
do the principals ever sit down -- you, in your job description as the national security
advisor, the secretary of state, the secretary of defense, the president of the United
States -- and meet solely on terrorism to discuss in the spring and the summer, when these
threats are coming in, when you've known since the transition that Al Qaida cells are in
the United States, when, as the PDB said on August, bin Laden determined to attack the
United States.
Why don't the principals at
that point say, Let's all talk about this, let's get the biggest people together in our
government and discuss what this threat is and try to get our bureaucracies responding to
it ?
RICE: Once again, on the
August 6th memorandum to the president, this was not threat-reporting about what was about
to happen. This was an analytic piece that stood back and answered questions from the
president.
But as to the principals
meetings...
ROEMER: It has six or seven
things in it, Dr. Rice, including the Ressam case when he attacked the United States in
the millennium.
RICE: Yes, these are his...
ROEMER: Has the FBI saying
that they think that there are conditions.
RICE: No, it does not have
the FBI saying that they think that there are conditions. It has the FBI saying that they
observed some suspicious activity. That was checked out with the FBI.
ROEMER: That is equal to
what might be...
RICE: No.
ROEMER: ... conditions for
an attack.
RICE: Mr. Roemer, Mr.
Roemer, threat reporting...
ROEMER: Would you say, Dr.
Rice, that we should make that PDB a public document...
RICE: Mr. Roemer...
ROEMER: ... so we can have
this conversation?
RICE: Mr. Roemer, threat
reporting is: We believe that something is going to happen here and at this time, under
these circumstances. This was not threat reporting.
ROEMER: Well, actionable
intelligence, Dr. Rice, is when you have the place, time and date. The threat reporting
saying the United States is going to be attacked should trigger the principals getting
together to say we're going to do something about this, I would think.
RICE: Mr. Roemer, let's be
very clear. The PDB does not say the United States is going to be attacked. It says bin
Laden would like to attack the United States. I don't think you, frankly, had to have that
report to know that bin Laden would like to attack the United States.
ROEMER: So why aren't you
doing something about that earlier than August 6th?
(APPLAUSE)
RICE: The threat reporting
to which we could respond was in June and July about threats abroad. What we tried to do
for -- just because people said you cannot rule out an attack on the United States, was to
have the domestic agencies and the FBI together to just pulse them and have them be on
alert.
ROEMER: I agree with that.
RICE: But there was nothing
that suggested there was going to be a threat...
ROEMER: I agree with that.
RICE: ... to the United
States.
ROEMER: I agree with that.
So, Dr. Rice, let's say that
the FBI is the key here. You say that the FBI was tasked with trying to find out what the
domestic threat was.
We have done thousands of
interviews here at the 9/11 Commission. We've gone through literally millions of pieces of
paper. To date, we have found nobody -- nobody at the FBI who knows anything about a
tasking of field offices.
We have talked to the
director at the time of the FBI during this threat period, Mr. Pickard. He says he did not
tell the field offices to do this.
And we have talked to the
special agents in charge. They don't have any recollection of receiving a notice of
threat.
Nothing went down the chain
to the FBI field offices on spiking of information, on knowledge of Al Qaida in the
country, and still, the FBI doesn't do anything.
Isn't that some of the
responsibility of the national security advisor?
RICE: The responsibility for
the FBI to do what it was asked was the FBI's responsibility. Now, I...
ROEMER: You don't think
there's any responsibility back to the advisor to the president...
RICE: I believe that the
responsibility -- again, the crisis management here was done by the CSG. They tasked these
things. If there was any reason to believe that I needed to do something or that Andy Card
needed to do something, I would have been expected to be asked to do it. We were not asked
to do it. In fact, as I've...
ROEMER: But don't you ask
somebody to do it? You're not asking somebody to do it. Why wouldn't you initiate that?
RICE: Mr. Roemer, I was
responding to the threat spike and to where the information was. The information was about
what might happen in the Persian Gulf, what might happen in Israel, what might happen in
North Africa. We responded to that, and we responded vigorously.
Now, the structure...
ROEMER: Dr. Rice, let me ask
you...
RICE: ... of the FBI, you
will get into next week.
ROEMER: You've been helpful
to us on that -- on your recommendation.
KEAN: Last question,
Congressman.
ROEMER: Last question, Dr.
Rice, talking about responses.
Mr. Clarke writes you a memo
on September the 4th, where he lays out his frustration that the military is not doing
enough, that the CIA is not pushing as hard enough in their agency. And he says we should
not wait until the day that hundreds of Americans lay dead in the streets due to a
terrorist attack and we think there could have been something more we could do.
ROEMER: Seven days prior to
September the 11th, he writes this to you.
What's your reaction to that
at the time, and what's your response to that at the time?
RICE: Just one final point I
didn't quite complete. I, of course, did understand that the attorney general needed to
know what was going on, and I asked that he take the briefing and then ask that he be
briefed.
Because, again, there was
nothing demonstrating or showing that something was coming in the United States. If there
had been something, we would have acted on it.
ROEMER: I think we should
make this document public, Dr. Rice. Would you support making the August 6th PDB public?
RICE: The August 6th PDB has
been available to you. You are describing it. And the August 6th PDB was a response to
questions asked by the president, not a warning document.
ROEMER: Why wouldn't it be
made public then?
RICE: Now, as to -- I think
you know the sensitivity of presidential decision memoranda. And I think you know the
great lengths to which we have gone to make it possible for this commission to view
documents that are not generally -- I don't know if they've ever been -- made available in
quite this way.
Now, as to what Dick Clarke
said on September 4th, that was not a premonition, nor a warning. What that memorandum
was, as I was getting ready to go into the September 4th principals meeting to review the
NSPD and to approve the new NSPD, what it was a warning to me that the bureaucracies would
try to undermine it.
Dick goes into great and
emotional detail about the long history of how DOD has never been responsive, how the CIA
has never been responsive, about how the Predator has gotten hung up because the CIA
doesn't really want to fly it.
And he says, if you don't
fight through this bureaucracy -- he says, at one point, They're going to all sign on to
this NSPD because they won't want to be associated -- they won't want to say they don't
want to eliminate the threat of Al Qaida. He says, But, in effect, you have to go in there
and push them, because we'll all wonder about the day when thousands of Americans and so
forth and so on.
RICE: So that's what this
document is. It's not a warning document. It's not a -- all of us had this fear.
I think that the chairman
mentioned that I said this in an interview, that we would hope not to get to that day. But
it would not be appropriate or correct to characterize what Dick wrote to me on September
4th as a warning of an impending attack. What he was doing was, I think, trying to buck me
up, so that when I went into this principals meeting, I was sufficiently on guard against
the kind of bureaucratic inertia that he had fought all of his life.
ROEMER: What is a warning,
if August 6th isn't and September 4th isn't, to you?
RICE: Well, August 6th is
most certainly an historical document that says, Here's how you might think about Al
Qaida. A warning is when you have something that suggests that an attack is impending.
And we did not have, on the
United States, threat information that was, in any way, specific enough to suggest that
something was coming in the United States.
The September 4th memo, as
I've said to you, was a warning to me not to get dragged down by the bureaucracy, not a
warning about September 11th.
ROEMER: Thank you, Dr. Rice.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
KEAN: Thank you,
Congressman, very, very much.
Our last questioner will be
Governor Thompson.
THOMPSON: Thank you, Mr.
Chairman.
Dr. Rice, first, thank you
for your service to this nation and this president. I think you can fairly be described by
all, whether they agree with you or not, on various issues, as devoted to the interests of
the president and the country. And all Americans, I believe, appreciate that.
Thank you also for finally
making it here. THOMPSON: I know there was a struggle over constitutional principles. I
don't think your appearance today signals any retreat by the president from the notion
that the Congress should not be allowed to hail presidential aides down to the Capitol and
question them.
We are not the Congress. We
are not a congressional committee. That's why you gave us the PDBs.
And so, we appreciate your
appearance and we appreciate the decision of the president to allow you to appear to not
just answer our questions -- because you've done that for five hours in private -- but to
answer the questions of Americans who are watching you today.
I'm going to go through my
questions -- some of which have been tossed out because my brothers and sisters asked them
before me -- as quickly as I can because we have to depart. And I would appreciate it if
you would go through your answers as quickly as you could, but be fair to yourself.
I don't believe in beating
dead horses, but there's a bunch of lame ones running around here today. Let's see if we
can't finally push them out the door.
Please describe to us your
relationship with Dick Clarke, because I think that bears on the context of this -- well,
let's just take the first question.
He said he gave you a plan.
You said he didn't give you a plan. It's clear that what he did give you was a memo that
had attached to it, not only the Delenda plan -- or whatever you want to describe Delenda
as -- but a December 2000 strategy paper.
Was this something that you
were supposed to act on, or was this a compilation of what had been pending at the time
the Clinton administration had left office but had not been acted on, or was this
something he tried to get acted on by the Clinton administration and they didn't act on
it?
THOMPSON: What was it? How
did he describe it to you? What did you understand it to be?
RICE: What I understood it
to be was a series of decisions, near-term decisions that were pending from the Clinton
administration, things like whether to arm the Uzbeks -- I'm sorry -- whether to give
further counterterrorism support to the Uzbeks, whether to arm the Northern Alliance -- a
whole set of specific issues that needed decision. And we made those decisions prior to
the strategy being developed.
He also had attached the
Delenda plan, which is my understanding was developed in 1998, never adopted and, in fact,
had some ideas. I said, Dick, take the ideas that you've put in this think piece, take the
ideas that were there in the Delenda plan, put it together into a strategy, not to roll
back Al Qaida -- which had been the goal of the Clinton -- of what Dick Clarke wrote to us
-- but rather to eliminate this threat. And he was to put that strategy together.
But by no means did he ask
me to act on a plan. He gave us a series of ideas. We acted on those. And then he gave me
some papers that had a number of ideas, more questions than answers about how we might get
better cooperation, for instance, from Pakistan. We took those ideas. We gave him the
opportunity to write a comprehensive strategy.
THOMPSON: I'd like to follow
up on one of Commissioner Roemer's questions, the principals meetings.
With all due respect to the
principals, Cabinet officers of the president of the United States, Senate confirmed, the
notion that when principals gather the heavens open and the truth pours forth is, to
borrow the phrase of one of my fellow commissioners, a little bit of hooey, I think.
Isn't it a fact that when
principals gather in principals meetings they bring their staffs with them? Don't they
line the walls? Don't they talk to each other? Doesn't the staff speak up?
RICE: Well, actually when
you have principals meetings they really sometimes are to tell -- for the principals to
say what their staffs have said -- have told them to say.
THOMPSON: Right.
RICE: I just have to say we
may simply disagree on this with some of the commissioners. I do not believe that there
was a lack of high-level attention. The president was paying attention to this. How much
higher level can you get?
The secretary of state and
the secretary of defense and the attorney general and the line officers are responsible
for responding to the information that they were given and they were responding.
The problem is that the
United States was effectively blind to what was about to happen to it and you cannot
depend on the chance that some principal might find out something in order to prevent an
attack. That's why the structural changes that are being talked about here are so
important.
THOMPSON: What you say in
your statement before us today on page 2 reminds me that terrorism had a different face in
the 20th century than it does today. I just want to be sure I understand the attitude of
the Bush administration, because you referenced the Lusitania and the Nazis and all these
state-sponsored terrorist activities when we know today that the real threat is from
either rogue states -- Iran, North Korea -- or from stateless terrorist organizations --
Al Qaida, Hezbollah, Hamas. Does the Bush administration get this difference?
RICE: We certainly
understand fully that there are groups, networks that are operating out there. The only
thing I would say is that they are much more effective when they can count on a state
either to sponsor them or to protect them or to acquiesce in their activities. That's why
the policy that we developed was so insistent on sanctuaries being taken away from them.
You do have to take away their territory. When they can get states to cooperate with them
or when they can get states to acquiesce in their being on their territory, they're much
more effective.
THOMPSON: The Cole -- why
didn't the Bush administration respond to the Cole?
RICE: I think Secretary
Rumsfeld has perhaps said it best.
We really thought that the
Cole incident was passed, that you didn't want to respond tit-for-tat. As I've said, there
is strategic response and tactical response.
And just responding to
another attack in an insufficient way we thought would actually probably embolden the
terrorists. They had been emboldened by everything else that had been done to them. And
that the best course was to look ahead to a more aggressive strategy against them.
I still believe to this day
that the Al Qaida were prepared for a response to the Cole and that, as some of the
intelligence suggested, bin Laden was intending to show that he yet survived another one,
and that it might have been counterproductive.
THOMPSON: I've got to say
that answer bothers me a little bit because of where it logically leads, and that is --
and I don't like
what if questions, but this
is a what if question.
What if, in March of 2001,
under your administration, Al Qaida had blown up another U.S. destroyer? What would you
have done and what -- would that have been tit-for-tat?
RICE: I don't know what we
would have done, but I do think that we were moving to a different concept that said that
you had to hold at risk what they cared about, not just try and punish them, not just try
to go after bin Laden.
I would like to think that
we might have come to an effective response. I think that in the context of war, when
you're at war with somebody, it's not an issue of every battle or every skirmish; it's an
issue of, can you do strategic damage to this organization? And we were thinking much more
along the lines of strategic damage.
THOMPSON: Well, I'm going to
sound like my brother Kerrey, which terrifies me somewhat.
(LAUGHTER)
But blowing up our
destroyers is an act of war against us, is it not?
THOMPSON: I mean, how long
would that have to go on before we would respond with an act of war?
RICE: We'd had several acts
of war committed against us. And I think we believed that responding kind of tit-for-tat,
probably with inadequate military options because, for all the plans that might have been
looked at by the Pentagon or on the shelf, they were not connected to a political policy
that was going to change the circumstances of Al Qaida and the Taliban and therefore the
relationship to Pakistan.
Look, it can be debated as
to whether or not one should have responded to the Cole. I think that we really believed
that an inadequate response was simply going to embolden them. And I think you've heard
that from Secretary Rumsfeld as well, and I believe we felt very strongly that way.
THOMPSON: I'll tell you what
I find remarkable. One word that hasn't been mentioned once today -- yet we've talked
about structural changes to the FBI and the CIA and cooperation -- Congress.
Congress has to change the
structure of the FBI. The Congress has to appropriate funds to fight terrorism. Where was
the Congress?
RICE: Well, I think that
when I made the comment that the country was not on war footing, that didn't just mean the
executive branch was not on war footing.
The fact is that many of the
big changes, quite frankly, again, we were not going to be able to make in 233 days. Some
of those big changes do require congressional action.
The Congress cooperated
after September 11th with the president to come up with the Patriot Act, which does give
to the FBI and the CIA and other intelligence agencies the kind of ability, legal ability,
to share between them that was simply not there before.
You cannot depend on the
chance that something might fall out of a tree. You cannot depend on the chance that a
very good Customs agent, who's doing her job with her colleagues out in the state of
Washington, is going to catch somebody coming across the border of the United States with
bomb-making materials to be the incident that leads you to be able to respond adequately.
This is hard, because,
again, we have to be right 100 percent of the time, they only have to be right once. But
the structural changes that we've made since 9/11 and the structural changes that we may
have to continue to make give us a better chance in that fight against the terrorists.
THOMPSON: I read this week,
an interview with Newsweek, with your predecessor, Mr. Brzezinski, he seemed to be saying
that there is a danger that we can obsess about Al Qaida and lose sight of equal dangers.
For example, the rise of a nuclear state, Iran, in the Middle East, and the apparent
connection to Hezbollah and Hamas, which may forecast even more bitter fighting, as we're
now learning in Iraq. Or the ability of Hezbollah or Hamas to attack us on our soil,
within the Untied States, in the same way Al Qaida did.
Are we keeping an eye on
that?
RICE: We are keeping an eye
and working actively with the international community on Iran and their nuclear ambitions.
I think the one thing that
the global war on terrorism has allowed us to do is to not just focus on Al Qaida. Because
we have enlisted countries around the world, saying that terrorism is terrorism is
terrorism -- in other words, you can't fight Al Qaida and hug Hezbollah or hug Hamas --
that we've actually started to delegitimatize terrorism in a way that it was not before.
We don't make a distinction
between different kinds of terrorism. And we're, therefore, united with the countries of
the world to fight all kinds of terrorism. Terrorism is never an appropriate or justified
response just because of political difficulty. So, yes, we are keeping an eye on it.
But it speaks to the point
that we, the United States administration, cannot focus just on one thing. What the war on
terrorism has done is it's given us an organizing principle that allows us to think about
terrorism, to think about weapons of mass destruction, to think about the links between
them, and to form a united front across the world to try and win this war.
THOMPSON: Last simple
question. If we come forward with sweeping recommendations for change in how our law
enforcement and intelligence agencies operate to meet the new challenges of our time, not
the 20th century or the 19th century challenges we faced in the past, and if the president
of the United States agrees with them, can you assure us that he will fight with all the
vigor he has to get them enacted?
RICE: I can assure you that
if the president agrees with the recommendations, and I think we'll want to take a hard
look at the recommendations, we're going to fight.
Because the real lesson of
September 11th is that the country was not properly structured to deal with the threats
that had been gathering for a long period of time. I think we're better structured today
than we ever have been. We've made a lot of progress. But we want to hear what further
progress we can make.
And because this president
considers his highest calling to protect and defend the people of the United States of
America, he'll fight for any changes that he feels necessary.
THOMPSON: Thank you, Dr.
Rice.
RICE: Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
KEAN: Thank you.
I might announce, before I
thank Dr. Rice, that there's a lot of discussion today about the PDB, the presidential
daily briefing, of August 6th.
KEAN: This is not to do with
Dr. Rice. But we have requested from the White House that that be declassified because we
feel it's important that the American people get a chance to see it. We're awaiting an
answer on our request, and hope by next week's hearing that we might have it.
Dr. Rice, thank you. You
have advanced our understanding of key events. We thank you for all the time you've given
us.
We have a few remaining
classified matters that at some point we'd like to discuss with you in closed session, if
we could...
RICE: Of course.
KEAN: ... and I thank you
for that.
We appreciate very much your
service to the nation.
This concludes our hearing.
The commission will hold its next hearing on April 13th and 14th on law enforcement and
the intelligence community.
Thank you very much.
RICE: Thank you.
END
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