Last week, during a question-and-answer session
following a speech he delivered in San Francisco, Attorney General
Michael Mukasey revealed a startling and extremely newsworthy
fact. As I wrote
last Saturday, Mukasey claimed that, prior to 9/11, the
Bush administration was aware of a telephone call being made
by an Al Qaeda Terrorist from what he called a "safe house in
Afghanistan" into the U.S., but failed to eavesdrop on that
call. Some help is needed from readers here to generate the
attention for this story that it requires.
In that speech, Mukasey blamed FISA's warrant
requirement for the failure to eavesdrop on that call -- an
assertion which is, for multiple reasons that I detailed in
that post, completely false. He then tearfully claimed that
FISA therefore caused the deaths of "three thousand people who
went to work that day." For obvious reasons, the Attorney General's
FISA falsehoods themselves are extremely newsworthy, but it
is the story he told about the pre-9/11-planning call from
Afghanistan itself that is truly new, and truly extraordinary.
Critically, the 9/11
Commission Report -- intended to be a comprehensive account
of all relevant pre-9/11 activities -- makes no mention whatsoever
of the episode Mukasey described. What has been long
publicly reported in great detail are multiple calls that
were made between a global communications hub in Yemen and the
U.S. -- calls which the NSA did intercept without warrants
(because, contrary to Mukasey's lie, FISA does not and never
did require a warrant for eavesdropping on foreign targets)
but which, for some unknown reason, the NSA failed to share
with the FBI and other agencies. But the critical pre-9/11 episode
Mukasey described last week is nowhere to be found in the 9/11
Report or anywhere else. It just does not exist.
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Yesterday, I contacted Lee Hamilton, the 9/11
Commission Vice Chairman, to ask him whether the Commission
was ever told about Mukasey's alleged Afghan Terrorist 9/11-planning
telephone calls and/or the Bush administration's failure/inability
to eavesdrop on such calls. Hamilton refused to comment, first
claiming that he was in meetings all day yesterday and had no
time to talk to me. When asked if he would comment today or
whenever he had time, he said he was not going to comment on
this ever, since he had not read Mukasey's speech. Calls to
9/11 Executive Director Philip Zelikow seeking comment were
not returned and 9/11 Commission Chairman Tom Kean could not
yet be reached.
It's unacceptable for Hamilton to refuse to comment
on Mukasey's claims. The whole
purpose of the 9/11 Commission was to ensure that there
was full-scale investigation and disclosure of all facts
relevant to the 9/11 attacks, including the Government's actions
and inactions in preventing that attack from occurring.
If the Attorney General of the United States,
out of the blue, makes an extraordinary and new assertion in
a public speech about an easy opportunity the Bush administration
had to detect those attacks -- an opportunity he claims was
lost because of eavesdropping laws -- Hamilton ought to say
whether the Commission was ever told about this incident and/or
whether Mukasey is telling the truth. Preventing high government
officials from lying about the 9/11 attacks or exposing concealment
of key 9/11 facts is his obligation as Vice Chairman of the
Commission. Some type of comment from 9/11 Commission officials
on Mukasey's claims is vital for generating further attention
to this story and for compelling Mukasey to account for what
he said.
Hamilton is currently
the President and Director of the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars, and director of The Center on Congress
at Indiana University. Please email him at the address below,
politely set forth the extraordinary claims the Attorney General
just made about the 9/11 attacks (with citations to media sources
about the speech -- including here,
here,
and here),
and urge him to fulfill his obligation as 9/11 Commission Vice
Chair by confirming whether Mukasey's revelations are true and/or
were disclosed to the Commission during its investigation: Lee.hamilton@wilsoncenter.org.
This isn't just a matter of academic and historical
interest about the 9/11 attacks, although it is that. One of
two things almost certainly happened here, each of which is
of great importance. Either Mukasey is lying about the
9/11 attacks in order to manipulate Americans into believing
that FISA's warrant requirements are what prevented discovery
of the 9/11 attacks and caused 3,000 American deaths -- a completely
disgusting act by the Attorney General which obviously cannot
be ignored. Or, Mukasey has just revealed the most damning
fact yet about the Bush's administration's ability and failure
to have prevented the attacks -- facts that, until now, were
apparently concealed from the 9/11 Commission and the public.
Since I wrote about this on Saturday, there has
been some slowly evolving media attention paid to it. On Monday,
I discussed the story on the radio with Rachel Maddow who, as
always, grasped completely its importance. The following night,
she was on Countdown with Keith Olbermman, which had a lengthy
and detailed segment, highlighting all of the right questions
(video below). Raw Story compiled a very
thorough article with the key facts, and the top
Daily Kos post this morning does the same.
The great significance of this story -- that
Mukasey either completely fabricated a key 9/11 event or just
revealed a heretofore unknown 9/11 bombshell -- is self-evident
and made clear by these growing accounts. Having Hamilton, Kean
and/or Zelikow comment on the veracity of Mukasey's claims about
the 9/11 attacks -- as they ought to do -- is vital for advancing
the story.
UPDATE:
Philip Zelikow, the 9/11 Commission Executive Director (and
former Counselor to Condolleeza Rice), obviously has no idea
what Mukasey is talking about, as he replies by email (ellipses
in original):
Not sure of course what the AG had in mind, although
the most important signals intelligence leads related to our
report -- that related to the Hazmi-Mihdhar issues of January
2000 or to al Qaeda activities or transits connected to Iran
-- was not of this character. If, as he says, the USG didn't
know where the call went in the US, neither did we. So unless
we had some reason to link this information to the 9/11 story
....
In general, as with several covert action issues
for instance, the Commission sought (and succeeded) in publishing
details about sensitive intelligence matters where the details
were material to the investigative mandate in our law.
That's polite Beltway talk for saying that nothing
like what Mukasey described actually happened. Does anyone on
TV other than Keith Olbermann care that the Attorney General
of the United States just invented a critical episode about
9/11 that never actually happened -- tearing up as he did it
-- in order to scare Americans into supporting the administration's
desired elimination of spying restrictions and blame FISA supporters
for the 9/11 attacks? We still ought to hear from Hamilton and/or
Kean.
UPDATE II:
I'll be on Rachel Maddow's show at 7:30 p.m. EST today to discuss
these developments. Local listings and live audio feed are here.
At Daily Kos, McJoan -- who wrote about this
matter today here
-- has written
about it again, and included contact information for key
members of Congress to demand that Mukasey be compelled to account
for his 9/11 claims, preferably under oath.
The reason this story has the potential to be
significant is because it's easy to understand -- Mukasey's
story is either true or false -- and, more importantly, nothing
like it happened. He can't claim that he just misspoke or
was confused because not only was there no such call from Afghanistan
(at least according to everything that is known, including by
the 9/11 Commission's version), but FISA could never possibly
have prevented interception of any calls remotely like the one
Mukasey described.
He just made this up out of whole cloth in order
to mislead Americans into supporting the administration's efforts
to eliminate spying safeguards and basic constitutional liberties
and to stifle the pending surveillance lawsuits against telecoms.
That isn't hard for anyone -- even including those who play
the role of journalists on TV -- to understand and convey.
Finally, numerous people have sent me their emails
to Lee Hamilton, who still hasn't commented or responded. If
he doesn't soon, I think mass (though civil) calling of his
office will be in order. I don't think he has the option of
simply remaining quiet when the Attorney General makes a statement
of this sort about the 9/11 attacks.
UPDATE III:
With the help of readers, I was able to find and get in contact
with Tom Kean's office, who asked that an email be sent to him
requesting comment. The email I sent is here,
along with the email I sent to the DOJ (at their request) asking
for comment from Mukasey.
Dan Gilmor of the Center for Citizen Media --
affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley's Graduate
School of Journalism and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society
at Harvard University Law School -- has posted a superb
piece on this matter, focusing on what it reflects about
establishment press behavior. The whole thing is worth reading.
UPDATE IV:
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, along with
two Subcommittee Chairs, just sent a
letter to Michael Mukasey demanding answers to all the right
questions about his 9/11 claims as well as the bizarre
(though unsurprising) reference in the Yoo Memorandum to
the suspension of the Fourth Amendment inside the U.S. That
letter will need to be followed up with action, but it's a good
start.