November 07, 2003
View From Lodi, CA: Bush Not Keen To Cooperate With
Kean
By Joe Guzzardi
The 9-11
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United
States, the Congressional bipartisan commission
reluctantly approved by President George W. Bush last
year, takes two steps forward but is then forced two
steps back in its search to learn what happened prior to
9/11.
Under
the direction of former New Jersey Governor
Thomas Kean, the Commission has struggled from the
beginning with federal government agencies it says have
been slow to cooperate.
Nevertheless, everyday, dozens of lawyers, police
officers and retired government officials pour over
nearly 400,000 pages of White House, CIA and FBI
documents. Also under review are transcripts of
interviews with
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of
the attack.
The
Commission has also analyzed what many critics consider
to be vital to the complete understanding of 9/11—the
communications between the White House and officials of
the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
Getting
the NORAD documents was—as usual—tough. Two weeks ago,
the commission
announced it had subpoenaed Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) documents after learning the agency
had failed to voluntarily turn over tapes and other
records.
Now Kean
wants the White House to relinquish the daily briefings
prepared by the CIA for President Bush. And the
President—who had hoped to avoid a Commission in the
first place—has
steadfastly refused to turn those papers over.
Consistent with its ongoing pattern, the Bush
administration has ignored Dean’s request. As long ago
as July, the commission complained that the Bush
administration refused access to the most critical
papers.
Kean feels that his only recourse is to subpoena more
documents including the pre-9/11 White House
intelligence briefings. In a recent conversation with
the
New York Times, Kean said that
"Anything that has to do
with 9/11, we have to see it — anything. There are a lot
of theories about 9/11, and as long as there is any
document out there that bears on any of those theories,
we're going to leave questions unanswered. And we cannot
leave questions unanswered."
Kean
argues that presidential privilege, which the White
House claims, doesn’t apply. The commission and its
mission, according to Kean, are unique.
For
Bush, stonewalling may hurt his re-election prospects.
Commission member Max Cleland, former Democratic senator
from Georgia, goes further. "It's obvious that the
White House wants to run out the clock here," he
told the Times. The commission must finish its
work by May of next year. "It's Halloween, and we're
still in negotiations with some assistant White House
counsel about getting these documents— it's disgusting."
Cleland’s fellow commission member Slade Gordon, the
former Republican senator from Washington, is equally
concerned about the May deadline. Gorton told the
Times he was "startled by the 'indifference' of
some executive branch agencies in making material
available to the commission."
In two
separate but equally ominous signs for Bush, Republican
Sen. John McCain of Arizona is urging the families of
9/11 victims to use their leverage to force the White
House to cooperate. And if the commission can't finish
up by May, McCain said he’d push for an extension.
One of
Bush’s potential opponents in 2004, Democratic Senator
Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, promises to join McCain
on the Senate floor to argue for more time.
Lieberman, a co-author of the legislation creating the
independent commission
said,
“After claiming they wanted
to find the truth about September 11th, the Bush
Administration has resorted to secrecy, stonewalling,
and foot dragging. They have resisted this inquiry at
every turn.”
Even
with subpoenas likely, the White House stalls. And the
country is left to wonder why.
One
obvious answer is that Bush is afraid of the
repercussions of complete disclosure. As Cleland said,
“As each day goes by, we learn that this government knew
a whole lot more about these terrorists before 9/11 than
it ever admitted.”
The
ultimate irony is that the Bush administration has
exploited the terrorist attacks for maximum political
purposes. No speech by Bush or his staff is complete
without references to
“9/11” or
“terrorism.”
And you
can expect more of the same as the election draws
closer.
For the
sake of the nation, Bush should cooperate fully with the
9/11 Commission. Let the chips fall where they may.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.