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Saddam and 9/11
Frontpage Magazine ^ | 1/8/2004 | Jamie Glazov

Posted on 01/08/2004 6:29:20 AM PST by Lost Highway

In this edition of Frontpage Interview, we have the privilege of being joined by Dr. Laurie Mylroie, one of the foremost American scholars on Iraq and Saddam Hussein.

In her book Study of Revenge: Saddam Hussein´s Unfinished War against America, Dr. Mylroie provided substantial evidence implicating Saddam's involvement in four terrorist attacks: the 1993 World Trade Center Bombing; the 1995 bombing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the 1996 attack on the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, and the 1998 bombings of two African embassies.

The author of the new book, Bush vs. the Beltway: How the CIA and the State Department Tried to Stop the War on Terror, Dr. Mylroie is represented by www.benadorassociates.com.

Frontpage Magazine: Welcome to Frontpage Interview Dr. Mylroie. We really appreciate you taking the time to talk to us.

You have recently become the target of some pretty nasty attacks from the Left. Peter Bergen and David Corn, for instance, have really gone after you - and it is obviously for the evidence you unearthed regarding Saddam's terror links.

It appears that the Left simply cannot forgive you for what they see as the intellectual justification you helped provide for the U.S. liberation of Iraq. These attacks are quite personally vicious and engulfed with some delusional conspiratorial thinking. Could you talk a little bit about this and what you think these attacks signify?

Mylroie: Partly, it's par for the course, particularly these days, when political discourse can be unusually ugly. Partly, it reflects the high stakes involved.

The 9/11 attacks represent the greatest US intelligence failure since Pearl Harbor. That is not a controversial statement, but the nature of that intelligence failure certainly is, as it involves the question of who bears responsibility.

Bill Clinton and his top advisers are most culpable in my view, and I say that as someone who was Clinton's adviser on Iraq in the 1992 campaign. People may forget, but Clinton was tougher than former president Bush on Saddam then, saying that Bush should have got rid of him during the 1991 war.

Clearly, I didn't begin as someone hostile to Clinton, but my strong critique, indeed utter dismay, developed as the Clinton administration refused to deal with the dangers posed by Iraq, including terrorism, as they became increasingly evident during the 1990's. In fact, I experienced that first hand, because in 1993 and 1994 I had easy access to the people covering the Middle East, including Martin Indyk, Clinton's NSC advisor on the region, who the year before, had actually brought me out of academics to work for him in Washington. That is how I ended up as Clinton's adviser on Iraq.

As early as 1993, I raised my concerns with them: it appeared from the New York Times reporting that Iraq was involved in the World Trade Center bombing. Also, Massoud Barzani (head of the Kurdish Democratic Party) had told me that Saddam was hiding many things from the UN weapons inspectors (UNSCOM), including that Iraq was still making biological agents (after Saddam's son-in-law defected, UNSCOM learned that Barzani was correct).

Initially, Indyk and the others I spoke with were quite concerned. Those concerns were certainly passed on to their superiors. But since nothing was ever done, one can only conclude that those concerns were dismissed. And it was not all that long before the Clinton people began to slime me, in the fashion of Corn and Bergen (although in his book, Bergen is much more respectful of my work). That is what you do, when you don't want to deal with the facts that someone marshals in support of an argument you don't want to hear.

FP: Presently, what do you think is the most important issue in the war in Iraq and in the War on Terror?

Mylroie: There are several. One is the lack of competence within the CPA (Coalition Provisional Authority)--which US military commanders have tellingly dubbed, "Can't Provide Anything." Iraqis would say the same.

Another is Iraq's biological weapons (BW) program. We know from UNSCOM's work that Iraq had such a program, and it included the production of anthrax. So what happened to that anthrax?

It's very important to find out to ensure that it is not used in an attack against the US or any other country. That is especially so, as there is an Iraqi-American, living in the US, with a Ph.D. in microbiology, who very much appears to have given logistical support to those who bombed the World Trade Center in 1993 (discussed in Study of Revenge, my book on Iraq, terrorism, and its proscribed weapons).

The person who knows the most about Iraq's BW program is a retired U.S. Army colonel, Dr. Richard Spertzel, who led UNSCOM's pursuit of that program. Spertzel volunteered to go to Iraq, and, in fact, he was supposed to do so as part of the Iraq Survey Group--but it never happened. Indeed, there were other UNSCOM people who did not go, or only went belatedly, when the ISG ran into trouble. It is stunning that the most knowledgeable people were not involved from the get-go in such an important project, but that is also typical bureaucratic behavior.

Unfortunately, the Bush administration has not done what is necessary to set things straight.

FP: Strange, why is that? How come the Bush administration is balking on pushing forward on ascertaining what happened to Iraq's anthrax program?

Mylroie: The Bush administration would very much like to find out what happened to Iraq's anthrax program. Indeed, Iraq's BW program is now the primary focus of the ISG.

But just as it took the right conceptual framework and a great deal of hard, tedious analysis to find Saddam, the same is true for his weapons.

The most informed people should have been involved in the search for them. They're from UNSCOM. The key question is why weren't they included? In fact, why weren't they central players in that search?

This administration is reluctant to micro-manage and that is one of the consequences. My understanding is that David Kay tried to include UNSCOM people in the ISG, but he wasn't that successful. The bureaucracies wanted the glory of finding the weapons themselves and didn't anticipate the difficulty of the task. Also, since there was extra hazard pay for this work, some managers sent themselves to Iraq instead of their analysts, who, in fact, knew much more about Iraq's weapons.

FP: How do you think Saddam's capture will impact the war in Iraq and the War on Terror?

Mylroie: It is very important. It removed a significant element of fear from the minds of ordinary Iraqis and more then came forward with information. Also, for some Ba'thist diehards, it made the point that Saddam is never coming back and even they are beginning to co-operate with US authorities, as General Petreaus recently explained.

Also, Saddam had documents that provided further insights into the structure of the insurgency and how it is being run, which, of course, led to more detentions. Presumably, that will continue.

Saddam's arrest is also important to other aspects of the War on Terror. That is best explained in terms of the intelligence failures that left us vulnerable on 9/11.

FP: And what was one of the most prominent intelligence failures that left us vulnerable to 9/11? Has it been fixed?

Mylroie: The central aspect of that intelligence failure is easily explained. Before the February 26, 1993, bombing of the World Trade Center--one month into Clinton's first term in office--the prevailing assumption was that major terrorist attacks against the US were state-sponsored. Thus, terrorism was considered a national security issue and the key question after any attack was which terrorist state was responsible.

But starting with the attack on the World Trade Center, the Clinton administration claimed that a new kind of terrorism had come into being that did not involve states. It turned terrorism into a law enforcement issue, with the focus on arresting and convicting individual perpetrators. For Clinton, who, particularly in his first years in office, did not want to deal with any serious national security problem except by way of a "peace process," this was very convenient.

But it was not true. The nature of terrorism did not change. Indeed, key figures in New York law enforcement believed Iraq was involved in the Trade Center bombing, particularly Jim Fox, who headed New York FBI, the lead investigative agency in that case.

Moreover, once the idea took hold that major terrorist attacks against the U.S. were not state-sponsored, we gave a pass to any terrorist state that wanted to attack us. The 1993 Trade Center bombing set a precedent for the assaults to follow. Iraq worked systematically with Islamic militants to attack the United States and just as systematically, the Clinton administration turned a blind eye to the evidence suggesting an Iraqi role, while focusing on the militants alone. We faced state-sponsored terrorism; we dealt with it by convicting individual perpetrators; and that is what created our vulnerability on 9/11.

Other parties also contributed to this intelligence failure, because there was a Catch-22, which they either did not understand or ignored. The most relevant information about these attacks was produced by the FBI, as it investigated the crime represented by the terrorist assault. The purpose of the FBI investigation was to produce evidence to be used in the trials of the terrorists.

Because of post-Watergate reforms, that information could not be turned over to the CIA or any other U.S. national security bureaucracy, and certainly not to foreign agencies. Incredibly, the terrorist defendants had the results of the FBI investigation into their case, but the U.S. government agencies responsible for defending the country against terrorism did not. This was corrected to some extent, although not entirely, by the post 9/11 counter-terrorism legislation.

This situation also meant that the intelligence agencies of other countries reached conclusions about the terrorist attacks against the United States without access to the most relevant information--ie the FBI investigation into the attack. That includes the Israelis, and they, too, are party to an enormous intelligence failure.

Indeed, I tried to explain this to them years ago, when Itzhak Rabin was prime minister. I knew Rabin personally. It was very frustrating and the problem in conveying it, I believe, was the "peace process." At the time--late 1994, early 1995--Rabin was so fixed on that ill-advised diplomacy, believing that a general Arab-Israeli peace was at hand, that he did not want the United States distracted by the unfinished business of the 1991 Gulf War.

As for the second part of your question, this intelligence failure has not really been corrected. Bush made the decision to go to war with Iraq soon after the 9/11 attacks, because of the strong suspicion that Iraq was involved. But he has avoided the reorganization of the bureaucracies that would facilitate that task. One clear example is that George Tenet is still CIA director.

Another example: Paul Pillar was deputy head of the CIA's Counter Terrorism Center in the 1990s and was very much involved in developing the notion that there was a new kind of terrorism that did not involve states. In fact, he took a leave of absence at Brookings to write a book to that effect. When he returned to the Agency in 2000, he became the National Intelligence Officer for the Middle East.

After 9/11, he opposed the notion of war with Iraq and played a significant role in pooh-poohing the information suggesting an Iraqi link to the attacks. Nonetheless, he still holds his position.

This is in sharp contrast to the Reagan administration. The Reagan White House recognized that to implement its policies, it needed to put its people in the key positions, and it did.

U.S. officials still don't really understand the nature of the terrorist threat they are confronting and it is illustrative to compare that situation to the capture of Saddam, which represents a good example of outstanding intelligence work.

When you begin to deal with a complicated problem (I've been involved in two such investigations), you face an enormous amount of information and it is very confusing. To deal with it, you first need the right conceptual framework in order to even begin to understand the information you have. And once you have the right framework, a very great deal of difficult, concentrated, tedious analysis is necessary.

Recall how the 4th Infantry Division found Saddam. Over the summer, a senior intelligence officer, Major Stan Murphy, concluded that people close to Saddam were hiding and protecting him, and they were part of a much larger network that included certain clans and tribes. That was the necessary conceptual framework.

Then, Murphy ordered two junior analysts to determine the names of every individual belonging to those tribes and clans and to work out the precise relationships among them. As the Wall Street Journal explained, Murphy said, "Figure it out, draw the lines, make me a chart and find every crucial person connected to Saddam." The analysts' first thought was, "Is he joking? This is impossible. We can't even pronounce these names."

But they did do it. As they worked, in a focused and concentrated fashion, they began to see patterns. The initial recognition of those patterns facilitated their understanding of the information they had, and then they began to see yet more patterns, until they understood very well the information they had, and they were able to capture Saddam.

I don't think U.S. intelligence has the proper conceptual framework for dealing with the major terrorist attacks outside of Iraq. It 's inherently a very difficult job. But the necessary framework involves an understanding of how states, particularly Iraq, but possibly others, work with and hide behind the militants to carry out their terrorism. If you insist that the intelligence agencies of states are not involved, it becomes that much harder to figure out what is going on.

The war continues inside Iraq. We can see that, and it continues outside Iraq as well, I believe. After Usama bin Ladin moved to Afghanistan, Iraqi intelligence assumed key functions in al Qaida. It is a difficult job to mop it all up, but that is what is necessary, before we can declare victory.

FP: So aside from the criminals who perpetrated the crime, President Clinton and his top advisers are actually indirectly complicit in 9/11. If they had had their heads screwed on right, it wouldn't have happened. Right?

Mylroie: Basically, that's correct. The White House was aware of the suspicions of New York FBI regarding Iraq's involvement in the Trade Center bombing and it believed that when it hit Iraqi intelligence headquarters a few months later, in June, saying that the strike was punishment for Iraq's attempt to kill former President Bush, that would take care of the Trade Center bombing too. Clinton believed that that strike would deter Saddam from all future acts of terrorism. But of course, that was to underestimate Saddam's vengefulness and resolve.

Indeed, in December 1994, I cautioned Martin Indyk about that: one strike on an empty building at night would not deter Saddam forever. Indyk was surprised, yet even as we spoke, the mastermind of the Trade Center bombing, Ramzi Yousef, was preparing another mega-terrorist plot, to bomb a dozen U.S. airplanes in the Philippines, which was thwarted because he accidentally started a fire while mixing explosives. We were lucky that time.

To sum up: the Clinton administration dealt slyly and ineffectually with the question of state sponsorship when this terrorism first began, with the Trade Center bombing, and promoted a false and fraudulent understanding of the attacks--a new kind of terrorism that did not involve states--that obscured what was, in fact, happening. The result was predictable.

FP: Till this very day, leftist pundits are still arguing that there was no Saddam-terror connection. Could you just very briefly crystallize this matter for our readers, giving a few succinct and concrete facts demonstrating the opposite reality?

Mylroie: With all due respect, it's not something that can be convincingly summarized in a handful of bullet points. And since it is such an important issue, I would urge people to read Study of Revenge (published in paperback as The War against America). Indeed, a congressman was kind enough to read it (at the urging of his brother) and then met with me. Among other things, he commented that when you get to the end, you expect to turn the page and read about the 9/11 attacks, but then you realize the book was written before 9/11.

If people don't have time for that, an article based on the manuscript appeared in The National Interest and can be found at: http://www.fas.org/irp/world/iraq/956-tni.htm

FP: Ok, thank you. So what do you think of the Left in general and what it showed about itself during the Iraq war?

Mylroie: There were prominent exceptions, and one should take note of them, but the Left's general opposition to the Iraq war was, indeed, telling. One of its problems--and this includes a significant element within the Democratic party--is that it is incapable of understanding basic national security issues and what the defense of this country requires.

Also, given the monstrously brutal character of Saddam's rule, their opposition to ousting him was stunning. Their professed concern for human suffering did not extend to Iraqis.

But since you've raised the issue, at least implicitly, there is something else I feel obliged to mention, with apologies, if it's not really what you want to hear, but the right has been no great shakes either.

Michael Ledeen stressed to you the need for analysts, people who focus on an issue, over many years, and know it extremely well. There is too much punditry and not enough analysis. Iraq was not particularly an issue for the right before 9/11, so thoroughly did Iraq get kicked off the US agenda in the 1990s.

Just think of what happened during the Clinton years: Iraq was behind repeated terrorist attacks against the US, starting with the 1993 Trade Center bombing. In 1995 Hussein Kamil defected, and as a result of that defection, the Iraqis revealed that they retained key elements of their proscribed weapons programs and that those programs were much bigger than they had previously acknowledged. The most dangerous of those programs was Iraq's BW program, which could be used to kill millions of people.

What was done? Nothing. The Clinton administration just maintained sanctions, as if an entire range of aggressive covert and military action did not exist. If you go back to that time, you'll find few critiques of US policy on Iraq, even from the right.

Nor has this problem--a failure to follow key developments in the Middle East with any kind of care--really changed for some number of people, even though they now claim expertise on the region. When I read an author like Victor Davis Hanson, I'm appalled. He supports the Iraq war, but he hasn't made the effort to understand why that war was fought and why Iraq, rather than Iran or Saudi Arabia, for example, was the country we went to war with. There are many reasons why we should be clear about that, including the fact that we are daily asking US soldiers to risk life and limb. They certainly deserve to understand why that sacrifice is being asked of them, and the Victor Hansons of this world don't provide the reasons.

FP: Well, perhaps our friend Victor Hanson will want to respond on this matter -- and we welcome his rejoinder.

Let’s move on to the argument of many Western terror analysts that there is a gulf between our "secular" and "fundamentalist" enemies in the War on Terror. You have argued that this distinction is meaningless in Islam. Could you talk a bit about that?

Mylroie: This is an untenable argument. It is contrary to much of what we know as fact. The "secular" Syrian regime supports Hizbullah in Lebanon, while the Palestinian Islamic Jihad maintains an office in Damascus, from where it directs terror attacks against Israel.

The Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigades is part of the "secular" PLO, and at a tactical level, the PLO works with Hamas, although they are rivals at a strategic level.

At the time of the 1991 Gulf War, Islamic militants, like the Afghan Mujahidin leader, Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, supported Saddam--even though Sayyaf was funded by Saudi Arabia. Indeed, most of the Saudi-funded Islamic militants supported Saddam then, as Judith Miller explains in God has Ninety-Nine Names, a very interesting and informed discussion of Islamic militancy.

Those who argue that "secular" and "fundamentalist" entities can't work together are willfully blind to the fact that they do and that there are many examples of such collaboration.

FP: If you don't mind, I would like to focus a little bit on your own political odyssey. At one time you were an adviser to Clinton and you were also not completely hostile to him and his view of the world. Would it be fair to say that, at one time, you were open, to a certain extent, to the "progressive faith"? If you were, what landmarks changed your outlook? Could you talk a bit about your own intellectual journey?

Mylroie: It's not really accurate to say I was involved with the "progressive faith." Martin Indyk brought me out of academics in 1992 to work at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which he then headed. I say "brought me out," because I was quite satisfied with the position I held then at the Naval War College: nice colleagues, nice environment.

My habits as an academic and some naiveté about the ways of Washington, or at least Washington of the Clinton era, were, in fact, to lead to an intellectual odyssey, but it's of a different sort than the one you suggest.

FP: Fair enough, let’s trash the “progressive faith” business. So, now, tell us a bit about your odyssey.

Mylroie: Back in 1992, in the context of working for Indyk, I was asked to be Clinton's adviser on Iraq for the campaign. I had some mistrust of the Democrats on national security matters from my experience with them at Harvard, where I had been a graduate student and then an assistant professor. Still it wasn't a strong feeling, and I figured if someone who might become president wanted my advice on Iraq, I'd give it happily. And, remember, Clinton was tougher than Bush on Saddam in the 1992 campaign.

Indeed, I briefed Clinton personally on Iraq. It was July 1992. Tony Lake and Sandy Berger were there. They advised me that they wanted only "a little daylight" between them and Bush, because this was the campaign, and the campaign was not about foreign policy. So, I briefed accordingly. Clinton saw through the artifice. He asked, "If the problem is that bad, why are your policy recommendations so limited?" Lake and Berger replied, almost in unison, "Mr. President" (even then that is how they addressed him), explaining this was just the campaign and once he became president, he could take care of the problem.

So I was shocked, when Indyk, still formally my boss, called me one evening shortly before the inauguration. Clinton had just given an interview to Thomas Friedman in which he essentially said that he was prepared to reconcile with Saddam. Indyk wanted me to be prepared for reporters' questions the next day.

In fact, Indyk sounded as stunned as I was. I thanked him for letting me know, but I also told him that Clinton had to take that back. He had to deny he had said it, otherwise he would set off shock waves throughout the region that would take a long time to repair, if they could ever be repaired at all.

And the next day, Clinton denied what he had told Friedman. That was the interview in which Clinton said he believed in death-bed conversions, and if Saddam were sitting on the couch next to him, he'd tell him to pay more attention to the welfare of his own people than to his weapons. Of course, Clinton had said it, as Friedman then claimed, but it was better to do what could be done to disavow the statement, rather than let it stand.

When I look back, that illustrates a significant part of a much bigger problem that developed. Clinton made decisions about the Middle East on who knows what grounds, but above the head of his Middle East advisor. And when that advisor, Indyk, learned about them, he lacked what it took to say that the decision was wrong and dangerous. In fact, I got so furious at Indyk during that time, I warned him about the consequences for his career, if more Americans died, because of the way they had handled the Trade Center bombing. But I was completely wrong. Three thousand Americans can die in the most lethal foreign assault in this country's history, because of mistakes that you were party to, and it won't harm your career one bit.

Indeed, as Herb Meyer, Bill Casey's Executive Assistant once remarked: It never hurts in Washington to be fashionably wrong, but what is lethal is to be right ahead of your time.

Indyk and others would go on to claim that I was "obsessed" by Saddam. But I merely maintained the position that I, and many others, held in 1992.

You asked about an intellectual odyssey: it has been to understand some of the great books taught to me in college, much better than I did then. That understanding came through my experience with how the issues of Iraq and terrorism were dealt with in the Clinton years. That is reflected in the epigraph in Bush vs. the Beltway, those very famous verses from Isaiah 5:20: "Woe unto those who call evil good and good evil, who turn darkness into light and light into darkness . .".

The role of ego in human affairs and the self-serving nature of human beings is not to be underestimated, particularly as they climb the greasy pole of ambition. It doesn't matter whether the issue at hand is fairly trivial--a football game, for example--or deadly serious, involving the national security interests of this country and the lives of large numbers of its citizens.

And I'll give you an example: in the 1990s, the overwhelming majority of Iraq experts accommodated Clinton's desire not to hear that he had a very serious problem with Saddam, and that, basically, Saddam had to go. In late 1998, I pushed a colleague on the question of where responsibility would lie, if Saddam succeeded in doing something absolutely terrible because he had been left in power. What if he carried out a biological attack? What if he developed a nuclear bomb and used it?

This quite well-respected fellow didn't dispute the danger, but replied, "The times are very cynical and everyone must do what he must do for his career."

A colleague with a long career in government, much of it in the Pentagon, wrote a manuscript, "Zealots and Issue-Brokers." His judgment is that maybe 1/3 of the civil service consists of people really dedicated to doing their jobs, the "zealots." The other 2/3, the "issue-brokers," are just doing what it takes to get along and otherwise advance their careers.

Until you experience it up close and in detail, this is difficult to understand, because it constitutes such a damning statement about human beings. But it is very relevant, for example, to the question you asked about why the Bush administration has "balked" at moving aggressively to determine what happened to Iraq's anthrax program. It hasn't "balked;" rather, it didn't act as aggressively as it might have to ensure that the search for Iraq's weapons was conducted as expertly and vigorously as possible. That would have meant stepping on more bureaucratic toes than they did. And if the consequence is that we get hit with a biological attack, they will not forgive themselves. Do they recognize the problem? Probably some do, but they may not be in a position to push on it, because elements of the CIA, in tacit collaboration with the Democrats and the media, have successfully raised the intimidating charge of "politicizing" the intelligence.

Bush deserves a lot of credit for taking the necessary and difficult decision to get rid of Saddam. But he has done so with a government apparatus that is not much changed from the Clinton years. That, as I said, is in contrast to the Reagan administration, and it seems a serious weakness.

FP: Thank you Dr. Mylroie, it is a shame our time is up. We are very grateful for you joining us. It really was fascinating to speak with you. I hope you will come back and visit us again.

Mylroie: It's been my pleasure. I very much appreciate your interest in my work.

*

I welcome all of our readers to get in touch with me if they have a good idea/contact for a guest for Frontpage Interview. Email me at jglazov@rogers.com.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 911; alqaedaandiraq; anthrax; barzani; bw; fbi; fox; hussein; iraq; jamieglazov; kamil; kay; lauriemylroie; mylroie; saddam; sept11; spertzel; wtc; yousef
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To: JohnGalt
ha. You've just proven my point by asking that question. You haven't read any of the links.

There are at least two books on OKC and literally thousands of articles in the local Oklahoma press that make reference to the same matters as the people you have continued to deride.

The book The New Jackals, as I've told you a few times now, also makes mention of these matters.

I guess in your view though if one if a writer and, gasp, actually takes filthy lucre for their efforts and years of investigation, then their work is automatically tainted and easily disregarded by you.

Regardless, John. As I said - just by asking the question you posed you have proven once again you have not read the links provided.

101 posted on 01/08/2004 11:12:04 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Peach
The McVeigh trail was in Colorado though and I only found articles that related to the Nichols trial.


My view is that if a writer has her ideas endorsed only by her co-workers, it's akin to what is called in history and journalism a circular reference. If she gets paid to pontificate on certain issues and the government and the larger media rejects the idea, the author has to invent a conspiracy theory in order to keep getting paid to expound on their set of ideas-- think about those hucksters who go around saying you don't have to pay your income tax because of blah-blah-blah...

Its quite different from stories like Mena Airport that originated on the Left but were reported by both sides of the ideological 'publishing' divide, thus making it a more plausible story when seperate sources reach similiar conclusions.
102 posted on 01/08/2004 11:22:23 AM PST by JohnGalt ("...so are the sons of men snared in an evil time, when it falleth suddenly upon them.")
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To: JohnGalt
I'm well aware of the notion of 9/11 and all the various other attacks as blowpack, payback, whatever term you prefer to use. The problem is that the notion is a bunch of hogwash. Anyone who pays any attention knows that the radical Islamists have declared a jihad against all societies that don't conform to the Sharia law, including Hindu India, the non-Muslim parts of Indonesia, secular Russia, etc. Our intervention abroad and support for Israel happens to give them a convenient tailor-made excuse, but these people have no trouble coming up with any kind of bugaboo to fit any situation, no many how far back into history they have to reach.

For the record, I'm against women in combat and I support sealing the border shut. The border will never be sealed shut because the elites and the employers benefit far too much from an endless heavy supply of cheap labor. If they didn't get the tangible benefits, the border would have been sealed shut years ago. Sadly, for many rich people, pinching pennies takes a higher precedence than the good of the country as a whole.

As for sending women to be killed and mutilated in combat, as a Christian Mr. Bush really should be ashamed of himself for doing this, but he's pandering for votes right now and doesn't want to risk alienating anyone, which is the new way of politics.

103 posted on 01/08/2004 11:23:41 AM PST by jpl
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To: kabar
When I read your post I suddenly thought about the sketch of John Doe 2 and Jose Padilla. I searched around and found that I am completely uninformed about this topic. (very embarrassing)

Anyway, here is what I found: Uncanny Resemblance Between Mysterious Oklahoma Bombing Suspect 'John Doe Number 2'


104 posted on 01/08/2004 11:29:39 AM PST by hobson
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To: jpl


Just a suggestion, but you need to stop wasting your time posting with fringe types like myself, and start engaging the Mainstream Rightists who could use some help framing the argument as you just did. I have given up on any political solution; I just like stumbling across fellow Old Rightists in a hostile environment-- it passes the time anyway. I am not sold on your transition, but I respect your ability to communicate with your rightwing brethren in this post.

I am unclear how are tactical disagreement (you favor foreign wars as the priority, I favor closed borders, small government and an armed citizenry) spills into defending Mylroie other than to believe with my prejudices that you are not entirely sold on the 'why we fight' line--a case of thou doth protest too much.
105 posted on 01/08/2004 11:33:44 AM PST by JohnGalt ("For Democracy, any man would give his only begotten son."--Johnny Got His Gun)
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To: JohnGalt
So thousands of articles in the Oklahoma papers, written by different reporters from around the country oftentimes, means nothing. Administration official's words mean nothing. Clinton terrorist czar official's words mean nothing. Authors of several books words mean nothing.

You've made your position clear, John. It's absence of logic is evident, but your position is clear.

We will have to agree to disagree.

After you've read a few books about the topic and really shown a desire to learn, you will change your mind.
106 posted on 01/08/2004 11:36:09 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Lost Highway
Thanks for posting this report. Laurie Mylroi is a hero in my book. There are over 125 reports linking Saddam directly with 9-11 and al Qaeda Posted Here. Also a new photo of the Butcher of Baghdad being captured and a link to view a military video of his capture.
107 posted on 01/08/2004 11:37:54 AM PST by ex-Texan
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To: JohnGalt
I favor closed borders, small government and an armed citizenry.

As I said before, I favor closed borders, and I also favor the idea of a much smaller government. I've just about come to the conclusion that we won't get either one with anything short of a violent revolution, and that's just not going to happen in the current political and cultural climate. I also very much favor an armed citizenry. I have a firearm myself, but exactly how are you going to force the average modern feminized male to arm himself, especially in the modern litgious society? Even if it weren't for the ubiquitous ambulance-chasers, a lot of guys today would run in the other direction screaming rather than personally intervene if they saw a rape taking place before their eyes.

Politics is the art of the possible, and like it or not, you simply have to try and work within the framework of what you've got, and we don't have much right now. If we can't get any of the things you mentioned, I'll settle for destroying our enemies before they destroy us.

108 posted on 01/08/2004 11:49:28 AM PST by jpl
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To: jpl
I understand, that is why I offered my two cents.

I have given up on a political solution, but I do not believe taking up arms is the answer or the only option. I believe some mechanisms retired in 1865 can be resurrected just like 'Impeachment.'

I do believe, in the meantime, exposing the villains of the Republic, which include Mylroie's opportunism, is a useful exercise and I also happen to believe that we are best to have moral men in the executive office and Bush has many family oriented qualities that can be admired so he should be supported. I find the obsession to the point of hysteria over the lack of WMDs to be a fascinating thing to observe; even though I was against this war, I was shocked that they found absolutely zero; I had no idea the intelligence apparatus was as corrupt and incompetent as that.

109 posted on 01/08/2004 11:57:43 AM PST by JohnGalt ("the constitution as it is, the union as it was")
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To: hobson
There have been a few authors and reporters who have noted the resemblance as well.

You should not be embarrassed; you will notice the mainstream press (excepting Oklahoma City reporters) have ignored the resemblance and in fact ignored many facets of the investigation.
110 posted on 01/08/2004 12:07:52 PM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: hobson; Peach
This is a classic example of where Mylroie really screwed up.

John Doe #2 is Michael Brescia, at least that was the consensus of the rightwing press 7 years ago, before Mylroie, and later Jayna Davis and Timmerman tried to bring in an Arab connection, but it appears they had a seperate agenda.

JOHN DOE #2 IDENTIFIED; BUT CAN WE GET THE FBI TO ARREST HIM?

OKC figure busted in bank jobs By Mark Eddy Denver Post Staff Writer


Accomplices known to FBI Document provides evidence tying white racists to McVeigh

111 posted on 01/08/2004 12:32:02 PM PST by JohnGalt ("the constitution as it is, the union as it was")
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To: JohnGalt
Your links are so lame I don't know where to start. Ambrose Pritcher? hahahha A no name link - I think it was the second one. Please.

#1: No where in those links does it show that Mylroi ever tried to get the government to believe that the white guy was John Doe #2. I don't know what you sent me that PROVES Mylroi screwed up. A few FBI types thought perhaps the white guy was John Doe #2.

#2: I was home sick the day of the OKC bombing and SAW the bulletin for John Doe #2 and he was, on that day, described as middle eastern. How does that rock your boat?

#3: A brief review of those links shows that the FBI arrested the white guy because he'd robbed banks before, not because of any firm evidence that he worked with McVeigh.

Really, John...
112 posted on 01/08/2004 12:51:49 PM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: JohnGalt
First of all the good Dr. is hardly "making money" off of these events since the sales of such books is very limited nor is she wrong about most of her contentions so that is an entirely bogus conjecture for you to make. Nor do you have any basis for claiming she is part of any "cover-up" with regard to Elohim City or Strassmeyer or anything else. Nor is she responsible for a Court allowing or disallowing evidence, testimony as you know. Jones also claimed there was a larger conspiracy involved at Oklahoma City but the judge wouldn't go there either. Is that Laurie's fault, too?

She is a knowledgeable and conscientious investigator and, if controversial conclusions are formed it in no way means she is a "phony" or unpatriotic. For for you to claim such absurdities does indicate an agenda on your part which likely includes undermining the President's foreign policies.

There is nothing "tin-foil hat" about the FACT that Iraq was involved in the WTC1 since one of the leaders immediately fled from NYC to Baghdad. Why was that? Just an irresistable airfare deal? It is also a FACT that Czech intelligence (and others) maintains to this day that Atta and Saddam's intelligence agent, Al-Ani, met in Prague prior to 9/11.
113 posted on 01/08/2004 12:53:18 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit (America's Enemies foreign and domestic agree: Bush must be destroyed.)
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To: All
Several Congressmen want the investigation into OKC and the first WTC investigations re-opened.

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/articles/1678779
114 posted on 01/08/2004 12:56:36 PM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Peach
You gotta be kidding me...you do know who Ambrose Evans Pritchard is don't you?

His resume is significantly more impressive to the Right than the Mylroie. He is one of our own, as opposed to an ideological interloping Clintonite like Mylroie.

The second link was to a story in the Denver Post, a newspaper, so I am unclear what your point is.


And your conclusion doesn't make any sense. Nothing proves anything of course but Mylroie interjected her theory of a Middle Eastern connection which allowed Michael Bresia to be downplayed. The reader will have to believe either fellow Rightwing journalists or a former government employee who wrote lurid tales about Saddam in the early 90s.

Ah yeah, you are welcome to not believe the Rightwing consensus on who John Doe #2 is, but again, this is a conservative web site.
115 posted on 01/08/2004 12:59:26 PM PST by JohnGalt ("the constitution as it is, the union as it was")
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To: All
One of several witnesses to McVeigh with a middle eastern man, called John Doe #2

http://archive.salon.com/news/feature/2001/06/09/john_doe/
116 posted on 01/08/2004 12:59:46 PM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: JohnGalt
Since Washington's Farewell Address is frequently totally misconstrued as to its meaning I wonder which false impression you are hanging your hat upon?

It is NOT a call to NEVER get involved in foreign affairs or an Isolationist policy. It WAS written to deter involvement with the French in European Wars as the Jeffersonians wished to do. Mainly it is a condemnation of Jeffersonians' foreign policies AND any thought of secession.
117 posted on 01/08/2004 12:59:51 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit (America's Enemies foreign and domestic agree: Bush must be destroyed.)
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To: justshutupandtakeit
"There is nothing "tin-foil hat" about the FACT that Iraq was involved in the WTC1 since one of the leaders immediately fled from NYC to Baghdad. Why was that? Just an irresistable airfare deal? It is also a FACT that Czech intelligence (and others) maintains to this day that Atta and Saddam's intelligence agent, Al-Ani, met in Prague prior to 9/11."

Tinfoil.
118 posted on 01/08/2004 1:00:44 PM PST by JohnGalt ("the constitution as it is, the union as it was")
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To: justshutupandtakeit
LOL.

At least have the courage of your fellow travelers to say that George Washington's wisdom is "living" like the New Deal Conservationist that you are.
119 posted on 01/08/2004 1:02:10 PM PST by JohnGalt ("the constitution as it is, the union as it was")
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To: All
The Wall Street Journal wants an investigation into the '93 WTC bombing and the OKC bombing.

That makes Wolfowitz, Mylroi (Clinton's terrorism czar), several authors of books, hundreds of reporters from around the country, several overseas reporters, several Congressmen...the list goes on.

The Wall Street Journal article is linked on Jayna Davis's web site:

http://www.jaynadavis.com/story090502-wsj2.html
120 posted on 01/08/2004 1:02:27 PM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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