WARTIME
Afte r the attacks had
occurred, while crisis managers were still sorting out a number of
unnerving false alarms, Air Force One flew to Barksdale Air Force Base
in Louisiana. One of these alarms was of a reported threat against Air
Force One itself, a threat eventually run down to a misunderstood com-
munication in the hectic White House Situation Room that morning.1
While the plan at the elementary school had been to return to
Washington, by the time Air Force One was airborne at 9:55 A.M. the
Secret Service, the President's advisers, and Vice President Cheney were
strongly advising against it. President Bush reluctantly acceded to this
advice and, at about 10:10, Air Force One changed course and began
heading due west.The immediate objec- tive was to find a safe
location-not too far away-where the President could land and speak to
the American people.The Secret Service was also interested in refueling
the aircraft and paring down the size of the traveling party. The
President's military aide, an Air Force officer, quickly researched the
options and, sometime around 10:20, identified Barksdale Air Force Base
as an appro-
priate interim destination.2
When Air Force One landed at Barksdale at about 11:45, personnel from
the local Secret Service office were still en route to the airfield.The
motorcade consisted of a military police lead vehicle and a van; the
proposed briefing the- ater had no phones or electrical outlets. Staff
scrambled to prepare another room for the President's remarks, while the
lead Secret Service agent reviewed the security situation with superiors
in Washington.The President completed his statement, which for security
reasons was taped and not broadcast live, and the traveling party
returned to Air Force One.The next destination was dis- cussed: once
again the Secret Service recommended against returning toWash- ington,
and the Vice President agreed. Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska was
chosen because of its elaborate command and control facilities, and
because it could accommodate overnight lodging for 50 persons. The
Secret Service
wanted a place where the President could spend several days, if
necessary.3
325
326 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
Air Force One arrived at
Offutt at 2:50 P.M. At about 3:15, President Bush met with his principal
advisers through a secure video teleconference.4 Rice said President
Bush began the meeting with the words, "We're at war,"5 and that
Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet said the agency was still
assessing who was responsible, but the early signs all pointed to al
Qaeda.6 That evening the Deputies Committee returned to the pending
presidential direc-
tive they had labored over during the summer.7
The secretary of defense directed the nation's armed forces to Defense
Con- dition 3, an increased state of military readiness.8 For the first
time in history, all nonemergency civilian aircraft in the United States
were grounded, strand- ing tens of thousands of passengers across the
country. Contingency plans for the continuity of government and the
evacuation of leaders had been imple- mented.9 The Pentagon had been
struck; the White House or the Capitol had narrowly escaped direct
attack. Extraordinary security precautions were put in place at the
nation's borders and ports.
In the late afternoon, the President overruled his aides' continuing
reluc- tance to have him return to Washington and ordered Air Force One
back to Andrews Air Force Base. He was flown by helicopter back to
theWhite House, passing over the still-smoldering Pentagon.At 8:30 that
evening, President Bush addressed the nation from the White House. After
emphasizing that the first priority was to help the injured and protect
against any further attacks, he said: "We will make no distinction
between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor
them." He quoted Psalm 23-"though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death . . ." No American, he said,"will ever forget
this day."10
Following his speech, President Bush met again with his National
Security Council (NSC), expanded to include Secretary of Transportation
Norman Mineta and Joseph Allbaugh, the director of the Federal Emergency
Manage- ment Agency.Secretary of State Colin Powell,who had returned
from Peru after hearing of the attacks, joined the discussion.They
reviewed the day's events.11
10.1 IMMEDIATE RESPONSES
AT HOME
As the urgent domestic
issues accumulated,White House Deputy Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten
chaired a temporary "domestic consequences" group.12 The agenda in those
first days is worth noting, partly as a checklist for future crisis
planners. It began with problems of how to help victims and stanch the
flow-
ing losses to the American economy, such as
o Organizing federal
emergency assistance. One question was what kind
of public health advice to give about the air quality in Lower Manhat-
tan in the vicinity of the fallen buildings.13
WARTIME 327
o Compensating
victims.They evaluated legislative options, eventually
setting up a federal compensation fund and defining the powers of a
special master to run it.
o Determining federal assistance. On September 13, President Bush
promised to provide $20 billion for NewYork City, in addition to the $20
billion his budget director had already guessed might be needed
for the country as a whole.14
o Restoring civil aviation. On the morning of September 13, the
national airspace reopened for use by airports that met newly impro-
vised security standards.
o Reopening the financial markets. After extraordinary emergency
efforts involving the White House, the Treasury Department, and the
Securities and Exchange Commission, aided by unprecedented cooperation
among the usually competitive firms of the financial
industry, the markets reopened on Monday, September 17.15
o Deciding when and how to return border and port security to more
normal operations.
o Evaluating legislative proposals to bail out the airline industry and
cap
its liability.
The very process of
reviewing these issues underscored the absence of an effective
government organization dedicated to assessing vulnerabilities and
handling problems of protection and preparedness.Though a number of
agen-
cies had some part of the task, none had security as its primary
mission.
By September 14,Vice President Cheney had decided to recommend, at least
as a first step, a newWhite House entity to coordinate all the relevant
agen- cies rather than tackle the challenge of combining them in a new
department. This new White House entity would be a homeland security
adviser and Homeland Security Council-paralleling the National Security
Council sys- tem.Vice President Cheney reviewed the proposal with
President Bush and other advisers. President Bush announced the new post
and its first occupant- Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge-in his address
to a joint session of Con-
gress on September 20.16
Beginning on September 11, Immigration and Naturalization Service agents
working in cooperation with the FBI began arresting individuals for
immigration violations whom they encountered while following up leads in
the FBI's investigation of the 9/11 attacks. Eventually, 768 aliens were
arrested as "special interest" detainees. Some (such as Zacarias
Moussaoui) were actu- ally in INS custody before 9/11; most were
arrested after. Attorney General John Ashcroft told us that he saw his
job in directing this effort as "risk mini- mization," both to find out
who had committed the attacks and to prevent a subsequent attack.
Ashcroft ordered all special interest immigration hearings closed to the
public, family members, and press; directed government attorneys
328 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
to seek denial of bond
until such time as they were "cleared" of terrorist con- nections by the
FBI and other agencies; and ordered the identity of the detainees kept
secret. INS attorneys charged with prosecuting the immigration
violations had trouble getting information about the detainees and any
terror- ist connections; in the chaos after the attacks, it was very
difficult to reach law enforcement officials, who were following up on
other leads. The clearance process approved by the Justice Department
was time-consuming, lasting an
average of about 80 days.17
We have assessed this effort to detain aliens of "special interest." The
detainees were lawfully held on immigration charges. Records indicate
that 531 were deported, 162 were released on bond, 24 received some kind
of immi- gration benefits, 12 had their proceedings terminated, and
8-one of whom was Moussaoui-were remanded to the custody of the U.S.
Marshals Service. The inspector general of the Justice Department found
significant problems in the way the 9/11 detainees were treated.18 In
response to a request about the counterterrorism benefits of the 9/11
detainee program, the Justice Depart- ment cited six individuals on the
special interest detainee list, noting that two (including Moussaoui)
were linked directly to a terrorist organization and that it had
obtained new leads helpful to the investigation of the 9/11 terrorist
attacks.19 A senior al Qaeda detainee has stated that U.S. government
efforts after the 9/11 attacks to monitor the American homeland,
including review of Muslims' immigration files and deportation of
nonpermanent residents, forced
al Qaeda to operate less freely in the United States.20
The government's ability to collect intelligence inside the United
States, and the sharing of such information between the intelligence and
law enforcement communities, was not a priority before 9/11. Guidelines
on this subject issued in August 2001 by Deputy Attorney General
LarryThompson essentially reca- pitulated prior guidance. However, the
attacks of 9/11 changed everything. Less than one week after September
11, an early version of what was to become the Patriot Act (officially,
the USA PATRIOT Act) began to take shape.21 A cen- tral provision of the
proposal was the removal of "the wall" on information sharing between
the intelligence and law enforcement communities (discussed in chapter
3). Ashcroft told us he was determined to take every conceivable action,
within the limits of the Constitution, to identify potential terrorists
and deter additional attacks.22 The administration developed a proposal
that even- tually passed both houses of Congress by large majorities and
was signed into
law on October 26.23
WARTIME 329
Flights of Saudi
Nationals Leaving the United States
Three questions have arisen with respect to the departure of Saudi
nationals from the United States in the immediate aftermath of 9/11: (1)
Did any flights of Saudi nationals take place before national airspace
reopened on September 13, 2001? (2)Was there any political interven-
tion to facilitate the departure of Saudi nationals? (3) Did the FBI
screen Saudi nationals thoroughly before their departure?
First, we found no evidence that any flights of Saudi nationals,
domestic or international, took place before the reopening of national
airspace on the morning of September 13, 2001.24 To the contrary, every
flight we have identified occurred after national airspace
reopened.25
Second, we found no evidence of political intervention.We found no
evidence that anyone at theWhite House above the level of Richard Clarke
participated in a decision on the departure of Saudi nationals. The
issue came up in one of the many video teleconferences of the
interagency group Clarke chaired, and Clarke said he approved of how the
FBI was dealing with the matter when it came up for interagency
discussion at his level. Clarke told us,"I asked the FBI, Dale Watson .
. . to handle that, to check to see if that was all right with them, to
see if they wanted access to any of these people, and to get back to
me.And if they had no objections, it would be fine with me." Clarke
added,"I have no recollection of clearing it with anybody at the White
House."26
Although White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card remembered someone
telling him about the Saudi request shortly after 9/11, he said he had
not talked to the Saudis and did not ask anyone to do anything about
it.The President andVice President told us they were not aware of the
issue at all until it surfaced much later in the media. None of the
officials we interviewed recalled any intervention or direction on this
matter from any political appointee.27
Third, we believe that the FBI conducted a satisfactory screening of
Saudi nationals who left the United States on charter flights.28 The
Saudi government was advised of and agreed to the FBI's requirements
that passengers be identified and checked against various databases
before the flights departed.29The Federal Aviation Administration rep-
resentative working in the FBI operations center made sure that the
330 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
FBI was aware of the
flights of Saudi nationals and was able to screen
the passengers before they were allowed to depart.30
The FBI interviewed all persons of interest on these flights prior to
their departures.They concluded that none of the passengers was con-
nected to the 9/11 attacks and have since found no evidence to change
that conclusion. Our own independent review of the Saudi nationals
involved confirms that no one with known links to terrorism departed
on these flights.31
10.2 PLANNING FOR WAR
By late in the evening of
September 11, the President had addressed the nation on the terrible
events of the day.Vice President Cheney described the Presi- dent's mood
as somber.32The long day was not yet over.When the larger meet- ing that
included his domestic department heads broke up, President Bush chaired
a smaller meeting of top advisers, a group he would later call his "war
council."33This group usually includedVice President Cheney,Secretary of
State Powell, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, General Hugh
Shelton, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs (later to become chairman)
General Myers, DCI Tenet,Attorney General Ashcroft, and FBI Director
Robert Mueller. From the White House staff, National Security Advisor
Condoleezza Rice and Chief of Staff Card were part of the core group,
often joined by their deputies, Stephen Hadley and Joshua Bolten.
In this restricted National Security Council meeting, the President said
it was a time for self-defense.The United States would punish not just
the per- petrators of the attacks, but also those who harbored them.
Secretary Powell said the United States had to make it clear to
Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the Arab states that the time to act was now.
He said we would need to build a coalition.The President noted that the
attacks provided a great opportunity to engage Russia and China.
Secretary Rumsfeld urged the President and the principals to think
broadly about who might have harbored the attackers, including Iraq,
Afghanistan, Libya, Sudan, and Iran. He wondered aloud how much evidence
the United States would need in order to deal with these coun-
tries, pointing out that major strikes could take up to 60 days to
assemble.34
President Bush chaired two more meetings of the NSC on September 12. In
the first meeting, he stressed that the United States was at war with a
new and different kind of enemy.The President tasked principals to go
beyond their pre-9/11 work and develop a strategy to eliminate
terrorists and punish those who support them.As they worked on defining
the goals and objectives of the upcoming campaign, they considered a
paper that went beyond al Qaeda to
WARTIME 331
propose the "elimination
of terrorism as a threat to our way of life," an aim that would include
pursuing other international terrorist organizations in the Mid-
dle East.35
Rice chaired a Principals Committee meeting on September 13 in the Sit-
uation Room to refine how the fight against al Qaeda would be conducted.
The principals agreed that the overall message should be that anyone
support- ing al Qaeda would risk harm. The United States would need to
integrate diplomacy, financial measures, intelligence, and military
actions into an over- arching strategy.The principals also focused on
Pakistan and what it could do to turn the Taliban against al Qaeda.They
concluded that if Pakistan decided
not to help the United States, it too would be at risk.36
The same day, Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage met with the
Pakistani ambassador to the United States, Maleeha Lodhi, and the
visiting head of Pakistan's military intelligence service, Mahmud
Ahmed.Armitage said that
the United States wanted Pakistan to take seven steps:
o to stop al Qaeda
operatives at its border and end all logistical support
for Bin Ladin;
o to give the United States blanket overflight and landing rights for
all
necessary military and intelligence operations;
o to provide territorial access to U.S. and allied military intelligence
and
other personnel to conduct operations against al Qaeda;
o to provide the United States with intelligence information;
o to continue to publicly condemn the terrorist acts;
o to cut off all shipments of fuel to the Taliban and stop recruits from
going to Afghanistan; and,
o if the evidence implicated bin Ladin and al Qaeda and the Taliban
continued to harbor them, to break relations with the Taliban
government.37
Pakistan made its
decision swiftly.That afternoon, Secretary of State Powell announced at
the beginning of an NSC meeting that Pakistani President Musharraf had
agreed to every U.S. request for support in the war on terror- ism.The
next day, the U.S. embassy in Islamabad confirmed that Musharraf and his
top military commanders had agreed to all seven demands. "Pakistan will
need full US support as it proceeds with us," the embassy noted.
"Musharraf said the GOP [government of Pakistan] was making substantial
concessions in allowing use of its territory and that he would pay a
domestic price. His stand- ing in Pakistan was certain to suffer.To
counterbalance that he needed to show
that Pakistan was benefiting from his decisions."38
At the September 13 NSC meeting, when Secretary Powell described Pak-
istan's reply, President Bush led a discussion of an appropriate
ultimatum to the Taliban. He also ordered Secretary Rumsfeld to develop
a military plan against
332 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
the Taliban.The President
wanted the United States to strike the Taliban, step back, wait to see
if they got the message, and hit them hard if they did not. He made
clear that the military should focus on targets that would influence the
Taliban's behavior.39
President Bush also tasked the State Department, which on the following
day delivered to the White House a paper titled "Game Plan for a
Political- Military Strategy for Pakistan and Afghanistan." The paper
took it as a given that Bin Ladin would continue to act against the
United States even while under Taliban control. It therefore detailed
specific U.S. demands for the Tal- iban: surrender Bin Ladin and his
chief lieutenants, including Ayman al Zawahiri; tell the United States
what the Taliban knew about al Qaeda and its operations; close all
terrorist camps; free all imprisoned foreigners; and comply
with all UN Security Council resolutions.40
The State Department proposed delivering an ultimatum to the Taliban:
produce Bin Ladin and his deputies and shut down al Qaeda camps within
24 to 48 hours, or the United States will use all necessary means to
destroy the terrorist infrastructure. The State Department did not
expect the Taliban to comply. Therefore, State and Defense would plan to
build an international coalition to go into Afghanistan. Both
departments would consult with NATO and other allies and request
intelligence, basing, and other support from coun- tries, according to
their capabilities and resources. Finally, the plan detailed a public
U.S. stance: America would use all its resources to eliminate terrorism
as a threat, punish those responsible for the 9/11 attacks, hold states
and other actors responsible for providing sanctuary to terrorists, work
with a coalition to eliminate terrorist groups and networks, and avoid
malice toward any peo-
ple, religion, or culture.41
President Bush recalled that he quickly realized that the administration
would have to invade Afghanistan with ground troops.42 But the early
brief- ings to the President and Secretary Rumsfeld on military options
were disap- pointing.43 Tommy Franks, the commanding general of Central
Command (CENTCOM), told us that the President was dissatisfied. The U.S.
military, Franks said, did not have an off-the-shelf plan to eliminate
the al Qaeda threat in Afghanistan. The existing Infinite Resolve
options did not, in his view,
amount to such a plan.44
All these diplomatic and military plans were reviewed over the weekend
of September 15-16, as President Bush convened his war council at Camp
David.45 Present wereVice President Cheney, Rice, Hadley,
Powell,Armitage, Rumsfeld, Ashcroft, Mueller, Tenet, Deputy Secretary of
Defense Paul Wol- fowitz, and Cofer Black, chief of the DCI's
Counterterrorist Center.
Tenet described a plan for collecting intelligence and mounting covert
oper- ations. He proposed inserting CIA teams into Afghanistan to work
with Afghan warlords who would join the fight against al Qaeda.46 These
CIA teams would act jointly with the military's Special Operations
units. President Bush later
praised this proposal, saying it had been a turning point in his
thinking.47
WARTIME 333
General Shelton briefed
the principals on the preliminary plan for Afghanistan that the military
had put together. It drew on the Infinite Resolve "phased campaign" plan
the Pentagon had begun developing in November 2000 as an addition to the
strike options it had been refining since 1998. But Shelton added a new
element-the possible significant use of ground forces-
and that is where President Bush reportedly focused his attention.48
After hearing from his senior advisers, President Bush discussed with
Rice the contents of the directives he would issue to set all the plans
into motion. Rice prepared a paper that President Bush then considered
with principals on Monday morning, September 17. "The purpose of this
meeting," he recalled saying,"is to assign tasks for the first wave of
the war against terror-
ism. It starts today."49
In a written set of instructions slightly refined during the morning
meet- ing, President Bush charged Ashcroft, Mueller, and Tenet to
develop a plan for homeland defense. President Bush directed Secretary
of State Powell to deliver an ultimatum to the Taliban along the lines
that his department had originally proposed.The State Department was
also tasked to develop a plan to stabilize Pakistan and to be prepared
to notify Russia and countries near
Afghanistan when hostilities were imminent.50
In addition, Bush and his advisers discussed new legal authorities for
covert action in Afghanistan, including the administration's first
Memorandum of Notification on Bin Ladin. Shortly thereafter, President
Bush authorized broad
new authorities for the CIA.51
President Bush instructed Rumsfeld and Shelton to develop further the
Camp David military plan to attack the Taliban and al Qaeda if the
Taliban rejected the ultimatum. The President also tasked Rumsfeld to
ensure that robust measures to protect American military forces against
terrorist attack were implemented worldwide. Finally, he directed
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill to craft a plan to target al Qaeda's
funding and seize its assets.52 NSC staff mem- bers had begun leading
meetings on terrorist fund-raising by September 18.53
Also by September 18, Powell had contacted 58 of his foreign
counterparts and received offers of general aid, search-and-rescue
equipment and person- nel, and medical assistance teams.54 On the same
day, Deputy Secretary of State Armitage was called by Mahmud Ahmed
regarding a two-day visit to Afghanistan during which the Pakistani
intelligence chief had met with Mul- lah Omar and conveyed the U.S.
demands. Omar's response was "not negative on all these points."55 But
the administration knew that theTaliban was unlikely
to turn over Bin Ladin.56
The pre-9/11 draft presidential directive on al Qaeda evolved into a new
directive, National Security Presidential Directive 9, now titled
"Defeating the Terrorist Threat to the United States." The directive
would now extend to a global war on terrorism, not just on al Qaeda. It
also incorporated the Presi- dent's determination not to distinguish
between terrorists and those who har- bor them. It included a
determination to use military force if necessary to end
334 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
al Qaeda's sanctuary in
Afghanistan. The new directive-formally signed on October 25, after the
fighting in Afghanistan had already begun-included new material followed
by annexes discussing each targeted terrorist group.The old draft
directive on al Qaeda became, in effect, the first annex.57 The United
States would strive to eliminate all terrorist networks, dry up their
financial sup- port, and prevent them from acquiring weapons of mass
destruction.The goal
was the "elimination of terrorism as a threat to our way of life."58
10.3 "PHASE TWO"AND THE
QUESTION OF IRAQ
President Bush had
wondered immediately after the attack whether Saddam Hussein's regime
might have had a hand in it. Iraq had been an enemy of the United States
for 11 years, and was the only place in the world where the United
States was engaged in ongoing combat operations. As a former pilot, the
President was struck by the apparent sophistication of the operation and
some of the piloting, especially Hanjour's high-speed dive into the
Pentagon. He told us he recalled Iraqi support for Palestinian suicide
terrorists as well. Speculating about other possible states that could
be involved, the President
told us he also thought about Iran.59
Clarke has written that on the evening of September 12, President Bush
told him and some of his staff to explore possible Iraqi links to 9/11.
"See if Sad- dam did this," Clarke recalls the President telling
them."See if he's linked in any way."60 While he believed the details of
Clarke's account to be incorrect, Presi- dent Bush acknowledged that he
might well have spoken to Clarke at some
point, asking him about Iraq.61
Responding to a presidential tasking, Clarke's office sent a memo to
Rice on September 18, titled "Survey of Intelligence Information on Any
Iraq Involvement in the September 11 Attacks." Rice's chief staffer on
Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, concurred in its conclusion that only
some anecdotal evi- dence linked Iraq to al Qaeda.The memo found no
"compelling case" that Iraq had either planned or perpetrated the
attacks. It passed along a few foreign intelligence reports, including
the Czech report alleging an April 2001 Prague meeting between Atta and
an Iraqi intelligence officer (discussed in chapter 7) and a Polish
report that personnel at the headquarters of Iraqi intelligence in
Baghdad were told before September 11 to go on the streets to gauge
crowd reaction to an unspecified event. Arguing that the case for links
between Iraq and al Qaeda was weak, the memo pointed out that Bin Ladin
resented the secularism of Saddam Hussein's regime. Finally, the memo
said, there was no confirmed reporting on Saddam cooperating with Bin
Ladin on unconven-
tional weapons.62
On the afternoon of 9/11, according to contemporaneous notes, Secretary
Rumsfeld instructed General Myers to obtain quickly as much information
as
WARTIME 335
possible.The notes
indicate that he also told Myers that he was not simply inter- ested in
striking empty training sites. He thought the U.S. response should con-
sider a wide range of options and possibilities. The secretary said his
instinct was to hit Saddam Hussein at the same time-not only Bin Ladin.
Secretary Rumsfeld later explained that at the time, he had been
considering either one
of them, or perhaps someone else, as the responsible party.63
According to Rice, the issue of what, if anything, to do about Iraq was
really engaged at Camp David. Briefing papers on Iraq, along with many
others, were in briefing materials for the participants. Rice told us
the administration was concerned that Iraq would take advantage of the
9/11 attacks. She recalled that in the first Camp David session chaired
by the President, Rumsfeld asked what the administration should do about
Iraq. Deputy SecretaryWolfowitz made the
case for striking Iraq during "this round" of the war on terrorism.64
A Defense Department paper for the Camp David briefing book on the
strategic concept for the war on terrorism specified three priority
targets for initial action: al Qaeda, theTaliban, and Iraq. It argued
that of the three, al Qaeda and Iraq posed a strategic threat to the
United States. Iraq's long-standing involvement in terrorism was cited,
along with its interest in weapons of mass
destruction.65
Secretary Powell recalled that Wolfowitz-not Rumsfeld-argued that Iraq
was ultimately the source of the terrorist problem and should therefore
be attacked.66 Powell said that Wolfowitz was not able to justify his
belief that Iraq was behind 9/11. "Paul was always of the view that Iraq
was a problem that had to be dealt with," Powell told us."And he saw
this as one way of using this event as a way to deal with the Iraq
problem." Powell said that President Bush did not give Wolfowitz's
argument "much weight."67 Though continuing to worry about Iraq in the
following week, Powell said, President Bush saw
Afghanistan as the priority.68
President Bush told BobWoodward that the decision not to invade Iraq was
made at the morning session on September 15. Iraq was not even on the
table during the September 15 afternoon session, which dealt solely with
Afghanistan.69 Rice said that when President Bush called her on Sunday,
Sep- tember 16, he said the focus would be on Afghanistan, although he
still wanted plans for Iraq should the country take some action or the
administration even-
tually determine that it had been involved in the 9/11 attacks.70
At the September 17 NSC meeting, there was some further discussion of
"phase two" of the war on terrorism.71 President Bush ordered the
Defense Department to be ready to deal with Iraq if Baghdad acted
against U.S. inter-
ests, with plans to include possibly occupying Iraqi oil fields.72
Within the Pentagon, Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz continued to press the
case for dealing with Iraq.Writing to Rumsfeld on September 17 in a memo
headlined "Preventing More Events," he argued that if there was even a
10 per- cent chance that Saddam Hussein was behind the 9/11 attack,
maximum pri-
336 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
ority should be placed on
eliminating that threat. Wolfowitz contended that the odds were "far
more" than 1 in 10, citing Saddam's praise for the attack, his long
record of involvement in terrorism, and theories that Ramzi Yousef was
an Iraqi agent and Iraq was behind the 1993 attack on the World Trade
Cen- ter.73 The next day, Wolfowitz renewed the argument, writing to
Rumsfeld about the interest of Yousef 's co-conspirator in the 1995
Manila air plot in crashing an explosives-laden plane into CIA
headquarters, and about informa- tion from a foreign government
regarding Iraqis' involvement in the attempted hijacking of a Gulf Air
flight. Given this background, he wondered why so lit- tle thought had
been devoted to the danger of suicide pilots, seeing a "failure
of imagination" and a mind-set that dismissed possibilities.74
On September 19, Rumsfeld offered several thoughts for his commanders as
they worked on their contingency plans.Though he emphasized the world-
wide nature of the conflict, the references to specific enemies or
regions named only the Taliban, al Qaeda, and Afghanistan.75 Shelton
told us the administra- tion reviewed all the Pentagon's war plans and
challenged certain assumptions
underlying them, as any prudent organization or leader should do.76
General Tommy Franks, the commanding general of Central Command,
recalled receiving Rumsfeld's guidance that each regional commander
should assess what these plans meant for his area of responsibility. He
knew he would soon be striking the Taliban and al Qaeda in Afghanistan.
But, he told us, he now wondered how that action was connected to what
might need to be done
in Somalia,Yemen, or Iraq.77
On September 20, President Bush met with British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, and the two leaders discussed the global conflict ahead.When
Blair asked about Iraq, the President replied that Iraq was not the
immediate problem. Some members of his administration, he commented, had
expressed a differ-
ent view, but he was the one responsible for making the decisions.78
Franks told us that he was pushing independently to do more robust plan-
ning on military responses in Iraq during the summer before 9/11-a
request President Bush denied, arguing that the time was not right.
(CENTCOM also began dusting off plans for a full invasion of Iraq during
this period, Franks said.) The CENTCOM commander told us he renewed his
appeal for further military planning to respond to Iraqi moves shortly
after 9/11, both because he personally felt that Iraq and al Qaeda might
be engaged in some form of collusion and because he worried that Saddam
might take advantage of the attacks to move against his internal enemies
in the northern or southern parts of Iraq, where the United States was
flying regular missions to enforce Iraqi no-fly zones. Franks said that
President Bush again turned down the request.79
...
Having issue d directive s to guide his administration's preparations
for
war, on Thursday, September 20, President Bush addressed the nation
before a joint session of Congress. "Tonight," he said, "we are a
country awakened to
WARTIME 337
danger."80 The President
blamed al Qaeda for 9/11 and the 1998 embassy bombings and, for the
first time, declared that al Qaeda was "responsible for bombing the USS
Cole."81 He reiterated the ultimatum that had already been conveyed
privately."The Taliban must act, and act immediately," he said."They
will hand over the terrorists, or they will share in their fate."82 The
President added that America's quarrel was not with Islam: "The enemy of
America is not our many Muslim friends; it is not our many Arab friends.
Our enemy is a radical network of terrorists, and every government that
supports them." Other regimes faced hard choices, he pointed out: "Every
nation, in every region, now has a decision to make: Either you are with
us, or you are with the
terrorists."83
President Bush argued that the new war went beyond Bin Ladin."Our war on
terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there," he said."It
will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found,
stopped, and defeated."The President had a message for the Pentagon:
"The hour is com- ing when America will act, and you will make us
proud." He also had a mes- sage for those outside the United States.
"This is civilization's fight," he said.
"We ask every nation to join us."84
President Bush approved military plans to attack Afghanistan in meetings
with Central Command's General Franks and other advisers on September 21
and October 2. Originally titled "Infinite Justice," the operation's
code word was changed-to avoid the sensibilities of Muslims who
associate the power of infinite justice with God alone-to the
operational name still used for opera-
tions in Afghanistan:"Enduring Freedom."85
The plan had four phases.
o In Phase One, the
United States and its allies would move forces into
the region and arrange to operate from or over neighboring coun- tries
such as Uzbekistan and Pakistan.This occurred in the weeks fol- lowing
9/11, aided by overwhelming international sympathy for the United
States.
o In Phase Two, air strikes and Special Operations attacks would hit key
al Qaeda and Taliban targets. In an innovative joint effort, CIA and
Special Operations forces would be deployed to work together with each
major Afghan faction opposed to the Taliban. The Phase Two strikes and
raids began on October 7.The basing arrangements con- templated for
Phase One were substantially secured-after arduous effort-by the end of
that month.
o In PhaseThree, the United States would carry out "decisive operations"
using all elements of national power, including ground troops, to top-
ple the Taliban regime and eliminate al Qaeda's sanctuary in
Afghanistan. Mazar-e-Sharif, in northern Afghanistan, fell to a coali-
tion assault by Afghan and U.S. forces on November 9. Four days later
the Taliban had fled from Kabul. By early December, all major cities
338
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REPORT
had fallen to the
coalition. On December 22, Hamid Karzai, a Pash- tun leader from
Kandahar, was installed as the chairman of Afghanistan's interim
administration. Afghanistan had been liberated from the rule of the
Taliban.
In December 2001, Afghan
forces, with limited U.S. support, engaged al Qaeda elements in a cave
complex called Tora Bora. In March 2002, the largest engagement of the
war was fought, in the mountainous Shah-i-Kot area south of Gardez,
against a large force of al Qaeda jihadists.The three-week battle was
substantially successful, and almost all remaining al Qaeda forces took
refuge in Pakistan's equally mountainous and lightly governed frontier
provinces. As of July 2004, Bin Ladin and Zawahiri are still believed to
be at large.
o In Phase Four, civilian
and military operations turned to the indefinite
task of what the armed forces call "security and stability operations."
Within about two months
of the start of combat operations, several hun- dred CIA operatives and
Special Forces soldiers, backed by the striking power of U.S. aircraft
and a much larger infrastructure of intelligence and support efforts,
had combined with Afghan militias and a small number of other coali-
tion soldiers to destroy theTaliban regime and disrupt al Qaeda.They had
killed or captured about a quarter of the enemy's known leaders.
Mohammed Atef, al Qaeda's military commander and a principal figure in
the 9/11 plot, had been killed by a U.S. air strike.According to a
senior CIA officer who helped devise the overall strategy, the CIA
provided intelligence, experience, cash, covert action capabilities, and
entrée to tribal allies. In turn, the U.S. military offered combat
expertise, firepower, logistics, and communications.86 With these ini-
tial victories won by the middle of 2002, the global conflict against
Islamist ter- rorism became a different kind of struggle.
Credit: The 911 Commision Report
http://www.9-11commission.gov/report/index.htm
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