Just five days ago I posted about Attorney General Michael Mukasey's astonishing assertion when speaking before the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco.
Officials "shouldn't need a warrant when somebody with a phone in Iraq picks up a phone and calls somebody in the United States because that's the call that we may really want to know about. And before 9/11, that's the call that we didn't know about. We knew that there has been a call from someplace that was known to be a safe house in Afghanistan and we knew that it came to the United States. We didn't know precisely where it went." [Emphasis mine]The director of the 9/11 Commission has no memory of any such call coming to the attention of the Commission (as I posted then).
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.
Neither do the co-chairs or anyone in Congress. As Rep. Lee Hamilton finally responded to Glenn Greenwald:
I am unfamiliar with the telephone call that Attorney General Mukasey cited in his appearance in San Francisco on March 27. The 9/11 Commission did not receive any information pertaining to its occurrence.Gleen Greenwald comments today:
(1) The Bush administration concealed this obviously vital episode from the 9/11 Commission and from everyone else, until Mukasey tearfully trotted it out last week; or,Rep. John Conyers wrote Mukasey asking for clarification. I have not noticed word of any response.
(2) Mukasey, the nation's highest law enforcement officer, made this story up in order to scare and manipulate Americans into believing that FISA and other surveillance safeguards caused the 9/11 attacks and therefore the Government should be given more unchecked spying powers.
Either way, isn't it rather self-evidently a huge story?
I agree with Greenwald's obvious implication. This IS self-evidently a huge story.
Did the maladministration make a horrendous error in not acting when it could and should have?
Or is the current Attorney General, like the previous one, a liar?
Anyone have other interpretations of this (and some reason to deem them plausible)?
--the BB
1 comment:
Oh Paul- you and your pesky need for details, truth and so forth.
It's practically... um, how do I say this... un-American.
(I loathe these bastards. Sorry for the snark.)
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