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Commission on 9/11 Criticizes Ashcroft
Tue Apr 13, 2004 09:43 AM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Justice Department under Attorney General John Ashcroft failed in 2001 to treat counterterrorism as a top priority, the commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks said in a report issued on Tuesday. The commission staff statement focused on a Justice Department document that set out priorities for 2001 issued May 10 of that year. The top priorities were reducing gun violence and combating drug trafficking. It made no mention of counterterrorism. The report said when Dale Watson, the head of the counterterrorism division, saw the report, he "almost fell out of his chair." "The FBI's new counterterrorism strategy was not a focus of the Justice Department in 2001," the staff report said. Then-acting FBI Director Thomas Pickard said he appealed to Ashcroft for more money for counterterrorism but on Sept 10, 2001, one day before the attacks on New York and Washington that killed nearly 3,000 people, Ashcroft rejected the appeal. The commission was to hear testimony later from Ashcroft, and his Democratic predecessor, Janet Reno. The panel first heard from former FBI Director Louis Freeh at public hearings that were to continue on Wednesday. The report also focused on FBI failures to detect the hijacked airliner plot, amid new revelations contained in a presidential briefing that the bureau had some 70 separate investigations related to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network underway a month before the attacks. The newly declassified Aug. 6, 2001, briefing said the FBI had detected suspicious activity "consistent with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks." The report found that despite increasing concern about terrorist threats, the FBI was hampered by a culture resistant to change, inadequate resources and legal barriers. "From the first World Trade Center attack in 1993, FBI and Department of Justice leadership in Washington and New York became increasingly concerned about the terrorist threat from Islamic extremists to U.S. interests both at home and abroad," said the report, presented at the commission hearing. Significant FBI resources were devoted to investigations of major
terrorist attacks that resulted in several prosecutions, but FBI attempts
to strengthen its ability to prevent such attacks failed to make changes
across the bureau, it said. Continued
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