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Clarke book has errors about arrest of Ahmed Ressam | |||
2004-04-12 | |||
EFL: As former White House counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke tells it in his book "Against All Enemies," an international alert to be on the lookout for terrorists played a role in Ressam's capture at a Port Angeles ferry terminal in December 1999, his car loaded with bomb-making material. But national-security adviser Condoleezza Rice, in her testimony before the Sept. 11 commission last week, discounted Clarke's version and credited a savvy U.S. customs agent, Diana Dean. Dean stopped Ressam because "she sniffed something about Ressam. They saw that something was wrong" — not because of some security alert, Rice testified. The debate over Ressam's capture encapsulates the controversy between Clarke and the Bush administration over which president — Clinton or Bush — took the threat of al-Qaida more seriously, and whether either administration did enough before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Disputing Clarke's claim, Rice testified customs agents "weren't actually on alert." At least one of the agents who helped apprehend Ressam sides with Rice's version of events. Moreover, others involved in the Ressam case say Clarke's book contains factual errors and wrongly implies national-security officials knew of Ressam's plan to set a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport long before they actually did. Ressam's arrest came on President Clinton's watch. Early that month, Clarke wrote in his book, the United States had learned terrorists linked to Osama bin Laden were planning as many as 15 attacks on Americans worldwide as the millennium approached. Clarke, who worked for both Clinton and Bush, said he convened the Counter-terrorism Security Group, which he chaired, and sent out warnings both overseas and to local, state and federal law-enforcement agencies around the country to be on heightened alert for suspicious activity. "And then we waited," he wrote. "The break came in an unlikely location," Clarke wrote, describing Ressam's arrest by customs agents during a "routine screening." According to a former customs agent who was involved, Clarke's version, laid out in one chapter of his book, wrongly implies they were on "heightened alert" and somehow looking for terrorists. "No," was the terse reply of Michael Chapman, one of the customs agents who arrested Ressam, when asked if he was aware of a security alert. "We were on no more alert than we're always on. That is a matter of public record," said Chapman, now a Clallam County commissioner. A review of the trial testimony of Chapman, Dean and two other U.S. customs agents involved in the arrest turned up no reference to a security alert. Rather, it supports Chapman's assessment that agents thought Ressam was smuggling drugs when they opened the trunk of his rental car and found bags of white powder buried in the spare-tire well. Only after finding several plastic black boxes, containing watches wired to circuit boards, did anyone suspect a bomb. Dean has said repeatedly she singled Ressam out for a closer look because he was nervous, fumbling and sweating. Ressam has since told agents he was sick, and federal sources have confirmed Ressam had apparently gotten malaria while at terrorist-training camps in Afghanistan. Clarke's version of that night contains other errors. Some of them are minor. But one implies national-security officials knew more about Ressam's plans than they could have at the time: • Clarke wrote that Ressam bolted and left his car on the ferry. In fact, Ressam drove off the ferry and ran when he was stopped for inspection.Another Brookings scholar, Stephen Hess, a senior fellow on governmental studies and an authority on Washington and the media, said errors in memoirs are not unusual or particularly significant unless they affect the broader point or conclusion the author is drawing. "So it's hard to say what the significance of these errors are," Hess added. "Whether you agree with him or not, I don't think anybody has accused Dick Clarke of being sloppy."
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Posted by:Steve |
#12 All we have to do is review the news stories from that time. I remember that the agent thought he was suspicious. Yet, now we read that Bubba's admin sent out a warning. All those stories and no one ever thought to ask? |
Posted by: Anonymous2U 2004-04-12 10:28:43 PM |
#11 From everything I've read about this book, it has more holes than a Swiss golf course. |
Posted by: Tibor 2004-04-12 6:46:04 PM |
#10 Clarke book has errorsAnd lies, and falsehoods, and untruths.... Just like Clarke himself. As I wrote to Glenn Reynolds, ABC has already hit rock bottom (along with the rest of the leftist "mainstream" media). Maybe they hired Clarke to help them start digging. And I wonder who's really paying his salary? Soros, perhaps? |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2004-04-12 6:28:49 PM |
#9 People are paying good money to buy Clarke's stoopid book. Why? |
Posted by: GK 2004-04-12 6:28:16 PM |
#8 "Indeed,the U.S. came within hours of dropping charges..." Again demonstrating the utter futility of treating Islamic terrorists as criminals.Treat captured terrorists as prisoners of war and keep imprisoned until OBL,Al Qaida and the rest are destroyed or surrender.They declared war,treat 'em accordingly. |
Posted by: Stephen 2004-04-12 6:21:55 PM |
#7 Before the Patriot Act was implemented or some other initiative, I don't believe that alerts would ever make it down to a customs agent at all and certainly not in a timely manner. It would be interesting to ask this customs agent whether she was a aware of an alert during this time. If she says she remembers one, I would still like to see it traced back through the bureaucratic maze to Clarke. |
Posted by: Super Hose 2004-04-12 5:39:21 PM |
#6 Good point Frank! While under contract with ABC Mr Clarke can't answer questions of other media outlets. Reporters can't 'shake the idiot tree' and see if Clarke falls out. Good political move on LLL controlled media too. Any bets that Mr. Clarke will be asked any important questions before November 2? And how long will he be on the payroll after that? |
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter) 2004-04-12 5:25:19 PM |
#5 Frank. I don't think ABC can protect him from a subpoena....... What this tells me is that ABC is providing Clarke cover for his bullshit. |
Posted by: CrazyFool 2004-04-12 5:06:36 PM |
#4 Instapundit notes that Clarke's been hired by ABC as an analyst. Jennings gave him a few softballs to swing at in his "news" interview, but ABC also denied access to him to the other nets and media, effectively preventing him from being questioned on his errors and accusations. |
Posted by: Frank G 2004-04-12 4:57:06 PM |
#3 Clarkes a joke, trust me on this one, I know one when I see one. I'd stay but I've an appointment with Stanley. (Who is actually CID) but't don't say anything, I wasn't here. Mum's the word. |
Posted by: Col Flagg 2004-04-12 4:30:05 PM |
#2 From the first time I heard this yarn about the customs guard arresting Ressa, I never believed a word of it. It's a typical story to serve as a cover for intelligence collected by NSA. The US Government was very probably tracking Ressa during his entire drive across Canada. This is similar to that yarn the Philippine police tell about that fire breaking out in Ramzi Yousef's apartment in Manila. Likewise in that case, some super-alert cop acted on a premonition and thus prevented a horrendous bomb attack. |
Posted by: Mike Sylwester 2004-04-12 4:02:28 PM |
#1 Clarke is begining (I Hope) to feel the heat from his lies. This coupled with oh so significant (NOT) October 6 PDB Memo makes Clarkes book look more like fiction than reality. How come I hear zilch, nada, nothing from CNN/MSNBC/ABC/NBC/CBS? Even the border patrol agents discredit his version of events. Tough when the people who were actually there tell a different story. I think someone was shaking a tree one day and Dick Clarke fell onto his head! |
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter) 2004-04-12 3:41:14 PM |