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WHAT WE KNEW:
WARNING GIVEN...STORY MISSED
How a Report on Terrorism Flew Under the Radar
BY
HAROLD EVANS
We
were warned. Some of the best minds in the United States attempted
to alert the nation that, without a new emphasis on homeland security
and attention to terrorism, "Americans will likely die on
American soil, possibly in large numbers" as the result of
terrorist attacks. The first warning came in September 1999, when
former Senators Gary Hart and Warren Rudman, co-chairs, used those
words in the first of three documents from an entity called the
United States Commission on National Security, created during
a rare moment of agreement between President Clinton and House
speaker Newt Gingrich. Then, seven months before the attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the commission re-emphasized
its warning, this time with a detailed agenda for action to make
America safer from terrorism. The report was scary but it was
also constructive and authoritative. And it is fair to say that
most Americans never heard of it until after the attacks.
What happened?
On January 31, Hart and Rudman looked with satisfaction on the
television cameras and print reporters assembled in the Mansfield
Room of the United States Senate. They were there to present the
commission's final report of 150 pages. It was called Road Map
for National Security: Imperative for Change, and was signed by
their twelve fellow commissioners, who represented the kind of
blue-ribbon braintrust Washington is so good at putting together
(see box). Over a three-year period, the wise men had visited
twenty-five countries and consulted more than a hundred experts.
Hart and Rudman had as their executive director the one-time fighter
pilot, Charles (Chuck) Boyd, the only graduate of the Hanoi Hilton
to make four-star general. They and their staffs went to great
lengths to alert the press in advance to the gravity of the commissioners'
findings.
"Hell," says Rudman, "it was the first comprehensive
rethinking of national security since Harry Truman in 1947."
The conclusions were startling: "States, terrorists, and
other disaffected groups will acquire weapons of mass destruction,
and some will use them. Americans will likely die on American
soil, possibly in large numbers." The commission also explored
many of the underlying factors. Hart told me: "We got a terrific
sense of the resentment building against the U.S. as a bully,
which alarmed us."
The report was a devastating indictment of the "fragmented
and inadequate" structures and strategies already in place
to prevent, and then respond to, the attacks on U.S. cities, which
the commissioners predicted. Hart specifically mentioned the lack
of preparation for "a weapon of mass destruction in a high-rise
building." But the report was not simply alarmist. It was
unusually constructive, avoiding grandiose language for a step-by-step
blueprint of what urgently needed to be done to create a National
Homeland Security Agency, revive the frontline public services,
and pull together the forty discrete official bodies with responsibility
for national security.
"We need orders-of-magnitude improvements in planning, coordination,
and exercise," the report concluded. "Any reorganization
must be mindful of the scale of the scenarios we envisage and
the enormity of their consequences." They urged that, since
our borders are so porous, the uniformed services of the Customs
Service, the Border Patrol, and the Coast Guard should report
to a new National Homeland Security Agency; that homeland security
should become a priority mission for the National Guard; that
human intelligence sources on terrorism should be recruited as
a priority. The writers also had a broad vision: "A world
amenable to American interests and values will not come into being
by itself. Much of the world will resent and oppose us, if not
for the simple fact of our preeminence, then for the fact that
others often perceive the United States as exercising its power
with arrogance and self-absorption." A number of the commissioners
visited the editorial boards of The New York Times, The Wall Street
Journal, and The Washington Post before they released their report.
They brought with them a press kit containing a crisp executive
summary of the report.
Press conferences and private briefings were all to little avail.
Network television news ignored the report; so did the serious
evening news on public television. Only CNN did it justice with
a full discussion. The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal
did not carry a line, either of the report or the press conference.
Boyd told me: "I won't ever forget that day in Senate Room
207." He watched in disbelief as the Times reporter left
before the presentation was over, saying it was not much of a
story. Coverage was excellent in The Washington Post and Los Angeles
Times, with a smattering of good stories in USA Today, and the
smaller and regional newspapers using AP and Reuters. But what
most astonished and then outraged the commissioners was that none
of the major newspapers, except the Los Angeles Times briefly,
offered any kind of follow-up or critical analysis in editorials
or op-ed pieces. Nowhere did Hart-Rudman get the kind of discussion
and amplification of the sort that tends to prompt the political
machinery to operate. In short, the report passed under the radar.
The Hart-Rudman report is the kind that required elite opinion
to engage in a sustained dialogue to probe, improve, explain,
and then press for action. None of the network talk shows took
it up. But the commissioners were particularly bewildered by the
blackout at the The New York Times; they pitched an op-ed article
signed by Hart and Rudman in the hope that it would induce the
Times to take a proper look at the commission's work. The article
was rejected.
Newspapers, by their nature, are bound to miss stories from time
to time; a good newspaper will then follow up, trying to recover.
There was no attempt to repair the omission in the Times or the
Journal. The performance of the Times, the country's leading newspaper,
is curious since it has distinguished itself over the years by
giving prominence to Saddam Hussein's mischiefs, and to notable
front-page reports by Judith Miller, William Broad, and Stephen
Engelberg on the threats of bioterrorism. Its editorials on state-sponsored
terrorism have been robust. Inquiries to the Times failed to elicit
a response.
The commissioners are variously "dumbfounded" (Hart),
"surprised" (Schlesinger), "stunned" (Gelb),
"appalled" (Rudman). "The New York Times,"
says the agreeably forthright Rudman, "deserves its ass kicked."
Gingrich is more rueful: "I was very saddened. I don't expect
the networks, people who cover daily events, to be interested.
But I thought, in particular, for The New York Times and The Washington
Post and The Wall Street Journal not to give it really serious
coverage was a significant failure in providing educated citizens
with an important report. And frankly, other than [creating an
office of] Homeland Security they still haven't gone back and
contemplated the scale of change we're describing."
None of the commissioners suggests that headlines or informed
comment about their report would have forestalled September 11.
But national planning could have been six months ahead, sparing
us much of the public health chaos over anthrax. If Hart-Rudman
had got the national attention it deserved, the administration
almost surely would have moved sooner. There is a keen sense of
frustration among the fourteen commissioners that the marriage
of two inertias -- one in the serious press, the other in the
administration -- delayed the taking of action. "We lost
momentum," says Rudman.
Actually, Hart-Rudman did gain impressive backing in Congress
from the top Republican members of the national security set,
at a time when they controlled the Senate, and vigorous support
from Donald Rumsfeld at Defense. Hearings were scheduled for the
week of May 7. But the White House stymied the move. It did not
want Congress out front on the issue, not least with a report
originated by a Democratic president and an ousted Republican
speaker. On May 5, the administration announced that, rather than
adopting Hart-Rudman, it was forming its own committee headed
by Vice President Dick Cheney, who was expected to report in October.
"The administration actually slowed down response to Hart-Rudman
when momentum was building in the spring," says Gingrich.
Senator Hart visited the White House in an effort to get the administration
to move faster. He met National Security adviser Condoleezza Rice
on September 6, just five days before the terrorist attacks. She
would, she said, "pass on" his concerns. After September
11, President Bush took a leaf from the commission's report in
his appointment of Governor Ridge to head Homeland Security. But
Ridge's powers are too limited to meet the commission's concept
of the job. By some estimates, it will take two years to fuse
the federal hermetic structures, leaving America terribly vulnerable
in the meantime.
The failure of the most respected, agenda-setting editorial and
news pages to acknowledge such informed analyses of the complex,
essentially life-and-death issues of national security, is puzzling.
The New York Times on October 9 even had the nerve to report:
"Tom Ridge was sworn in today as the first director of homeland
security, a position the country's leaders never felt was needed
before September 11 . . ." (emphasis added). Finger pointing
is uncomfortable in the light of the unique malevolence of the
atrocity of September 11. But the print and electronic press,
which have legitimately been criticizing gaps in the U.S. intelligence
system, have so far failed to point the finger at themselves.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harold Evans was editor of The Sunday Times of London
for fourteen years, 1967-1981, and editor of The Times,
1981-1982. He was president of Random House, 1990-1997, and editorial
director and vice chairman of the Daily News, U.S.
News & World Report, and Atlantic Monthly, 1997-2000.
He is the author of The American Century.
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