Rice takes sting out of 'Bin Laden' briefing

President Bush was given an intelligence briefing entitled "Bin Laden determined to attack inside the United States" just weeks…

Dr Condoleezza Rice is sworn in before the 9/11 commission iin Washington yesterday. Dr Rice denied the August 6th briefing paper amounted to an urgent warning of an impending attack.
Dr Condoleezza Rice is sworn in before the 9/11 commission iin Washington yesterday. Dr Rice denied the August 6th briefing paper amounted to an urgent warning of an impending attack.

President Bush was given an intelligence briefing entitled "Bin Laden determined to attack inside the United States" just weeks before the September 11th attacks, it emerged yesterday.

Details of the August 6th briefing in 2001, which warned of terrorist preparations being made for hijackings on US soil, surfaced in testimony given by the US national security adviser, Dr Condoleezza Rice, to a commission of inquiry studying the September 11th attacks.

The existence of the Presidential Daily Brief (PDB) had been publicly known for some time, but Dr Rice's confirmation of its title and some of its contents pushed it centre stage in the explosive political row over whether the al-Qaeda attacks could have been prevented.

The emotive significance of the briefing - in the form of a memorandum sent to the president summarising potential threats to the US - is all the greater because at the time he received it, Mr Bush was on a month-long "working holiday" at his Texas ranch and spent much of the following days fishing and clearing undergrowth on his land.

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He did not cut short his vacation or apparently take dramatic steps in response to the briefing.

The president was at the ranch yesterday, watching Dr Rice's performance on television. According to his spokesman he telephoned her from his pickup truck to say she had done "a great job".

In the course of a frequently testy interrogation lasting more than two hours, Dr Rice repeatedly insisted that the content of the August 6th briefing to the president did not live up to its dramatic title.

She said it was largely a historical review by the CIA and FBI of previous hijacking plots and contained no fresh information or warnings. There was no "silver bullet" that could have stopped the attacks, she said.

However, Democratic members of the commission questioned that interpretation. Mr Bob Kerrey, a former senator, said the PDB informed the president that "the FBI indicates patterns of suspicious activity in the United States consistent with preparations for hijacking".

Dr Rice countered that the FBI had been given the task of looking into the report, airport authorities were informed, and that there was not much more the president and his top officials could have done. She blamed the failure to catch the al-Qaeda hijackers before the attack on long-term bureaucratic barriers which prevented the sharing of information between the CIA and FBI.

In exchanges in which the questions were often more revealing than the answers, the commissioners made public a series of stunning findings on the extent of apparent bureaucratic incompetence in the weeks between August 6th and September 11th, 2001.

"Secretary \ Mineta, the secretary of transportation, had no idea of the threat. The administrator of the FAA [Federal Aviation Administration], responsible for security on our airlines, had no idea. Yes, the attorney general was briefed, but there was no evidence of any activity by him about this," Mr Jamie Gorelick, a Democratic commissioner, told Dr Rice.

"You indicate in your statement that the FBI tasked its field offices to find out what was going on out there. We have no record of that. The Washington field office international terrorism people say they never heard about the threat, they never heard about the warnings, they were not asked to come to the table and shake those trees. SACs, special agents in charge, around the country - Miami in particular - had no knowledge of this."

The justice department and FBI will come under particular scrutiny in the commission's hearings next week, when the attorney general, Mr John Ashcroft, will be under fire.

In his first seven months in office, he cut the FBI's counter-terrorism budget, and did not even list terrorism on his list of justice department priorities on the eve of the al-Qaeda attack.

Sitting alone in front of the 10 commissioners, Dr Rice began with a prepared statement, read with a shaky voice which gradually grew in confidence.

She argued that reports of an increase in intelligence "chatter" about an impending attack in the summer of 2001 had been overstated, and made public examples of vague intercepted comments from terrorist subjects to illustrate her argument: "Unbelievable news in coming weeks" and "Big event ... there will be a very, very, very, very big uproar." "Troubling, yes. But they don't tell us when; they don't tell us where; they don't tell us who; and they don't tell us how," Dr Rice said. She denied the August 6th briefing paper amounted to an urgent warning of an impending attack.