Ex-Feds Blast 9-11 Panel and Bush: Government agencies roasted for screw-ups in war on "terror"
by James Ridgway
Village Voice
Monday, Sept 13, 2004
Link to Original
WASHINGTON, D.C.—A group of 25 former federal employees directly involved in
the government's counterintelligence and counterterrorism programs held a
press conference here this morning to lambaste both the 9-11 Commission and the
Bush administration for failing to hold government officials accountable for
failures leading up to 9-11.
The ex-employees, from the FBI, CIA, FAA, Customs, and the Defense
Intelligence Agency, had firsthand knowledge of their agencies' activities in
counterintelligence and counterterrorism. Bogdan Dzakovic, a former special agent at the FAA, said he repeatedly sought to warn his superiors of mismanagement and the dangers of terrorism, but to no avail. He was a leader of a "Red Team" at FAA, engaged in preparing for terrorist attacks. But he said the security measures in his agency were "little more than window dressing," and quoted one frustrated colleague as saying, "The FAA is so screwed up I don't know where to begin."
Diane Kleiman, a former Customs agent at JFK who was fired in 1999, scoffed
at the idea that airport security has been improved. Emphasis on checking
passengers coming into the airport hides the real problems in the back of the
airport, she said, where literally anybody can board a parked plane. She outlined a scenario, for instance, in which, say, 10 terrorists could apply to be cargo handlers (a job with high turnover), get hired and work, but then quit, retaining their passes, which give them access to ramps and the unlocked aircraft. They then could enter the airports with backpacks full of explosives, get on the planes, stash the bags in the cargo holds, and leave. In this way, 10 planes with all their passengers could be blown up.
Holding up a special government security-clearance pass, she described how lax airport security remains. Her pass gave her entrance to every nook and cranny of the airport, from ramps to runways to planes to cargo-handling entrances. Such a pass is worth thousands of dollars to any would-be terrorist. When she
was fired, nobody took this valuable passport from her. "The leadership and
management at JFK are terrible," she said.
The 25 signed a letter to Congress—organized by Sibel Edmonds, the former FBI
whistleblower who is blocked from telling what she knows by a Justice
Department gag order—citing "intentional actions or inaction by individuals
responsible for our national security, actions or inaction dictated by motives other than the security of the people of the United States."
The 9-11 Commission's final report, the letter added, "deliberately ignores
officials and civil servants who were, and still are, clearly negligent and/or
derelict in their duties to the nation. If these individuals are protected,
rather than held accountable, the mindset that enabled 9-11 will persist, no
matter how many layers of bureaucracy are added, and no matter how much money is poured into the agencies. Character counts. Personal integrity, courage, and
professionalism make the difference. Only a commission bent on holding no one
responsible and reaching unanimity could have missed that."