Blasphemous Metablogging
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  22. mars 2004


Richard Clarke: Now who was obsessed with other threats?

Half the blogosphere has been discussing Richard Clarke the last few days, and his accusations about the inner workings of the Bush administration. Clarke was terrorism czar under President Clinton and under President Bush until he, after 9/11-01, was demoted to cybersecurity czar and later resigned.

One of the two most serious allegations he makes is that before 9/11, Clarke tried in vain to convince the Bush administration that they needed to go after Bin Laden.

Clarke finally got his meeting about al Qaeda in April, three months after his urgent request. But it wasn't with the president or cabinet. It was with the second-in-command in each relevant department.

For the Pentagon, it was Paul Wolfowitz.

Clarke relates, "I began saying, 'We have to deal with bin Laden; we have to deal with al Qaeda.' Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, said, 'No, no, no. We don't have to deal with al Qaeda. Why are we talking about that little guy? We have to talk about Iraqi terrorism against the United States.'

"And I said, 'Paul, there hasn't been any Iraqi terrorism against the United States in eight years!' And I turned to the deputy director of the CIA and said, 'Isn't that right?' And he said, 'Yeah, that's right. There is no Iraqi terrorism against the United States."

Clarke went on to add, "There's absolutely no evidence that Iraq was supporting al Qaeda, ever."

Richard ClarkeThe second serious allegation is that even after the horrible events on 9/11-01, the Bush administration didn't care about al-Qaeda but were obsessed with Iraq.

As Clarke writes in his book, he expected the administration to focus its military response on Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda. He says he was surprised that the talk quickly turned to Iraq.

"Rumsfeld was saying that we needed to bomb Iraq," Clarke said to Stahl. "And we all said ... no, no. Al-Qaeda is in Afghanistan. We need to bomb Afghanistan. And Rumsfeld said there aren't any good targets in Afghanistan. And there are lots of good targets in Iraq. I said, 'Well, there are lots of good targets in lots of places, but Iraq had nothing to do with it.

"Initially, I thought when he said, 'There aren't enough targets in-- in Afghanistan,' I thought he was joking.

As far as I can remember, US forces did attack Afghanistan pretty soon after the WTC and Pentagon attacks, and Rumsfeld's men had no problems finding good targets for US planes there. Maybe Rummy was joking, or maybe Clarke just made this up. How can we know? We can't.

Condi Rice has made the rounds today denying the claims totally.

"Dick Clarke just does not know what he is talking about. He wasn't involved in most of the meetings of the administration," Rice told ABC's "Good Morning America."

Essentially, we have a word against word situation, not unlike that of a divorced couple, both accusing the other, and both remembering each episode, each conversation, very differently.

What it comes down to is that those who distrust the Bush administration, or especially those who really hate it, will believe every word Clarke has told. Those who support the Bush administration will disbelieve it all. And it is not just a cliche to say the truth lay somewhere in between, it is a fallacy, because it can easily be at either extremes.

However, there is some evidence we can find to verify Clarke's credibility.

Now, I knew the name Richard Clarke rang a bell, and a quite strong one, because one of my favourite tech industry pundits, Rob Rosenberger of Virus Myths, has had an eye on him for years.

The truth is that from a public perspective at least, Dick Clarke did not run around before 9/11 warning everybody about Bin Laden bringing about a new Pearl Harbour. He warned that computer viruses or hackers would bring about a "digital Pearl Harbour!"

President Clinton appointed Richard Clarke to the National Security Council as his coordinator for security, infrastructure protection, and counter-terrorism. Clarke developed a serious fetish for computer security hysteria -- think of him as the Internet's Joe McCarthy -- and he loves making comparisons to Pearl Harbor.

Make note that this chiding article was written in December 2000. Rosenberger continues:

He insisted no terrorist group "is even trying" to build up its information warfare skills -- yet, true to form, Clarke predicted the U.S. will suffer an unspecified cyber-catastrophe in the next few years. It will be a digital Pearl Harbor so large and so deadly that "the federal government needs a reconstitution plan" just to survive it.

If the US anti-terror czar were so deluded, we can perhaps better understand how 9/11 could happen. While being in charge of US security, Clarke was fantasising about an army of 14 year old hackers wrecking havoc on the US homeland through hi tech means At that exact time, Bin Laden and his brutes lay plans to inflict a Pearl Harbur-like strike using very crude, unsophisticated but highly effective methods.

A few months later, Clarke was demoted to cyberterrorism czar. Rosenberger fired off this shot:

Clarke used to advise the president about all types of terrorism, but now he'll just watch for terrorism on the Internet. To put it bluntly: Clarke got what he wished for. (He knows he got demoted, too. Big time.)

Clarke focused on the threat of 14yr-old wannabees -- and America paid the price for his folly. Don't ask me why Bush didn't fire the guy outright. But hey, at least Clarke will live to regret his cyber-terrorism fetish. I can't say the same for the 6,000+ people whose computers he took an oath to protect...

But apparently Clarke didn't please too many people now that he could devote his full attention to the danger of hackers, either. After all, he wasn't exactly a geek. More like a wannabe with a weird fetish. So when he released the draft "National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace" he was chided from everybody for its lack of ambition and lack of teeth. Clarke quit shortly thereafter, to seek greener pa$tures elsewhere. We now know where.

In February 2003 columnist George Smith sums up Clarke's security carreer:

The retirement of Richard Clarke is appropriate to the reality of the war on terror. Years ago, Clarke bet his national security career on the idea that electronic war was going to be real war. He lost, because as al Qaeda and Iraq have shown, real action is still of the blood and guts kind. 

No later than April 2003, we again find Rosenberger chiding Clarke for his past obsession with computer security:

Soon after 9/11, White House counterterrorism advisor Richard Clarke decided to fly around the country to look at routers & hubs while the rest of Washington's counterterrorism task force fixated on Osama bin Laden's terrorist network.

It is rather ironic when Clarke, who had a reputation for his obsession with cyberthreats, accuses the Bush administration of being obsessed with Iraq. His past history clearly puts the accusations in a new light.


7:36:34 PM    comment []

Those who are with us, and against us

Here is a great map of Europe, showing which countries were part of the coalition of the willing (and who were not) during the combat phase of the Iraq war a year ago, and today.

I think it will surprise a lot of people who live under the misconception that Bush is acting "unilaterally."

Thanks to Lars at The Unspeakable Truth, a new Norwegian blog (in English) well worth reading.


4:43:05 PM    comment []

Hamas leader killed

Former Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed YassinThe IDF has succeeeded in killing the Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin (picture).

Israeli helicopters killed the spiritual leader of the Hamas Islamic militant group, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, as he left a mosque on Monday in Israel's highest profile assassination of more than three years of conflict.

At least seven other people died in the pre-dawn Gaza City missile strike on the bearded, wheelchair-bound Palestinian cleric who headed the group that has sworn to destroy the Jewish state and killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings.

You know what comes next, right?

Tens of thousands of Palestinians marched in Gaza shouting calls of revenge.

Refer to what I said about extremists and threats earlier.

Mosques in the West Bank and Gaza called a general strike.

That strike, would it include terrorists?

Previous assassinations have triggered waves of suicide bombings.

Apparently not. What exactly does not trigger suicide bombings from mass murdering groups of fanatics like Hamas? When Israel releases their people from prison in a goodwill gesture, they come back strapped with dynamite. So can anyone give a good reason why Israel should not kill someone responsible for murdering hundreds, probably thousands, of their people? Note, if you say anything about "destablising the Middle East", it will trigger a compulsory laugh track. 


8:19:44 AM    comment []

The Spanish lesson to terrorists

Iberian Notes provides a translation of an article by the Spanish political commentator Borja Gracia, debunking the claim that the Aznar governmetn were to blame for the election landslide following the Madrid bombings. Leftists have been busy rationalising appeasement ever since al-Qaeda's electoral victory in Spain, but the arguments don't hold up.

Maybe the message the Spanish sent is even more dangerous than first expected. Spain has been unwilling to appease ETA, the familiar threat, but people want the government to give in to al-Qaeda's demands. Obviously, the lesson learned by homegrown European terrorists is that they are mere amateurs. Killing a policeman here or a journalist there is no longer good enough. Only ruthless mass carnage helps to bring about capitulation from the weak European states. When will the first non-Islamist group learn this lesson?

Link via Tim Blair, who also has many other interesting pointers. Look at this Command Post.article showing that the Anzar government did not mislead the public or hide intelligence, as has been asserted (see translation of e.g. timeline in comments!). The statements where the government confidently blamed ETA, later proved badly founded, were based on information intelligence and police authorities passed on to the government.


2:20:23 AM    comment []

Anti-Israeli demonstrations in Sweden turn violent

Violent demonstrators in Sweden

Well-planned demonstrations against an annual Israel-friendly fundraising dinner turned violent in Sweden's capital Stockholm Sunday night. The 59 police officers called out to meet the traditional demonstrators were surprised and outnumbered as around 500 thugs, many of them masked, some wearing characteristic Arab headdresses (Kaffiyas, called "Palestine scarves" here) attacked. They wore anarchist gear and shouted slogans like "Free Palestine" and "Sharon - fascist and murderer!"

The demonstrators threw stones and bottles, and bombarded the police with fireworks (!) and paint bombs. They also started building barricades with furniture from a nearby restaurant, and started vandalising storefronts, including the Israeli tourist office (picture).

By this time, heavily reinforced police counterattacked and managed to trap many of the demonstators. 88 (!) of the thugs were arrested and are being taken around to smaller police districts for interrogation. Surprisingly, there is no mention of injuries.

The fundraising dinner at Den forenede Israelinnsamlingen ("The United Israel-Fundraising") could continue as planned.

It's 1933 all over again in Europe. Well, maybe it's still only 1922.

More pictures on Norwegian Dagbladet and Swedish Expressen.

PS: I realise it's a coincidence the nymber of arrested thugs were exactly 88. Still...


12:36:46 AM    comment []


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