As President George W. Bush's top
speechwriter,
Marc Thiessen was provided unique
access to the
CIA program
used in
interrogating
top Al Qaeda
terrorists,
including the
mastermind of
the 9/11
attack, Khalid
Sheikh
Mohammad
(KSM).
Now, his riveting new book, "Courting Disaster", How the CIA Kept
America Safe
(Regnery), has
been
published.
Here is an
excerpt from
"Courting
Disaster";
Just before
dawn on March
1, 2003, two
dozen heavily
armed
Pakistani
tactical
assault forces
move in and
surround a
safe house in
Rawalpindi.
A few hours
earlier they
had received a
text message
from an
informant
inside the
house. It
read: "I am
with KSM."
Bursting in,
they find the
disheveled
mastermind of
the 9/11
attacks,
Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, in
his bedroom.
He is taken
into custody.
In the safe
house, they
find a
treasure trove
of computers,
documents,
cell phones
and other
valuable
"pocket
litter."
Once in custody, KSM is defiant. He
refuses to
answer
questions,
informing his
captors that
he will tell
them
everything
when he gets
to America
and sees his
lawyer. But
KSM is not
taken to America
to see a
lawyer Instead
he is taken to
a secret CIA
"black site"
in an
undisclosed
location.
Upon arrival, KSM finds himself in
the complete
control of
Americans. He
does not know
where he is,
how long he
will be there,
or what his
fate will be.
Despite his
circumstances,
KSM still
refuses to
talk. He spews
contempt at
his
interrogators,
telling them
Americans are
weak, lack
resilience,
and are unable
to do what is
necessary to
prevent the
terrorists
from
succeeding in
their goals.
He has trained
to resist
interrogation.
When he is
asked for
information
about future
attacks, he
tells his
questioners
scornfully:
"Soon, you
will know." It
becomes clear
he will not
reveal the
information
using
traditional
interrogation
techniques. So
he undergoes a
series of
"enhanced
interrogation
techniques"
approved for
use only on
the most
high-value
detainees. The
techniques
include
waterboarding.
His resistance is described by one
senior
American
official as
"superhuman."
Eventually,
however, the
techniques
work, and KSM
becomes
cooperative-for
reasons that
will be
described
later in this
book.
He begins telling his CIA
de-briefers
about active
al Qaeda plots
to launch
attacks
against the United
States
and other
Western
targets. He
holds classes
for CIA
officials,
using a
chalkboard to
draw a picture
of al Qaeda's
operating
structure,
financing,
communications,
and logistics.
He identifies
al Qaeda
travel routes
and safe
havens, and
helps
intelligence
officers make
sense of
documents and
computer
records seized
in terrorist
raids. He
identifies
voices in
intercepted
telephone
calls, and
helps
officials
understand the
meaning of
coded
terrorist
communications.
He provides
information
that helps our
intelligence
community
capture other
high-ranking
terrorists,
KSM's
questioning,
and that of
other captured
terrorists,
produces more
than 6,000
intelligence
reports, which
are shared
across the
intelligence
community, as
well as with
our allies
across the
world.
In one of these reports, KSM
describes in
detail the
revisions he
made to his
failed
1994-1995 plan
known as the
"Bojinka plot"
to blow up a
dozen
airplanes
carrying some
4,000
passengers
over the Pacific
Ocean.
Years later, an observant CIA
officer
notices the
activities of
a cell being
followed by
British
authorities
appear to
match KSM's
description of
his plans for
a
Bojinka-style
attack.
In an
operation that
involves
unprecedented
intelligence
cooperation
between our
countries,British
officials
proceed to
unravel the
plot.
On the night of Aug.9, 2006 they
launch a
series of
raids in a
northeast London
suburb that
lead to the
arrest of two
dozen al Qaeda
terrorist
suspects. They
find a USB
thumb-drive in
the pocket of
one of the men
with security
details for
Heathrow
airport, and
information on
seven
trans-Atlantic
flights that
were scheduled
to take off
within hours
of each other:
* United
Airlines
Flight # 931
to San
Francisco
departing at
2:15 p.m.;
* Air Canada
Flight # 849
to Toronto
departing at
3:00 p.m.;
* Air Canada
Flight # 865
to Montreal
departing at
3:15 p.m.;
* United
Airlines
Flight # 959
to Chicago
departing at
3:40 p.m.;
* United
Airlines
Flight # 925
to Washington
departing at
4:20 p.m.;
* American
Airlines
Flight # 131
to New
York
departing at
4:35 p.m;
* American
Airlines
Flight # 91 to
Chicago
departing at
4:50 p.m.
They seize
bomb-making
equipment and
hydrogen
peroxide to
make liquid
explosives.
And they find
the chilling
martyrdom
videos the
suicide
bombers had
prepared.
Today, if you
asked an
average person
on the street
what they know
about the 2006
airlines plot,
most would not
be able to
tell you much.
Few Americans are aware of the fact
al Qaeda had
planned to
mark the fifth
anniversary of
9/11 with an
attack of
similar scope
and magnitude.
And still
fewer realize
the
terrorists'
true
intentions in
this plot were
uncovered
thanks to
critical
information
obtained
through the
interrogation
of the man who
conceived it:
"Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed."
This is only
one of the
many attacks
stopped with
the help of
the CIA
interrogation
program
established by
the Bush
Administration
in the wake of
the Sept. 11,
2001,
terrorist
attacks.
Editor's Note:
For other foiled terrorist plots,
see page 9 of
"Courting
Disaster." In
addition to
helping break
up these
specific
terrorist
cells and
plots, CIA
questioning
provided our
intelligence
community with
an
unparalleled
body of
information
about al Qaeda
Until the
program was
temporarily
suspended in
2006,
intelligence
officials say,
well over half
of the
information
our government
had about al
Qaeda &
how it
operates, how
it moves
money, how it
communicates,
how it
recruits
operatives,
how it picks
targets, how
it plans and
carries out
attacks have
come from the
interrogation
of terrorists
in CIA
custody.
Former CIA
Director
George Tenet
has declared:
"I know this
program has
saved lives. I
know we've
disrupted
plots. I know
this program
alone is worth
more than what
the FBI, the
Central
Intelligence
Agency, and
the National
Security
Agency put
together have
been able to
tell us."
Former CIA
Director Mike
Hayden has
said: "The
facts of the
case are that
the use of
these
techniques
against these
terrorists
made us safer.
It really did
work."
Even Barack
Obama's
Director of
National
Intelligence,
Dennis Blair,
has
acknowledged:
"High-value
information
came from
interrogations
in which those
methods were
used and
provided a
deeper
understanding
of the al
Qaeda
organization
that was
attacking this
country."
Leon Panetta,
Obama's CIA
Director, has
said:
"Important
information
was gathered
from these
detainees. It
provided
information
that was acted
upon."
And John Brennan, Obama's Homeland
Security
Advisor, when
asked in an
interview if
enhanced-interrogation
techniques
were necessary
to keep America
safe, replied
: "Would the U.S.
be handicapped
if the CIA was
not, in fact,
able to carry
out these
types of
detention and
debriefing
activities? I
would say
'Yes'."
On Jan. 22,
2009,
President
Obama issued
Executive
Order # 13491,
closing the
CIA program
and directing
that,
henceforth,
all
interrogations
by U.S.
personnel must
follow the
techniques
contained in
the Army Field
Manual.
The morning of
the
announcement,
Mike Hayden
was still in
his post as
CIA Director,
He called
White House
Counsel Greg
Craig and told
him bluntly:
"You didn't
ask, but this
is the CIA
officially
nonconcurring".
The President
went ahead
anyway, over
ruling the
objections of
the Agency.
A few months
later, on
April 16,
2009,
President
Obama ordered
the release of
four Justice
Department
memos that
described in
detail the
techniques
used to
interrogate
KSM and other
high-value
terrorists.
This time, not
just Hayden
(who was now
retired) but
five CIA
directors
-including
Obama's own
director, Leon
Panetta --
objected.
George Tenet
called to urge
against the
memos'
release. So
did Porter
Goss. So did
John Deutch.
Hayden says:
"You had CIA
directors in a
continuous
unbroken
stream to 1995
calling
saying, 'Don't
do this !'"
In addition to
objections
from the Men
who led the
Agency for a
collective 14
years, the
President also
heard
objections
from the
Agency's
covert field
operatives. A
few weeks
earlier,
Panetta had
arranged for
the eight top
officials of
the
Clandestine
Service to
meet with the
President. It
was highly
unusual for
these
clandestine
officers to
visit the Oval
Office, and
they used the
opportunity to
warn the
President that
releasing the
memos would
put Agency
operatives at
risk. The
President
reportedly
listened
respectfully -
and then
ignored their
advice.
With these actions, Barack Obama
arguably did
more damage to
America's
National
Security in
his first 100
days of office
than any other
President in
American
history.
(But how many people know this ? ? ?
? ?)
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