9/11 - An Incomplete Investigation - Louis Freeh

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rick_reno

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http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007559

Why did the 9/11 Commission ignore "Able Danger"?

It was interesting to hear from the 9/11 Commission again on Tuesday. This self-perpetuating and privately funded group of lobbyists and lawyers has recently opined on hurricanes, nuclear weapons, the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel and even the New York subway system. Now it offers yet another "report card" on the progress of the FBI and CIA in the war against terrorism, along with its "back-seat" take and some further unsolicited narrative about how things ought to be on the "front lines."

Yet this is also a good time for the country to make some assessments of the 9/11 Commission itself. Recent revelations from the military intelligence operation code-named "Able Danger" have cast light on a missed opportunity that could have potentially prevented 9/11. Specifically, Able Danger concluded in February 2000 that military experts had identified Mohamed Atta by name (and maybe photograph) as an al Qaeda agent operating in the U.S. Subsequently, military officers assigned to Able Danger were prevented from sharing this critical information with FBI agents, even though appointments had been made to do so. Why?

There are other questions that need answers. Was Able Danger intelligence provided to the 9/11 Commission prior to the finalization of its report, and, if so, why was it not explored? In sum, what did the 9/11 commissioners and their staff know about Able Danger and when did they know it?

The Able Danger intelligence, if confirmed, is undoubtedly the most relevant fact of the entire post-9/11 inquiry. Even the most junior investigator would immediately know that the name and photo ID of Atta in 2000 is precisely the kind of tactical intelligence the FBI has many times employed to prevent attacks and arrest terrorists. Yet the 9/11 Commission inexplicably concluded that it "was not historically significant." This astounding conclusion--in combination with the failure to investigate Able Danger and incorporate it into its findings--raises serious challenges to the commission's credibility and, if the facts prove out, might just render the commission historically insignificant itself.

The facts relating to Able Danger finally started to be reported in mid-August. U.S. Army Col. Anthony Shaffer, a veteran intelligence officer, publicly revealed that the Able Danger team had identified Atta and three other 9/11 hijackers by mid-2000 but were prevented by military lawyers from giving this information to the FBI. One week later, Navy Capt. Scott J. Phillpott, a U.S. Naval Academy graduate who managed the program for the Pentagon's Special Operations Command, confirmed "Atta was identified by Able Danger by January-February of 2000."
On Aug. 18, 2005, the Pentagon initially stated that "a probe" had found nothing to back up Col. Shaffer's claims. Two weeks later, however, Defense Department officials acknowledged that its "inquiry" had found "three more people who recall seeing an intelligence briefing slide that identified the ringleader of the 9/11 attacks a year before the hijackings and terrorist strikes." These same officials also stated that "documents and electronic files created by . . . Able Danger were destroyed under standing orders that limit the military's use of intelligence gathered about people in the United States." Then in September 2005, the Pentagon doubled back and blocked several military officers from testifying at an open Congressional hearing about the Able Danger program.

Two members of Congress, Curt Weldon and Dan Burton, have also publicly stated that shortly after the 9/11 attacks they provided then-Deputy National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley with a "chart" containing preattack information collected by Able Danger about al Qaeda. A spokesperson for the White House has confirmed that Mr. Hadley "recalled seeing such a chart in that time period but . . . did not recall whether he saw it during a meeting . . . and that a search of National Security Council files had failed to produce such a chart."

Thomas Kean, the chairman of the 9/11 Commission, reacted to Able Danger with the standard Washington PR approach. He lashed out at the Bush administration and demanded that the Pentagon conduct an "investigation" to evaluate the "credibility" of Col. Shaffer and Capt. Phillpott--rather than demand a substantive investigation into what failed in the first place. This from a former New Jersey governor who, along with other commissioners, routinely appeared in public espousing his own conclusions about 9/11 long before the commission's inquiry was completed and long before all the facts were in! This while dismissing out of hand the major conflicts of interest on the commission itself about obstructions to information-sharing within the intelligence community!

Nevertheless, the final 9/11 Commission report, released on July 22, 2004, concluded that "American intelligence agencies were unaware of Mr. Atta until the day of the attacks." This now looks to be embarrassingly wrong. Yet amazingly, commission leaders acknowledged on Aug. 12 that their staff in fact met with a Navy officer 10 days before releasing the report, who "asserted that a highly classified intelligence operation, Able Danger, had identified Mohammed Atta to be a member of an al Qaeda cell located in Brooklyn." (Capt. Phillpott says he briefed them in July 2004.) The commission's statement goes on to say that the staff determined that "the officer's account was not sufficiently reliable to warrant revision of the report or further investigation," and that the intelligence operation "did not turn out to be historically significant," despite substantial corroboration from other seasoned intelligence officers.

This dismissive and apparently unsupported conclusion would have us believe that a key piece of evidence was summarily rejected in less than 10 days without serious investigation. The commission, at the very least, should have interviewed the 80 members of Able Danger, as the Pentagon did, five of whom say they saw "the chart." But this would have required admitting that the late-breaking news was inconveniently raised. So it was grossly neglected and branded as insignificant. Such a half-baked conclusion, drawn in only 10 days without any real investigation, simply ignores what looks like substantial direct evidence to the contrary coming from our own trained military intelligence officers.

No wonder the 9/11 families were outraged by these revelations and called for a "new" commission to investigate. "I'm angry that my son's death could have been prevented," seethed Diane Horning, whose son Matthew was killed at the World Trade Center. On Aug. 17, 2005, a coalition of family members known as the September 11 Advocates rightly blasted 9/11 Commission leaders Mr. Kean and Lee Hamilton for pooh-poohing Able Danger's findings as not "historically significant." Advocate Mindy Kleinberg aptly notes, "They [the 9/11 Commission] somehow made a determination that this was not important enough. To me, that says somebody there is not using good judgment. And if I'm questioning the judgment of this one case, what other things might they have missed?" This is a stinging indictment of the commission by the 9/11 families.

The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Arlen Specter, has led the way in cleaning up the 9/11 Commission's unfinished business. Amid a very full plate of responsibilities, he conducted a hearing after noting that Col. Shaffer and Capt. Phillpott "appear to have credibility." Himself a former prosecutor, Mr. Specter noted: "If Mr. Atta and other 9/11 terrorists were identified before the attacks, it would be a very serious breach not to have that information passed along . . . we ought to get to the bottom of it." Indeed we should. The 9/11 Commission gets an "I" grade--incomplete--for its dereliction regarding Able Danger. The Joint Intelligence Committees should reconvene and, in addition to Able Danger team members, we should have the 9/11 commissioners appear as witnesses so the families can hear their explanation why this doesn't matter.
 
Screwey Lewey Freeh couldn't investigate his way out of a paper bag with both sides ripped open.
 
Maybe we need a constitutional amendment to make SOCOM the 4th branch of government. Put a liberal in office and you may as well flush the entire FBI, NSA, CIA, US military down the toilet.

Except when it's an American citizen that saws 1/4" too much off their shotgun barrel. Then they call out the military APCs and FBI and ATF and shoot the family and burn them alive. While ignoring incidents like the USS Cole, Mogudishu, first WTC attack, Empire State Building attack, Marine barracks, US Embassies in Kenya, etc...
 
While I think full disclosure of Atta's ID as an AQ operative might have attracted some attention before 9/11/2001, I'm not at all certain it would have prevented the attacks. Don't forget, the pre-9/11 attitude in this country was one of comfortable somnolence. We smugly assumed that nobody could successfully attack America the Superpower. Well, guess what--they found a way.

TC
 
But that's one pice. When you add other pieces, like memos stating that terrorists were planning to use airplanes in the next attack, and add evidence of a flight-school instructor who notified the FBI he has students who didn't care about landing, and the FBI raided their apartment, but again all procedure decided not to secure evidence, or even look at their computer, the 1 piece of furniture in ther spartan apartment. Combine it with Bin Laden getting surery, known publically, announced in newspapers, around 2000, an IDEAL time to pick him up, if anyone cared.

The whole lot of intelligence bastards need to be cleaned. Homeland Security just perpetuates the extreme problems, wha'ts needed is a complete sweeping fresh start.
 
Also, I always thought it was kind of interesting that the govt knew who the hijackers were and that they were connected to Al Quaeda within 24 hrs of 9-11-01 ... :rolleyes:

Looking at Bush's popularity numbers, I'd say we're due for another attack any day now :uhoh:
 
I think that's explainable, since they already knew most of them on the first-name basis. They'd look at airport tapes, say, 'Oh There's Hadbji, the crazy guy with the flight simulator and the schematics of the WTC. Looks like I owe you $5 Bob, I guess he was up to something after all.'

And assuming they were simply more negligent than a retarded monkey is giving them the benefit of the doubt. The other explanation is what DeNiro said when he fired a politician's nephew, in Casino.
 
I was amazed at how fast the FIBCIADIA was able to make the perps after the deed.

I am also amazed at how fast and efficiently the Incumbent Party circled the wagons around the two crimes families (Democrats and republicans) when Able Danger surfaced. If it wasn't for Weldon we would know nothing.

What I also find interesting is the evident lack of interest on the part of the MSM as to the implications of Able Danger. If there was a hint it would dirty Bush they'd be all over it.

I am also intrigued by the lack of leaks to any media. So far Weldon is the mouthpiece and I find the lack of back channel revelations interesting.

Based on what I see happening, based on what I know of the chronology, and based more importantly on what is not happening in our highly charged political environment I've drawn the conclusion Able Danger is a grenade in BVD's of both political parties. Both parties are dirty, both parties are hiding something of profound importance. Whenever I see the parties protecting each other backside I get really curious. The fact that there is an ongoing coverup shows me AD is big.
 
I get depressed when I see how many people are starting to buy the idea that the US government was involved in these attacks. I'm unhappy with lots of US policies too, but I haven't lost so much faith that I'm willing to accept absurd theories about my fellow americans' motives.

9-11 was a major failure. That doesn't mean that there's some maniacal plot in place. Failures happen without orchestration all the time, and it just amazes me that people are so quick to assume that politicians who can't manage a single city well would be able to organize such a thing and leave behind nothing but speculation in the way of evidence.
 
shootinstudent said:
I get depressed when I see how many people are starting to buy the idea that the US government was involved in these attacks. I'm unhappy with lots of US policies too, but I haven't lost so much faith that I'm willing to accept absurd theories about my fellow americans' motives.

9-11 was a major failure. That doesn't mean that there's some maniacal plot in place. Failures happen without orchestration all the time, and it just amazes me that people are so quick to assume that politicians who can't manage a single city well would be able to organize such a thing and leave behind nothing but speculation in the way of evidence.
Despite my scepticism regarding the motives and the competancy of any career politician, of any party, I actually do not believe the government had a hand in 9/11. But let's remember that 9/11 was relatively early into Mr. Bush's presidency. Much of the intelligence gather ing that should have told someone what was going on was carried out (or not) under the Democratic predecessor administration. So I agree that both parties are responsible. Not guilty of being part of the plot, but certainly guilty, collectively, of misfeasance and malfeasance in carrying out their duty to protect and defend the country.

The problems with the "intelligence" community and apparatus is not the sole province of the Democrats or the Republicans. Like most bureaucracies, they have settled into their own largely unaccountable, systems and they just keep cruising along on autopilot as adminstrations change and as agency heads change -- or roll.
 
shootinstudent said:
9-11 was a major failure. That doesn't mean that there's some maniacal plot in place. Failures happen without orchestration all the time, and it just amazes me that people are so quick to assume that politicians who can't manage a single city well would be able to organize such a thing and leave behind nothing but speculation in the way of evidence.

Want to hear a maniacal plot? You have 2 options, COMPLETE INCOMPETENCE, or TEASONOUS COMPLICITY.

The resulr of such a catastrophic failure should have been a 'night of the long knives', with job termination instead of killings. Department heads should have rolled. The entire bureaucracies should have been purged. Just like when the Japanese set up automobile factories in North America, they made sure none of the old bad habits existed.

Instead, what happened? What was the response to this catastrophic failure (or treason)? Promotions all around, More powers, Greater freedom of operations, the ground-work was laid for the intelligence agencies to have a Gestapo-like presence.

They were rewarded beyond their wildest wet dreams. For complete disastrous pathetic failures (or treason).

That's incredibly unbelievably wrong. It doesn't matter how you look at it, it's completely opposite to what should have happened to them.

(and no-one wants to mention treason, because it is a 'tinfoil hat' concept. It's just that SO MANY counter-productive things were done, that one would be negligent NOT to mention the possibility)
 
Shootinstudent, I am not saying or implying USG had anything to do with 911. It is clear to me a band of islamofascist terrormongers planned and executed the hit without any assistance from anyone in the USG.

Able Danger is evidence of what those of us with a 30 year historical perspective have always known. US intelligence is a well-crafted, perfectly executed charlie foxtrot designed by the congress of the US and implemented by the executive branch of government being manned by representatives of both parties. Congress, beginning with Otis Pike and Frank Church's work, took the US out of human intelligence. Jimmuh Carta and Admiral Stansfield Turner violently lurched the US toward electronic intelligence. Gerald Ford and his famous executive order against assassination took legitimate force off the table. The Torricelli protocol basically required the US to get its human intel from Ivey League grads in penny loafers sipping mint julips in Africa. The Borland Amendment so confused US South American policy that we had no clue what the hell was going on. Then we get to the Clinton administration where anti-intelligence pathology grew to full flower.

Now we move to the 911 commisssion and find out the that no one was really at fault in the intelligence failure of 911. Later we learn that the author of the so-called wall between intel and criminal investigation was created by one of the commission members who stayed on the commission with no objections. We see the commission wagging its finger at various parts of the current administration for not taking its suggestion seriously all the while the commission failed to do any work at all on the legislative environment which created the decisions leading our horrible human intel record.

Then out of the clear blue comes word of a secret taskforce that was able to identify the perps of 911 before the fact. In other words a military lashup did what a $30 billion / year organization failed to do. First reaction? Shut 'em up and shut'em down. Destroy those who come forward. Clamp down on everyone and deny, belittle, and ridicule. If AD dirtied Bush the Democrats would be all over it like a retriever on a ham sandwich. If AD slimed Democrats the leaks to the alternative media would be a flood. Fact of the matter is all of DC wants AD squashed. Why? I think AD will demonstrate both parties and institutional Washington including CIA, FBI, State, DOD, and DoJ all heard the evidence. Change parties in 2000 and the same thing happened. In other words I think AD will demonstate a systemic failure of government to do its freakin' job of protect the US. That's why it is being strangled.

Rep Weldon says the AD coverup is bigger than Watergate. Really interesting comment since the beginning of our failure in human intel has its origins in Watergate.
 
(and no-one wants to mention treason, because it is a 'tinfoil hat' concept. It's just that SO MANY counter-productive things were done, that one would be negligent NOT to mention the possibility)

Mistakes were made, as they always are. If your belief is that any regime which allows any attack to occur is automatically borderline treasonous, then the problem is that you have totally unrealistic expectations. It's like saying "How could a serial killer get 20 women!? This is outrageous, with all our investigators...SOMEONE MUST BE IN ON IT." The severity of the result doesn't prove anything except that attacks are possible, which we knew already.

There's a reason treason is a tin-foil hat concept: There's absolutely zero evidence to support it, and it's dumb. To make up some "interest" that the President might have in this, and then to conceive of the number of people who would need to be in on such a conspiracy (without leaking a word), and still come out saying "Yep, it's a strong possibility!" isn't just "alternative" or tinfoil hat...it's retarded.
 
You've got a man who's job is to guard the bank at night. He goes out for coffee, switches off the security cameras, opens the vault, and forgets to lock the front door. People run in and take money the second he leaves.

It's entirely possible he is a complete putz and was stupid enough to do all those things. But you have to consider all possibilities.

The day it is forbidden to consider all the possibilities, well that's the day, well, that's probably... some time next year, the way things are going:(

Isn't there some story where a King walks around naked, but no-one mentions that he is naked because it seems improper?
 
You've got a man who's job is to guard the bank at night. He goes out for coffee, switches off the security cameras, opens the vault, and forgets to lock the front door. People run in and take money the second he leaves.

This is the problem with argument by analogy: you can create totally ridiculous little situations and then draw conclusions from them that do not at all apply in the real world.

The US government isn't one person; President Bush doesn't go around investigating every incident personally, nor does he personally collect all the intelligence the US possesses. You're talking about a failure that involved hundreds of people, working in the frameworks of various bureaucracies, not knowing what every other guy in the country is doing at the same time. When you understand that, it's not so difficult to imagine how these royal screw ups occur.

The day it is forbidden to consider all the possibilities, well that's the day, well, that's probably... some time next year, the way things are going

It's not forbidden at all. It's just silly and it belies a complete unwillingness to realistically assess the facts. There are none of the hundreds of people who would have to be involved on record claiming conspiracy, and there is plenty of evidence that the obvious (Al Qaeda) did it.

But be my guest, consider away. Sure makes for some funny theories and it gives people opportunities to post the latest mock-tin-foil hat website.
 
What he said

shootinstudent, I wouldn't stifle their creative minds.

The Problem with a Conspiracy is; in the process of connecting the dots (to make a picture) most people tend to see what they want. And the end picture looks much like what they thought it would be instead of what it really is. Most people don’t trust the government (especially when it’s the other party in charge), so the picture they see in the dots looks much like their preconceived notion to begin with.

If you want the Conspiracy facts, here they are. Lots of people in Government screwed up. Knowing that a great big pile of Sh1+ was about to land, they actively began to cover their a??. Every time they do, observant (mistrusting) people see the cover move and as an attempt to cover up some evil plan.

Washington is full of people who enjoy the power and privilege of government. The fear of loosing that power and privilege will make them go to any length to keep it. What happened on 9/11 is a result of how Intel. is processed, not an evil plot.

When the FBI, CIA, NSA… . get a piece of Intel about Iran, it is forwarded to the desk of the Iran experts. When they get a piece if Intel on chemical weapons, it; it's forwarded to the desk of the Chemical Weapons expert. The problem is, there was no “Flying Plains into Buildings” expert.

The process of collating Intel data was simple, but it worked until 9/11. Now the People wanted to know what went wrong, and instead of admitting the collating process was too simple to catch it (IE we screwed up), what the American people got was a bunch of politicians scrambling for excuses and covering their a??.

AD is just another piece of Sh1+ that the Government Elite are running from. The intel was there, but had no one to go to. The information was lost on the desk of the "Intel we don't know what to do with experts". Or it was on the desk of the "Policy forbids me from sharing it" experts.

We can try to draw any conclusion from all the dots we want, but if there were numbers connected to those dots it would look like "A big screw up nobody wants to take credit for", not a vast conspiracy to allow American citizens to die for some political agenda.

If you look at all of the statements and actions you see as a conspiracy; and look at them as a move to cover their a?? so they can stay in power, it (the true picture) will all look clearer to you.

Regards,
 
First of all, I don't know why you insist on trying to make this a debate about the president? Do you already have talking points prepared that you want to use? Lol.

It's about, as far as I can tell, intelligence agencies. You don't seem like the type who is impressed by evidence, so I'll leave it at this - they did a lot of things that were abnormal or counter productive.

Now unless you can find a third option, you have 2 possibiliities. #1)They are absolutely useless, stupid worthless agencies that have no right to continue to function on our behalf. #2)They were complicit, in some way or another, and have no right to function on our behalf.

Only 2 possibilities, and they have 1 thing in common - The intelligence agencies SHOULD NOT BE CONTINUING TO FUNCTION LIKE THEY DID BEFORE.

And then, because Washington doesn't need to pay attention to reality, these intelligence agencies are REWARDED with police-state powers.


I would like you to explain that to me, if you please.
 
Warnings

After the terrorists failed to bring down the towers in 1993, they vowed they'd be back.
The hijackers did a dry run the week before and some entertainment personality was with them in first class. He thought they were creepy and mentioned it to the airline personnel when he landed in LA.
 
First of all, I don't know why you insist on trying to make this a debate about the president? Do you already have talking points prepared that you want to use? Lol.

It's about, as far as I can tell, intelligence agencies. You don't seem like the type who is impressed by evidence, so I'll leave it at this - they did a lot of things that were abnormal or counter productive.

The only close to possible scenario would have to involve the president, that's why. If you choose to think that "agencies" are involved, please explain to me how hundreds of people participated in the cover up, yet not one of them has leaked such an explosive issue. It would seem odd to me that you'd find hundreds of average joes willing to slaughter americans and cover it up for average government pay. And not one single person regrets it and defects? If you can explain to me how a secret so big can be kept, please do.

Now unless you can find a third option, you have 2 possibiliities. #1)They are absolutely useless, stupid worthless agencies that have no right to continue to function on our behalf. #2)They were complicit, in some way or another, and have no right to function on our behalf.

I posted 3 above: They are government agencies that don't all talk to each other, so information is fragmented and doesn't get to some superman who can integrate it all and see the big picture...until after the fact. What's so hard to believe about that? You've got thousands of people employed in this field, it is a government bureaucracy, and there're millions of pieces of information involved. You should be amazed that it ever works.

Only 2 possibilities, and they have 1 thing in common - The intelligence agencies SHOULD NOT BE CONTINUING TO FUNCTION LIKE THEY DID BEFORE.

And then, because Washington doesn't need to pay attention to reality, these intelligence agencies are REWARDED with police-state powers.

Yeah, politicians scramble to make it look like they're doing something, in large part because of people like you who will accuse them of being closet Al Qaeda members if they don't.

I stand by my position. There is lots of evidence that Arab Terrorist Members of Al Qaeda did this, and precisely zero evidence of any plot on the part of the US government. If you had good evidence to refute that, you would've posted it instead of taking a snipe at my supposed lack of interest in evidence.

I've heard all kinds of theories...the Jews, the Secret World Controllers, the Defense business, etc...all of them are utterly ridiculous. They are right up there with staged moon landing and my new personal favorite: Yigal Amir's "third party shooter" theory of his assassination of Rabin.
 
Good point, option #3 is of course ideal. #3 No one was at fault, these things happen, now give the nice people police state powers. They can't prevent terrorists from attacking again, because that's impossible. Only 'superman' can stop terrorist attacks.

But give them police state powers anyway.

Great option, that #3. It doesn't meet the criteria I listed, but #3 doesnt need reason, doesn't have to make sense, doesn't even need to be legitimate. Hooray #3.


And you are most likely right. I kind of think that it's wierd you refuse to acknowledge an obvious possibility, but that's your choice. While I'm at it I guess I ought to apologize for accusing the President and all politicians for being closet Alqueda members. That was wrong of me. And it was wrong to suggest you don't care about evidence, just because you don't seem to care about any evidence of gross negligence on the part of intelligence agencies in this thread... My bad again. My apologies as well to accusing the Jews, the secret world controllers, and defence busniness. I was out of line there. And I don't know what I was thinking when I told you the moon landing was staged. WOOO I was really getting off topic in this thread! And that 3rd party shooter of Rabin, I don't know what that is, but sorry I accused someone of it, or something.
 
Based on what I see happening, based on what I know of the chronology, and based more importantly on what is not happening in our highly charged political environment I've drawn the conclusion Able Danger is a grenade in BVD's of both political parties. Both parties are dirty, both parties are hiding something of profound importance. Whenever I see the parties protecting each other backside I get really curious. The fact that there is an ongoing coverup shows me AD is big.

+1

CIA and State are shadow governments. The rock needs to be turned. By whom is the question.
 
Joe,

See what I mean? You went off on this, that and the other...but presented no evidence beyond your repetition of the claim "this HAS TO BE A CONSPIRACY OR IMPOSSIBLE STUPIDITY."

Repeat it all you want, it won't be evidence, and it won't be any more reasonable than the staged-moon-landing.

I think it's ironic that people who deny the obvious Al Qaeda and then pretty obvious politics surrounding the patriot act will turn around and accuse all the "mainstream" thinkers of denying this "obvious" supsicious behavior....

for which there is no evidence or rational explanation. When you can explain how you get that many people involved in a conspiracy without someone talking, and provide some evidence, then I'll stop chuckling when I read these kinds of theories.
 
Now repeat after me: Not impossible stupidity, EXTREME INCOMPETENCE OR NEGLIGENCE.

Again with the moon landing. you really have a bone to pick there. I hate to break it to you, but this is a different thread... Maybe you should make a moon-landing thread.

Now, repeat once more - no-one says its 'obvious suspicious behavior'. OK? It's suspicious behavior, with 2 obvious causes. #1 incompetence #2 treason.

You think treason doesn't happen? Of course it happens, that's why there is a word for it.

And let's face it, 9/11 was a crime. When police investigate a crime, do they say, "Well, its completely possible that this guy did it, but I choose to believe he didn't, because I like him."
+
All I'm saying is that from an impartial standpoint, #1 is clearly possible. And if you take incompetence and negligence far enough and you are very close to #2.

And in either case, in either case the intelligence agencies should have been PURGED. But they were not purged, they were granted extrajudicial super-powers. They are either incompetent, negligent, or complicit, and they now have more power than the Stazi. Tell me how this can be a good thing.

And from this crime, who benefitted? That's a good place to start, when looking at crimes.

Unless it is forbidden to think such things, then I apologize and will try to be in greater control of my thoughts in the future.
 
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