The
unanimous report of the bipartisan 9/11
commission is a searing indictment not
just of the intelligence failures that
preceded Sept 11, 2001, but also the Bush
administration's policy since.
The 40 policy recommendations, some of
which Bush is now rushing to embrace,
beg the question, just what has the Bush
administration been up to these past three
years. The self-proclaimed "war president"
has presumably been razor focused on the
much ballyhooed "war on terror,"
to the exclusion of the economy and just
about everything else.
So why does the 9/11 commission still
find us so vulnerable? Several commissioners
point to "failures of imagination."
The truth is even more depressing. In
the face of a ruthless and crafty enemy,
the Bush administration has demonstrated
startling ineptitude. |
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After 9/11, the erstwhile-INS (games
of musical chairs are the signature of
this administration's war on terror) rounded
up aliens from suspect countries and required
male adult citizens of some two dozen
nations to appear before it for special
registration, ostensibly to weed out potential
terrorists.
The foolish special registration policy
(would a real terrorist volunteer himself
at the immigration service's doors), which
served only to create needless panic among
innocent immigrants and disrupted the
lives of hundreds who had committed the
minutest technical violations, was finally
abandoned in December 2003. |
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The
unanimous
report of the bipartisan 9/11 commission
is a searing indictment not just
of the
intelligence failures that
preceded Sept 11, 2001, but also
the Bush
administration's policy since. |
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The
Bush administration packed prisons in
Guantanamo Bay with hundreds of terrorism
suspects from Afghanistan and other parts
of the world. The secret detentions and
brutal interrogations have reportedly
yielded few productive leads and the vast
majority of those held for upto two years
now are believed to have virtually no
links to terror groups. They have instead
raised serious concerns about inhumane
prisoner treatment and U.S. constitutional
violations. There is the diversionary
invasion of Iraq, which far from fighting
the war on terror may well have exacerbated
it, not to say distracted the country
from the real task. Then there is the
horrendous prisoner abuse scandal at Abhu
Ghraib, which has wreaked havoc on America's
moral standing worldwide and cast a shadow
of war crimes on thousands of honorably
serving men and women of the army. The
list is endless.
The war on terror is not fought with
a Texas cowboy swagger, but with smarts.
Locking up or beating up on people for
toughness's sake may make Bush's right
wing zealots feel good, but it doesn't
solve a thing.
Far from implementing smart strategies
to fight terror, this administration has
only succeeded in scaring the public and
pushed the country into an uncharacteristic
funk. The silly color coded alert system,
the repeated false warnings, the fracturing
of international coalitions, the wanton
invasion of a sovereign country, as a
result of intelligence failures, political
ineptitude or ideological tunnel vision,
call it what you will, the ineptness of
this administration seems boundless.
Considering that Bush, who fought tooth
and nail first against creating the 9/11
commission, then stymied its investigation
by resisting its funding requests, time
extensions and even witness access, is
suddenly wrapping himself in some its
recommendations, one should ask: How is
it that 10 non specialists with a paltry
$15 million at their disposal are able
to generate ideas in half the time that
Bush had that he now finds so compelling?
Why did these solutions evade the Bush
administration, notwithstanding its single-minded
focus over three years, even with all
the resources and reach of the federal
government and hundreds of billions of
dollars at its disposal?
The answer is as simple as it is wrenching.
Forget the politics; it's not even about
"failures of imagination."
For this is ineptitude and incompetence
on a scale that defies the imagination. |