http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-na-terror-report1-2010jan
01,0,2727404.story
Reporting from Washington and Honolulu - The Obama administration
pledged Thursday to close gaps in the intelligence system that enabled a
suspected terrorist carrying explosives to board a U.S.-bound plane, and
vowed to create a better system for sharing and analyzing the
information that floods the intelligence community.
The White House based its assertions on the early findings of two
inquiries into what it calls the "human and systemic failures" that took
place in the run-up to a Nigerian man's alleged attempt to blow up a
plane carrying nearly 300 people from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas.
The administration would not release the conclusions, but it said Obama
will hold meetings next week in Washington aimed at getting the tangle
of government agencies responsible for fighting terrorism to more
diligently assess and share information.
Meanwhile, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced that
she would send senior department officials to meet with leaders from
major international airports in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East
and South America to review security procedures and technology being
used to screen passengers on U.S.-bound flights.
Senior administration and intelligence officials said the inquiries'
preliminary findings show that in some cases, systemic problems,
including a lack of interagency coordination, prevented key pieces of
information from being shared or matched up.
But in other cases, intelligence analysts simply didn't connect the
disparate pieces of information already in their computer databases that
could have flagged Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab and stopped him from
boarding Northwest Airlines Flight 253, according to officials familiar
with the preliminary investigation.
The need for the White House review underscores one of the more
troubling aspects of the Christmas incident: Despite spending billions
to shore up the nation's defenses and intelligence networks after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the U.S. still struggles to digest
and act upon all of its anti-terrorism intelligence.
"It points to something fundamental," said Richard A. Clarke, a former
top counter-terrorism official in the Bush and Clinton administrations.
"No matter how good your software is or how good your procedures are, at
the end of the day it comes back to people. And if people think that
this is a 9-5 job and they're not filled with a sense of urgency every
day, then you'll get these kinds of mistakes."
Briefing reporters in Hawaii, a senior administration official said the
various intelligence breakdowns identified so far are being addressed.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, "When we do have
information and when we have good information -- as we often do, given
how good our intelligence professionals are -- the failure to share that
information is not going to be tolerated."
According to intelligence and administration officials, the lack of
communication and intelligence-sharing is especially apparent in the
Abdulmutallab case.
Starting in August, the National Security Agency intercepted some
communications between senior members of Al Qaeda's regional network in
Yemen in which they discussed possible attacks involving an unidentified
Nigerian.
But those intercepts were vague, did not refer to potential attacks on
U.S. soil, and were not highlighted as an urgent cause for concern for
the nation's analysts at the CIA, the National Counterterrorism Center
or elsewhere in the U.S. intelligence community, according to officials
familiar with the communications.
Then, in November, Abdulmutallab's father told officials at the U.S.
Embassy in Abuja, Nigeria, that his 23-year-old son had fallen in with a
group of extremists and might have traveled to Yemen.
Much of that information was sent back to Washington in a classified
cable, and although officials at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va.,
prepared a formal report on the father's information, it wasn't shared
with the larger intelligence community until after the jet incident, an
intelligence official familiar with the document said.
Administration officials have said that the information in that report
could have placed Abdulmutallab on federal lists that would have
subjected him to additional screenings or barred him from flying.
But other officials said the CIA did send the raw data from the father's
visit to classified computer networks that are available to all analysts
at the National Counterterrorism Center, the agency set up after Sept.
11 as a clearinghouse for intelligence.
Some U.S. officials said the raw data would not have flagged the suspect
because the information was too vague.
"Abdulmutallab's father didn't say his son was a terrorist, let alone
planning an attack," another U.S. intelligence official said. "I'm not
aware of [any] intelligence that suddenly would have flagged this guy --
whose name nobody even had until November -- as a killer en route to
America."
Others challenged that assertion, saying that if the CIA had
disseminated its formal report, it would have drawn far more attention
than raw, unhighlighted data and could have prompted analysts to link
the intercepts of the Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen with the information
provided by Abdulmutallab's father.
If they had linked the two pieces of information, authorities might have
flagged Abdulmutallab as a serious threat.
Instead, his name was added to a general threat database of 550,000
names that is not cross-checked with other databases. And Abdulmutallab
was allowed to board Flight 253.
An intelligence official from a different agency defended the NCTC,
dismissing criticism that an analyst should have matched up the
intercepts about an unspecified Nigerian with the raw intelligence from
the CIA.
"The bull's-eye seems to have settled on them," he said, adding such an
assessment was unfair.
The NCTC, he said, "routinely gets terabytes of data, in quantities that
boggle the mind. The question is, what format was it in? Was it
query-able? Could you look for it and find it? Was it shareable? Was it
in a database that could be accessed by everyone?"
--
Nancy Pelosi, Democrat criminal, accessory before and after the fact, to
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles B. Rangel of New York's
million dollar tax evasion. Charles B. Rangel is still under
"investigation" by a "closed door" House Ethics Committee.
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