Barack Obama gets an 'F' for protecting Americans
By Toby Harnden
Telegraph.co.uk
There is no more solemn duty for an American commander-in-chief than the
martialling of “all elements of American power” – the phrase Obama himself used
on Monday – to protect the people of the United States. In that key respect,
Obama failed on Christmas Day, just as President George W. Bush failed on
September 11th (though he succeeded in the seven years after that).
Yes, the buck stops in the Oval Office. Obama may
have rather smugly
given himself a “B+” for his 2008 performance but he gets an F for the
events that led to Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab boarding a Detroit-bound plane in
Amsterdam with a PETN bomb sewn into his underpants. He said today that a
“systemic failure has occurred”. Well, he’s in charge of that system.
The picture we’re getting is more and more alarming by the hour. Here are
some key elements to consider:
1. Abdulmutallab’s father spoke several times to
the US Embassy in Abuja, Nigeria and visited a CIA officer there to tell him,
apparently, that he feared his son was a jihadist being trained in Yemen.
According to CNN, the CIA officer wrote up a report, which then sat in the
CIA headquarters at Langley for several weeks without being disseminated to the
rest of the intelligence community. This was not just a casual encounter. Again
according to CNN, there were at least two face-to-face meetings, telephone calls
and written correspondence with the father. If it’s true that the CIA sat on
this then it beggars belief.
2. After 9/11, the huge bureaucracies of the
Homeland Security Department and the
Directorate of National Intelligence (DNI) were created. Inside the DNI, the
National Counter Terrorism Center was created. These organisations were created
to “connect the dots”. It may well be that the fault lay with NCTC and not the
CIA – CIA spokesman George Little says here that “key biographical information”
and information about “possible extremist connections in Yemen” was passed to
NCTC. If NCTC knew about it, then did someone at the National Security Council
within the White House? There’s a huge blame game beginning so we’ll no doubt
know soon enough.
3. It wasn’t just the meeting with the father.
According to CBS, “as early as August of 2009 the Central Intelligence
Agency was picking up information on a person of interest dubbed ‘The Nigerian’
suspected of meeting with ‘terrorist elements’ in Yemen”. So there were other
parts of the jigsaw that were not put together.
4. In his studied desire to be the unBush by
responding coolly to events like this, Obama is dangerously close to failing as
a leader. Yes, it is good not to shoot from the hip and make broad assertions
without the facts. But Obama took three days before speaking to the American
people, emerging on Monday in between golf and tennis games in Hawaii to deliver
a
rather tepid address that significantly underplayed what happened. He
described Abdulmutallab as an “isolated extremist” who “allegedly tried to
ignite an explosive device on his body” – phrases that indicate a legalistic,
downplaying approach that alarms rather than reassures.
Today’s words showed a lot more fire and desire to get on top of things –
we’ll see whether Obama follows through with action. In the meantime, he
went snorkelling.
5. There has been a pattern developing with the
Obama administration trying to minimise terrorist attacks. We saw it with
Abdul Hakim Mujahid Muhammad, a Muslim convert who murdered a US Army
recruit in Little Rock, Arkansas in June. We saw it with
Major Nidal Malik Hassan, a Muslim with Palestinian roots who slaughtered 13
at Fort Hood, Texas last month. In both cases, there were Yemen connections.
Obama began to take the same approach with Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. We’ll see
whether this incident shakes him out of that complacency. Whether it’s called
the war on terror or not, it’s clear that the US is at war against al-Qaeda and
radical Islamists.
6. Guantanamo Bay. It seems that two of the
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) planners behind this attack were
released from Guantanamo Bay during the Bush administration. That calls into
question the competence of Bush administration officials but also the wisdom of
closing Guantanamo Bay. How many other enemies of America and the West are going
to be released back to the battlefield? As
Mike Goldfarb asks: “Is the Obama administration seriously still considering
sending some 90 Yemeni detainees now being held at Gitmo back to their country
of origin, where al Qaeda are apparently running around with impunity?”
7. Janet Napolitano, Obama’s Homeland Security
Chief, has been
a distaster in this, exhibiting the kind of bureaucratic complacency that
makes ordinary citizens want to go postal. On Sunday, she told CNN that “one
thing I’d like to point out is that the system worked” and ABC News that “once
the incident occurred, the system worked”. A day later, she grumbled that quoted
“out of context” before reversing herself, telling NBC: “Our system did not work
in this instance. No one is happy or satisfied with that. An extensive review is
under way.” The “system worked” comment was a
“heckuva job, Brownie” moment. Is she up to the job?
8. Will Obama hold individuals accountable?
Briefing the press today behind a cloak of anonymity as a “Senior Administration
Official”, Denis McDonough, NSC chief of staff (he gave the game away by saying
he was
from Minnesota), said that Obama “intends to demand accountability at the
highest levels” before adding: ” It remains to be seen what that means exactly.”
If heads don’t roll – and soon – then Obama’s words will seem hollow. It’s an
opportunity for him to show some real steel.
9. There’s a continued, unfortunate tendency for
everyone in Obamaland to preface every comment about something going wrong with
a sideswipe against the Bush administration. On Sunday, Bill Burton, Deputy
White House Press Secretary,
briefed:
“On the Sunday shows, Robert Gibbs and Secretary Napolitano made clear that we
are pressing ahead with securing our nation against threats and our aggressive
posture in the war with al Qaeda. We are winding down a war in Iraq that took
our eye off of the terrorists that attacked us, and have dramatically increased
our resources in Afghanistan and Pakistan where those terrorists are.” Why pat
yourself on the back for “winding down a war in Iraq that took our eye off of
the terrorists that attacked us” when the issue at hand is why the US government
under Obama, er, took its eyes off a terrorist who did try to attack us and
nearly killed 300 people? It’s bordering on the juvenile. Obama’s been president
for a year now. It’s time for him to accept that things that happen as his
responsibility, not Bush’s. It’s time for him to echo Ronald Reagan, who
said over Iran-Contra: “I take full responsibility for my own actions and
for those of my administration.”
10. Will there be US air attacks against targets
in Yemen? Watch
this space. It’s safe to say that
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula or AQAP, described to me by a senior
intelligence official today as “officially recognised and in corporate terms a
sanctioned franchise of al-Qaeda” that is plainly now seeking to become an
international rather than just a regional Islamist player.
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