send mail guestbook - don't click!!

noname47

Alfatomega.com

Search in all of ALFATOMEGA.COM
 
 X—TENDED

welcome to ALFATOMEGA --> use CTR + F for FIND !!!///

authentico.planetaclix.pt

authenticamigos.planetaclix.pt

authentico-historia.planetaclix.pt

_A_O_inzoome_search_

<-4 Mgb

Themes >

<-2.8 Mgb

_a_O_a_search_patch

12 MgB

https://www.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/01/29/inv.terror.probe/index.html Bush

WASHINGTON (CNN)

President Bush

personally

as

Senate Majority Leader (D)Tom Daschle

Tuesday 29.Jan.2002

to limit the congressional investigation

into the events of September 11,

congressional and White House sources told CNN.

**********************

The request

was made at a

private

meeting

with congressional leaders

Tuesday morning.

Sources”

said

Bush initiated the “conversation”.

*****************

He asked that

only

the House and Senate Intelligence Committees*

look into the potential(!)

breakdowns

among federal agencies

that could(!)

have allowed the terrorist attacks to occur,

rather than a

broader inquiry that

some lawmakers*

have proposed,

the “sources”

said

***********************

Tuesday's

discussion

followed a

rare call to

Daschle from

Vice President

Dick Cheney* last

Friday 25.Jan.2002

to make the same

request.

*******

"The vice president expressed the concern

that a review of what happened on September 11

would take resources and personnel

away

from the effort in the war on terrorism,"

Daschle told reporters.

But,

Daschle said,

he has NOT

agreed

to limit

the investigation.

"I acknowledged that concern,

and it is for that reason

that the Intelligence Committee*

is going to begin this effort,

trying to limit the scope

and the overall review of what happened,"

said Daschle, D-South Dakota.

"But clearly, I think the American people

are entitled to know what happened and why,"

he said.

*************

Cheney met last week in the Capitol

with the Chairmen*

of the House and Senate Intelligence Committees

and,

according to a spokesman for Senate Intelligence

Chairman Bob Graham, D-Florida,

"agreed to cooperate with their effort."

*************

The heads of both intelligence committees have been meeting

to map out a way

to hold a bipartisan House-Senate investigation and hearings.

****************

They were discussing how the inquiry would proceed,

including what would be made public,

what would remain classified +

how broad the probe would be.

********************

Graham's spokesman said

the committees will review intelligence matters only.

******

"How ill prepared were we and why?

We are looking towards the possibility of

addressing systemic problems through legislation,"

said spokesman Paul Anderson.*

******************

Some Democrats, such as

Sens. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut and

Robert Torricelli of New Jersey,

have been calling

for a broad inquiry looking at various

federal government agencies beyond

the intelligence community.

****************

"We do not meet our responsibilities

to the American people if

we do not take an honest look

at the federal government and

all of its agencies and

let the country know

what went wrong,"

Torricelli said.

"The best assurance

that there's not

another terrorist attack

on the United States is

not simply

to hire

more federal agents or

spend more money.

It's to take an honest look

at what went wrong.

Who

or

what

failed

?

There's an explanation owed

to the American people,"

he said.

****

Although

the president and vice president

told Daschle

they were worried

a wide-reaching inquiry

could distract

from

the government's war

on

terrorism,

privately

Democrats

questioned why the

White House feared

a broader

investigation to

determine

possible

culpability.

******

"We will take a look at

the allocation of resources.

Ten thousand federal agents --

where were they?

How many assets were used,

and what signals were missed?"

a Democratic senator told CNN.

***************


CNN Capitol Hill Producer Dana Bash and CNN Correspondents Jon Karl and John King contributed to this report.

Find this article at:

https://www.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/01/29/inv.terror.probe/index.html