|  				 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 				 				  				  			 |