01/22/10
from Washington Examiner
On bombing suspect, tough questions for Eric
Holder
By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
It seems like a pretty simple question. Who made the decision to charge Umar
Farouk Abdulmutallab, the accused terrorist arrested for trying to blow up a
Northwest Airlines jet on Christmas Day, as an everyday criminal, as opposed to
an enemy combatant?
After all, Abdulmutallab was trained by al Qaeda, equipped with an al Qaeda-made
bomb, and dispatched by al Qaeda to bring down the airliner and its 278
passengers. Even though the Obama administration has mostly abandoned the term
"war on terror," the president himself has said clearly that the United States
is at war with al Qaeda. So who decided to treat Abdulmutallab as a civilian,
read him the Miranda warning, and provide him with a government-paid lawyer --
giving him the right to remain silent and denying the United States potentially
valuable intelligence that might have been gained by a military-style
interrogation?
This week that simple question -- Who? -- became more complicated after several
of the administration's top anti-terrorism officials testified on Capitol Hill.
The director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Michael Leiter, said he
wasn't consulted before the decision was made. The director of National
Intelligence, Dennis Blair, said he wasn't consulted, either. The secretary of
Homeland Security, Janet Napolitano, said she wasn't consulted. And the head of
the FBI, Robert Mueller, said he wasn't consulted.
"The decision was made by the agents on the ground," Mueller told the Senate
Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, referring to the officials who apprehended
Abdulmutallab when the plane landed in Detroit. American agents questioned the
accused terrorist briefly before he was taken to a hospital to be treated for
burns suffered in the attempt to set off explosives hidden in his underwear.
After that, Mueller testified, "in consultation with the Department of Justice
and others in the administration," the agents read him his rights.
And that was that. "Isn't it a fact, that after Miranda was given ... the
individual stopped talking?" Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions asked Mueller.
"He did," Mueller answered. But Mueller declined to say who made the decision to
grant Abdulmutallab the right to remain silent.
The issue is enormously important because Abdulmutallab, newly trained by al
Qaeda in the terrorist group's latest hot spot, Yemen, likely knows things that
would be very useful to American anti-terrorism investigators. He's not some
grizzled old terrorist who's been sitting in Guantanamo Bay since 2003 and
doesn't have any new intelligence. He's fresh material. Yet he is protected by
U.S. criminal law from having to answer questions.
Why? Republicans on the Judiciary Committee increasingly believe there is only
one person who can answer: Attorney General Eric Holder.
It was Holder who made the decision to try 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed in a criminal trial in New York. It is Holder who has expressed his
desire to grant full American constitutional rights to foreign terrorists. It is
Holder who is leading the administration's sputtering effort to move some
Guantanamo inmates to the United States. And it is Holder who is apparently
cutting other parts of the government out of crucial terrorism decisions like
the treatment of Abdulmutallab.
"These days, all roads lead to the attorney general," says one well-placed
Republican source in the Senate. "They seem to have aggregated quite a bit of
power inside Main Justice." The problem is, the Holder Justice Department
appears to be handling terrorism issues from a defense-attorney perspective, and
doing so without the input of the government's other terrorism-fighting
agencies.
That was the message of Wednesday's testimony from Blair, Leiter, Napolitano,
and Mueller, all of whom were out of the loop on the Adbulmutallab decision.
Their accounts left a number of Republican senators shaken; as the GOP lawmakers
see it, the decision to read Abdulmutallab Miranda rights was a dreadful
mistake, one that could have serious consequences down the line. There should be
some accountability.
So on Thursday all seven Republicans on the Judiciary Committee sent a letter to
Holder asking for a full explanation: Who made the decision and why, and whether
the administration now has "a protocol or policy in place for handling al Qaeda
terrorists captured in the United States."
Republicans were troubled by the decision even before Wednesday's testimony
showed that major administration figures knew nothing about it. Now, the
lawmakers want to know what happened, and they believe the only person who can
tell them is Holder.
Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at
byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his
stories and blog posts appears on www.ExaminerPolitics.com ExaminerPolitics.com.
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