01/22/10
From Judicial Watch
Intel Chief’s Ignorance Displayed In Senate
Hearing
Last Updated: Fri, 01/22/2010 - 12:41pm
In yet another indicator that incompetents are handling national security, the
U.S. government’s top intelligence official told a senate panel that the Al
Qaeda operative who recently tried to blow up a passenger jet should have been
questioned by a special interrogation unit that doesn’t even exist.
If this sounds like a late-night comedy show skit, just take a look at the
news report that provides the embarrassing details. Testifying before the
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, the president’s
Director of National Intelligence (Dennis Blair) said that the Nigerian
terrorist who tried to blow up the Detroit-bound airliner on Christmas should
not have been questioned by the FBI, but rather a yet-to-be-created
interrogation outfit.
The hypothetical unit—to be called High-Value Interrogation Group or HIG—was
recommended by an Obama Administration task force last summer but has not yet
come together. Even when it does, it’s only supposed to handle the questioning
of high-value Al Qaeda leaders captured overseas, a criteria that didn’t apply
to the Christmas Day terrorist (Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab) since he was
apprehended upon landing in the U.S. None of this stopped the Director of
National Intelligence from telling congressional leaders that the HIG should
have questioned the bomber instead of the FBI.
"That unit was created exactly for this purpose—to make a decision on whether a
certain person who's detained should be treated as a case for federal
prosecution or for some of the other means," the director told the senate panel.
"We did not invoke the HIG in this case; we should have. Frankly, we were
thinking more of overseas people. And, you know, we didn't put it then—that's
what we will do now. And—and so we need to make those decisions more carefully."
This sort of ignorance certainly doesn’t paint a very positive portrait of the
official who, not only heads the nation’s intelligence community, but also acts
as the principal adviser to the president as well as the Department of Homeland
Security. Annoyed, angry and frustrated, the White House quickly ordered the
remarks corrected. Blair followed orders, subsequently claiming that his
testimony had been “misconstrued.” What he meant to say is that the HIG will be
of tremendous value once it’s fully operational.
This hardly marks the first controversy involving Homeland Security blunders
that indicate the system is perhaps not the most efficient. The nation’s
Secretary of Homeland Security is actually best known for her many gaffes,
including the laughable assessment that the aviation security system worked
because Abdulmutallab didn’t actually succeed in blowing up the plane. Never
mind that the system allowed a radical Muslim who appeared on the terrorist
watch lists of two countries to board an airplane with explosives in his pants
and that it was actually passengers—not authorities—who stopped him.
President Obama subsequently revealed that incompetent U.S. intelligence
agencies actually helped the Al Qaeda terrorist who came dangerously close to
blowing the plane up with 300 passengers aboard. The commander-in-chief called
it a “potential
catastrophic breach” of security because the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) had been sitting on valuable information about the bomber’s terrorist
connections for months and the terrorist’s own father had warned American
embassy officials that his son had “become radicalized.”
* * * * *
Our founding fathers were well-meaning when they set up our government so that certain key positions at the top of various departments were to be filled through appointment by the president. They could not have foreseen how much the government has grown - into many, many important departments and agencies that are populated by highly skilled men and women, but whose top management is made up of political hacks. Their sole qualification for the office they hold is usually the amount of money they raised for the president's election campaign. These top managers are in a position to set policy and make decisions and rule their department or agency or bureau for the duration of their sponsor/president's time in office. The smart ones relax in their plush office and nap while their "assistant" career professionals run the show. The dangerous ones try to actually perform "hands-on" management.
It would be very funny if it didn't have the potential to cause great tragedy.


These intrepid gentlemen are the Keystone Kops. They're a little before your time, and mine too. You can Google them to see why they're an appropriate metaphor for our efforts to protect the country from Islamic Jihad. INCOMPETENCE.