Bush, Cheney Take 9/11 Questions for 3+ Hours
Thu, Apr 29, 2004
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
President Bush (news - web sites) said he and Vice
President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) answered every question on Thursday from
the panel investigating the Sept. 11 attacks and denied the
joint appearance was aimed at keeping their story straight.
In comments afterward in the White House Rose Garden, Bush
declared the extraordinary, more than three-hour session a
success that he hoped would lead to recommendations about how
to guard against future attacks, which he left open as a
possibility.
He dismissed criticism from Democrats that he wanted to
appear together with Cheney so they would not contradict each
other and did not mention he had only met with the commission
under pressure from victims' families.
"Look, if we had something to hide we wouldn't have met
with them in the first place. We answered all their questions.
As I say, I came away good about the session because I wanted
them to know how I set strategy, how we run the White House,
how we deal with threats," Bush said.
A key area of questioning for Bush was his response to an
Aug. 6, 2001, presidential intelligence memo entitled "Bin
Ladin Determined to Strike In US."
It said al Qaeda members were in the United States before
the Sept. 11, 2001, commercial airliner attacks and that the
FBI (news - web sites) had detected suspicious patterns of activity "consistent
with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks."
Bush has said the memo's usefulness was limited because it
did not point to a specific target. He did not appear to give
any ground on that position.
Former counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke has said Bush
did not heed his warnings that al Qaeda was an urgent threat.
The commission of five Republicans and five Democrats
issued a statement saying Bush and Cheney had been "forthcoming
and candid" and their input would be of great assistance as it
looks to complete a final report by July 26.
Two Democrats on the panel, Vice Chairman Lee Hamilton and
former U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, left the session about
an hour early. Hamilton, a former congressman from Indiana, was
said to have had a prior commitment to introduce visiting
Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin at a lunch.
Bush agreed under pressure to answer questions from all
panel members for as long as necessary, but only on condition
he have Cheney at his side and they meet in private, with no
recording of the session. They were not under oath.
The meeting, with potential election-year ramifications,
took place in the very heart of presidential power, the Oval
Office, rather than in a room that would have provided a
traditional table-and-chair setting.
Bush and Cheney took up opposite seats in front of the
fireplace, and commission members were clustered in the room on
couches and chairs.
Bush was joined by White House legal counsel Alberto
Gonzales and two other, unidentified White House lawyers who
were there to take notes. The commission was allowed to bring
one staffer for note-taking.
Past testimony established that elements of the U.S.
intelligence apparatus were aware of threats to American
targets from the militant al Qaeda network, led by Osama bin
Laden (news - web sites), before the Sept. 11 attacks.
Bush was expected to have been asked why he did not launch
the U.S. government into battle stations based on the Aug. 6
memo, which he received while on vacation in Texas.
Bush's advisers were worried the commission's findings will
be critical of the president, who is running for re-election in
November on his record of fighting terrorism. The panel is
working to complete its final report by July 26, well into the
campaign season.
Asked al Qaeda operatives were in the United States today,
Bush said he could not rule it out but would not get into any
details. "We are still vulnerable to attack," he said.
On Capitol Hill, U.S. House of Representatives Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, criticized Bush and
Cheney for demanding that they appear together.
"I think the only advantage to them doing it together is
that their comments be consistent. But I really think that the
whole process would have been better served if the president
had gone in alone and the vice president had gone in alone."
(Additional reporting by Adam Entous)