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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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358 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

‘What a wonderful world we live in! We can do whatever we want to do to<br />

the Great Satan!’”<br />

geoRge tenet, the diRectoR <strong>of</strong> Central Intelligence during Clinton’s<br />

second term <strong>and</strong> most <strong>of</strong> Bush’s first, told the commission “the system<br />

was blinking red” in the Intelligence Community in July <strong>of</strong> 2001. Yet<br />

some at the Pentagon <strong>and</strong> White House surmised that the threats might<br />

be merely al-Qaida deception. <strong>The</strong>re were in fact few specifics. Some 9/11<br />

family members pointed to the August 6 Presidential Daily Brief warning<br />

that bin Laden was determined to strike in the U.S. <strong>The</strong>re’s the smoking<br />

gun, they said. <strong>The</strong> brief went on, however, to assure the president<br />

that the FBI was conducting 70 “full field” investigations throughout the<br />

nation. Bush recollected that Rice told him there was no actionable intelligence<br />

<strong>of</strong> a domestic threat. 3<br />

<strong>The</strong> September 11 attacks fell into a void between the foreign <strong>and</strong> domestic<br />

intelligence agencies <strong>of</strong> an unwieldy government, the 9/11 Commission<br />

concluded. No one was looking for a foreign threat to domestic<br />

targets from al-Qaida foot soldiers who had infiltrated into the United<br />

<strong>State</strong>s. But here they were, busy learning how to fly Boeing 767s <strong>and</strong><br />

practicing how to butcher anyone who tried to intervene. “<strong>The</strong> terrorists<br />

exploited deep institutional failings within our government.” Gorton vividly<br />

recalls a CIA supervisor telling the commissioners that no one was<br />

looking at the bigger picture. “No analytic work foresaw the lightning that<br />

could connect the thundercloud to the ground.” 4<br />

Besides a failure to communicate, Gorton says 9/11 was caused by a<br />

dearth <strong>of</strong> something that’s second nature to Bill Gates <strong>and</strong> Steve Jobs:<br />

Imagination. <strong>The</strong> blame really had no one face or h<strong>and</strong>ful <strong>of</strong> faces. It<br />

was a systemic “failure <strong>of</strong> imagination,” as Kean <strong>and</strong> Hamilton put it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lesson was as old as December 7, 1941, when “in the face <strong>of</strong> a clear<br />

warning, alert measures bowed to routine,” one contemporary historian<br />

wrote. 5<br />

What if al-Qaida decided to launch latter-day kamikaze attacks, with<br />

suicide pilots at the controls <strong>of</strong> huge jetliners instead <strong>of</strong> single-engine<br />

Mitsubishi Zeros? <strong>The</strong> FBI had inklings in July <strong>of</strong> 2001 that terrorists<br />

were interested in U.S. flight schools. That August, FBI <strong>and</strong> INS agents<br />

arrested an al-Qaida operative in Minnesota. Zacarias Moussaoui had<br />

Boeing 747 flight manuals <strong>and</strong> a flight simulator program for his laptop.<br />

Intense publicity surrounding his arrest might have disrupted plans for<br />

the attack, according to Zelikow <strong>and</strong> Gorton. But no one connected the<br />

dots. Institutionalizing the exercise <strong>of</strong> imagination requires breaking

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