Records Show Tenet Briefed Rice on Al Qaeda Threat - New York Times 





October 2, 2006
Records Show Tenet Briefed Rice on Al Qaeda Threat 
By PHILIP SHENON and MARK MAZZETTI
JIDDA, Saudi Arabia, Oct. 2 - A review of White House records has determined 
that George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, did brief 
Condoleezza Rice and other top officials on July 10, 2001, about the looming 
threat from Al Qaeda, a State Department spokesman said Monday. 
The account by Sean McCormack came hours after Ms. Rice, the secretary of state, 
told reporters aboard her airplane that she did not recall the specific meeting 
on July 10, 2001, noting that she had met repeatedly with Mr. Tenet that summer 
about terrorist threats. Ms. Rice, the national security adviser at the time, 
said it was "incomprehensible" she ignored dire terrorist threats two months 
before the Sept. 11 attacks. 
Mr. McCormack also said records show that the Sept. 11 commission was informed 
about the meeting, a fact that former intelligence officials and members of the 
commission confirmed on Monday. 
When details of the meeting emerged last week in a new book by Bob Woodward of 
The Washington Post, Bush administration officials questioned Mr. Woodward's 
reporting. 
Now, after several days, both current and former Bush administration officials 
have confirmed parts of Mr. Woodward's account. 
Officials now agree that on July 10, 2001, Mr. Tenet and his counterterrorism 
deputy, J. Cofer Black, were so alarmed about an impending Al Qaeda attack that 
they demanded an emergency meeting at the White House with Ms. Rice and her 
National Security Council staff. 
According to two former intelligence officials, Mr. Tenet told those assembled 
at the White House about the growing body of intelligence the Central 
Intelligence Agency had collected pointing to an impending Al Qaeda attack. But 
both current and former officials took issue with Mr. Woodward's account that 
Mr. Tenet and his aides left the meeting in frustration, feeling as if Ms. Rice 
had ignored them. 
Mr. Tenet told members of the Sept. 11 commission about the July 10 meeting when 
they interviewed him in early 2004, but committee members said the former C.I.A. 
director never indicated he had left the White House with the impression that he 
had been ignored. 
"Tenet never told us that he was brushed off," said Richard Ben-Veniste, a 
Democratic member of the commission. "We certainly would have followed that up." 

Mr. McCormack said the records showed that, far from ignoring Mr. Tenet's 
warnings, Ms. Rice acted on the intelligence and requested that Mr. Tenet make 
the same presentation to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Atttorney 
General John Ashcroft.
But Mr. Ashcroft said by telephone on Monday evening that he never received a 
briefing that summer from Mr. Tenet. 
"Frankly, I'm disappointed that I didn't get that kind of briefing," he said. 
"I'm surprised he didn't think it was important enough to come by and tell me."
The dispute that has played out in recent days gives further evidence of an 
escalating battle between the White House and Mr. Tenet over who should take the 
blame for such mistakes as the failure to stop the Sept. 11 attacks and 
assertions by Bush administration officials that Saddam Hussein was stockpiling 
chemical and biological weapons and cultivating ties to Al Qaeda. 
Mr. Tenet resigned as director of central intelligence in the summer of 2004 and 
was honored that December with a Presidential Medal of Freedom during a White 
House ceremony. Since leaving the C.I.A., Mr. Tenet has stayed out of the public 
eye, largely declining to defend his record at the C.I.A. even after several 
government investigations have assailed the faulty intelligence that helped 
build the case for the Iraq war. 
Mr. Tenet is now completing work on a memoir that is scheduled to be published 
early next year. 
It is unclear how muchMr. Tenet will use the book to settle old scores, although 
recent books have portrayed Mr. Tenet both as dubious about the need for the 
Iraq war and angry that the White House has made the C.I.A. the primary 
scapegoat for the war. 
In his book "The One Percent Doctrine," the journalist and author Ron Suskind 
quotes Mr. Tenet's former deputy at the C.I.A., John McLaughlin, saying that Mr. 
Tenet "wishes he could give that damn medal back." 
In his own book, Mr. Woodward wrote that over time Mr. Tenet developed a 
particular dislike for Ms. Rice, and that the former C.I.A. director was furious 
when she publicly blamed the agency for allowing President Bush to make the 
false claim in the 2003 State of the Union Address that Saddam Hussein was 
pursuing nuclear materials in Niger. 
"If the C.I.A., the Director of National Intelligence, had said `take this out 
of the speech,' it would have been gone, without question," Ms. Rice told 
reporters in July 2003. 
In fact, the C.I.A. had told the White House months before that the Niger 
intelligence was bogus and had managed to keep the claim out of an October 2002 
speech that President Bush gave in Cincinnati. 
More recently, Mr. Tenet has told friends that he was particularly angry when, 
appearing recently on Sunday talk shows, both Ms. Rice and Vice President Dick 
Cheney cited Mr. Tenet by name as the reason that Bush administration officials 
asserted that Mr. Hussein had stockpiles of banned weapons in Iraq and ties to 
Al Qaeda.
Mr. Cheney recalled during an appearance on "Meet the Press" on Sept. 10 of this 
year: "George Tenet sat in the Oval Office and the president of the United 
States asked him directly, he said, `George, how good is the case against Saddam 
on weapons of mass destruction?' the director of the C.I.A. said, `It's a slam 
dunk, Mr. President, it's a slam dunk.' " 
Philip Shenon reported from Jidda, Saudi Arabia, and Mark Mazzetti from 
Washington.


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