ABLE DANGER - FACTS REPORTED BY CURT WELDON
Part 3
WELDON TESTIFIES BEFORE SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE ON ABLE DANGER
WASHINGTON, Sep 21 - Congressman Curt Weldon (R-Pa.), Vice Chairman of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees, gave the following testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee on intelligence sharing issues, and particularly Able Danger - a Department of Defense planning effort to identify and target the linkages and relationships of Al-Qaeda worldwide.
Congressional Testimony Prepared by CQ Transcriptions)
Statement of The Honorable Curt Weldon Representative
Committee on Senate Judiciary
September 21, 2005
"I would like to thank you Chairman Specter and Ranking Member Leahy. I
wish that a hearing such as this did not have to take place. Unfortunately, that
is not the case. It is important that we - the House and Senate as the oversight
bodies of the Executive Branch - not rush to move forward from the failures that
led to September 11, 2001. The only way to move forward with new policies is to
go back and really understand what went wrong - even if it means reexamining old
territory. However, it is regretful that all of the Able Danger team members are
not allowed to speak today. The victims and families of 9-11 and the Country
deserve better.
I have served in the House of Representatives for 19 years. Currently, I am Vice
Chairman of the Armed Services Committee and the Homeland Security Committee.
The story that I will outline today is extremely troubling to me, and has raised
significant questions that need to be answered.
In 1999, while serving as the Chair of the Research and Development
Subcommittee, I had the responsibility of overseeing approximately $35 billion
of the Defense budget that funded all military R&D. This included all
funding for each of the military services` (USN, USMC, USA, UASF) information
dominance centers that were being stood up to monitor and prevent hackers from
penetrating classified and unclassified systems.
The Army`s Information Dominance System, located at Fort Belvoir, was one of the
most capable. Known as the Land and Information Warfare Analysis Center (LIWA),
this Center was doing much more than just information dominance. Through several
site visits and briefings, I witnessed the LIWA`s state of the art facility and
initiatives, which included massive data mining, data collaboration and data
analysis. I was so impressed with this capability that I increased funding
authorization for the LIWA. It was because of the great work at LIWA, that I
felt it was important to raise the capababilites of LIWA to the attention of Dr.
John Hamre, then Deputy Secretary of Defense. Equally impressed after getting
briefed on LIWA`s capabilities, Dr. Hamre tasked them with doing an analysis of
proliferation of sensitive military technologies. The provocative outcome would
later prove harmful to the LIWA.
In the spring of 1999, I had an opportunity to personally witness the amazing
capability of the LIWA. Two weeks after the United States commenced the bombing
of Belgrade, I was contacted by leaders of the major political factions within
the Russian Federation. They were extremely concerned that our bombing of Serbia
was premature causing the Russian people to distrust the United States. The
Russians believed that this conflict could be avoided if they were asked to play
a role in dealing with Milosevic.
Leaders of Russia`s major political parties suggested that I put together a
bi-partisan congressional delegation to travel to Belgrade with a similar one
from the Russian Duma to meet with Milosevic directly. They were convinced that,
with Russia`s help, the ethnic cleansing and human rights abuses could be
stopped.
Working with Steny Hoyer, we arranged a meeting with Strobe Talbot at the State
Department to review the Russian offer. In our meeting Talbot expressed concern
with any trip to Belgrade, because he was worried that it might send an adverse
message. He did agree, however, to sending a bi-partisan Congressional
Delegation to meet with the Russian leaders in Vienna. By the end of the week, I
assembled an eleven member Congressional Delegation to meet with five Russian
political leaders in Vienna. The Russians had informed me that they were
bringing along a Serbian citizen who could establish and maintain contact with
Milosevic. I was concerned that the Serb might be a part of the Milosevic regime
and I also wanted to know more about this individual before agreeing to meet
with him.
I asked then CIA Director George Tenet for a profile the Serb who would join the
Russians. The next day I received a call from Tenet saying that the CIA did not
know much - he only provided me with two sentences about this Serb. I made the
same request from the Army`s LIWA, who, within a matter of hours, provided me
with multiple pages of information about the Serb and his family. I shared this
information with my colleagues on the military flight to Vienna, which proved to
be very useful and enabled the delegation to be better prepared.
Our meetings in Vienna were extremely successful - so much that we developed a
two page document that laid the foundation for a final and peaceful resolution
to the conflict. In fact, while in Vienna, Milosevic offered us travel by bus to
Belgrade, at which time he would embrace the framework and release three
American POW`s to the Congressional Delegation. However, after consultation with
both the White House and the State Department, I decided that we would not
travel to Belgrade and return to Washington.
On May 17, 1999, approximately two weeks after returning from Vienna, the FBI
requested to be debriefed on the Serb whom my delegation had met in Vienna. I
immediately scheduled a meeting for that following Monday, May 24, 1999, at
3:30pm. On the Friday before the FBI briefing, the CIA requested to be briefed
as well. I was informed that the State Department had tasked the CIA to brief
our Ambassador who was negotiating the final terms of the agreement to end the
war in Kosovo. I convinced the CIA to join in the FBI briefing. That Monday, I
briefed four agents in my office. Following the briefing, I asked the agents if
they knew where I had obtained this information on the Serbian. They said the
information either must have been provided by the Russians or the Serb himself.
I told the agents they were wrong, and that I had obtained the information on
the Serb from the LIWA before I left Washington. The agents indicated to me that
they did not know what the LIWA was. It was then that I knew our government had
a serious problem on it hands of stove-piped intelligence agencies, insufficient
information sharing and redundant classified systems. It was also during that
time I learned that the CIA, and much of the intelligence community, was not
using open-source information in developing their intelligence estimates and
profiles.
Following these events, I convened an adhoc group of intelligence officials to
strategize on the creation of a national collaborative center modeled after the
LIWA proto-type. This effort led to the development of a nine-page brief
entitled NOAH - National Operations and Analysis Hub. I briefed the NOAH concept
to Dr. John Hamre, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense, who expressed interest in
developing this initiative. In fact, he said that DOD could provide funding for
such a Center, but that he would need my support in convincing the FBI and CIA
to participate - noting that their participation was critical. At Hamre`s
suggestion, I convened a meeting in my office on November 4, 1999 to brief DOD,
CIA and FBI on the NOAH concept. Senior officials from each agency were in
attendance. At the conclusion of the brief, the CIA official said that the NOAH
was unnecessary.
Despite the reluctance of the CIA, I continued to press for a national
collaborative center in three successive Defense Authorization Bills, and also
delivered speeches and presentations on the topic around the country. The FY01
Defense Authorization Bill required the CIA to provide the House Armed Services
Committee with a Report on a National Collaborative Capability, in which the CIA
responded that, the ``overarching collaborative solution addressing the totality
of the requirement is not practical.`` Not only was it practical, but it became
a reality when President Bush announced the TTIC (now the NCTC) in January of
2003. It should not have taken this long, considering Congress had called for
this capability in prior years.
During 1999 and 2000, I was aware that the LIWA was providing massive data
mining and analysis for a number of extremely important intelligence and
anti-terrorism initiatives - including international drug cartels; corruption in
Russia and Serbia; terrorist linkages in the Far East; proliferation activities
both within and against the United States; as well as an extensive global
analysis of Al Qaeda.
In fact, in the weeks following 9/11, I was provided an extensive analysis chart
of Al Qaeda, which I immediately took to the White House and personally
delivered to then-Deputy National Security Advisor Steven Hadley. Mr. Hadley was
extremely interested in the chart and said that he would take it to the
President.
I continued to vigorously support the concept of data mining and analysis,
particularly when the TTIC was announced.
In the spring of 2005, I attempted to re-create the chart that I had presented
to Hadley in 2001, so I queried my contact from LIWA. It was then that I
received a brief to create a new expanded data mining and analysis capability
known as Able Providence (which I would like to submit for the record). Able
Providence was an initiative that would be supported through the Office of Naval
Intelligence. The Navy was so enamored with getting Able Providence up and
running that they even provided my Chief of Staff with the appropriate budget
line number to direct any additional congressional funds.
It was during the briefings on Able Providence that I was provided additional
information about Able Danger. I was told that Able Danger had amassed
significant data about Al Qaeda and five worldwide cells - one of which had
linkages to Brooklyn and has been referred to as the Brooklyn cell. I was told
that Able Danger identified the Brooklyn cell - to include Mohammed Atta and
three other 9/11 hijackers - more than one year before September 11, 2001.
Additionally, I was informed of an effort to share specific information with the
FBI about Al Qaeda in September 2000 - one year before 9/11 - and that three
meetings for that purpose were abruptly cancelled hours before they were
scheduled to take place.
This new information was startling, and caused me to review the 9/11 Commission
Report to see if any reference to Able Danger was contained therein. Realizing
that no such reference existed, I asked my Chief of Staff to personally contact
the 9/11 Commission and determine if they had been briefed about Able Danger. On
May 18, 2005, the 9/11 Commission Deputy Staff Director Chris Kojm said that the
staff had been briefed, but had decided ``not go down that route``. Still
puzzled that no mention of Able Danger had been made, I raised this question
with 9/11 Commissioner Tim Roemer during a meeting in my office on May 23, 2005.
He told me that he had never been briefed on Able Danger. 9/11 Commissioner John
Lehman said the same thing during a lunch on June 29, 2005. He expressed dismay
and suggested that I pursue the issue further.
How could it be possible that two 9/11 Commission staffers received two briefs,
by two different members of Able Danger, in two different countries, on the same
subject, yet no such information was brought to the level of a Commissioner. One
is left to wonder if there was a similar information sharing problem within the
commission.
On June 27, 2005, dismayed by the fact that Able Danger was omitted from the
9/11 Commission Report, I took to the floor of the House of Representatives to
outline the entire Able Danger story for my colleagues and the American people.
In the weeks following that speech, I methodically briefed the Chairs of House
Armed Services, Intelligence, Homeland Security and FBI Appropriations Oversight
Committee.
The New York Times picked up the story in August and ran three straight days of
stories. On each day, the 9/11 Commission changed their story.
-- First, they said that they were never briefed.
-- Second, they said that they were briefed and that there was never a mention
of Mohammed Atta.
-- Third, they said they were briefed, Atta was mentioned, but they found Able
Danger to be `historically insignificant``.
As someone who had supported the creation of the 9/11 Commission and their
recommendations, even though more then half were already recommended by the
Gilmore Commission, I was incensed by this cavalier attitude. Along with my
Chief of Staff, we pursued the operatives involved in Able Danger throughout the
months of July and August. We identified five officials who confirmed the facts
of Able Danger, as well as knowledge of massive data and materials tied to the
effort. We identified an FBI agent who played a role in arranging meetings to
share information on U.S. persons that were abruptly cancelled. We also
identified a technician who did Able Danger analysis and an individual who
admitted to destroying Able Danger data - up to 2.5 terabytes. This data
contained information on U.S. persons with ties to terrorism that could have
helped prevent 9-11 and possibly even be used to track terrorist movements
today. The person who destroyed this data has also spoken about how Major
General Lambert, the J3 at U.S. Special Operations Command, was extremely upset
when he learned that his data had been destroyed without his knowledge or
consent.
On at least four occasions, I personally tried to brief the 9/11 Commissioners
on: NOAH; integrative data collaboration capabilities; my frustration with
intelligence stovepipes; and Al Qaeda analysis. However, I was never able to
achieve more than a five-minute telephone conversation with Commissioner Tom
Kean. On March 24, 2004, I also had my Chief of Staff personally hand deliver a
document about LIWA, along questions for George Tenet to the Commission, but
neither was ever used. [I would like to submit for the record.] Had the
Commission been more thorough, I would have provided all of the leads that I
recently pursued on my own. In the end I was ignored by the Commission. In fact,
on the day the Commission provided the first brief for House Members in the
Cannon Caucus Room, I attended and was the first to be recognized. I asked the
Commission why they did not meet with Members who had worked intelligence and
security issues prior to 9/11, and Lee Hamilton told me that ``the Commission
did not have time to meet with every Member who had information to share.``
I have never alleged any wrong doing, conspiracy or cover-up. However, I have
been bewildered by the response to Able Danger - both by the 9-11 Commission and
the Pentagon.
Fundamental questions need to be answered - 1. Why was Able Danger a
historically insignificant event even thought we knew that Al Qaeda was
responsible for
1993 Bombing on World Trade Center
Khobar Towers
Embassy Bombings in Africa
USS COLE
2. Who ordered the destruction of 2.5 terabytes of data about Al Qaeda and why?
3. Any why wasn`t the customer at SOCOM ever consulted or briefed?
4. Who stopped the meetings between the FBI and Able Danger personnel in
September 2000 and why?
5. What was the extent of the 3 hour brief provided to General Shelton in
January 2001 regarding Able Danger?
6. Why did the 9/11 Commission change their response several times when queried
about Able Danger and attempt to spin Able Danger based on misinformation?
7. Why have threats been made to Able Danger witnesses who were simply telling
their stories?
As it stands now, the 9/11 story has not been fully examined and told. The
families of the victims and the American people deserve answers and we must not
stop until we get them."
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http://curtweldon.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=34698
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THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE:
CONTACT THE OFFICE OF CURT WELDON AND LET HIM KNOW HOW YOU FEEL
Email Congressman Weldon: EMAIL
CurtPa07@Mail.House.Gov
Offices of Pennsylvania's Seventh Congressional District
Washington, D.C.
2466 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-2011
Fax: (202) 225-8137
http://curtweldon.house.gov/Contact/
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