WASHINGTON, June 12 (Reuters) - Top CIA officials fought bitterly in
the years after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks over whether U.S.
intelligence agencies could have done more to stop the deadliest
terrorist strikes in American history, documents released on Friday
show.
The once-secret documents include a more complete version of
a 2005 report by the spy agency's inspector general, which found that
the CIA did not have a comprehensive strategy or marshal adequate
resources to combat al Qaeda before hijacked planes hit New York's World
Trade Center and the Pentagon on 9/11.
A redacted summary of that report was first made public in 2007.
But
the documents released by the CIA on Friday also reflect the arguments
of former CIA Director George Tenet and his lieutenants that U.S.
intelligence was intently focused on al Qaeda and leader Osama bin
Laden.
At stake in the years-long dispute are the legacies of former top CIA officials and the agency itself.
None
of the documents focus directly on how President George W. Bush and his
White House dealt with the al Qaeda threat after taking office in
January 2001. Some former officials, including Bush counter-terrorism
czar Richard Clarke, have said Bush did not initially make al Qaeda a
priority.
In a heated June 2005 letter to then CIA Inspector General John Helgerson, Tenet rejected Helgerson's critical draft report.
"Your
report challenges my professionalism, diligence and skill in leading
the men and women of U.S. intelligence in countering terrorism," Tenet
told Helgerson.
"I did everything I could to inform, warn and
motivate action to prevent harm," he wrote. "Your report does not fairly
or accurately portray my actions, or the heroic work of the men and
women of the Intelligence Community."
After the bombings of U.S.
Embassies in East Africa in 1998 and the USS Cole in October 2000, Tenet
said, he warned President Bill Clinton "to expect from five to fifteen
attacks against United States' interests."
Tenet has previously
said that he developed a plan to go after al Qaeda in 1999, and worked
to increase U.S. intelligence funding, slashed during the 1990s.
"I
said when the executive summary was made public eight years ago that
the IG's report was flat wrong," Tenet said on Friday. "Nothing in the
additional material just released changes that judgment in the
slightest."
The documents, which former CIA officials pressed the
agency to release, include a July 2005 memo from 17 top officers of the
CIA's Counterterrorism Center disputing Helgerson's report.
Helgerson was not immediately available for comment.
The documents can be found at http://www.foia.cia.gov/collection/declassified-documents-related-911-attacks.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/12/cia-911-documents_n_7573936.html
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