Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: On 7th Anniversary Of
Attacks, White House Claims Bin Laden Was Not The ‘Mastermind’ of Sept.
11 via Think Progress by Satyam on 9/10/08
Tomorrow marks the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. In a press
conference today, a reporter asked White House Press Secretary Dana
Perino about the administration’s ongoing efforts to find Osama bin
Laden, calling him the “mastermind” of 9/11. Perino interrupted the
reporter, claiming bin Laden was not the true “mastermind” of the
attacks:

Q But Osama bin Laden is the one that — you keep talking about his
lieutenants, and, yes, they are very important, but Osama bin Laden was
the mastermind of 9/11 –

PERINO: No, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was the mastermind of 9/11, and he’s
sitting in jail right now.

Watch it:



Perino seems to be attempting to justify the White House’s failure to
catch bin Laden by suggesting he was not the “mastermind.” But in
September 2006, former press secretary Tony Snow stated:

Osama bin Laden, mastermind of September 11th, the person that many
people talk about and still have concerns about, calls this fight, the
fight in Iraq, “the third world war.”

While Khalid Sheikh Mohammed has admitted to being the “architect” of
9/11, bin Laden was not inconsequential; he approved and executed the
attacks. KSM in fact, brought the idea to bin Laden, who according to
the 9/11 Commission, “wanted to hit the White House, Pentagon and U.S.
Capitol,” not just the World Trade Center.

Perino suggested that it would take “superpowers” to catch bin Laden.
“So there are human limitations to any — this is not the movies, we
don’t have superpowers,” she said. It didn’t, however, take
“superpowers” to capture bin Laden at Tora Bora in late 2001, where he
escaped in part because of a lack of troops.

Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to Think Progress using Google Reader
- Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
favorite sites

Reply via email to