<<http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A13541-2004Mar21?language=print
er>>

In the early days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the Bush White House
cut by nearly two-thirds an emergency request for counterterrorism funds
by the FBI, an internal administration budget document shows. 

The document, dated Oct. 12, 2001, shows that the FBI requested $1.5
billion in additional funds to enhance its counterterrorism efforts with
the creation of 2,024 positions. But the White House Office of Management
and Budget cut that request to $531 million. Attorney General John D.
Ashcroft, working within the White House limits, cut the FBI's request
for items such as computer networking and foreign language intercepts by
half, cut a cyber-security request by three quarters and eliminated
entirely a request for "collaborative capabilities." 

The document was one of several administration papers obtained and given
to The Washington Post by the Center for American Progress, a liberal
group run by former Clinton chief of staff John D. Podesta. The papers
show that Ashcroft ranked counterterrorism efforts as a lower priority
than his predecessor did, and that he resisted FBI requests for more
counterterrorism funding before and immediately after the attacks. 
...

Other documents indicate that before Sept. 11, Ashcroft did not give
terrorism top billing in his strategic plans for the Justice Department,
which includes the FBI. A draft of Ashcroft's "Strategic Plan" from Aug.
9, 2001, does not put fighting terrorism as one of the department's seven
goals, ranking it as a sub-goal beneath gun violence and drugs. After the
attacks, fighting terrorism became the department's primary goal. By
contrast, in April 2000, Ashcroft's predecessor, Janet Reno, called
terrorism "the most challenging threat in the criminal justice area." 

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