The Web of Lies this Clown Show has spun has begun to Unravel further:

<<http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=507514>>
 
'I saw papers that show US knew al-Qa'ida would attack cities with
aeroplanes' Whistleblower the White House wants to silence speaks to The
Independent By Andrew Buncombe in Washington 
02 April 2004


A former translator for the FBI with top-secret security clearance says
she has provided information to the panel investigating the 11 September
attacks which proves senior officials knew of al-Qa'ida's plans to attack
the US with aircraft months before the strikes happened.

She said the claim by the National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice,
that there was no such information was "an outrageous lie". 

Sibel Edmonds said she spent more than three hours in a closed session
with the commission's investigators providing information that was
circulating within the FBI in the spring and summer of 2001 suggesting
that an attack using aircraft was just months away and the terrorists
were in place. The Bush administration, meanwhile, has sought to silence
her and has obtained a gagging order from a court by citing the rarely
used "state secrets privilege". 

She told The Independent yesterday: "I gave [the commission] details of
specific investigation files, the specific dates, specific target
information, specific managers in charge of the investigation. I gave
them everything so that they could go back and follow up. This is not
hearsay. These are things that are documented. These things can be
established very easily." 

She added: "There was general information about the time-frame, about
methods to be used � but not specifically about how they would be used �
and about people being in place and who was ordering these sorts of
terror attacks. There were other cities that were mentioned. Major cities
� with skyscrapers." 

The accusations from Mrs Edmonds, 33, a Turkish-American who speaks
Azerbaijani, Farsi, Turkish and English, will reignite the controversy
over whether the administration ignored warnings about al-Qa'ida. That
controversy was sparked most recently by Richard Clarke, a former
counter-terrorism official, who has accused the administration of
ignoring his warnings. 

The issue � what the administration knew and when � is central to the
investigation by the 9/11 Commission, which has been hearing testimony in
public and private from government officials, intelligence officials and
secret sources. Earlier this week, the White House made a U-turn when it
said that Ms Rice would appear in public before the commission to answer
questions. Mr Bush and his deputy, Dick Cheney, will also be questioned
in a closed-door session. 

Mrs Edmonds, 33, says she gave her evidence to the commission in a
specially constructed "secure" room at its offices in Washington on 11
February. She was hired as a translator for the FBI's Washington field
office on 13 September 2001, just two days after the al-Qa'ida attacks.
Her job was to translate documents and recordings from FBI wire-taps. 

She said said it was clear there was sufficient information during the
spring and summer of 2001 to indicate terrorists were planning an attack.
"Most of what I told the commission � 90 per cent of it � related to the
investigations that I was involved in or just from working in the
department. Two hundred translators side by side, you get to see and hear
a lot of other things as well." 

"President Bush said they had no specific information about 11 September
and that is accurate but only because he said 11 September," she said.
There was, however, general information about the use of airplanes and
that an attack was just months away. 

To try to refute Mr Clarke's accusations, Ms Rice said the administration
did take steps to counter al-Qa'ida. But in an opinion piece in The
Washington Post on 22 March, Ms Rice wrote: "Despite what some have
suggested, we received no intelligence that terrorists were preparing to
attack the homeland using airplanes as missiles, though some analysts
speculated that terrorists might hijack planes to try and free US-held
terrorists."

Mrs Edmonds said that by using the word "we", Ms Rice told an "outrageous
lie". She said: "Rice says 'we' not 'I'. That would include all people
from the FBI, the CIA and DIA [Defence Intelligence Agency]. I am saying
that is impossible."

It is impossible at this stage to verify Mrs Edmonds' claims. However,
some senior US senators testified to her credibility in 2002 when she
went public with separate allegations relating to alleged incompetence
and corruption within the FBI's translation department. 
 

------
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

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