Victim Famlies Glad Kissinger Quit 911
Panel By
Shaun Waterman 12-14-2
- WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Former Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger stepped down Friday as chairman of a blue ribbon
commission investigating the United States' failure to prevent the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, in a move which was welcomed by groups
representing the families of those killed.
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- In a letter to President Bush, Kissinger, 79, said
that he was concerned that combining his role as chairman with his
ownership of an international consulting firm which advises foreign
clients would embroil both bodies in controversy, even though he was
prepared to disclose any potential conflicts of interest to the White
House.
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- "To remove any questions about even the appearance of
a conflict of interest, I was prepared ... to submit all relevant
financial information to the White House, as well as to independent
review and in the end to any procedure, consistent with submissions of
other members of the Joint Commission," he wrote.
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- "However, it is clear that, although specific
potential conflicts can be resolved in this manner, the controversy
would quickly move to the consulting firm I have built and own." To
break the firm up, the letter says, would delay the start of the
commission's work. Since Kissinger says he wants the panel to work
"without delay or distraction," he concludes, "I cannot accept the
responsibility you propose."
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- President Bush, in a statement Friday night, said his
administration "will work quickly to select a new chairman whose mission
will be to uncover every detail and learn every lesson of Sept. 11, even
as we act on what we have learned so far to better protect and defend
America."
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- Of Kissinger, Bush said in accepting his resignation,
"his chairmanship would have provided the insights and analysis the
government needs to understand the methods of our enemies and the nature
of the threats we face"
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- The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States was set up to discover how the United States failed to
prevent the Sept. 11 suicide hijackings, which killed nearly 3,000
Americans. The president signed the act of Congress bringing it into
being on Nov. 27.
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- But the commission has been beset by problems and
controversy ever since. White House sources told United Press
International Thursday that -- though expected to be up and running late
this month or early next month -- the panel is still in a state of flux,
with no offices, no desks and not even a telephone number.
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- Kissinger is the second senior member to quit this
week. The vice chairman, former Democratic Senate majority leader George
Mitchell resigned Wednesday, saying he had not realized how much work
was involved and could not afford to leave his law practice.
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- Both men have repeatedly denied that they would have
-- or even appear to have -- any conflict of interest in investigating
the failures of the U.S. intelligence community and the possible
complicity in the attacks of foreign entities and governments.
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- Mitchell said in his resignation letter, "as to
conflicts (of interest), I have already stated publicly that I have none
and that I would immediately stop representing and have no further
contact with any client of my firm who becomes involved in the
inquiry."
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- Nonetheless, both men quit after a report prepared for
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee by the Congressional Research
Service found that all the members of the commission would be bound by
the 1978 Ethics in Government Act, and that -- under the supervision of
the Senate Ethics Committee -- they would have to publicly disclose
"detailed information about income, assets ... liabilities, positions
held in private entities and organizations, agreements or understandings
for future employment or re-employment," and about any clients from whom
they had earned more than $5,000 in the past two years.
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- Both men have lucrative private sector jobs with
extensive client lists.
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- The White House believed that the commission's
chairman -- because he is part-time, unpaid and appointed by the
president -- should only be subject to the much less detailed -- and
less public -- disclosure requirements for executive branch
officials.
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- "The White House had a different opinion (about
disclosure requirements)," one Democratic official familiar with the
issue told United Press International, "but I never saw anything from
them that cited the law and legal precedent like (the CRS report) did."
No one form the White House had any comment Friday evening.
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- A spokesman for a coalition of four groups
representing the families of the victims of the attacks welcomed
Kissinger's decision. "This is a wonderful opportunity for the president
to correct the mistake he made and appoint the right person for the job
-- Senator Warren Rudman," Stephen Push of the "Families of Sept. 11"
group told UPI.
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- "If Kissinger had remained chairman there would always
have been questions about how thorough the inquiry was," he said.
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- Push maintained that Rudman would do his best to get
to the bottom of the issue, which he said made him a difficult choice
for some. "Someone has been blocking Rudman's appointment because he is
a highly qualified candidate who would be a dogged investigator," he
said.
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- Push was of the opinion that Kissinger had stepped
down because he was reluctant to make his client list public. "I spoke
with him by telephone on Monday and met with him Thursday (in his New
York office) and he made it very clear to me on both occasions that he
was not going to release his client list to the public ... . I cannot
think of any other reason why he would have quit like that. He gave no
hint of his intention to go when we met, in fact we discussed the date
for our next meeting."
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- Neither Kissinger nor anyone from his office Kissinger
Associates Inc., an international consulting firm, would comment.
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- Originally an academic, he was appointed national
security adviser by President Richard Nixon and later became Secretary
of State, a post he also held in the succeeding administration of
President Gerald Ford.
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- Actions during his tenure led to his sharing the Nobel
Peace Prize with North Vietnam's Le Duc Tho for helping the United
States withdraw from the Vietnam War. But they also earned him
opprobrium from critics, who accused Kissinger of lying to Congress,
needlessly extending the war and orchestrating the overthrow of Chile's
elected president, Salvador Allende.
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- Criticism had followed him to this latest posting,
with some suggesting his appointment heralded a cover up of the
circumstances -- from missed intelligence to personal failures by
intelligence and other officials -- that lead up to the attacks which
killed nearly 3,000 people.
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- "His affinity for power and the commercial interests
he has cultivated since leaving government may make him less than the
staunchly independent figure that is needed for this critical post," The
New York Times wrote in an editorial. "Indeed, it is tempting to wonder
if the choice of Mr. Kissinger is not a clever maneuver by the White
House to contain an investigation it has long opposed."
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- With additional reporting by Richard Tomkins.
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- Copyright � 2002 United Press International. All
rights reserved.
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