PDA

View Full Version : Nixon Administration


grimm
01-25-2005, 07:57 PM
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washingt...ism_task_force/ (http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2005/01/24/documents_detail_nixon_era_terrorism_task_force/)



Documents detail Nixon-era terrorism task force
'Dirty bombs,' planes used as missiles cited as threats in reports
By Frank Bass and Randy Herschaft, Associated Press | January 24, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Nearly three decades before the Sept. 11 attacks, a high-level government panel developed plans to protect the nation against terrorist acts ranging from radiological "dirty bombs" to airline missile attacks, according to declassified documents obtained by the Associated Press.

ADVERTISEMENT

"Unless governments take basic precautions, we will continue to stand at the edge of an awful abyss," Robert Kupperman, chief scientist for the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, wrote in a 1977 report that summarized work by the Cabinet Committee to Combat Terrorism.

The group was formed in September 1972 by President Nixon after Palestinian commandos slaughtered 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic Games. The committee involved people as diverse as Henry Kissinger to a young Rudolph Giuliani, the once-secret documents show.

"It is vital that we take every possible action ourselves and in concert with other nations designed to assure against acts of terrorism," Nixon wrote in asking his secretary of state, William Rogers, to oversee the task force.

"It is equally important that we be prepared to act quickly and effectively in the event that, despite all efforts at prevention, an act of terrorism occurs involving the United States, either at home or abroad," the president said.

The full committee met only once, in October 1972, to organize, but its specialists got together twice a month over nearly five years to identify threats and debate solutions, the memos show.

Eventually, the group's influence waned as competing priorities, a change of presidents ushered in by Watergate, and bureaucratic turf battles took their toll.

But before that happened, the panel identified many of the same threats that would confront President George W. Bush in the 21st century.

The specialists fretted that terrorists might gather loose nuclear materials for a "dirty bomb" that could devastate an American city by spreading radioactivity.

"This is a real threat, not science fiction," National Security Council staffer Richard T. Kennedy wrote his boss, Kissinger, in November 1972.

Rogers, in a memo to Nixon in mid-1973, praised the Atomic Energy Commission's steps to safeguard nuclear weapons.

Rogers, however, also warned the president that "atomic materials could afford mind-boggling possibilities for terrorists."

Committee members identified commercial jets as a particular vulnerability, but raised concerns that airlines would not pay for security improvements such as tighter screening procedures and routine baggage inspections.

"The trouble with the plans is that airlines and airports will have to absorb the costs and so they will scream bloody murder should this be required of them," according to a White House memo from 1972. "Otherwise, it is a sound plan which will curtail the risk of hijacking substantially."

By 1976, government pressure to improve airport security and thwart hijackings had awakened airline industry lobbyists. The International Air Transport Association said "airport security is the responsibility of the host government. The airline industry did not consider the terrorist threat its most significant problem; it had to measure it against other priorities. If individual companies were forced to provide their own security, they would go broke," according to minutes from one meeting.

Thousands of pages of heavily blacked-out records and memos obtained from government archives and under the Freedom of Information Act show the task force:

Discussed the defense of commercial aircraft against being shot down by portable missile systems.

Recommended improved vigilance at potential "soft" targets, such as major events, municipal water supplies, nuclear power plants, and electric power facilities.

Supported a crackdown on foreigners living in and traveling through the United States, with particular attention to Middle Easterners and Arab Americans.

Though the CIA routinely updated the committee on potential terrorist threats and plots, task force members learned quickly that intelligence gathering and coordination were weak spots, just as Bush would discover three decades later.

© Copyright 2005 Globe Newspaper Company.

grimm
01-25-2005, 07:57 PM
1977 to 9/11.. the governments didn't see it coming?