updated 1/20/2010 8:10:52 PM
ET
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP
From left, National Counterterrorism Center Directir Michael Leiter,
Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair, and Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano prepare to testify on intelligence
reform Wednesday on Capitol Hill.
WASHINGTON — The
nation's intelligence chief on Wednesday conceded missteps in the
government's handling of the Christmas Day airline bombing attempt, but
his comments about the failure to use a special federal interrogation
team may have amounted to a misstep of his own.
National Intelligence Director
Dennis Blair raised new questions Wednesday before a Senate panel about
how well prepared the administration is to respond on short notice to
domestic terrorist acts.
Blair suggested the High-Value
Detainee Interrogation Group, also known as HIG, should have questioned
the Nigerian airline bomb incident suspect before any decisions were
made on whether to place him in the civilian court system.
"That unit was created exactly for
this purpose," Blair told the Senate Homeland Security Committee. "We
did not invoke the HIG in this case. We should have."
But the elite interrogation unit
cited by Blair was designed by the Obama administration last year to
deal with suspects captured abroad. And it is not operational yet, FBI
Director Robert Mueller said Wednesday.
The HIG unit, which brings
together experienced interrogators from across the intelligence
agencies, is also led by the FBI, the same agency that questioned
suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab in the hours after he was taken into
custody on a landed Detroit-bound airliner.
Comments misconstrued?
Several hours after Blair spoke, his office posted a brief note on its
Web site saying his remarks had been misconstrued.
"The FBI interrogated Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab when they took him into custody," the statement said.
"They received important intelligence at that time, drawing on the
FBI's expertise in interrogation that will be available in the HIG once
it is fully operational."
Abdulmutallab spoke for many hours
to his FBI questioners, telling them he had been trained and equipped
by al-Qaida operatives in Yemen, according to multiple law enforcement
officials familiar with the case who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to speak publicly about it.
At a separate congressional
hearing Wednesday, Mueller appeared to take issue with Blair's initial
comments, saying there was not sufficient time immediately after the
Christmas Day incident to use the mobile interrogation teams.
Blair's comments came as
Republicans in Congress hammered the Obama administration for treating
the near-disaster as a crime rather than an act of war.
In sometimes contentious Senate
testimony, Blair accepted blame for the failings of Dec. 25 that led to
Abdulmutallab alleged attempt to ignite a bomb hidden in his underwear
as his Northwest airlines flight approached landing in Detroit.
"The overall counterterrorism
system did not do its job," Blair said. "It's in large part my
responsibility."
Quick decision?
Blair told the Homeland Security Committee that he was not consulted on
whether Abdulmutallab should have been questioned by the HIG unit to
determine whether he should be charged in civilian or military court.
Some critics assert the government
should have at least considered whether to delay placing the Nigerian
in the civilian court system in order to press him for any useful
intelligence before he gained the legal protections of a lawyer.
Many Republicans insist that major
terror suspects such as Abdulmutallab should be tried in military
courts because civilian courts do not have the capacity to handle such
high-profile cases.
"It's crystal clear to me that
somebody in the Department of Justice prematurely decided that they
should treat this as a normal criminal case," Sen. Jeff Sessions,
R-Ala., said after the hearing. "Obviously no care and time was spent
on this one, it was just, 'Boom!' a decision made quickly — way too
quickly in my view."
Blair said the decision to file
criminal charges against the suspect in federal court was made by the
FBI agent in charge on the scene, "consulting with his headquarters and
Department of Justice."
"Seemed logical to the people
there, but it should have been taken using this HIG format at a higher
level," Blair said.
'Very troubling'
Under questioning by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano and Michael Leiter, chief of the National
Counterterrorism Center, said they also were not consulted before the
decision was made to place the Nigerian suspect in the civilian
judicial system.
"That is very troubling," Collins
said. "It appears to me that we lost an opportunity to secure some
valuable intelligence information, and that the process that Director
Blair described should have been implemented in this case. And I think
it's very troubling that it was not, and that three key intelligence
officials were not asked their opinion."
The chief U.S. immigration
investigator in Detroit said Wednesday he had no regrets over how
Abdulmutallab was handled at the airport by his agency and the FBI.
Brian Moskowitz, special agent in
charge with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said it was
critical that agents immediately speak to Abdulmutallab to determine
whether "there were other people on other planes planning to do the
same."
"It was the right thing to do
given our training and the events on the ground. ... Given the facts, I
would do it again," Moskowitz told The Associated Press.
He declined to disclose any
details about what Abdulmutallab said.
'Very fluid situation'
In a separate hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mueller
said Abdulmutallab made statements to FBI agents before being given his
Miranda warnings.
The decision to arrest him was
appropriate, Mueller said, "based on an ongoing, very fluid situation"
that demanded speedy actions.
Sessions argued that the suspect
should have been declared an enemy combatant and turned over to
military authorities for interrogation.
"Intelligence is what saves
lives," said Sessions, his voice rising. His view was echoed by Joseph
Lieberman, I-Conn., who declared at the Homeland Security hearing with
Blair that the Nigerian "is a prisoner of war."
Blair said that while the U.S.
has gotten better at stopping terrorist plots that are hatched over a
lengthy period and require a money and logistical trail, it is less
able to deal with cases like Abdulmutallab, allegedly a lone recruit
who had a valid U.S. visa and no known prior link to terrorist acts.
No firings
Blair also said criteria for adding people to the government's
"no fly" list was too legalistic and rigid. And he said that in recent
years there has been pressure to shrink rather than expand the list
because of a cascade of complaints from people getting "hassled" by
authorities. "Why are you searching grandmothers?" was a too-common
refrain, he said.
"Shame on us for giving in to
that pressure," Blair said. Since the Christmas episode, the list has
been expanded, he said.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
pressed hard for answers on why no high-level officials have been fired
for the Christmas Day failures.
"We are reviewing all the
individuals, and I think the president is reviewing my performance as
well," said Leiter, the counterterrorism center director. "That is
absolutely appropriate."
Blair gave no indication that he
intended to quit or be fired because of the lapses he cited, but said:
"I don't feel good about it, and
I'm fixing it."
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