Wednesday, October 31, 2007

OOOOH ROOOOOOOOODEEEEEE

Joe Conason
Rudy’s Glass House
by Joe Conason

Published: October 30, 2007

Tags: Opinion, Politics, Rudolph Giuliani
This article was published in the November 5, 2007, edition of The New York Observer.


Hai Knafo
Rudy Giuliani.
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In Rudolph Giuliani’s narrative of his own life, as confided to rapt Republican voters along the presidential primary trail, he has been fighting the lonely twilight struggle against “Islamic terrorism,” as he insists on calling it, since sometime in the 1970’s. Like President Bush, Mr. Giuliani is vain enough to compare himself with Winston Churchill. Both the former mayor and his supporters often suggest that his understanding of the terror threat is visceral and almost mystical. Only he, among all the candidates of both parties, truly grasps the issue and possesses the fortitude to confront the threat.

As part of the same spiel touting his 30 years of experience battling terrorism, Mr. Giuliani often attacks the Clinton administration for failing to comprehend the nature of the problem following the first major attack on New York, which occurred shortly after he became mayor.

“Islamic terrorists killed Americans. Slaughtered Americans. Bombed the World Trade Center. Bombed it,” he said in a typical speech last summer. “You know what the reaction of the Clinton administration at the time was? It was a crime. It was another group of murders. … Well, it wasn’t just another group of murders.”

While that description of President Clinton’s response to the February 1993 bombing is hardly fair or accurate, the tone of curt disdain serves a specific partisan purpose, by warning that a Clinton restoration in the White House will endanger America. His unrelenting attacks are aimed at portraying Hillary Clinton, the Democratic front-runner, as too weak to serve as commander in chief. But his biting words also invite closer scrutiny of Mr. Giuliani’s claims about himself.

Unfortunately very few mainstream media outlets will take up that invitation. Although cable channels and newspapers devote endless amounts of space and time to consider the authenticity of Mrs. Clinton’s laughter, they seem unable to cover an extraordinary scoop that raises questions about Mr. Giuliani’s authenticity.

Published in the Oct. 23 issue of The Village Voice—the New York alternative weekly that has excelled in covering the former mayor for many years—that scoop revealed the contents of his private testimony before the 9/11 Commission. The previously sealed memoranda summarizing Mr. Giuliani’s testimony, obtained by reporter Wayne Barrett, show profound contradictions between his stump speech and what he admitted to the commission behind closed doors.

For reasons that remain unclear, the minutes of his private testimony, marked “commission sensitive/unclassified,” were nevertheless to be locked away until the convenient date of December 2008. According to Mr. Barrett, nobody associated with the 9/11 Commission could explain how or why that decision had been made.

The Voice article discloses the embarrassing contents of a 15-page “memorandum for the record,” prepared by a commission attorney on April 20, 2004, which quotes Mr. Giuliani explaining that he knew little about Osama bin Laden’s organization until “after 9/11,” when “we brought in people to brief us on al Qaeda.” He recalled no such briefing earlier, which was “a mistake,” he acknowledged, since “if experts share a lot of info,” that would mean a “better chance of someone making heads and tails … [of the] situation.”

When a commissioner inquired about his knowledge of al Qaeda threats during the three years preceding 9/11, Mr. Giuliani replied, “At the time, I wasn’t told it was al Qaeda, but now that I look back at it, I think it was al Qaeda.” He noted that soon after the 9/11 attacks he had brought in Yossef Bodansky, author of the prophetic 2001 book Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War on America, to brief him and his staff. (In his own book, Leadership, he discloses that he read Bodansky’s book at the urging of his wife, and covered the text in “highlighter and notes.” No wonder he regards himself as an expert.)

Asked how he might apply the city’s crime-fighting strategies to the “war on terror,” Mr. Giuliani said, “Bernie knows more than I,” a reference to former Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik, the extremely dubious character whom he almost succeeded in installing as secretary of Homeland Security. All in all, America’s Mayor appears clueless and uninformed in his private remarks, even though the commissioners, by their own admission later, went easy on him.

None of that will surprise anyone who has read Grand Illusion: The Untold Story of Rudy Giuliani and 9/11, the 2006 book by Mr. Barrett and Dan Collins that delves into many of the errors and falsehoods behind the Republican front-runner’s facade. More puzzling—but alas not so surprising—is the reluctance of the mainstream media to follow up on Mr. Barrett’s story, to demand the release of Mr. Giuliani’s private testimony and to determine how and why those documents were to be locked up for the duration of the presidential campaign.

When Mr. Giuliani observes that national security will be the chief concern of many voters this year and next, he is correct. That is why he deserves the scrutiny he has escaped so far.

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