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'We're Less Safe,' Say Counterterrorism Experts
By Monisha Bansal, CNSNews.com
September 28, 2006
(CNSNews.com) - Echoing
recent statements by congressional
Democrats, conservative counterterrorism
experts Wednesday said the United States is
"less safe" today than before Sept. 11, 2001.
But White House Press Secretary Tony Snow
continued to defend President Bush's position
that the U.S. is safer now than before the
worst terrorist attacks in the nation's
history.
The National Intelligence
Estimate, which reportedly concluded that the
Iraq war has heightened Islamic radicalism and
increased the threat of terrorism, was leaked
Sunday. The report has been cited by many
Democrats in their criticisms of the Bush
administration's handling of the
war.
"We've heard a lot in the last 48
hours about the National Intelligence Estimate
conclusion that U.S. presence overseas in the
war in Iraq has contributed to jihadi
fightings," said Col. Michael Meese, head of
the department of social sciences at West Point
Military Academy. "In fact, that is what we
found."
"We've done a lot to look at the
root causes of terrorism," Meese said at the
Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. From
looking at "online jihadi writings, thus far,
direct engagement with the United States has
been good for the jihadi movement."
He
noted that the conflict drains American
resources and puts pressure on American
allies.
"The United States should avoid
direct large-scale military action in the
Middle East," he said.
Scott Bates, vice
president of the Center for National Policy,
told Cybercast News Service, "I think we're
less safe [than before 9/11]. I think we're
creating more terrorists than we are capturing
or killing.
"You have to turn off the
faucet before you can mop up the floor," he
added. "I hate to say it, but that faucet is
going full blast right now. We have to turn off
that faucet."
Bates said wining the war
on terrorism requires targeting and attacking
terrorists, providing a strong domestic defense
system and preventing the rise of future
terrorists. He said the U.S. will have to
"commit equal vigor and resources in all those
areas at the same time to truly prevail in this
long war."
But White House Press
Secretary Tony Snow Wednesday defended the
President Bush's assertion that the United
States is winning the war on terror and that
the U.S. homeland is safer now than before
9/11.
"Since September 11, 2001, we have
not been attacked. And, furthermore, the United
States, since September 11, 2001, has taken a
much more aggressive approach toward terror
than it had taken previously," Snow said during
his daily briefing.
Intelligence
failures of the past, he said, are finally
being remedied.
"Even with the buildup
since September 11th, we are only now beginning
to achieve the same sort of levels that we had,
in terms of intelligence assets that we had at
the beginning of the Clinton administration,"
Snow added.
Al Qaeda and other terrorist
organizations have been weakened in the last
five years and can no longer communicate easily
or maintain centralized operations, he said.
"They had an operational capability then that
they do not have now."
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