March
5, 2003
Full Text of
F.B.I. Agent's Letter to Director Mueller
Following
is the full text from a Feb. 26 letter to Director Robert S. Mueller III
of the F.B.I. from Special Agent Coleen Rowley of the bureau's field
office in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis, MN
55401
February 26,
2003
FBI Director
Robert Mueller
FBI Headquarters
Washington D.C.
Dear Director
Mueller:
In June, 2002,
on the eve of my testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, you told me
that you appreciate constructive criticism and that FBI agents should feel
free to voice serious concerns they may have about senior-level FBI
actions. Since then I have availed myself twice of your stated openness.
At this critical
point in our country's history I have decided to try once again, on an
issue of even more consequence for the internal security posture of our
country. That posture has been
weakened by the diversion of attention from al-Qaeda to our government's
plan to invade Iraq, a step that will, in all likelihood, bring an
exponential increase in the terrorist threat to the U.S., both at home and
abroad.
In your recent
testimony to the Senate, you noted that "the al-Qaeda network will
remain for the foreseeable future the most immediate and serious threat
facing this country," adding that "the prevention of another
terrorist attack remains the FBI's top priority." You then noted that
a "U.S.-Iraq war could prompt Baghdad to more directly engage al-Qaeda
and perhaps provide it with weapons of mass destruction." But you did
not connect these very important dots.
Your recent
briefings of field management staff have thrown light on the immense
pressures you face as you try to keep the FBI intact and functioning amid
persistent calls for drastic restructuring. You have made it clear that
the FBI is perilously close to being divided up and is depending almost
solely upon the good graces of Attorney General Ashcroft and President
Bush for its continued existence. Clearly, this tense environment poses a
special challenge to those like you who are responsible for providing
unbiased, objective intelligence and national security advice to the
country's leaders. But I would implore you to step out of this
pressure-cooker for a few minutes and consider the following:
1) The FBI is
apparently the source for the public statement that there are 5,000 al-Qaeda
terrorists already in the U.S. I would ask you to inquire as to whether
this figure is based on any hard data. If it is, rather, an estimate based
largely on speculation, this can only feed the suspicion, inside the
organization and out, that it is
largely the product of a desire to gain favor with the administration, to
gain support for FBI initiatives and possibly even to gain support for the
administration's initiatives.
2) What is
the FBI's evidence with respect to a connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq?
Polls show that Americans are completely confused about who was
responsible for the suicidal attacks on 9-11 with many blaming Iraq. And
it is clear that this impression has been fostered by many in the
Administration. As far as the FBI is concerned, is the evidence of such a
link "bulletproof," as Defense Secretary Rumsfeld claims, or
"scant," as General Brent Scowcroft, Chairman of the President's
Intelligence Advisory Board has said? The answer to this is of key
importance in determining whether war against Iraq makes any sense from
the FBI's internal security point of view. If the FBI does have
independent data verifying such a connection, it would seem such
information should be shared, at least internally within the FBI.
3) If, as you
have said, "the prevention of another terrorist attack remains the
FBI's top priority," why is it that we have not attempted to
interview Zacarias Moussaoui, the only suspect in U.S. custody charged
with having a direct hand in the horror of 9-11? Although al-Qaeda has
taken pains to compartmentalize its operations to avoid compromise by any
one operative, information obtained from some al-Qaeda operatives has
nonetheless proved invaluable. Moussaoui almost certainly would know of
other al-Qaeda contacts, possibly in the U.S., and would also be able to
alert us to the motive behind his and Mohammed Atta's interest in crop
dusting.
Similarly, there
is the question as to why little or no apparent effort has been made to
interview convicted terrorist Richard Reid, who obviously depended upon
other al-Qaeda operatives in fashioning his shoe explosive. Nor have
possible links between Moussaoui and Reid been fully investigated. It
therefore appears that the government may have sacrificed the possibility
of acquiring information pertinent to future attacks, in order to conduct
criminal prosecution of these two individuals. Although
prosecution serves worthy purposes, including deterrence, standard
practice in "Organized Crime/Terrorism 101" dictates
imaginative, concerted attempts to make inroads into well-organized,
cohesive groups. And sometimes that requires "dealing with the
devil."
In short, it is
a matter of priorities. And lack of follow-through with regard to
Moussaoui and Reid gives a hollow ring to our "top priority;" i.
e., preventing another terrorist attack.
4) It
is not clear that you have been adequately apprized of the potential
damage to our liaison relationships with European intelligence agencies
that is likely to flow from the growing tension over Iraq between senior
U.S. officials and their counterparts in key West European countries.
There are far more al-Qaeda operatives in Europe than in the U.S., and
European intelligence services, including the French, are on the
frontlines in investigating and pursuing them. Indeed, the Europeans have
successfully uncovered and dismantled a number of active cells in their
countries.
In the past, FBI
liaison agents stationed in Europe benefitted from the expertise and
cooperation of European law enforcement and intelligence officers.
Information was shared freely, and was of substantial help to us in our
investigations in the U.S. You will recall that prior to 9-11, it was the
French who passed us word of Moussaoui's link to terrorism.
5) I know the
FBI is no longer (or will shortly be no longer) in charge of regulating
the color codes, but I expect we will still have input. I realize that
decisions to change color codes are made at the most senior level, but
perhaps you can caution senior officials about the downside to alarming
the public unless there is adequate reason to do so. Increased vigilance
must be encouraged when needed, but the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces
can easily get bogged down in attempting to pursue all the leads
engendered by panicky citizens. This, in turn, draws resources away from
more important, well predicated and already established investigations.
Unintended
consequences like the recent stampede in the Chicago dance club (which
initial news accounts reported to be the case) can also occur when the
public is put on these heightened alerts. The terrorists win in such
circumstances even without attacking.
6) The
vast majority of the one thousand plus persons "detained" in the
wake of 9-11 did not turn out to be terrorists. They were mostly illegal
aliens. We have every right, of course, to deport those identified as
illegal aliens during the course of any investigation.
But after 9-11, Headquarters encouraged more and more detentions for what
seem to be essentially PR purposes. Field
offices were required to report daily the number of detentions in order to
supply grist for statements on our progress in fighting terrorism. The
balance between individuals' civil liberties and the need for effective
investigation is hard to maintain even during so-called normal times, let
alone times of increased terrorist threat or war. It is, admittedly, a
difficult balancing act. But from what I have observed, particular
vigilance may be required to head off undue pressure (including subtle
encouragement) to detain or "round up" suspectsparticularly
those of Arabic origin.
7) As I believe
you know, I have a reputation for being quite "conservative" on
legal and policy issues regarding law enforcement. I have complained
loudly on occasions when some of our laws and procedures
have-unnecessarily, in my view, hindered our ability to move boldly
against crime. At the same time, I
know from experience that the FBI's policy on permissible use of deadly
force has served the FBI and the country well. It should be noted,
however, that the Administration's new policy of "preemptive
strikes" abroad is not consistent with the Department of Justice's
(DOJ's) "deadly force policy" for law enforcement officers. DOJ
policy restricts federal agents to using deadly force only when presented
with an imminent threat of death or serious injury (essentially in
self-defense or defense of an innocent third party). I believe it would be
prudent to be on guard against the possibility that the looser
"preemptive strike" rationale being applied to situations abroad
could migrate back home, fostering a more permissive attitude towards
shootings by law enforcement officers in this country.
8) I believe the
FBI, by drawing on the perspective gained from its recent history, can
make a unique contribution to the discussion on Iraq. The misadventure in
Waco took place well before your time as Director, but you will probably
recall that David Koresh exerted the same kind of oppressive control over
members of his Branch Davidian followers, as Saddam Hussein does over the
Iraqis. The parallel does not stop there.
Law enforcement
authorities were certain Koresh had accumulated a formidable arsenal of
weapons and ammunition at his compound and may have been planning on using
them someday. The FBI also had evidence that he was sexually abusing young
girls in the cult. After the first law enforcement assault failed, after
losing the element of surprise, the Branch Davidian compound was contained
and steadily increasing pressure was applied for weeks. But then the FBI
decided it could wait no longer and mounted the second assaultwith
disastrous consequences. The children we sought to liberate all died when
Koresh and his followers set fires leading to their mass death and
destruction.
The FBI,
of course, cannot be blamed for what Koresh set in motion. Nevertheless,
we learned some lessons from this unfortunate episode and quickly explored
better ways to deal with such challenges. As a direct result of that
exploration, many subsequent
criminal/terrorist "standoffs" in which the FBI has been
involved have been resolved peacefully and effectively. I would suggest
that present circumstances vis-a-vis Iraq are very analagous, and that you
consider sharing with senior administration officials the important
lessons learned by the FBI at Waco.
You are only too
well aware that fighting the war on terrorism and crime is an unbelievably
difficult mission that will only become more difficult in the years to
come, adversely affecting future generations of Americans. The extraneous
pressures currently being brought to bear by politicians of both parties
upon the FBI and other U.S. intelligence agencies, however, only worsen
the present situation.
I know that my
comments appear so presumptuous for a person of my rank in the
organization and I'm very sorry for that impression. A word of explanation
is therefore probably in order as to why I feel moved to write you
directly about these issues. A good part of the reason lies in a promise I
made to myself after I realized the enormity of what resulted when FBI
Headquarters Supervisory personnel dismissed the warnings of Minneapolis
agents pre-September 11, 2001. I was well aware of the forceful but
frustrated efforts being made by Minneapolis case agents and their
supervisor in their efforts to get Headquarters to move. But since my own
role was peripheral, I did not think I could be of much additional help.
Since that fateful day of September 11, 2001, however, I have not ceased
to regret that perhaps I did not do all that I might have done.
I promised
myself that in the future I would always try.
I appreciate
that you alone do not determine policy on the terrorist threat from inside
or outside the countrythat, indeed, you may have little influence in the
crafting of broad domestic or foreign policy. And
it seems clear to me now that the decision to attack Iraq was taken some
time ago and you, even as FBI Director, may be little more than a helpless
bystander.
Such an attack,
though, may have grave consequences for your ability to discharge your
responsibility to protect Americans, and it is altogether likely that you
will find yourself a helpless bystander to a rash of 9-11s. The bottom
line is this: We should be deluding neither ourselves nor the American
people that there is any way the FBI, despite the various improvements you
are implementing, will be able to stem the flood of terrorism that will
likely head our way in the wake of an attack on Iraq. What troubles me
most is that I have no assurance that you have made that clear to the
president.
If you believe
my concerns have merit, I would ask you to share them with the president
and attorney general. We no doubt can agree that our Government has a
gargantuan task facing it of melding American foreign policy to make the
world, and primarily United States soil, a safer place. I pray for our
American and allied world leaders' success in achieving this most
important objective.
Thank you so
much for allowing me to express these thoughts. They are personal in
nature and should not be construed as representing the view of any FBI
unit or other agents.
Yours truly,
Coleen Rowley
Special Agent,
Minneapolis
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