On Tape, Clinton Admits Passing
Up bin Laden Capture; Lewinsky Played Role
Since 09-12-06
Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2006/9/10/181819.shtml?s=al&promo_code=255B-1
Bill Clinton denies it now, but he once admitted he passed up an opportunity to
extradite Osama bin Laden.
And NewsMax has the former President making the claim on audiotape. [You can
listen to the tape yourself] -- Click Here
Clinton's comments and his actions relating to American efforts to capture bin
Laden have taken on renewed interest because of claims made in a new ABC movie,
the "Path to 9/11," that suggests Clinton dropped the ball during his
presidency. Clinton has also angrily denied claims the Monica Lewinsky scandal
drew his attention away from dealing with national security matters like
capturing bin Laden.
During a February 2002 speech, Clinton explained that he turned down an offer
from Sudan for bin Laden's extradition to the U.S., saying, "At the time, 1996,
he had committed no crime against America, so I did not bring him here because
we had no basis on which to hold him."
But that wasn't exactly true. By 1996, the 9/11 mastermind had already been
named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing by
prosecutors in New York.
9/11 Commissioner former Sen. Bob Kerrey said that Clinton told the Commission
during his private interview that reports of his comments to the LIA were based
on "a misquote."
During his interview with the 9/11 Commission, Clinton was accompanied by
longtime aide and former White House counsel Bruce Lindsey, along with former
national security advisor Sandy Berger, who insisted in sworn testimony before
Congress in Sept. 2002 that there was never any offer from Sudanese officials to
turn over bin Laden to the U.S.
But other evidence suggests the Clinton administration did not take advantage of
offers to get bin Laden -- and that the Monica Lewinsky scandal was exploding
during this time period.
At least two offers from the government of Sudan to arrest Osama bin Laden and
turn him over to the U.S. were rebuffed by the Clinton administration in
February and March of 1996, a period of time when the former president's
attention was distracted by his intensifying relationship with White House
intern Monica Lewinsky.
One of the offers took place during a secret meeting in Washington, the same day
Clinton was meeting with Lewinsky in the White House just miles away.
On Feb. 6, 1996, then-U.S. Ambassador to the Sudan Tim Carney met with Sudanese
Foreign Minister Ali Osman Mohammed Taha at Taha's home in the capital city of
Khartoum. The meeting took place just a half mile from bin Laden's residence at
the time, according to Richard Miniter's book "Losing bin Laden."
During the meeting, Carney reminded the Sudanese official that Washington was
increasingly nervous about the presence of bin Laden in Sudan, reports Miniter.
Foreign Minister Taha countered by saying that Sudan was very concerned about
its poor relationship with the U.S.
Then came the bombshell offer:
"If you want bin Laden, we will give you bin Laden," Foreign Minister Taha told
Ambassador Carney.
Still, with the extraordinarily fortuitous offer on the table, back in
Washington President Clinton had other things on his mind.
A timeline of events chronicled in the Starr Report shows that during the period
of late January through March 1996, Mr. Clinton's relationship with Monica
Lewinsky was then at its most intense.
On Feb. 4, 1996, for instance - two days before Ambassador Carney's key meeting
with the Sudanese Foreign Minister, the president was focused not on Osama bin
Laden, but instead on the 23-year-old White House intern.
Their rendezvous that day included a sexual encounter followed by a leisurely
chat between Clinton and Lewinsky, as the two "sat and talked [afterward] for
about 45 minutes," according to the Starr Report.
Later in the afternoon that same day, as Sudanese officials weighed their
decision to offer bin Laden to the U.S., Clinton found time to call Lewinsky
"[to say] he had enjoyed their time together." If there were any calls from
Clinton to the State Department or Khartoum that day, the records have yet to
surface in published reports.
The Feb. 4 encounter with Lewinsky followed a period of intense contact detailed
in the Starr report in interviews with the former White House intern, including
a sexual encounter on Jan. 6, 1996, several sessions of phone sex during the
week of Jan. 14 - 21, and another sexual encounter on Jan. 21.
Sudan's offer to the U.S. for bin Laden's extradition remained on the table for
at least a month, and was reiterated by Sudanese officials who traveled to
Washington as late as March 10, 1996.
On March 3, Sudan's Minister of State for Defense Elfatih Erwa met secretly with
Ambassador Carney, another State Department official and the CIA's Africa bureau
Director of Operations at an Arlington, Va., hotel, according to Miniter's book.
Erwa was handed a list of issues the U.S. wanted taken care of if relations were
to improve. The list included a demand for information on bin Laden's terrorist
network inside Sudan.
Erwa replied that he would have to consult with Sudan's President Omar Hassan
al-Bashir about the list. When he returned for a March 10, 1996 meeting with the
CIA's Africa bureau chief, "Erwa would be empowered to make an extraordinary
offer," writes Miniter.
On instructions from its president, the government of Sudan agreed to arrest bin
Laden and hand him over to U.S law enforcement at a time and place of the
Clinton administration's choosing. "Where should we send him?" Erwa asked the
CIA representative.
In his 2002 speech President Clinton has acknowledged being fully briefed on the
Sudanese efforts to turn over the 9/11 mastermind, admitting that he made the
final decision to turn the offer down.
As chronicled in the Starr report, however, Clinton's relationship with Lewinsky
proved to be a growing distraction around this time.
Two weeks before the secret meeting between Erwa, Carney and the CIA bureau
chief, the president summoned Lewinsky to the White House to inform her that he
"no longer felt right" about their relationship and it would have to be
suspended until after the election.
Lewinsky explained, however, that Clinton's decision to put their relationship
on hold did little to change its basic character, telling Starr's investigators,
"There'd continue to be this flirtation when we'd see each other."
The Starr report noted, "In late February or March [1996], the president
telephoned her at home and said he was disappointed that, because she had
already left the White House for the evening, they could not get together."
The call, Lewinsky said, "sort of implied to me that he was interested in
starting up again."
On March 10, 1996, as Sudanese Defense Minister Erwa was making his
extraordinary offer for bin Laden's arrest to the CIA's Africa bureau chief,
Clinton met with Lewinsky in the White House.
The Starr report:
"On March 10, 1996, Ms. Lewinsky took a visiting friend, Natalie Ungvari, to the
White House. They bumped into the president, who said when Ms. Lewinsky
introduced them, 'You must be her friend from California.' Ms. Ungvari was
'shocked' that the president knew where she was from."
Though there was no physical contact that day, three weeks later, on March 31,
1996, Clinton resumed his sexual relationship with Lewinsky.
It was around this time, the president later admitted, that he was involved in
delicate negotiations to try to persuade Riyadh to take bin Laden, after
refusing to accept his extradition to the U.S.
"I pleaded with the Saudis to take him, 'cause they could have," Clinton
admitted in the 2002 speech. "But they thought it was a hot potato and they
didn't and that's how he wound up in Afghanistan."
On April 7, 1996, Monica Lewinsky was transferred to the Pentagon. Around the
same time, the administration's hunt for bin Laden finally seemed to begin in
earnest. Just weeks after Clinton spurned Sudan's bin Laden offer, for instance,
the CIA created a separate operational unit dedicated to tracking down bin Laden
in Sudan.
But it happened too late to capture the 9/11 mastermind. On May 18, 1996, bin
Laden boarded a chartered plane in Khartoum with his wives, children, some 150
al-Qaida jihadists and a cache of arms - and flew off to Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
TRANSCRIPT: Ex-President Clinton's Remarks on Osama bin Laden Delivered to the
Long Island Association's Annual Luncheon Crest Hollow Country Club, Woodbury,
NY Feb. 15, 2002
Question from LIA President Matthew Crosson:
CROSSON: In hindsight, would you have handled the issue of terrorism, and
al-Qaeda specifically, in a different way during your administration?
CLINTON: Well, it's interesting now, you know, that I would be asked that
question because, at the time, a lot of people thought I was too obsessed with
Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda.
And when I bombed his training camp and tried to kill him and his high command
in 1998 after the African embassy bombings, some people criticized me for doing
it. We just barely missed him by a couple of hours.
I think whoever told us he was going to be there told somebody who told him that
our missiles might be there. I think we were ratted out.
We also bombed a chemical facility in Sudan where we were criticized, even in
this country, for overreaching. But in the trial in New York City of the
al-Qaeda people who bombed the African embassy, they testified in the trial that
the Sudanese facility was, in fact, a part of their attempt to stockpile
chemical weapons.
So we tried to be quite aggressive with them. We got - uh - well, Mr. bin Laden
used to live in Sudan. He was expelled from Saudi Arabia in 1991, then he went
to Sudan.
And we'd been hearing that the Sudanese wanted America to start dealing with
them again.
They released him. At the time, 1996, he had committed no crime against America
so I did not bring him here because we had no basis on which to hold him, though
we knew he wanted to commit crimes against America.
So I pleaded with the Saudis to take him, 'cause they could have. But they
thought it was a hot potato and they didn't and that's how he wound up in
Afghanistan.
We then put a lot of sanctions on the Afghan government and - but they
inter-married, Mullah Omar and bin Laden. So that essentially the Taliban didn't
care what we did to them.
Now, if you look back - in the hindsight of history, everybody's got 20/20
vision - the real issue is should we have attacked the al-Qaeda network in 1999
or in 2000 in Afghanistan.
Here's the problem. Before September 11 we would have had no support for it - no
allied support and no basing rights. So we actually trained to do this. I
actually trained people to do this. We trained people.
But in order to do it, we would have had to take them in on attack helicopters
900 miles from the nearest boat - maybe illegally violating the airspace of
people if they wouldn't give us approval. And we would have had to do a
refueling stop.
And we would have had to make the decision in advance that's the reverse of what
President Bush made - and I agreed with what he did. They basically decided -
this may be frustrating to you now that we don't have bin Laden. But the
president had to decide after Sept. 11, which am I going to do first? Just go
after bin Laden or get rid of the Taliban?
He decided to get rid of the Taliban. I personally agree with that decision,
even though it may or may not have delayed the capture of bin Laden. Why?
Because, first of all the Taliban was the most reactionary government on earth
and there was an inherent value in getting rid of them.
Secondly, they supported terrorism and we'd send a good signal to governments
that if you support terrorism and they attack us in America, we will hold you
responsible.
Thirdly, it enabled our soldiers and Marines and others to operate more safely
in-country as they look for bin Laden and the other senior leadership, because
if we'd have had to have gone in there to just sort of clean out one area, try
to establish a base camp and operate.
So for all those reasons the military recommended against it. There was a high
probability that it wouldn't succeed.
Now I had one other option. I could have bombed or sent more missiles in. As far
as we knew he never went back to his training camp. So the only place bin Laden
ever went that we knew was occasionally he went to Khandahar where he always
spent the night in a compound that had 200 women and children.
So I could have, on any given night, ordered an attack that I knew would kill
200 women and children that had less than a 50 percent chance of getting him.
Now, after he murdered 3,100 of our people and others who came to our country
seeking their livelihood you may say, "Well, Mr. President, you should have
killed those 200 women and children."
But at the time we didn't think he had the capacity to do that. And no one
thought that I should do that. Although I take full responsibility for it. You
need to know that those are the two options I had. And there was less than a
50/50 chance that the intelligence was right that on this particular night he
was in Afghanistan.
Now, we did do a lot of things. We tried to get the Pakistanis to go get him.
They could have done it and they wouldn't. They changed governments at the time
from Mr. Sharif to President Musharraf. And we tried to get others to do it. We
had a standing contract between the CIA and some groups in Afghanistan
authorizing them and paying them if they should be successful in arresting
and/or killing him.
So I tried hard to - I always thought this guy was a big problem. And apparently
the options I had were the options that the President and Vice President Cheney
and Secretary Powell and all the people that were involved in the Gulf War
thought that they had, too, during the first eight months that they were there -
until Sept. 11 changed everything.
But I did the best I could with it and I do not believe, based on what options
were available to me, that I could have done much more than I did. Obviously, I
wish I'd been successful. I tried a lot of different ways to get bin Laden
'cause I always thought he was a very dangerous man. He's smart, he's bold and
committed.
But I think it's very important that the Bush administration do what they're
doing to keep the soldiers over there to keep chasing him. But I know - like I
said - I know it might be frustrating to you. But it's still better for bin
Laden to worry every day more about whether he's going to see the sun come up in
the morning than whether he's going to drop a bomb, another bomb somewhere in
the U.S. or in Europe or on some other innocent civilians. (END OF TRANSCRIPT)