America Ungoverned


9/11: America Ungoverned



BY MICHAEL VENTURA



The Austin Chronicle

October 5, 2001

http://www.auschron.com/issues/dispatch/2001-10-05/cols_ventura.html



The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Time, and Newsweek agree the first 

plane

hit at 8:45am EST; The New York Times says 8:48; The Wall Street 

Journal,

"about 8:50." The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Newsweek, and The Wall

Street Journal report the second plane hit at 9:03; Time and The New 

York

Times say 9:06. According to The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Time, 

and The

Wall Street Journal, the South Tower collapsed at 9:50; but The New 

York

Times puts it at 9:59 and Newsweek at 10:00 -- an extraordinary 

disagreement

about an event everyone watched. These sources almost unite about the

collapse of the North Tower, but not quite: 10:28, say The Los Angeles 

Times

and The New York Times; 10:29, Time and Newsweek; USA Today puts it at 

10:30

and The Wall Street Journal at "about 10:30."



In the shadow of the atrocity, these details have no importance. Still 

it's

striking that a historian, comparing the most authoritative news 

sources in

America, will be unable to discover the exact moment of these terrible

events -- though by the time the second plane hit, every news 

organization

in the country was fixed upon the World Trade Center. If such 

(seemingly)

easily verifiable details are already lost to history, how much trust 

can be

put in reports about, say, Osama bin Laden -- a figure known mostly 

from his

own propaganda (certainly not to be trusted) and from our seriously 

flawed

intelligence services? Also, there have been virtually no reports about

other terrorist networks (with whom we are, after all, going to war). 

As I

write, Americans still have zero dependable data upon which to base 

opinion

about our government's actions. This, in itself, is terribly dangerous.



There were two horrors on September 11. The first and greatest was the

attack itself. The other horror is something about which America seems 

now

to be in denial: On a crucial day in its history, our nation appeared 

to be

not only abysmally uninformed but ungoverned.



We can only hope our government's actions that day don't prefigure our

future.



Shortly after the first plane hits, President Bush gives a curt, 

tentative

statement and disappears. About 11am EST, an hour after the second 

tower's

collapse, Newt Gingrich is the first to liken this attack to Pearl 

Harbor.

At 11:39 Fox's Edie Donahue states the shocking truth: "The target this

morning is America. The enemy, at the moment, is unknown." Soon after 

that,

the first live press conference by anyone in authority is given by 

whom? One

Joseph Lawless, the security director responsible for Boston's Logan

Airport, from which two hijacked planes took off. Then, a little after 

noon,

Yassar Arafat speaks: "We are completely shocked." I am far more 

shocked

that Arafat is addressing my country at length before my president 

does.

Minutes later, New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani gives a live statement -- 

the

first live on-camera response from an elected American official since 

the

towers collapsed two hours before. He is calm, determined, honest,

unscripted. While he speaks, the caption-line is still giving President

Bush's only quote thus far: "an apparent terrorist attack." No one 

knows

where Bush is. No one knows where Vice-President Cheney is. At 12:47 

CNN's

Judy Woodruff reports: "It has been difficult to get in touch with 

members

of Congress. It seems like there's no game plan in operation."



At 12:39 word is that Bush has landed at a base near Shreveport, La.

Incredibly, at 12:51, there is footage of a Taliban news conference by 

one

Wakil Ahmed Mutawakel. It is difficult to absorb that Arafat and the 

Taliban

have weighed in before Bush. Five minutes later ABC reports that in

Shreveport "the president looked grim. His eyes were somewhat red." The 

only

hard information is that there are no national security people 

traveling

with the president. ABC's Peter Jennings, breaking protocol for news

anchors, says forcefully that the country needs words from its 

president in

Washington.



1:08: More than three hours after the second tower collapsed. A taped

message from President Bush. But the sound isn't transmitting, and the 

image

is jerky. Then the image goes backwards. Then it goes off. ABC reports 

that

a big helicopter landed at the Capitol, people got in and flew off; 

it's

unknown who they were or where they went. 1:12: CNN shows a split 

screen. On

the left, a taped Bush is saying, "We will do whatever is necessary to

protect America and Americans"; on the right, footage of the second 

plane

smashing into the tower. I'm no Bush fan, but I'm shocked at this 

display of

open contempt.



Bush is already in the air again, whereabouts unknown, by the time his

footage is shown. Later a lame excuse is given that Bush didn't go live 

in

Louisiana because there was no uplink, though everyone knows that Air 

Force

One can uplink to anywhere in the world. There will also be reports, 

later

discredited, that Air Force One was somehow a target. Which doesn't 

explain

why Bush, at an Air Force Base, could not get into the rear seat of a

fighter-bomber and, with full fighter escort, proceed to D.C. -- from

Shreveport he could have gotten there in a half hour. What is going on?



1:38: Senator Biden gives a live interview to ABC (to my knowledge, the

first by an elected national figure): "If we have to alter our civil

liberties, change our institutions, then we've lost the war." Biden 

says

Bush is definitely headed back to D.C. But at 1:51 CNN reports that 

Bush is

definitely not headed back to D.C. At 1:53 on CNN, Senator Dodd 

understates

mightily: "You haven't heard as much from some of the leaders as you 

might

like."



2:35: Guiliani live again: "The number of casualties will be more than

anyone can bear."



2:55: Fox reports that Bush's political advisers want him in D.C., but 

the

Secret Service wants him underground at N.O.R.A.D. in Colorado. Then a

flash: The president has landed in Nebraska, and "some reporters are 

being

taken to an undisclosed location where they are to be given a briefing 

by an

undisclosed official." 3:16, Fox: Two aircraft carriers are en route to

protect New York City, Marines are en route to D.C. 3:22, Dan Rather: 

What

has happened "is the fate of power, power and the nemesis, which is 

always

generated by power."



3:30: Confirmation that Bush has landed at the Strategic Air Defense 

Command

base near Omaha, Neb. ABC's Ann Compton, traveling with the president, 

is on

the phone to Peter Jennings, whose inflection says it all: "Annie, can 

you

hear me? What are you doing in Nebraska?"



When he asks where Bush is, she replies, "He disappeared down the 

rabbit

hole, Peter."



A minute later Jennings is talking to George Stephanapoulos, former 

member

of the Clinton White House, and he asks: "Does the president have any 

say at

the moment, basically, if the Secret Service says go here or go there?"

Jennings knows what we all know: The president is the Commander in 

Chief;

the Secret Service answers to him; he, and he alone, is responsible for

where he is. Stephanapoulos stutters as the question and its silent 

answer

hang in the air. He improvises as generous a response as he can. The 

point

has been made.



On my table, as I watch, is the Newsweek that hit the racks the day 

before

(and disappeared from the racks the day after). The cover is Bush, and 

the

headline: "The Secret Vote That Made Bush President -- The Untold Story 

of

the Supreme Court's 5 to 4 Ruling."



3:48: For the first time an administration official, White House 

counsel

Karen Hughes, gives a live statement: "The president, vice-president, 

and

speaker of the House are all safe." It is astonishing that this late in 

the

day the White House has nothing more to say.



4:33: Air Force One, the president aboard, is headed back to D.C.



6:00: Fox's conservative Brit Hume says, "We didn't know he [Bush] was 

going

there [to Nebraska]. Perhaps he didn't know either." Thirty-five 

minutes

later Hume adds, "There have been remarkably few official statements." 

At

6:38 Air Force One lands at Andrews Air Force Base in D.C. At 6:41,

Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld gives a live press conference -- nearly 

nine

hours after the towers collapsed, a cabinet-level official finally 

speaks.

7:13, James Woolsey, former CIA director: "It is clear now the United 

States

is at war. The question is with whom." 7:16, Attorney General John 

Ashcroft

weighs in. 7:24, Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and Senate 

Majority

Leader Tom Daschle, along with many other Congressional people, all 

break

into "God Bless America." 7:53, CNN's Jeff Greenfield: "We are going to 

wake

up tomorrow in a different America. Our luck has run out."



8:31: Nearly 12 hours after the attack began, 10 and a half after the 

towers

collapsed, President George W. Bush reads a speech live from the Oval

Office.

The attack was an atrocity. The reaction that day, at the top levels of 

our

government, was disgraceful. There has been every effort since to erase 

that

impression, and one can only pray that it isn't all show. Americans

understandably have chosen to forget that part of the horror of 

September 11

was that America seemed ungoverned. Like it or not, these are the

individuals we must trust to do what's necessary. But it's difficult to 

get

over the impression that we are governed by frightened people, who 

don't

know what they need to know, and whose first concern is their own 

safety.





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