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Frances Fragos Townsend, the Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security and Counter-Terrorism and the point person for the White House's newly-released
information on "Al Qaeda" terrorist plots (including a 2002 "West
Coast plot" to crash an airplane into the U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles
(formerly the Library Tower, which Bush erroneously referred to as the "Liberty
Tower"), has some noteworthy qualifications. She is married to John M.
Townsend, Washington attorney for Hughes, Hubbard & Reed and Bush's classmate
at Andover and Yale.
Fragos Townsend was a key Justice Department official involved with international
terrorism issues and intelligence matters from 1991 to 2001. Before her stint
at Justice, Fragos Townsend worked on mob and white collar crime cases for then-U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Rudolph Giuliani. Another Fragos
Townsend mentor is former FBI Director Louis Freeh, Jr. Fragos Townsend was
sacked as head of DOJ's Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR) after
she locked horns with Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court chief judge Royce
Lamberth over false statements made by FBI agents on wiretap applications to
the court and other policy differences.
Frances Fragos Townsend: Spinning tales about terrorist plots foiled by Bush's "crack" team. However, she was in charge at DOJ for a decade when real terrorist attacks against Americans occurred. And they kept on occurring and occurring until 9-11. Now she's in charge of counter-terrorism at the White House. The Peter Principle is in full force in the Bush administration
Clearly, OIPR under Fragos Townsend was incapable of dealing with requests to
conduct surveillance of the 9-11 hijackers. In August 2001, a month prior to 9-11,
Fragos Townsend became head of intelligence for the Coast Guard after leaving
the OIPR job at Justice.
The following biographical information on Fragos Townsend's DOJ jobs is from
the White House web site along with key events that took place on her watch:
1991- Dec. 1993 -- worked in the Office of the Attorney
General to assist in establishing the newly created Office of International
Programs, the predecessor to the Executive Office for National Security. September
23, 1992, Sanaa, Yemen: Bomb explodes outside US embassy. January 25, 1993,
Langley, Virginia: A Pakistani gunman, Mir Aimal Kasi, opened fire on Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) employees in cars at the main gate. Two employees,
Frank Darling and Bennett Lansing, were killed and three others wounded. The
assailant fled to Pakistan but was later captured and executed in Virginia.
Feb. 26, 1993, New York City: bomb exploded in basement garage of World Trade
Center, killing 6 and injuring at least 1,040 others. In 1995, militant Islamist
Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and 9 others were convicted of conspiracy charges,
and in 1998, Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind, was convicted of the bombing. Al-Qaeda
was linked to the bombing.
December 1993 - November 1995 -- joined the Criminal Division
where she served as Chief of Staff to the Assistant Attorney General and played
a critical part in establishing the Division's international training and
rule of law programs. March 8, 1995, Karachi, Pakistan: two U.S. diplomats,
Jacqueline Keys Van Landingham and Gary C. Durell, are killed by unknown gunmen.
November 9, 1995, Algiers: Islamic extremists set fire to a warehouse belonging
to the U.S. Embassy. November 13, 1995: Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: A car bomb exploded
in the parking lot outside of the headquarters of the Office of the Program
Manager/Saudi Arabian National Guard, killing seven persons, five of them
U.S. citizens.
November of 1995 to November of 1997 -- Director of the
Office of International Affairs in the Criminal Division, which serves as
the U. S. Central Authority for extradition and mutual legal assistance, and
works with the Department of State in the negotiation of international law
enforcement treaties. February 23, 1997, New York: a Palestinian gunman
opens fire on tourists on an observation deck at the Empire State Building,
killing a Danish national and wounding six others. June 25, 1996, Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia: truck bomb exploded outside Khobar Towers military complex,
killing 19 American servicemen and injuring hundreds of others.
November 1997 -- March 1998 -- appointed as Acting Deputy
Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, where she oversaw international
law enforcement and training matters in the Criminal Division, and acted as
an advisor to the Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General on international
law enforcement policy. Karachi, Pakistan, November 12, 1997: Four
U.S. businessmen from Union Texas Petroleum are killed by members of the Islamic
Revolutionary Council in retaliation against Mir Aimal Kasi's conviction for
killing two CIA employees in Langley, Virginia.
March 1998 -- Aug. 2001 -- appointed Counsel for Intelligence
Policy, managing matters related to national security policy and operations
for the Department of Justice. In this capacity she headed the office of Intelligence
Policy and Review, an office that provides legal advice and recommendations
to the Attorney General and the Department of Justice regarding national security
matters, reviews executive orders, directives and procedures relating to the
intelligence community, and approves certain intelligence-gathering activities,
especially those matters related to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act. Aug. 7, 1998, Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: truck
bombs exploded almost simultaneously near 2 U.S. embassies, killing 224 (213
in Kenya and 11 in Tanzania) and injuring about 4,500. 4 men connected with
al-Qaeda 2 of whom had received training at al-Qaeda camps inside Afghanistan,
were convicted of the killings in May 2001 and later sentenced to life in
prison. A federal grand jury had indicted 22 men in connection with the attacks,
including Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, who remained at large. October
31, 1999: Nantucket, Massachusetts: EgyptAir Flight 990 crashed off the U.S.
coast killing all 217 people on board, including 100 Americans. Indications
of a struggle in the cockpit. Oct. 12, 2000, Aden, Yemen: U.S. Navy destroyer
USS Cole heavily damaged when a small boat loaded with explosives blew up
alongside it. 17 sailors killed. Linked to Osama bin Laden, or members of
al-Qaeda terrorist network. December 30, 2000, Manila: Across the street from
the United States Embassy, a plaza is bombed, injuring 9. January 23, 2001,
Sanaa: A Yemeni, Mohammed Yehia Ali Sattar, hijacked a Yemeni plane carrying
US ambassador Barbara Bodine and ninety other people. May 27, 2001, Palawan
Island, Philippines, terrorists from the Abu Sayyaf Group capture 13 tourists
and three employees at a resort and take their captives to Basilan Island.
Guellermo Sobero, a United States citizen is beheaded and his body is found
in October. Two more United States citizens remained in captivity. August
15, 2001, Minneapolis, Zacarias Moussaoui taken into custody by INS. National
Security Law Unit of FBI and Fragos Townsend's OIPR fail to act on FBI Minneapolis
request for a FISA warrant to search Moussaoui's computer.
***
Hallmark of the Bush administration: screw up and get promoted
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