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It now appears likely that Michael Chertoff, the Secretary of the Dept.
of Homeland Security, may finally be held accountable for the absolutely non-effective
federal response to Hurricane Katrina. As I said at the time, "Chertoff
needs to be held accountable for criminal negligence leading to the deaths of
hundreds of innocent people in New Orleans."
RMN readers were among the first to know that Chertoff was, in fact, the primary
federal official directly responsible for the failure to respond to the millions
of Americans in dire distress in New Orleans and the devastated Gulf Coast communities,
when I posted the following article on September 15, 2005.
www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=78590
I have a very big bone to chew with the Israeli-American Michael Chertoff
because he was also the official who also "failed" to investigate
9-11 as Asst. Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division of the Dept.
of Justice on 9-11.
He was also the New Jersey attorney who guided the investigation and
criminal trial of the Arabs involved in the first "terror" attack
on the World Trade Center of 1993. This "false flag" operation was
designed to form the impression in the minds of Americans that Arabs were targeting
the WTC twin towers, so that when 9-11 happened it would be assumed by the world
that Arabs were behind the terror attacks.
Asst. Attorney General Chertoff is the one who oversaw the non-investigation
of what really happened on 9-11, who sent the 200 Israeli terror suspects home
on "visa violations", who drew up the list of the 19 Arab suspects,
and who single-handedly created the impression that Arabs had committed the
9-11 attacks while the real terror suspects, his Israeli comrades, went home
to brag about their successful terror attacks in New York City!
Chertoff is the key Zionist mole in the U.S. governement that needs to be exposed
and put in prison.
If anyone belongs in Guantanamo, chained to a floor, abused and beaten about
for answers - it is Michael Chertoff, not some poor taxi drivers from Kabul!
Here is the original RMN article from September 15, 2005:
Michael Chertoff: The Master of Disaster
Homeland Security Secretary Delayed Federal Assistance to Victims of Hurrican
Katrina
By Christopher Bollyn – American Free Press
Michael Chertoff, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, is the
government official legally responsible for the delayed and inept federal response
to Hurricane Katrina. But will he be held accountable for the suffering and
lives lost due to his failure to act?
As the nation watched the horrific scenes of devastation and became aware of
the widespread human suffering caused by Hurricane Katrina and the catastrophic
flood that followed, the pressing questions were: "Where is FEMA? Where
is Homeland Security? Where is the federal assistance?"
The fact that tens of thousands of American citizens were left stranded for
days on end without the essentials of life and that bloated corpses lay rotting
in the streets of New Orleans for more than ten days shocked the nation.
It seemed as if terrorism was being perpetrated against the people of New Orleans
with a dose of psychological terrorism for the nation as a whole. But who is
to blame?
"What is remarkable," Dan Barry wrote in his article, "Macabre
Reminder: The Corpse on Union Street," in the New York Times on Sept.8,
"is that on a downtown street in a major American city, a corpse can decompose
for days, like carrion, and that is acceptable."
"This is Not America"
"It is not acceptable," Michael Johnson of Houston responded. "There
is no excuse to allow dead bodies to rot in the street while people just walk
by…If it is acceptable, which apparently it is to the authorities, then
this is not America anymore."
"We have been abandoned by our own country," Aaron Broussard, president
of Jefferson Parish, south of New Orleans, told NBC's Meet the Press.
"It‘s not just Katrina that caused all these deaths in New Orleans,"
Broussard said. "Bureaucracy has committed murder here in the greater New
Orleans area, and bureaucracy has to stand trial before Congress now."
Federal officials, however, steadfastly refused to answer the key question
every reporter asked: "Who is to blame for the delayed and ineffective
federal response?"
When Michael Chertoff, Secretary of the Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS), arrived
in Louisiana several days after the flood, he became testy when a reporter asked
who was to blame for the failure of the federal government to respond more quickly
and effectively.
The time to assign blame would come later, he said. Chertoff is the Israeli-American
former Asst. Attorney General who managed the investigation of the 9-11 attacks,
an investigation in which scores of Israeli terror suspects were released on
visa violations.
"As it happens," the New Yorker reported, "Chertoff was the
senior Justice Department official on duty at the F.B.I. command center right
after the attacks." His office became "the funnel for what is probably
the most important criminal investigation in American history, as prosecutors
and F.B.I. investigators pour in to seek the boss's approval," Jeffrey
Toobin wrote in November 2001. "For day-to-day decisions, Chertoff has
the last word."
On Sept. 14, the U.S. Senate rejected, by a party-line vote of 44 to 54, a
bill introduced by Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY), which would have created a blue-ribbon
bipartisan panel to investigate the federal government's response to Hurricane
Katrina.
Chertoff, a graduate of Harvard Law School, knows who is legally responsible
for the delayed and inadequate federal response to Hurricane Katrina, a failure
that undoubtedly exacerbated the human suffering and caused an untold number
of lives to be lost. The responsibility is all his.
President George W. Bush signed the Homeland Security Presidential Directive
[HSPD-5] on February 28, 2003, which makes the DHS secretary the legal authority
in such disasters.
The National Response Plan of 2004 states: "Pursuant to HSPD-5, the Secretary
of Homeland Security is responsible for coordinating Federal operations within
the United States to prepare for, respond to, and recover from terrorist attacks,
major disasters, and other emergencies."
HSPD-5 mandates: "If the resources of state and local authorities are
overwhelmed and federal assistance has been requested by the appropriate State
and local authorities," the DHS Secretary is responsible "to coordinate
the Federal Government's resources."
Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, governor of Louisiana, along with the state's Office
of Homeland Security, had formally requested federal assistance and asked President
Bush to "declare an expedited major disaster" on August 28. Blanco
had already declared a state of emergency on August 26, three days before the
hurricane made landfall on August 29.
In an apparent attempt to shield Chertoff from blame, Bush accepted responsibility
for any failures of the federal government in its response to the catastrophe.
"Katrina exposed serious problems in our response capability at all levels
of government, and to the extent that the federal government didn't fully do
its job right, I take responsibility," Bush said at the White House on
Sept. 13.
Earlier, on Sept. 9, Michael D. Brown, director of the FEMA, a sub-agency of
DHS, had been recalled from New Orleans by Chertoff. Amid a growing scandal,
Brown resigned on Sept. 12.
"Chertoff was in Charge"
"But Chertoff - not Brown - was in charge of managing the national response
to a catastrophic disaster," Knight Ridder (KR) reported the following
day.
"Even before the storm struck the Gulf Coast, Chertoff could have ordered
federal agencies into action without any request from state or local officials,"
KR reported. "FEMA chief Michael Brown had only limited authority to do
so until about 36 hours after the storm hit, when Chertoff designated him as
the 'principal federal official' in charge of the storm."
A DHS memo signed by Chertoff indicates that he formally granted Brown that
authority on August 30. "Chertoff didn't shift that power to Brown until
late afternoon or evening on Aug. 30, about 36 hours after Katrina hit Louisiana
and Mississippi," KR reported.
The memo "suggests that Chertoff may have been confused" about his
role in disaster response, KR reported. Confusion, however, would seem to be
an unlikely defense.
Chertoff and FEMA had plenty of advance warning about Katrina. Dr. Max Mayfield,
director of the National Hurricane Center, told the New Orleans Times-Picayune
on Sept. 4 that senior DHS and FEMA officials, including Chertoff and Brown,
had been fully briefed by his staff long before Katrina made landfall.
Mayfield said the strength of the storm and the disaster it could bring were
made clear during the briefings and in formal advisories, which warned of a
storm surge capable of overtopping levees in New Orleans.
"We were briefing them way before landfall," Mayfield said. "It's
not like this was a surprise. We had in the advisories that the levee could
be topped.
"I keep looking back to see if there was anything else we could have done,
and I just don't know what it would be," he said. Chertoff, however, told
reporters Saturday that government officials had not expected the damaging combination
of a powerful hurricane and the levee breaches that flooded New Orleans.
In the days before Katrina hit, Mayfield said, his staff had briefed FEMA headquarters
in Washington, D.C. and its offices in Dallas and Atlanta about the potential
effects of the storm.
Mayfield said the briefings were logged in the hurricane center's records,
and that his staff had participated in a five-day exercise in July 2004 named
"Hurricane Pam," which had been sponsored by FEMA and the Louisiana
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness in which a storm like
Katrina hit the city.
FEMA's news release of July 23, 2004, announced the end of the Pam exercise,
which was very similar to what Katrina actually delivered:
"Hurricane Pam brought sustained winds of 120 mph, up to 20 inches of
rain in parts of southeast Louisiana and storm surge that topped levees in the
New Orleans area. More than one million residents evacuated and Hurricane Pam
destroyed 500,000-600,000 buildings."
Dismantled FEMA
"To increase overall preparedness, particularly for catastrophic events,"
Chertoff announced a reorganization of FEMA on July 13, 2005. He dismantled
the Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate, of which FEMA comprised
the bulk and was headed by a full under secretary.
Chertoff then split FEMA into two parts. The first part kept the name FEMA
and had a director, not an undersecretary, who reported to Chertoff. It was,
however, stripped of any preparedness functions, and dealt solely with response
and recovery.
With the rest, Chertoff created the Directorate for Preparedness. The new directorate
was tasked with facilitating grants for responder training, citizen awareness,
public health, infrastructure, and cyber security.
In 2002-2003, Chertoff's wife, Meryl Justin, worked at FEMA as disaster response
branch chief and facilitated the agency’s transition into DHS.
During her tenure at FEMA, Meryl briefed members of Congress and their staffs
on response and recovery efforts following natural and technological disasters,
including Hurricane Lili and the Shuttle Columbia disaster.
Meryl also served as director of New Jersey’s office in Washington under
governors Donald T. DiFrancesco and James E. McGreevey. As director, she represented
the state’s interests before Congress, White House staff and federal executive
agencies. After 9-11, Meryl was responsible for securing grants for New Jersey
homeland security and transportation projects from Congress and federal agencies
as part of the state’s relief and recovery efforts.
Gov. McGreevey resigned in November 2004 after it was reported that his homeland
security aide, an Israeli named Golan Cipel, planned to file a sexual harassment
suit.
Finis
Photo: The son of an Israeli Mossad agent, Secretary of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff - not Michael Brown - was in charge of managing the national response
to Hurricane Katrina. As I said when he was made Secretary, "Don't you
feel more secure already?"
Ask that question of the people of New Orleans.
Who's next?
Chertoff oversees the Secret Service, which protects the president; the Coast
Guard, which guards our coasts; and the Dept. of Homeland Security and FEMA,
which responds - or doesn't respond - to catastrophic disasters in the United
States.
Chertoff needs to be held accountable for criminal negligence leading to the
deaths of hundreds of innocent people in New Orleans.
Chertoff is the Master of Disaster.