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Sunday, 21 April 2013

Why wasn't Tamerlan Tsarnaev on the FBI's watch list when he returned after 6 months in Russia?

Posted on 12:18 by ratan
On Today's Fox News Sunday:
CHRIS WALLACE, host: What do you make of the fact, because of a Russian request, the FBI interrogated the older brother Tamerlan back in 2011 about his ties to radical Islam. They found out he was not a threat.... [W]hat do you make of the interrogation? And what about the fact that when he returned after six months in Russia, he apparently was not on an FBI watch list?

CONGRESSMAN PETER KING: ... [W]here the FBI is given information about someone as being potential terrorists, they look at them, and then they don't take action. And they go out and carry out murders after this. So, again, I'm wondering, again, is there something deficient here? What was wrong? Again, there was nothing they could find in 2011. He goes to Chechnya in 2012. He has statements up on his Web site. He's talking about radical imams. Why didn't the FBI go back and look at that?... [I]s far as getting information in advance and not seeming to take proper action, this is the fifth case I'm aware of where the FBI has failed to stop someone who ultimately became a terrorist murderer....
Later in the show, Wallace interviews Philip Mudd, a terrorist expert with experience in the CIA, the National Security Council, and the FBI.
WALLACE: Was there any kind of a breakdown here in our national security operation, and specifically with regard to the FBI? Are you troubled by the fact that they were alerted by the Russians to the older brother, they interviewed him, decided he was not a threat, he goes to Russia, he comes back, and they don't seem to have him on a watch list?

PHILIP MUDD: No, I'm not troubled by this for several reasons. First, people fail to consider the implications of false positives. You look at one guy we could have gotten, but you forget the other 10,000 that would have come into the net if we look at a person like this every day. So, I look at this and say, you know, these kinds of things happen, but I suspect it wasn't a dropped ball here.
10,000 caught in the net every day? Every year? Every decade? When the FBI goes as far as it did on Tamerlan Tsarnaev, shouldn't the case be tagged in a way that would cause it to reopen when something happens that is as significant as 6 months in Russia — even if there would be 10,000 files subject to reopening? If we have to worry about "sleeper cells," why don't we monitor these characters and do something  when they engage in behavior typical of planning or training? But I don't know that the FBI doesn't do these things. Mudd seems intent on deflecting our attention from past FBI failings.

Wallace presses him: "[D]o you see any way you could have prevented these two guys?"
MUDD: Well, I mean, we're going to have to see what kind of foreign connections they have, whether the travel to Russia last year actually meant something. But what I see so far says we've got two kids who are in a closed radical circle. Breaking that circle in a state like ours that is an open society is virtually impossible.

WALLACE: What is your sense -- and I understand this is speculation, but informed speculation -- were they acting alone, part of a group, and do you see any Al Qaeda fingerprints on this?

MUDD: The only fingerprint I've seen might possibly have been ideology, but not operations. Every step of the way was pretty rudimentary. For example, if you look at some of those initial photos, you've got a kid with a hoodie and a cap. If he wants to obscure himself, the hoodie goes on, and the cap goes forward. If he had operational training, I want to know who did it because they were amateurs.
Two kids who are in a closed radical circle... An open society....

Don't expect the government to protect you from everything in our free society. That's a talking point. I heard it from Senator Dick Durbin this morning on "Meet the Press":
GREGORY: Do you have questions about the FBI’s tracking of the older suspect here who is now dead and whether something was missed?

SEN. DURBIN: Of course I do. And I think we should ask those questions. That’s our responsibility. But I listened to [Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee] Mike Rogers and I thought he laid it out as a former FBI agent himself as to what we were faced with when we were asked these hard questions. We’ve got to make sure as well, let me add David, that we give to the intelligence and law enforcement agencies, federal, state, and local, the resources they need to keep America safe. We live in a dangerous world. We live also in a free and open society, which we value very much. In order to keep Americans safe at the marathon, at every other public event, we need to invest the resources that are necessary for law enforcement.
I laughed at this point, because it was such knee-jerk Democratic Party response: We need to invest the resources. Spend more money. No one on their side ever fails. They were always only deprived of enough money. The FBI has been well-funded over the years, though presumably they could always hire more people and so forth. But the question is whether they did enough here and are doing enough in similar cases.
GREGORY: Is that a call in fact for re-examination of whether additional resources are needed to-- to look at homegrown terror and the potential for smaller boar attacks that can only be deterred by the strength of law enforcement and engaged citizenry?
Smaller boar attacks! Gregory didn't transcribe his own question, but somebody at NBC doesn't know enough about guns.





Gregory is responsible, however, for the inanity of his question. Is this a call for more money? Durbin's answer — "It is" — is as short as he can possibly make it, and Gregory doesn't stop him from gratuitously plugging in his prepared remarks about immigration. This is really shameless:
SEN. DURBIN: It is. But let me add one other element. Let me bring it up to date with the agenda of the Senate. I’ll return tomorrow for the Senate Judiciary Committee’s second hearing on the new immigration reform bill. Let me put it in context. There are four specific provisions in this immigration reform bill that will make America safer. We are going to have a stronger border with Mexico. We are going to have 11 million people come forward and have an opportunity to register with our government, out of the shadows. We’re going to have verification of employment in the work place. And we’re finally going to have a system where we can track visa holders who visit the United States to make sure that they leave when they’re supposed to. So this is part of the ongoing conversation about a safer America and the immigration reform bill moves us closer.
Does that have anything to do with terrorist attacks? Gregory gets his next question right:
GREGORY: Do you fear an impact similar to what we saw after 9/11 that derailed immigration reform. Already, you’ve heard Senator Grassley talk about, you know, loopholes in the immigration system, whether, you know, leniencies of student visas. Are there going to be concerns here related to the Boston attacks that you think impact the immigration debate?
Of course, the immigration proposal, the next item on the legislative agenda, just happens to answer these questions Durbin would have us believe:
SEN. DURBIN: I’ll just put it on the line. I’ve been involved with the eight senators who have put this bill together, Democrats and Republicans. The worst thing we can do is nothing. If we do nothing, leaving 11 million people in the shadows, not making our border safer, not having the information that comes from employment and these visa holders, we will be less safe in America. Immigration reform will make us safer. And I hope that those who are critical of it will just come forward and say what their idea is. We’ve come up with a sound plan to keep this country safe.
The worst thing we can do is nothing. So the best you've got is the assertion that your plan is better than nothing — is it? — and the baseless insinuation that the 11 million people in the shadows are central to the fight against terror.
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Posted in Boston bombing, Chris Wallace, David Gregory, Durbin, immigration, Meet the Press, national security, nothing, Peter King, pigs, spelling, terrorism | No comments
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  • ▼  2013 (300)
    • ►  May (8)
    • ▼  April (292)
      • At the Pinker Café...
      • "Logic Behind Obama News Conference Hard To Fathom."
      • "It's very emotional for me as a woman to have inv...
      • "There is consternation at Wikipedia over the disc...
      • At the Slightly Pink Café...
      • "As corporate rather than government actors, the D...
      • "Extreme Pricing" — Joe Fresh and the building col...
      • Obama gets back to the topic of closing Guantanamo.
      • "Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg is taking fir...
      • "I'd like to have breakfast with somebody. I'd lik...
      • "Indian stuntman dies as he uses only his hair to ...
      • "I have seen a lot of post search residences but t...
      • Madison Mayor Paul Soglin uses city money to try t...
      • Cats are for..
      • "Ted Cruz is too often falling into the reflexive ...
      • "Most of the woodland wildflowers are as late as t...
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "Imagine you're in the oven, baking."
      • At the Magnolia Café...
      • "Sadly, we have been conditioned to believe that t...
      • "So when Democrats are pushing to ban people on th...
      • "You have a choice, a real choice... to roll with ...
      • "When I wear my wig, I know something big is going...
      • "I didn’t set out to be the first openly gay athle...
      • I'm skeptical that Twitter drives traffic to websi...
      • The "golden age" of the blog is over.
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "My father, who has barely any formal education, b...
      • "Imagine, Mr. Speaker, a world without balloons."
      • "Obama did not tout himself as the civil rights ca...
      • Resisting a robber who points a gun.
      • "Are there more abortion doctors like Kermit Gosne...
      • "People think of scientists as monks in a monaster...
      • Springtime!
      • Highlights from "Meet the Press."
      • At the Magnolia Café...
      • "A baseball game between two Chicago public high s...
      • "Glenn Beck on the CNN 'Pit of Despair' and Why He...
      • Over-anti-hyper-correction?
      • There was a time when people felt shame accepting ...
      • When the government can turn off your household ap...
      • "The terrorism threat facing the United States may...
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "David Axelrod now works for MSNBC, which is a nic...
      • "Before he became the anti-junk-food mayor of New ...
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "I like the soft roundedness I’ve found in women, ...
      • "About 500 locks on cell doors simultaneously open...
      • Justice Breyer breaks his proximal humerus in a bi...
      • At the Northern Colors Café...
      • "Daddy, remember that time we died?"
      • Come on!
      • "By the time you get to be a big fancy adult with ...
      • "He can be a serious presidential candidate becaus...
      • "As with all drugs, there is such a thing as too m...
      • "As you can imagine, I have had occasion to feel t...
      • "Everybody loves the idea of the wily islanders di...
      • "Eating boogers may actually be good for your heal...
      • A rape case that went cold in 1978 is solved using...
      • "There’s a strong relationship between how many do...
      • "We don’t know where this came from, Disney is get...
      • "Working for him, the whole crew being artisans, t...
      • At the Boston Café...
      • "Tom Brokaw declined his invitation to this year's...
      • "I do a little thing about the way people shake th...
      • Are you looking at me?
      • "Following Portugal's April 1974 Carnation Revolut...
      • "Forget everything you once knew. Albums, cycles, ...
      • The 2d Circuit court says the "fair use" copyright...
      • UConn's new husky dog logo — insensitive to campus...
      • NYT exposé of the Pigford settlement "shows that i...
      • "Groupers Use Gestures to Recruit Morays For Hunti...
      • 'Wow! That is great. That is awesome!" — last word...
      • "Wausau woman finalist in potato chip flavor conte...
      • "The news of survival and new life came as the 72-...
      • Deported from Saudi Arabia for being "too handsome."
      • "The Federal Helium Program — leftover from the ag...
      • "I think though, this is not a time to commit soci...
      • Speaking of my stream of consciousness, blowjobs, ...
      • "Hank Williams may have set country music's mythol...
      • "Brooklyn Law School to Permit Dismissal of Tenure...
      • "If Candice had been in the bottom, she would be g...
      • "Brown University student mistakenly linked by ama...
      • "Hear my voice, Alexander Graham Bell."
      • At the Scilla Café...
      • "I hope you're not making a movie," I say...
      • "In 1958 the French Fourth Republic collapsed due ...
      • "What If We Never Run Out of Oil?"
      • "I will always believe: Our nation's best days lie...
      • Solidarity Singers seek recognition as "Longest co...
      • Highlights from the Bush interview: "I'll be dead....
      • "Paul Kevin Curtis... freed after initially being ...
      • "Williams-Sonoma Pulls Pressure Cookers Off Shelve...
      • "Non-reading is not just the absence of reading. I...
      • "But English people throw everything out their car...
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "Suzy [Favor Hamilton] had 'a very hard time turni...
      • "Is the FBI focused enough on the real bad guys?"
      • Gov. Patrick's administration won't release detail...
      • The $101,813 egg.
      • "In Monte Alto near La Democracia, Escuintla, gian...
      • If Gosnell is not convicted...
      • People love themselves... and people love babies.....
      • "In a surprise move, the defense in the Kermit Gos...
      • I want a shoplifter, just like the shoplifter...
      • What are mystery clouds?
      • "Man who died in blast lived in foil-wrapped home,...
      • To all those UW students who ran wild 2 years ago ...
      • "Canada terror suspect does not recognize 'crimina...
      • "The executive editor of The New York Times was up...
      • "[I]f Reddit is actually interested in using the p...
      • The intersection of Comics Curmudgeon and Dr. Kerm...
      • "Mr. Joyce was not teaching early Egyptian pervers...
      • "Much of my life has been spent in the effort to l...
      • "The real issue we have with admitting that colleg...
      • Speaking of "plush."
      • "And I never touched a living body cold as the Rub...
      • "I want to know what anybody wants to know. You se...
      • The theatrical mother of the Boston bombers.
      • Boxing to blame for Boston bombing?
      • "Mr. Mower tracked their sex life in a notebook he...
      • "Ricin Suspect Released from Jail: Was He Framed?"
      • Purchase of the day.
      • "French lawmakers have legalized same-sex marriage...
      • Joining the news team, as inauspiciously as possible.
      • Nate Silver discerns that Democrats won't be able ...
      • At the Trout Lily Café...
      • In 1878, Robert Louis Stevenson invented his own s...
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ratan
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