Terrorism, Food Poisoning, and Hubris
Obama’s “the buck stops with me” speech left me feeling more than uneasy. Sure, Obama’s teleprompter was in top form, but talk is cheap, and we all know Obama—like all Commie dictators—loves to hear himself talk.
Talk, talk, talk. That’s all it was. Where’s the managerial aspect? Where are the heads rolling down the aisle? I mean, this is a SERIOUS incident. In fact, this is the second such serious terrorism incident in the past couple of months. Have any of you forgotten the egregious security lapses which facilitated Nidal Hasan’s reign of terror? Of course not. But, it would seem that Obama has chosen to forgive and forget all of that—even after American men and women lost their lives. And now, we have Obama doing the same thing when it comes to the unfunny comedy of errors which led to the Fruit-of-the-Loon bomber nearly killing everyone aboard Flight 253.
This is just pure insanity from Our Dark Overlord; an out of touch illegitimate Commie dictator.
Maybe an analogy would be in order here: Imagine you decide to purchase a beef burrito “grande” from your local Mexican restaurant and wind up in the hospital with food poisoning. After recovering, you go back and complain to the manager of the restaurant. He assures you that “the buck stops here” and that he will get to the bottom of this. You forgive and forget the incident and go about your merry way. A couple of months later, you decide to go back to your local Mexican restaurant and give that “grande” burrito another go, only to be stricken with food poisoning once again.
In between bouts of nausea, stomach cramps, and diarrhea, you call up the manager of your local Mexican restaurant and tell him about your food poisoning and that he will be getting a bill for your hospital stay. Now, what do you want to hear back from that Manager come the following week? Another “the buck stops here” speech and that he will review the food handling and safety procedures, but no one is getting fired for not following the procedures in place? Or, would you feel more confident if the manager told you that he had identified the individual responsible for not following established procedures and that that individual had been terminated? Obviously, the latter.
Which brings us back to Obama: Any sane manager would be chopping heads in an effort to instill confidence amongst his customers. But, not Obama. Nope, he sees this crisis as an opportunity to tighten his grip on Americans; all the while, letting incompetent schmucks like Janet Nappylatino and Michael Leiter continue to put the lives of Americans at risk:
Why Heads Should Roll
Jan 8 2010, 10:05 am by D.B. Grady – The Atlantic
[...]
The White House Review of the Christmas Day terrorist attack reads like a game of Clue, in reverse. From the start, we knew the killer, we knew his location, and after sixty years of aircraft hijackings and Al Qaida’s record, we had a pretty good idea of the weapon of choice. We even had a motive and a witness.
The White House blames Abdulmutallab’s success on a failure to “connect the dots,” but, in fact, the dots were already connected. There were no dots. We already had all the information necessary to shut down Abdulmutallab. No secret missions were in order. No covert bribes in cash-stuffed briefcases needed to change hands at disused bus stops. Delta operatives didn’t have to to kick down doors, and there was no need to dust off the waterboard to draw out a name.
We knew everything.
In a press conference, President Obama said that our failure to stop the terrorist incident was “not the fault of a single individual or organization.” But that’s not true. The minute Abdulmutallab’s father walked into a U.S. Embassy with news that his son was a potential terrorist, the official in charge was duty-bound to see this through. Every scrap of paper and every byte of data on the suspect should have been called up and frozen. That’s why we have embassies. When the information was passed to the first special agent at the CIA, he or she was duty bound to see it through. When the information was passed to the first administrator at the National Counterterrorism Center, he or she, too, was duty bound to see it to the end.
Everyone who read the name “Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab” prior to December 25, 2009 should be reprimanded and fired.
The White House findings state that, “Mr. Abdulmutallab possessed a U.S. visa, but this fact was not correlated with the concerns of Mr. Abdulmutallab’s father about Mr. Abdulmutallab’s potential radicalization.” It’s an embarrassing sentence of bureaucratese in its own right, but more so when considered in context. The State Department didn’t revoke Abdulmutallab’s visa because an office clerk misspelled his name in a database.
Has no one in the intelligence community ever used Google? When “Abdulmutalab” was typed in, did the computer not ask, “Did you mean ‘Abdulmutallab’?”
Another admission that crosses the threshold of bewildering into the realm of criminally negligent: the National Counterterrorism Center has a database of all known and suspected international terrorists. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was added to that database.
But that database does not feed directly into the TSA No-Fly List.
Who more than known terrorists belong on the No-Fly List? There should be no human involvement required here. One line of SQL database code could have averted disaster.
According to the White House, when the CIA and NCTC got the name of a radicalized militant from the militant’s own father, and a warning that he was planning an attack, they did not search “all available databases to uncover additional derogatory information.” How many databases are there? And how many terrorist databases must one appear in before he or she is considered a threat to U.S. national security?
This wasn’t a ticking time bomb situation involving a lone wolf under the radar. Such a terrorist will succeed, and there’s nothing we can do about it, aside from remaining vigilant. But the United States already knew about Abdulmutallab, and learned of his intentions on November 18th — a month before he struck.
Most grating in the White House report is the repeated notion that Abdulmutallab’s plot failed. It didn’t. Nine years after 9/11, and after billions of spent dollars in needless security, confiscated fingernail clippers, and dumped breast milk, he succeeded in smuggling explosives onto an airliner destined for American soil. He succeeded in igniting the explosive. If not for dumb luck involving bad chemistry and a brave Dutch film director, there might today be a smoldering crater in Detroit.
After the attack, President Obama remained in Hawaii and enjoyed a Christmas vacation on the golf course. After the attack, National Counterterrorism Center director Michael Leiter took a six-day skiing holiday. After the attack, CIA director Leon Panetta remained in beautiful Monterey, California. The nation, the administration claims, can be governed from afar, and that’s probably true. But when terrorists attempt a major strike on U.S. soil, isn’t it a good idea to have someone in the White House situation room above the rank of janitor?
When National Security Advisor James Jones warned that the White House review of the Christmas Day terrorist attack would bring “a certain shock,” one expected to learn of political intrigue and a mishandling of delicate scraps of questionable intelligence. But rather, Mr. Jones must have been referring to the Obama administration’s hubris in this matter, which is the most shocking revelation of all.
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8 January, 2010 at 1:47 pm
Breaking news;
FreeRepublic; Panty bomber pleads not guilty. Now that the plot has failed he has been advised to cost the infidel as much money and trouble as he can. He’s a convert…from siucide bomber to courtroom jihadist.
8 January, 2010 at 7:29 pm
If 45% of Americans polled believe we could do better with Congressmen picked out of the phone book, then I wouldn’t doubt the janitor could do a better job in the situation room…
9 January, 2010 at 1:03 am
Forget about the fathers report, a very indignant British prime minister has just confirmed that MI 5 advised the Americans of his radical links.
Now for the good news. Employment, in some sectors is definitely on the way up. The FDIC is expecting a boom year and is looking for an additional 1,600 staff. Their budget for this year is almost double of last years, when they only had 140 bank failures.