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Peter Lance, Crisscrossed

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Peter Lance is back hawking his latest book, Triple Cross. Unfortunately, it does not come with a “Buyer Beware” label. Peter, in my judgment, confuses self-promotion with analysis and is prone to jump to conclusions not supported by actual evidence. Consider for example Lance’s specious claim in his recent post on Huffington Post, touting his book and his accomplishments:

What isn't known and will be revealed for the first time in Triple Cross was that Ali Mohamed had been acting as an FBI informant on the West Coast since 1992 - a year before the WTC bombing carried out by the same cell members he'd trained.

Really? Here’s what Kit R. Roane; David E. Kaplan; Chitra Ragavan wrote in the January 8, 2001 edition of US News and World Report (Vol. 130 , No. 1; Pg. 25):

Ali Mohamed is a man of many faces: Egyptian intelligence agent, U.S. Army paratrooper, FBI informant, aide to accused terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. Before bombs shattered U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, Mohamed says, he scouted possible targets and personally brought bin Laden photos of Nairobi sites. "Bin Laden looked at the picture of the American Embassy," he claims, "and pointed to where a truck could go as a suicide bomber."

Or, how about the November 4, 2001 article in the San Francisco Chronicle by Lance Williams and Erin McCormick:

According to Steven Emerson, a terrorism expert and author who has written about the case, Mohamed by the early 1990s had also established himself as an FBI informant. "He agreed to serve (the FBI) and provide information, but in fact he was working for the bad guys and insulating himself from scrutiny from other law enforcement agencies," Emerson said in an interview.

Got the picture? Peter thinks that writing about something that has been in the public domain for almost six years is a first-time revelation.

But let’s not stop there. Peter also engages in hyperbole and pronounces on “facts” that on closer scrutiny are wrong or inaccurate. In the same HuffPo puff piece he writes:

[Ali Mohamed] got himself assigned to the highly secure JFK Special Warfare Center (SWC) at Fort Bragg, N.C. -- the advanced training school for officers of the Green Berets and Delta Force.

“Highly secure JFK Special Warfare Center”? It would help if Peter would actually visit these sites. For starters, the correct title is the JFK Special Warfare Center and School (USAJFKSWCS). But it is not a highly secure facility by any stretch. Anyone who is on Fort Bragg or Pope Air Force Base can drive right up to the headquarters. Peter also is wrong with his claim that USAJFKSWCS is the advanced training school for officers of the Green Berets and Delta Force. The school is devoted to the training of Special Forces, both officers and enlisted. The USAJFKSWCS does not train Delta Force. In fact, they do not even acknowledge that there is a Delta Force. Just call them and ask.

Beyond Peter’s sloppiness with basic facts, the real flaw with his breathless pronouncements is that he is the ultimate Monday morning quarterback. Note, Peter has never held a security clearance in his life. He has never recruited and managed informants. He has never put together evidence for a criminal case and successfully prosecuted it. Nonetheless, he wants you to believe that he can prove that the key to unlocking the 9-11 plot was plain as day and that negligence by Patrick Fitzgerald and a host of FBI agents allowed it to go forward.

Peter does a slick job of intermixing facts and conjecture to create the impression that he has a special truth. Consider the following from Peter:

Using evidence from the SDNY court cases, interviews with current and retired Special Agents and documents from the FBI's own files, I prove in Triple Cross that Patrick Fitzgerald and Squad I-49 in the NYO could have prevented those bombings - not just by getting the truth from FBI informant Ali Mohamed, but by connecting him to Wadih El-Hage, one of the Kenya cell leaders.

Here’s the truth—there is not one document, piece of court evidence, or retired FBI agent that supports the claim that in the year prior to the bombing of the US Embassies in East Africa Ali Mohamed was recorded stating his intent to attack those embassies. Not one. You see, clever Peter uses the benefit of hindsight to insist that law enforcement officers and prosecutors only had to look and listen to see the threat. If they had listened to wiretaps they might have heard something. If they had kept tighter rein on Ali Mohamed he might have spilled the beans. Yes, and if Peter was not such a cheap shot artist he might have written a book worth reading.

Peter’s venom spewed at Patrick Fitzgerald is particularly crazy. Consider the following claim by Lance:

How was it that Fitzgerald, the man Vanity Fair described as the bin Laden "brain," possessing "scary smart" intelligence, had not connected the dots and ordered the same kind of "perch" or "plant" to watch Sphinx that the Bureau had used against Gotti?

Well, for starters, prosecutors in the United States are not like prosecutors in France. Fitzgerald and other junior prosecutors do not have the luxury of waking up each morning and deciding on their own to follow a hunch. Moreover, they normally don’t direct Federal investigations. The investigative part is handled by FBI agents who run field offices. They collect evidence until they have a case put together that enables them to secure an indictment or an arrest warrant and then the prosecutor gets involved. Once again, Peter misses a basic fact that anyone who has watched Law and Order already knows.

What we do know about Patrick Fitzgerald is that he succeeded in putting terrorists behind jail without violating the Constitution or torturing a soul. He deserves better than to be attacked by a lightweight like Lance.

UPDATE:

I got ahold of a portion of Peter's book that mention's me. It is a typical example of how misleading and disingenuous Peter is. Lance writes:
As late as May 2002, eight months after 9/11, that same story was repeated by Larry C. Johnson,[iv] the former State Department counterterrorism official (under Bush 41 and Clinton) infamous for his July 2001 New York Times quote minimizing the importance of Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda: "To listen to some of the news reports a year or two ago, you would think bin Laden was running a top Fortune 500 multinational company,"? said Johnson, "people everywhere, links everywhere." He then compounded that mistaken assessment five weeks later with a Times Op-Ed piece entitled "The Declining Terrorist Threat,"? describing al Qaeda as a "a loose amalgam of people with a shared ideology, but a very limited direction."

Wrong again Peter. Wrong again. Here's the link. I said nothing in that op-ed describing al Qaeda at all. But that doesn't phase Peter he makes up facts and, when convenient, ignores what was really said. One point I made in that July op-ed that is especially relevant highlights the concern of Islamic extremists. I wrote:

The most violent and least reported source of international terrorism is the undeclared war between Islamists and Hindus over the disputed Kashmir region of India, bordering Pakistan. Although India came in second in terms of the number of terrorist incidents in 2000, with 63, it accounted for almost 50 percent of all resulting deaths, with 187 killed, and injuries, with 337 hurt. Most of the blame lies with radical groups trained in Afghanistan and operating from Pakistan.

That is particularly relevant in light of the op-ed I co-wrote with Milton Bearden in November of 2000. While I stand by my statements that we tend to exaggerate the capabilities of Bin Laden (e.g., having sleeper cells all over the world), I have consistently identified him as a serious threat that should not be ignored. Here's what Milt and I wrote in the NY Times op-ed (November 7, 2000):

Mughniyeh and Bin Ladin are the two most prolific mass murderers currently at large. A new administration will have to take on the fundamental task of bringing to American justice the two men who have killed so many Americans. The full range of options, including military force, covert action, clandestine operations and diplomatic pressure must be brought to bear. The experience of the last two decades has shown that putting terrorists in American prisons is a very effective policy, but we must be prepared to take other steps if that option is not feasible.

Knowing firsthand that Peter makes glaring, inexcusable mistakes about what I have said and done then I have little doubt that his so-called revelations about Patrick Fitzgerald are pure unadulterated crap. In fact, I have spoken to someone who has read the book and has first hand knowledge of several events and that person identified two other significant errors. If you feel the need to throw your money away and buy his book I suggest you invest in a big box of Kosher Salt. You’ll need some hefty grains of salt to get thru Peter’s mess.


5 Comments

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Larry, neither of the articles you link to mention Ali Mohamed being an informant since 1992 or provide any details about his handling agent in California, John Zent. One is close mentioning 1993, but no cigar.

I think you are misreading the quote about Wadih El Hage. It is not saying they "got the truth" from Ali Mohamed. It is saying they should have been able to prevent the embassy bombings by connecting Mohamed to Wadih El Hage, or by getting the truth from Mohamed - which they did not do as far as anyone knows - unless you know otherwise?

You said "Fitzgerald and other junior prosecutors do not have the luxury of waking up each morning and deciding on their own to follow a hunch. Moreover, they normally don’t direct Federal investigations. The investigative part is handled by FBI agents who run field offices." Well here's what Fitzgerald said:
http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=965&wit_id=2741

I was on a prosecution team in New York that began a criminal investigation of Usama Bin Laden in early 1996. The team – prosecutors and FBI agents assigned to the criminal case – had access to a number of sources. We could talk to citizens. We could talk to local police officers. We could talk to other U.S. Government agencies. We could talk to foreign police officers. Even foreign intelligence personnel. And foreign citizens. And we did all those things as often as we could. We could even talk to al Qaeda members – and we did. We actually called several members and associates of al Qaeda to testify before a grand jury in New York. And we even debriefed al Qaeda members overseas who agreed to become cooperating witnesses.
But there was one group of people we were not permitted to talk to. Who? The FBI agents across the street from us in lower Manhattan assigned to a parallel intelligence investigation of Usama Bin Laden and al Qaeda. We could not learn what information they had gathered. That was “the wall.” A rule that a federal court has since agreed was fundamentally flawed – and dangerous.


Last but not least, are you really trying to defend this op/ed piece? Written just TWO MONTHS BEFORE September Eleventh?
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/10/opinion/10JOHN.html

July 10, 2001

The Declining Terrorist Threat

By LARRY C. JOHNSON

Judging from news reports and the portrayal of villains in our popular entertainment, Americans are bedeviled by fantasies about terrorism. They seem to believe that terrorism is the greatest threat to the United States and that it is becoming more widespread and lethal. They are likely to think that the United States is the most popular target of terrorists. And they almost certainly have the impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism.

None of these beliefs are based in fact....

I hope for a world where facts, not fiction, determine our policy. While terrorism is not vanquished, in a world where thousands of nuclear warheads are still aimed across the continents, terrorism is not the biggest security challenge confronting the United States, and it should not be portrayed that way.

Do you have a reading disability? Steven Emerson is clearly quoted stating early 1990s. No wonder you are no longer a prosecutor.

And, if you will try to read Peter's quote, please show me in that op-ed where I spoke of al Qaeda. Nitwit.

But go back to the op-ed. I do stand behind it. The threat of terrorism is not even comparable to the threat from nuclear proliferation. That was the point chuckledhead.

Geez, to have cheerleaders like you in Peter's camp explains why he can be praised for such sloppy work.

Argument #1: Peter Lance is self promoting.

So are Carl Bernstein, and Richard Clarke, and Joe Wilson. Self promotion, ranging from healthy confidence to malignant narcissism, in journalism is not at all uncommon. I wouldn't want to have lunch with Terrel Owens, but he can catch some balls. Take a second look at your own bio, which hawks your consulting business, amidst the guise of providing a great public service from your periodic blog entries. It's not like you are so different.

Argument #2: "Consider for example Lance’s specious claim in his recent post on Huffington Post, touting his book and his accomplishments..."

If what you go on to describe is the most "specious" of Lance's arguments, then perhaps treatises against him are over? But perhaps you can describe where previous reports identified AM's FBI handling agent, and that AM was on board since 92? Admittedly, it's probably much ado about nothing. It's not like the guy who told the Canadians to let Ali go manages risk for a Fortune 500 company or anything. At least I hope not.

Argument #3: Lance mixed up an editorial you wrote for the New York Times with another article in the Times written around the same time which quotes you.

That's a fair editorial comment. Seriously, it is. It looks like you caught him. But again, if that's the best you can do, (and it's not, because according to you Argument #2 is the most "specious") then I'm afraid you're reaching. The guy was chief investigative correspondent for ABC News, and won 5 Emmies. He may be a self promoter, and even make a few mistakes, but your attempt to paint him as some kind of a sloppy dunce from that, taken out of a 600 page book, are kind of weak.

This could easily be turned around. For example:

"I got ahold of a portion of Peter's book that mention's me."

You don't exactly have a command of apostrophes. Therefore you must be an idiot who can't be trusted about anything. Right?

And since the book has not been published yet, how did you manage to get a peek? Perhaps we should hold all journalists' unpublished drafts to the same standard.

Argument #4: Patrick Fitzgerald was too busy prosecuting people to play Sherlock Holmes on terrorists.

Topdogo8 managed to knock this out of the park already, using Patrick's own words. But add to that him saying that AM was the most dangerous man he ever met, and then let him out on the streets again, 10 months before the bombing of the African embassies and then taking another month to have him arrested?

Argument #5: Fitzgerald "deserves better than to be attacked by a lightweight like Lance."

So you are saying he deserves to be attacked by a heavyweight?

I've noticed that the tone of your words got more personal and more frustrated with time. You responded to the previous poster with ad hominem schoolyard name calling, "nitwit", "chucklehead" and "cheerleader".

Working for the federal government is a contact sport, Mr. Johnson, and not everyone is up to the task. I'm sure even Mr. Fitzgerald himself doesn't ask for your strident defense of lightweights (or should I say "lightweight's") who attack him. He has never seemed to be phased by attacks from talking heads with higher name recognition and more captive audiences. What makes you think he will have as hard a time accepting criticism from a man like Lance as you seem to be having?

It's not a quote and "early 1990s" isn't 92.
"No wonder you are no longer a prosecutor."?
You must have me confused with someone else!
As for the op-ed, you still stand by this???
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/10/opinion/10JOHN.html

At first glance, things do seem to be getting worse. International terrorist incidents, as reported by the State Department, increased to 423 in 2000 from 392 in 1999. Recently, Americans were shaken by Filipino rebels' kidnapping of Americans and the possible beheading of one hostage. But the overall terrorist trend is down.

As a lurker, I have hard time deciding who is correct. Even so, avoiding words like "chucklehead" and "nitwit" would help (my English is too poor to grasp why "cheerleader" is offensive, sounds like a perfectly polite expression, akin to "stooge of imperialism".

Attacking the wrong apostrophes' usage seems to be a low road as well (feel free to criticise this very sentence, however).

By the way, the threat of nuclear proliferation is not obvious. It seems that "rouge" regimes (starting from India) managed to cobble together very bulky and very low-yield nukes of quite negligible military value.

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