Civilian Sector
3. US State Department
4. Treasury Department
5. Energy Department
6. Coast Guard
Military Sector
1. Defense Intelligence Agency
2. National Security Agency
3. National Reconnaissance Office
4. National Imagery and Mapping Agency
5. Army Intelligence
6. Navy Intelligence
7. Air Force Intelligence
8. Marine Intelligence
(World Trade Center. Photo courtesy of Wally Gobetz, Wikemedia Commons) |
The
notion that the United States is invincible from a foreign-terrorist attack was proven wrong after the tragic events of
September 11, 2001, which later referred to as the 9/11. The successful
terrorist operations carried out in New York and Washington DC by the members
of al-Qaeda (AQ) have revealed to the world that even a powerful country like
the United States is not secured from a suicidal terrorist group.
The results of the suicide attacks on the World Trade Center towers and the
Pentagon building not only claimed the lives of 5,350 Americans and foreign
expatriates, but they also resulted in the injuries of 6,500 people. These
figures do not include the lives of 44 passengers and the flight crew of United
Airlines Flight 93 killed when they crashed in the outskirt of Shanksville,
Pennsylvania while bravely wrestling control of the plane from the terrorists.
The terrorists' operations on 9/11 have revealed the softer sides of the
security and intelligence apparatus of the United States government. The
much-heralded invincibility of the US Intelligence Community (IC), considered
as the best in the world, was later on regarded by the public as an incompetent
organization. The IC members' ineptitude raised serious concern about the
capability to provide the policymakers with accurate and timely intelligence on
future terrorist operations in the United States.
There are several factors that can be considered why the IC failed to preempt
the AQ plot. One of these was the lack of a strategic plan to counter the
emerging threats of global terrorism coming from the ranks of the Islamist
terrorists after the Cold War. The IC members, particularly the FBI and the
CIA, have failed to adjust to the changing geopolitical landscape of the world
after the collapse of the Berlin wall—which consequently united the two German countries—and
of the break-up of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republic (USSR) into
independent States.
The political change has shifted the global alliances that even former Warsaw
Pact members (i.e., communist states) became part of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization. This transformation had left the United States with no
traditional military enemies to engage with. The threat to United States'
national security via conventional warfare or through missile strikes from the
distant European shores has lessened.
The lowering of guards created false security, which apparently affected the
collection of intelligence data because of the pressure to disband the CIA in
the aftermath of the downfall of communism in Europe. The Democratic Party
leaders called for the abolition of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and
to transfer its foreign intelligence activities to the US Department of State
as well as the CIA’s paramilitary operations to the Pentagon.
The demise of the USSR and the Warsaw Pact
countries—considered as the “A” list nations in terms of threat to national
security—has caused the United States’ foreign policy on security to shift to
the “B” list nations (e.g., Iraq and North Korea) and to the “C” list
nations (e.g., Bosnia, Somalia). Accordingly, the immediate attention
given to the “B” list nations is to preempt these countries to fill the void
left by the “A” nations and to counter the proliferations of weapons of mass
destruction. Security experts claimed that, because the focus of the IC
resources in the past decade was shifted to the “B” list nations, the IC had
never seen the emerging threats coming from the Islamic radical groups,
particularly the MAK—the forerunner of AQ network, after the Soviet-Afghan war.
There were estimated 40,000 displaced had-core mujahideens, who came from
various Muslim countries around the world to fight in Afghanistan. With
no more war to win and no more battle to fight, these seasoned fighters went back
to their respective countries and became leaders of terrorist groups in their
localities. For example, the late Abdurajik Abubakar Janjalani, who founded the
notorious Abu Sayaff Group in the Philippines, was a veteran of the
Soviet-Afghan war. Others had surreptitiously relocated to the West and
secretly formed cell groups in Germany, France, and Spain. These developments
were not seen by the IC as a gathering threats to the security of United States
until the 9/11 attacks happened.
Before the 9/11, there were 14 organizations that comprised IC—six from the
civilian sector and eight from the military sector. Its mandate came from the Executive Order 12333 (United States
Intelligence Activities), which provides, among others, to “collect information
concerning, and the conduct of activities to protect against, intelligence
activities directed against the United States, international terrorist and
international narcotics activities, and other hostile activities directed
against the United States by foreign powers, organizations, persons, and their
agents.”
The US Intelligence Community members were as follows:
1. Central Intelligence Agency
2. Federal Bureau of Investigation3. US State Department
4. Treasury Department
5. Energy Department
6. Coast Guard
3. National Reconnaissance Office
4. National Imagery and Mapping Agency
5. Army Intelligence
6. Navy Intelligence
7. Air Force Intelligence
8. Marine Intelligence
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