
by Janice Niblack
PREFACE
We present the narrative of this report and the
recommendations that flow from it to the President of the United States,
the United States Congress, and the American people for their
consideration. Ten Commissioners-five Republicans and five Democrats
chosen by elected leaders from our nation's capital at a time of great
partisan division-have come together to present this report without
dissent.
We have come together with a unity of purpose because
our nation demands it. September 11, 2001, was a day of unprecedented
shock and suffering in the history of the United States. The nation was
unprepared. How did this happen, and how can we avoid such tragedy again?
To answer these questions, the Congress and the
President created the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States (Public Law 107-306, November 27, 2002).
Our mandate was sweeping. The law directed us to
investigate "facts and circumstances relating to the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001," including those relating to intelligence agencies,
law enforcement agencies, diplomacy, immigration issues and border
control, the flow of assets to terrorist organizations, commercial
aviation, the role of congressional oversight and resource allocation, and
other areas determined relevant by the Commission.
In pursuing our mandate, we have reviewed more than 2.5
million pages of documents and interviewed more than 1,200 individuals in
ten countries. This included nearly every senior official from the current
and previous administrations who had responsibility for topics covered in
our mandate.
We have sought to be independent, impartial, thorough,
and nonpartisan. From the outset, we have been committed to share as much
of our investigation as we can with the American people. To that end, we
held 19 days of hearings and took public testimony from 160 witnesses.
Our aim has not been to assign individual blame. Our aim
has been to provide the fullest possible account of the events surrounding
9/11 and to identify lessons learned.
We learned about an enemy who is sophisticated, patient,
disciplined, and lethal. The enemy rallies broad support in the Arab and
Muslim world by demanding redress of political grievances, but its
hostility toward us and our values is limitless. Its purpose is to rid the
world of religious and political pluralism, the plebiscite, and equal
rights for women. It makes no distinction between military and civilian
targets. Collateral damage is not in its lexicon.
We learned that the institutions charged with protecting
our borders, civil aviation, and national security did not understand how
grave this threat could be, and did not adjust their policies, plans, and
practices to deter or defeat it. We learned of fault lines within our
government-between foreign and domestic intelligence, and between and
within agencies. We learned of the pervasive problems of managing and
sharing information across a large and unwieldy government that had been
built in a different era to confront different dangers.
At the outset of our work, we said we were looking
backward in order to look forward. We hope that the terrible losses
chronicled in this report can create something positive-an America that is
safer, stronger, and wiser. That September day, we came together as a
nation. The test before us is to sustain that unity of purpose and meet
the challenges now confronting us.
We need to design a balanced strategy for the long haul,
to attack terrorists and prevent their ranks from swelling while at the
same time protecting our country against future attacks. We have been
forced to think about the way our government is organized. The massive
departments and agencies that prevailed in the great struggles of the
twentieth century must work together in new ways, so that all the
instruments of national power can be combined. Congress needs dramatic
change as well to strengthen oversight and focus accountability.
As we complete our final report, we want to begin by
thanking our fellow Commissioners, whose dedication to this task has been
profound. We have reasoned together over every page, and the report has
benefited from this remarkable dialogue. We want to express our
considerable respect for the intellect and judgment of our colleagues, as
well as our great affection for them.
We want to thank the Commission staff. The dedicated
professional staff, headed by Philip Zelikow, has contributed innumerable
hours to the completion of this report, setting aside other important
endeavors to take on this all-consuming assignment. They have conducted
the exacting investigative work upon which the Commission has built. They
have given good advice, and faithfully carried out our guidance. They have
been superb.
We thank the Congress and the President. Executive
branch agencies have searched records and produced a multitude of
documents for us. We thank officials, past and present, who were generous
with their time and provided us with insight. The PENTTBOM team at the
FBI, the Director's Review Group at the CIA, and Inspectors General at the
Department of Justice and the CIA provided great assistance. We owe a huge
debt to their investigative labors, painstaking attention to detail, and
readiness to share what they have learned. We have built on the work of
several previous Commissions, and we thank the Congressional Joint
Inquiry, whose fine work helped us get started. We thank the City of New
York for assistance with documents and witnesses, and the Government
Printing Office and W.W. Norton & Company for helping to get this report
to the broad public.
We conclude this list of thanks by coming full circle:
We thank the families of 9/11, whose persistence and dedication helped
create the Commission. They have been with us each step of the way, as
partners and witnesses. They know better than any of us the importance of
the work we have undertaken.
We want to note what we have done, and not done. We have
endeavored to provide the most complete account we can of the events of
September 11, what happened and why. This final report is only a summary
of what we have done, citing only a fraction of the sources we have
consulted. But in an event of this scale, touching so many issues and
organizations, we are conscious of our limits. We have not interviewed
every knowledgeable person or found every relevant piece of paper. New
information inevitably will come to light. We present this report as a
foundation for a better understanding of a landmark in the history of our
nation.
We have listened to scores of overwhelming personal
tragedies and astounding acts of heroism and bravery. We have examined the
staggering impact of the events of 9/11 on the American people and their
amazing resilience and courage as they fought back. We have admired their
determination to do their best to prevent another tragedy while preparing
to respond if it becomes necessary. We emerge from this investigation with
enormous sympathy for the victims and their loved ones, and with enhanced
respect for the American people. We recognize the formidable challenges
that lie ahead.
We also approach the task of recommendations with
humility. We have made a limited number of them. We decided consciously to
focus on recommendations we believe to be most important, whose
implementation can make the greatest difference. We came into this process
with strong opinions about what would work. All of us have had to pause,
reflect, and sometimes change our minds as we studied these problems and
considered the views of others. We hope our report will encourage our
fellow citizens to study, reflect-and act.
| Thomas H. Kean |
| CHAIR |
| Lee H. Hamilton |
| VICE CHAIR |
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