Our
Enemy Is Not Terrorism
Posted May, 2004
Address by Former Secretary
of the Navy John Lehman
'Our Enemy Is Not Terrorism'
The former Secretary of the Navy and current member
of the Kean Commission investigating the 11 September
2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, addressed
the U.S. Naval Institute 130th Annual Meeting
and Annapolis Naval History Symposium on 31 March.
Following is an edited version of his remarks.
"The subject here is naval
history and the naval history to come. This is
particularly relevant, given the subjects I've
been immersed in over the last year-the so-called
war on terrorism and the attacks of 9/11, what
went wrong, and what we should do to fix it. I
have learned that what these two institutions-the
U.S. Naval Institute and the U.S. Naval Academy-
stand for are at the center of what we face as
a nation going forward.
We are at a juncture today that
really is more of a threshold, even more of a
watershed, than the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
was in 1941. We are currently in a war, but it
is not a war on terrorism. In fact, that has been
a great confusion, and the sooner we drop that
term, the better. This would be like President
Franklin Roosevelt saying in World War II, "We
are engaged in a war against kamikazes and blitzkrieg."
Like them, terrorism is a method, a tool, a weapon
that has been used against us. And part of the
reason we suffered such a horrific attack is that
we were not prepared. Let's not kid ourselves.
Some very smart people defeated every single defense
this country had, and defeated them easily, with
confidence and arrogance. There are many lessons
we must learn from this.
We were not prepared intellectually.
Those of us in the national security field still
carried the baggage of the Cold War. We thought
in concepts of coalition warfare and the Warsaw
Pact. When we thought of terrorism, we thought
only of state-sponsored terrorism, which is why
the immediate reaction of many in our government
agencies after 9/11 was: Which state did it? Saddam,
it must have been Saddam. We had failed to grasp,
for a variety of reasons, the new phenomenon that
had emerged in the world. This was not state-
sponsored terrorism. This was religious war.
This was the emergence of a transnational
enemy driven by religious fervor and fanaticism.
Our enemy is not terrorism. Our enemy is violent,
Islamic fundamentalism. None of our government
institutions was set up with receptors, or even
vocabulary, to deal with this. So we left ourselves
completely vulnerable to a concerted attack.
Where are we today? I'd like
to say we have fixed these problems, but we haven't.
We have very real vulnerabilities. We have not
diminished in any way the fervor and ideology
of our enemy. We are fighting them in many areas
of the world, and I must say with much better
awareness of the issues and their nature. We're
fighting with better tools. But I cannot say we
are now safe from the kind of attack we saw on
9/11. I think we are much safer than we were on
9/11; the ability of our enemies to launch a concerted,
sophisticated attack is much less than it was
then. Still, we're totally vulnerable to the kinds
of attacks we've seen in Madrid, for instance.
We face a very sophisticated and intelligent enemy
who has been trained, in many cases, in our universities
and gone to school on our methods, learned from
their mistakes, and continued to use the very
nature of our free society and its aversion to
intrusion in privacy and discrimination to their
benefit.
For example, today it is still
a prohibited offense for an airline to have two
people of the same ethnic background interviewed
at one time, because that is discrimination. Our
airline security is still full of holes. Our ability
to carry out covert operations abroad is only
marginally better than it was at the time of 9/11.
A huge amount of fundamental cultural and institutional
change must be carried out in the United States
before we can effectively deal with the nature
of the threat. Today, probably 50 or more states
have schools that are teaching jihad, preaching,
recruiting, and training. We have absolutely no
successful programs even begun to remediate against
those efforts.
It's very important that people
understand the complexity of this threat. We have
had to institute new approaches to protecting
our civil liberties the way we authorize surveillance,
the way we conduct our immigration and naturalization
policies, and the way we issue passports. That's
only the beginning. The beginning of wisdom is
to recognize the problem, to recognize that for
every jihadist we kill or capture as we carry
out an aggressive and positive policy in Afghanistan
and elsewhere another 50 are being trained in
schools and mosques around the world.
This problem goes back a long
way. We have been asleep. Just by chance about
six months ago, I picked up a book by V. S. Naipaul,
one of the great English prose writers. I love
to read his short stories and travelogues. The
book was titled Among the Believers (New York:
Vintage, 1982) and was an account of his travels
in Indonesia, where he found that Saudi-funded
schools and mosques were transforming Indonesian
society from a very relaxed, syncretist Islam
to a jihadist fundamentalist fanatical society,
all paid for with Saudi Arabian funding. Nobody
paid attention.
Presidents in four administrations put their arms
around Saudi ambassadors, ignored the Wahhabi
jihadism, and said these are our eternal friends.
We have seen throughout the last
20 years a kind of head-in-the-sand approach to
national security in the Pentagon. We were comfortable
with the existing concept of what the threat was,
what threat analysis was, and how we derived our
requirements, still using the same old tools we
all grew up with. We paid no attention to the
real nature of this emerging threat, even though
there were warning signs. Many will recall with
pain what we went through in the Reagan administration
in 1983, when the Marine barracks were bombed
in Beirut-241 Marines and Navy corpsmen were killed.
We immediately got an intercept from NSA [National
Security Agency], a total smoking gun from the
foreign ministry of Iran, ordering the murder
of our Marines. Nothing was done to retaliate.
Instead, we did exactly what the terrorists wanted
us to do, which was to withdraw. Osama bin Laden
has cited this as one of his dawning moments.
The vaunted United States is a paper tiger; Americans
are afraid of casu! alties; they run like cowards
when attacked; and they don't even bother to take
their dead with them. This was a seminal moment
for Osama.
After that, we had our CIA station
chief kidnapped and tortured to death. Nothing
was done. Then, we had our Marine Colonel [William
R.] Higgins kidnapped and publicly hanged. Nothing
was done. We fueled and made these people aware
of the tremendous effectiveness of terrorism as
a tool of jihad. It worked. They chased us out
of one place after another, because we would not
retaliate.
The Secretary of Defense at the
time has said he never received those intercepts.
That's an example of one of the huge problems
our commission has uncovered. We have allowed
the intelligence community to evolve into a bureaucratic
archipelago of baronies in the Defense Department,
the CIA, and 95 other different intelligence units
in our government. None of them talked to one
another in the same computerized system. There
was no systemic sharing. Some will recall the
Phoenix memo and the fact that there were people
in the FBI saying, "Hey, there are young
Arabs learning to fly and they don't want to learn
how to take off or land. Maybe we should look
into them." It went nowhere.
We had watch lists with 65,000
terrorists' names on them, created by a very sophisticated
system in the State Department called Tip-Off.
That existed before 9/11, but nobody in the FAA
[Federal Aviation Administration] bothered to
look at it. The FAA had 12 names on its no-fly
list. The State Department had a guy on its list
named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. He was already under
indictment for his role in planning the 1993 attack
on the World Trade Center. The State Department
issued him a visa. I could go on and on.
Two big lessons glare out from
what our investigations have discovered so far.
Number one, in our government bureaucracy today
there is no accountability. Since 9/11-the greatest
failure of American defenses in the history of
our country, at least since the burning of Washington
in 1814-only one person has been fired. He is
a hero, in my judgment:
[retired Vice] Admiral John Poindexter. He got
fired because of an excessive zeal to catch these
bastards. But he was the only one fired. Not any
of the 19 officers lost their jobs at Immigration
for allowing the 19 terrorists-9 who presented
grossly falsified passports-to enter the country.
One Customs Service officer stopped the 20th terrorist,
at risk to his own career. Do you think he's been
promoted?
Not a chance. That is the culture
we've allowed to develop, except in the Navy.
We've all felt the pain over the last year of
the number of skippers who have been relieved
in the U.S. Navy: two on one cruiser in one year.
That's a problem for us. It's also something we
should be mightily proud of, because it stands
out in stark contrast to the rest of the U.S.
government. In the United States Navy, we still
have accountability. It's bred into our culture.
And what we stand for here has to be respread
into our government and our nation.
Actions have consequences, and
people must be held accountable. Customs officer
Jose Melendez-Perez stopped the 20th terrorist,
who was supposed to be on Flight 93 that crashed
in Pennsylvania. Probably because of the shorthanded
muscle on that team, the passengers were able
to overcome the terrorists. Melendez-Perez did
this at great personal risk, because his colleagues
and his supervisors told him, "You can't
do this. This guy is an Arab ethnic. You're racially
profiling. You're going to get in real trouble,
because it's against Department of Transportation
policy to racially profile." He said, "I
don't care. This guy's a bad guy. I can see it
in his eyes." As he sent this guy back out
of the United States, the guy turned around to
him and said, "I'll be back." You know,
he is back. He's in Guantanamo. We captured him
in Afghanistan. Do you think Melendez-Perez got
a promotion? Do you think he got any recognition?
Do you think he is doing any! better than the
19 of his time-serving, unaccountable colleagues?
Don't think any bit of it. We have no accountability,
but we're going to restore it.
The other glaring lack that has
been discovered throughout the investigation is
in leadership. Leadership is the willingness to
accept the burdens and the risks, the potential
embarrassment, and the occasional failure of leading
men and women. It is saying: We will do it this
way. I won't let that guy in. I will do this and
I'll take the consequences. That's what we stand
for here. That's what the crucible of the U.S.
Naval Academy has carried on now since 1845, and
what the U.S. Naval Institute has carried on for
130 years and hasn't compromised. We all should
be very proud of it. We need leadership now more
than ever. We need to respread this culture, which
is so rare today, into the way we conduct our
government business, let alone our private business.
Having said all this, I'm very
optimistic. We have seen come forward in this
investigation people from every part of our bureaucracy
to say they screwed up and to tell what went wrong
and what we've got to do to change it. We have
an agenda for change. I think we're going to see
a very fundamental shift in the culture of our
government as a result of this. I certainly hope
so.
This should be a true wake-up
call. We cannot let this be swept under the rug,
put on the shelf like one more of the hundreds
of other commissions that have gone right into
the memory hole. This time, I truly believe it's
going to be different."