As recently as September, the president told the Weekly Standard that capturing Osama bin Laden is “not a top priority use of American resources.” I thought about the comment after watching a CNN segment today about bin Laden’s suspected whereabouts, and whether the 9/11 mastermind might be in Pakistan or not. CNN reported:
There is more going on behind the scenes than meets the eye. Last week, Bush’s homeland security advisor Fran Townsend told CNN, there is, in her words, “increased activity” on the part of the CIA and the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the hunt for bin Laden.
And, as she termed it, “unbelievable” cooperation from the Pakistanis.
I’m, of course, glad to hear there’s “increased activity.” Maybe satellites picked up on something, or maybe an informant offered some valuable intelligence, but whatever the reason, it’s encouraging to know the Bush administration hasn’t completely forgotten about the man the president pledged to get “dead or alive.”
The information is no doubt classified, but if the hunt has picked up of late, it would certainly be a dramatic change in the status quo.
The clandestine U.S. commandos whose job is to capture or kill Osama bin Laden have not received a credible lead in more than two years. Nothing from the vast U.S. intelligence world — no tips from informants, no snippets from electronic intercepts, no points on any satellite image — has led them anywhere near the al-Qaeda leader, according to U.S. and Pakistani officials.
“The handful of assets we have have given us nothing close to real-time intelligence” that could have led to his capture, said one counterterrorism official, who said the trail, despite the most extensive manhunt in U.S. history, has gone “stone cold.”
Bush ordered the CIA over the summer to “flood the zone” and sharply increase the number of intelligence resources devoted to pursuing bin Laden. Of course, after years of ignoring the terrorist mastermind, “no one is certain where the ‘zone’ is.”
The CNN report offers a glimmer or hope, but I’m inclined to believe that when Bush, just six months after 9/11, said, “I truly am not that concerned about [bin Laden],” he probably meant it.