Featured Post

Click Here for Excerpts (and Reviews) for New Book

Monday, January 4, 2010

Now It Can Be Told: Terror Threat for Obama on Inauguration Day 2009

In the past two years, The New York Times Magazine has increasingly scooped itself by posting its cover story online a day or two or five before the Sunday when it actually came out. Today it goes much further, putting up at its Web site the planned cover story for its January 17 issue. Apparently the terrorist concerns or the past week, and President Obama's actions, sparked the push. When you read the opening grafs of the Peter Baker piece, a scoop in itself, you may understand:

The evening before he was sworn into office, Barack Obama stepped out of Blair House, the government residence where he was staying across from the White House, and climbed into an armored limousine for the ride to a bipartisan dinner. Joining him in the back seat were John Brennan, his new counterterrorism adviser, and two foreign-policy advisers, Denis McDonough and Mark Lippert. The three men with the president-elect were out of breath, having rushed more than a mile from transition headquarters on foot after failing to find a taxi in Washington’s preinaugural madness. As the motorcade moved out, they updated Obama on gathering evidence of a major terrorist plot to attack his inauguration. After a weekend of round-the-clock analysis, the nation’s intelligence agencies were concerned that the threat was real, the men told him. A group of Somali extremists was reported to be coming across the border from Canada to detonate explosives as the new president took the oath of office. With more than a million onlookers viewing the ceremony from the National Mall and hundreds of millions more watching on television around the world, what could be a more devastating target?

“All the data points suggested there was a real threat evolving quickly that had an overseas component,” Juan Carlos Zarate, President George W. Bush’s deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism, told me in November. As the inauguration approached, signs of a plot “seemed to be growing in credibility and relevance."

No comments: