December 31, 2009 11:31 AM

Bomb Plot Exposed Lack of Intel "Urgency"

By
Armen Keteyian
(CBS)  CBS News has learned law enforcement's top priority now is to identify if similar attacks are imminent - pressing to find out who was training alongside Abdulmutallab in Yemen, who associated with him and provided him with the explosives. More details are emerging about the failure of the intelligence community to prevent the Christmas Day attack.

A senior counterterrorism official told CBS News today the intelligence community knew al Qaeda was planning what he called a"Christmas Surprise" for months but was unable to come up with something credible, to connect the dots - until it was too late.

"We should have stopped an individual from coming into the country that fell through the cracks," said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C.

The problem, reports CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian, is what the official termed "no sense of urgency" within the intelligence community - compounded by information overload at the National Counterterrorism Center in McLean, Virginia. The center receives some 8,000 messages a day.

Special Report: The Christmas Day Terror Attack

"Quite simply what went wrong is the lack of communication between the State Department, the intelligence community and Department of Homeland Security," Sen. Burr said.

Adding to the system breakdown, says another source: confusion between the Counterterrorism Center and State Department over whether or not Abdulmutallab's name was in a national terrorist database. One agency thought the other was checking. And nobody did.

In fact, as early as 2009 the CIA had human intelligence and electronic intercepts on a man dubbed "the Nigerian," linked to "terrorist elements" in Yemen. But it was only after the Christmas Day attack that the agency figured out "the Nigerian" was, in fact, Abdulmutallab. And that was five weeks after Abdulmutallab's father raised concerns to the CIA.

Joseph Cuellar, a former CIA and military intelligence officer, says there's no excuse for this kind of failure.

"You know they had information that an analyst could have quickly put together and said 'something's wrong here' and it didn't get done," Cuellar said.

To make matters worse Abdulmutallab wasn't hard to find in Yemen. He regularly attended a local mosque and studied at an Arabic school, communicating with the American-born radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awalki, who is said to have influenced Major Nadal Hasan's massacre at Ft. Hood.

The intelligence review ordered by President Obama is due Thursday - one that will undoubtedly show eight years after 9/11, a lot of lessons about information sharing have yet to be learned.

More coverage from CBSNews.com:

CIA's Abdulmutallab Info Not High Priority
Official: We Knew Al Qaeda Planned "Christmas Surprise"
U.S. Intel Lapses Helped Abdulmutallab
Friend Says Abdulmutallab Was Not Extremist in London
Yemen, North Africa: Terrorism's New Home
Yemen Raids Al Qaeda Hide-Out; 1 Arrested
Opposition Grows to Transferring Gitmo Detainees to Yemen
Dick Cheney: Obama Stance "Makes Us Less Safe"
Democrats Say GOP Playing Politics on Bombing Attempt
Obama: "Systemic Failure" Allowed Attack
Roommate: Abdulmutallab Shunned Women
Abdulmutallab's Missing Months in Yemen
TSA Still Vexed by Explosives Screening
Tracing Bomb Suspect's Journey to Detroit




Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by nobodyasked December 30, 2009 8:59 PM EST
instead of asking who trained the terrorist, the question should be "who trained the security dolts that didn't transfer the warnings."

billions of $ spent and we can't even send a message. the government at is best.

the government should get a private software company to write a security program. let it be ibm or apple or google or hp et al, anybody but the usa government hacks.
Reply to this comment
by SouthernBeachGuy1960 December 30, 2009 7:41 PM EST
It seems that our Government cares more about being Politically correct and finding ways to release people from Guantanamo than finding ways to keep U.S. citizens safe.
Reply to this comment
by piBen11 December 31, 2009 9:16 PM EST
SouthernBeachGuy1960, I think you need a little education in our Justice system. Locking up people in Guantanamo is an affront to our Justice system. Indeed, the Bush Administration might have opened Guantanamo to skirt our Justice system, which does not differentiate between a citizen-accused from a foreign-accused. In fact, we have one and only one Justice system for all accuseds. Contrary to what most Conservative Republicans often state in their arguments about a criminal not being a citizen; hence, should not be accorded rights of a citizen, our Justice system, as we see it, accords every accused the same rights. I supposed,here lies one of the most important differences between Progressives and Conservatives in this Country. Most of us - Progressives, believe strongly and argue that our Justice system is meant to adjudicate any criminal act(s) committed by anybody irrespective of the Country of origin of the offender. On the other hand, Conservatives usually want to create another Legal system for foreign offenders. We would like to think that we have the fairest Justice system in the World, which serves us as well as any would-be offenders of our societal norms. It is therefore imperative that we have only one Justice system that does not discriminate between citizen offenders and foreign offenders, and recognizes the human dignity of each offender, whether foreign or domestic. After all, it is an implied truth in our Justice system that a Judge is an impartial arbiter; thus, we need only one system,a Judge, or similarly educated Judges to apply the same set of rules to adjudicate all cases in the system. Think about it. It is only fair and right
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