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      Vice President Dick Cheney was the acting  Supreme Commander in Chief on 9/11.     On May 8th, 2001, four months prior to 9/11, George W. Bush placed Dick Cheney in charge of all federal programs dealing
         with weapons of mass destruction consequence management          within the Departments
         of Defense, Health and Human Services, Dept.          of Justice, Dept. of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, and several other federal agencies. This included all “training
         and planning” which needed to be “seamlessly          integrated, harmonious and comprehensive” in order to “maximize effectiveness.” This mandate
         created the Office of National Preparedness (ONP) in FEMA, overseen          by DickCheney.
       In summation,          Cheney was placed directly in charge of managing all training exercises
         throughout the entire federal government and all military agencies.  On          9/11 Cheney oversaw multiple war games and terror drills, including
         several exercises involving          NORAD, the USAF agency whose mandate is to “watch the
         sky.” It was          no coincidence that multiple exercises were either commenced or ongoing on the morning of 9/11.
  After the second
         WTC tower hit, Cheney was taken by the Secret          Service to the underground bunker under
         the east wing of the White House known as the Presidential Emergency
         Operations Center (PEOC). From there Cheney directed the U.S. government’s          response
         to the unfolding attack. Less than an hour later he was taken to what
                  is referred to as the “underground Pentagon,” also known as SITE R. This highly
         secure          complex of buildings inside Raven Rock Mountain near Blue Ridge Summit,          Pa., is about seven miles north of Camp David. It was built in the early
         1950’s as an alternate          command center in the event of a nuclear war.
  SITE          R is completely hidden except for an array of satellite
         dishes, microwave towers, and antennae clustered nearby. Inside are computer filled caverns, communications equipment,          and tracking technology right out of Star Wars.
         Heavily armed military police enforce the posted no trespassing advisories.
  Within a few hours          of the plane attacks on 9/11, no fewer than five helicopters
         landed on the facility’s helipads carrying top officials such as Paul Wolfowitz to join Cheney inside. Cheney’s          command at SITE R superseded any orders
         from the Pentagon, the FAA, or even the
 White House.
         He also controlled FEMA assets in New York City through its new command center on Pier 29.  Cheney          was also running a completely separate chain of command
         and control from what was provided to him          on May 8th via the Secret Service, assuring
         the paralysis of the USAF          response capability on 9/11. 
   The Secret Service has the capability to see the same radar screens the FAA sees in real          time. The secret Service also has the legal authority
         and capability to take supreme command in cases of a national emergency.     Keep in mind that Zionist Jew Lewis “Scooter” Libby (Liebowitz)          was Cheney’s Vice-Presidential Chief of Staff
         and main conduit to the other cabal operatives prior to, during and after 9/11.
        Dick Cheney is primarily          an oilman and the man behindoil/construction mega company Halliburton. Cheneystood to gain unfathomable wealth
         from the U.S.invasion of Iraq while Israel stood to          gain at least partialdominance over its home region. Cheney, some JewishZionist          Americans and the
         Israelis made a good team.The sacrifice of a few thousand innocent people on          themorning of 9/11 was worth it to them. It was goodbusiness and not          at
         all personal. It was manifest destiny! If God had not provided the  
                opportunity, they would not have taken it. It was God’s design... to the mind of a twisted souled psychopath.
  Some of the different war
                  games in progress on the morning of 9/11 were:
 
     OPERATION NORTHERN VIGILANCE: This was planned months in advance          of 9/11. It insured that on the morning of
         9/11, jet fighters assigned to the North East Air Defense Sector (NEADS) had been reassigned to duties in Alaska and Canada          to participate in a simulated attack out
         of Russia, thus reducing the number of fighters available to NEADS on 9/11. General Norton Schwartz was in command. Recall that          Schwartz had previously been assigned as
         the head of the USAF’s Special Operations Command to where Rabbi Dov Zakheim had sent a small fleet of Boeing 767s to          be modified into air refueling tankers...
         and the drones used on 9/11.    OPERATION
         VIGILANT GUARDIAN: This exercise simulated hijacked planes in the North          East
         Air Defense Sector (NEADS). This exercise was only applied to the North
                  East Air Defense Sector. It commenced on the morning of 9/11. 
   Lt. Col. Dawne Deskins was the NORAD airborne control and warning
                  officer who was overseeing the exercise. At 8:40 a.m. she took a call from Boston          Center (air traffic control center) advising her of a hijacked airliner.
         Here first words were,          as quoted by Newhouse News Service were: “It must be part
         of the           exercise.”    This is an example of how          the numerous exercises on 9/11 caused the confusion
         at NORAD enabling          three of the four drones to reach their targets.      OPERATION VIGILANT WARRIOR:         
         This drill was conducted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff involving at least one
                  real commercial airliner in the air intended to simulate exactly the kind of emergency
         perpetrated          on 9/11. 
   One of the          components of the drill included “false blips” which were
         simulated radar imprints          (aka: inputs) placed
         on all FAA radar screens          in the North East area and only in the North East area!  At one point on the morning of 9/11, FAA Director Jane Garvey
         said that as many as 11          hijackings were seemingly evident. No one could determine what
         “real world”          was, what was simulated and which were deemed
         “live-fly” exercises. 
   Regardless,
         this exercise and all          the other exercises created such confusion and misdirection of defense assets that it rendered          the military response totally
         ineffective on 9/11.    BIO-WARFARE
         EXERCISE TRIPOD II: Rudy Giuliani revealed details of this exercise during          his testimony during the 9/11 Investigation Commission hearings. FEMA          arrived
         in New York on September 10th to set up a command post located at Pier 29 under the auspices of a bio-warfare exercise scheduled for September 12th . 
   FEMA personnel, vehicles and equipment          added to the confusion
         and congestion of 9/11. Giuliani used this Pier 29 command post after evacuating
         WTC 7 when advised that the Twin Towers were about to collapse... Nobody          had any idea
         that the towers were about to collapse, especially the firefighters inside
         the Twin Towers!  Giuliani actually told Peter Jennings          of ABC
         News referring to WTC 7: “We were operating out of there when
                  we were told that the World Trade Center was gonna collapse.” ...Now how would anyone
         know          that a collapse was imminent when no steel framed building had
         ever          collapsed from fire damage in all of history including all of the steel framed buildings
         in Tokyo Japan during the fire-bombings of WWII?
 
     Another 911 enabler was the Ptech software that was used in most of the computer systems          by the FAA, USAF, FBI, Secret Service,
         Pentagon, and even the White          House.      Jewish Zionist Michael Goff was the marketing
         manager at Ptech and he also worked for Israeli database company Guardium.          Goff allegedly
         sold Ptech software loaded with trapdoors and Trojan horses to     
             all the agencies mentioned above. Some key computer systems failed miserably on 9/11... or
         performed perfectly depending on your point of view.       
 
   
      
      
    
   
                 
   
   
      
      
 
  www.historycommons.org/timeline.jsp?day_of_9/11=dick...   The
         Vice President’s Residence. [Source: David Bohrer/ White House] Just before 7:00 a.m., Vice President Dick
         Cheney  sits in the library of the vice president’s residence at the Naval  Observatory in Washington,
         DC, for his regular CIA briefing.  
      911research.wtc7.net/disinfo/alibis/cheney.html   Dick
         Cheney Cover Stories of the People in Charge Vice President Dick Cheney
         was in the White House during the attack. He said he learned of the attack from a clerical secretary.  
       
        www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ibdl2OogFPI   NBC
         Meet The Press with Tim Russert .... Dick Cheney's first appearance in public five days
         after 9/11. Sunday 9/16/2001 WRC 10:30 to 11:30 am  
          www.infowars.com/inside-job-cheney-reportedly...   This
          article originally appeared in the Infowars Underground Insider  newsletter! Not subscribed? Join now!. Official White House
         photographs  taken on the morning of September 11, 2001, recently released by the  National Archives, have raised further
         questions about Vice President Dick Cheney’s role in the terrorist operation.  
          washingtonsblog.com/2013/03/cheney-admits-that-he-lied...   Cheney
         Admits that He Lied about 9/11. ... “The World According to Dick Cheney
         ... Cheney acted as if he was the president on 9/11. * Cheney lied about
         numerous ...  
          www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3174018/Never-seen...  These never-before-seen images capture then-Vice President Dick
         Cheney and other officials' reactions to the 9/11 attacks, which saw two hijacked planes
         crash into New York's Twin Towers.  
          rense.com/general95/cheney_dev.html   Cheney,
         9/11- More Uncomfortable Facts ... "The former US vice-president Dick Cheney
         ordered the CIA conceal a highly secret counter-terrorist programme from ...  
        
      
      
    
   
                 
   
   
      
      
         
                                               ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________   The VICE File: Dick Cheney Declassified                                                         By Tom Blanton and Nate Jones                                                                Oscar-worthy Documents on the Dark Side, from Cheyenne to Baghdad            Washington D.C., February 22, 2019  – The movie VICE, nominated for eight Academy Awards including
         the best  picture Oscar, shows on screen several documents obtained through the  Freedom of Information Act. Those documents
         relate to then-Vice  President Dick Cheney’s meetings with oil company lobbyists discussing  potential drilling in Iraq.
         But at least a dozen other declassified  records deserve screen time before Sunday’s Oscars show, according to  the
         National Security Archive’s publication today of primary sources  from Cheney’s checkered career.   
         The documents show how Cheney built a rap sheet for drunk driving and  arranged draft deferments in the
         1960s, pitched in on President Gerald  R. Ford’s unsuccessful veto of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in  1974,
         helped undermine investigations of CIA scandals in 1975, excused  President Ronald Reagan’s Iran-contra misdeeds in
         1987, mistakenly  distrusted Gorbachev and slowed the end of the Cold War in 1989,  promoted the global hegemon role for the
         U.S. in 1992, hid his work with  oil companies in 2001 to set energy policy, endorsed torture and  warrantless surveillance
         in the 2000s, played a leading role in trashing  Iraq and the Middle East from the Iraq invasion in 2003 to the present, 
         mysteriously went whole days at the White House without his Vice  President’s office generating any saved e-mail, and
         presented a danger  to civilians whether they were armed or not by shooting his hunting  partner in 2006.   
         Common themes emerge from the documents, including Cheney’s  long-standing commitment to defending
         and expanding presidential power,  especially on national security matters, a predilection for the “dark  side”
         in CIA operations from the scandals of the 1970s to the War on  Terror, and his disastrously wrong foreign policy judgment.
         Cheney  explained his intellectual history to reporters in 2005 by saying,  “Watergate and a lot of the things around
         Watergate and Vietnam both  during the ’70s served, I think, to erode the authority I think the  president needs to
         be effective,” and went on to cite the Iran-Contra  congressional committee minority report published below.[1]      The documents posted today provide fascinating context for some of
          Cheney’s most famous moments. After 9/11, on September 16, 2001, Cheney told  NBC’s Tim Russert, “We also have to work, though, sort of the dark  side, if you will. We've got to spend time
         in the shadows in the  intelligence world. A lot of what needs to be done here will have to be  done quietly, without any
         discussion, using sources and methods that are  available to our intelligence agencies, if we're going to be  successful.”
         Just before the invasion of Iraq, on March 16, 2003, Cheney  told Russert that when the United States goes in, “we will,
         in fact, be  greeted as liberators.” The vice president was adamant: “to suggest  that we need several hundred
         thousand troops there after military  operations cease, after the conflict ends, I don’t think is accurate. I  think
         that’s an overstatement.” Cheney’s message proved to be far from  correct. According to a December 2014
         Congressional Research Report  entitled, “The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror  Operations
         Since 9/11,” the United States spent an estimated $815  billion on the Iraq War, including military operations, base
         support,  weapons maintenance, training Iraq security forces, reconstruction,  foreign aid, embassy costs, and veterans’
         health care, while more than  4,410 Americans were killed in action and 31,957 wounded in action  during the fighting in Iraq.[2]     Read the documents  
 Document 01 Selective Service Classification History,
            Richard Bruce Cheney, Selective Service No. 48-13-41-25  9999-00-00  Source:
         Politifact.com (contributed by Caryn Shinske, The Star Ledger) A lengthy Washington
         Post profile  of then-Secretary of Defense Cheney after the first Gulf War included  his explanation that he did not
         serve in Vietnam because, “I had other  priorities in the ’60s than military service.”[3] The military draft classification history of Cheney, published by Politifact,  details those other priorities, showing that beginning in March 1963,  Cheney received five deferments. The first four
         were for “activity in  study” (Cheney attended the University of Wyoming after flunking out of  Yale in June 1962),
         and the fifth, issued in January 1966, was for  “registrant with child … or deferred by reason of extreme hardship
         to  dependents.” As Timothy Noah of Slate pointed  out, “Dedicated students of obstetrics will observe that Elizabeth  Cheney’s birth date [July 28, 1966]
         falls precisely nine months and two  days after the Selective Service publicly revoked its policy of not  drafting childless
         husbands …. Who says government policy can’t affect  human behavior?”[4]  
 
  
  Document 02B Rock Springs,
            Wyoming Police Arrest Card, circa July 27, 1963.  1963-07-27 Dick Cheney’s drunk driving arrests have been a matter of public record
         since at least 2001, when he described to The New Yorker  magazine “a couple of scrapes with the law”
         in his youth and the  Smoking Gun web site published the actual Wyoming police and court  records. Subsequently, in a 2015
         interview with Playboy  Magazine, Cheney recalled that, “I was headed down a bad road after I  had been kicked
         out of Yale. I had been arrested twice for DUI when I  was a 22-year-old.”[5]  Although refusing to discuss the details of the DUIs, he said, “I  didn’t hit anything. There were no accidents
         involved. I was drinking  and driving, and there was no question I was guilty.” According to Bob  Woodward’s account
         in The Commanders, Cheney disclosed the  arrests to the Senate Armed Services Committee in 1989 after his  nomination
         for secretary of defense in a closed confirmation hearing.  According to Woodward, Cheney told the committee that he wanted
         to  disclose the arrests, but committee members stated there was no need to  release the information and subsequently voted
         20-0 to confirm him.[6]  Ironically, the SecDef nomination was only available for Cheney because  the George H.W. Bush administration’s first
         choice, Texas Senator John  Tower, lost his Senate confirmation vote 53-47 in large part due to  allegations of excessive
         drinking. The docket from Cheyenne’s municipal  court shows that Cheney was arrested the first time for “operating
         motor  vehicle while intoxicated and disturbances” in November 1962. As  punishment, Cheney’s license was suspended
         for thirty days and he  forfeited his $150 bail bond. The second time Cheney was arrested for  drunk driving was in July 1963.
         Although there appears to be no  remaining docket of the arrest, a Rock Springs Police Department police  arrest card, which
         includes the code for DWI, “11-44,” shows that Cheney  was arrested and fined $100 for his second driving-while-intoxicated
          conviction.  
  
  Document 03 Donald Rumsfeld
            handwritten notes of September 30, 1974, White House staff meeting.  1974-09-30 In  the wake of Watergate and Richard Nixon’s resignation in August
         1974,  President Gerald R. Ford attempted to set a new open government tone in  the White House, for example inviting reporters
         in to see him toast his  own English muffins for breakfast. Ford’s new chief of staff, former  Illinois congressman
         Donald Rumsfeld (a leading character in VICE as  Cheney’s mentor), had been one of the original sponsors of the 1966
          Freedom of Information Act, and Ford – who himself had voted for FOIA  then – initially wanted to approve the
         new strengthening amendments to  the law passed by Congress in 1974. But heightened concerns about leaks  (driven by Rumsfeld
         and his deputy, Cheney) and arguments that the new  amendments intruded on presidential powers (promoted by Justice  Department
         lawyer Antonin Scalia) persuaded Ford to veto the bill. This  example of handwritten notes of the first White House senior
         staff  meeting presided over by Rumsfeld and Cheney show that a sizable portion  of the meeting focused on Rumsfeld’s
         concern about leaks – exactly at  the moment in September 1974 when Ford was thinking about the FOIA bill.  Other contemporary
         documents quote Scalia’s admonitions to the director  of the CIA and other high-ranking officials that they “should
         move  quickly to make their view [supporting the veto] known directly to the  president.” Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Scalia
         were successful in convincing  Ford to veto the legislation. But they were not successful in blocking  the law. The House
         overrode Ford’s veto 371-31 and the Senate 65-27.  
  
  Document 04 White  House,
            Richard Cheney, White House Chief of Staff, Extracts of  Handwritten Comments on a Draft of the Report to the President on
            the  Commission on CIA Activities within the United States, circa June 1975.  1975-06-00  Source:
          Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library, Richard Cheney Files, Intelligence  Series, Box 7, Folder, "Rockefeller Commission
         Report: Final (1)."  Published in John Prados and Arturo Jimenez-Bacardi, National Security Archive Briefing Book #543 Files  at the Ford Presidential Library show Cheney’s hands-on role in
          protecting the CIA from outside investigations in the wake of multiple  revelations of prior intelligence abuses uncovered
         by Congress and the  media, and downplaying “dark side” activities as merely “improper”  rather than
         illegal. Having succeeded Rumsfeld as White House chief of  staff, Cheney used his power to alter the supposedly independent
         1975  Rockefeller Commission investigation report on the CIA’s domestic  activities. Cheney’s handwritten edits
         to key portions of the report  eliminated a provision that would have allowed CIA employees to report  improper activity to
         the agency’s Inspector General, and removed the  entire treatment of "Alleged Plans to Assassinate Certain Foreign
          Leaders,” replacing it with a brief text asserting that the commission  had not had the time to cover the subject.
         Where the original,  presidentially-appointed Rockefeller Commission text concluded that  several CIA activities, including
         domestic spying, were unlawful,  Cheney’s edits watered down those judgments to describe the actions as  merely “improper.”
         The Rockefeller Commission had flatly described as  wrong the government’s actions of keeping files on, and creating
         lists  of, political dissenters. Cheney's revisions, however, gave the  impression that “many” of these records
         had somehow been inadvertently  created by the application of certain inappropriate “standards.” 
         
  
  Document 05 Minority  Report
            of Members of House and Senate Select Committees on Secret  Military Assistance to Iran and the Nicaraguan Opposition, November
            18,  1987.  1987-11-18 After  his tour in the Nixon White House, Dick Cheney won election to Congress
          from Wyoming, in a campaign memorably reported in VICE featuring his  wife, Lynne Cheney, doing the honors, denouncing bra-burning
         on the  campaign trail while Cheney recovered from the first of his heart  attacks. (Amy Adams has a Best Supporting Actress
         Oscar nomination for  her troubles.) Cheney quickly rose in the Republican leadership, who in  1987 assigned him a coveted
         spot on the joint House and Senate  investigation of the Iran-Contra affair that had cost President Reagan  the greatest one-month
         decline in approval ratings in Gallup Poll  history. While serving on the committee, Cheney praised serial  prevaricator Oliver
         North (eventually convicted of three felonies, now  serving as president of the National Rifle Association) as “the
         most  effective and impressive witness certainly this committee has heard.”[7]  At the conclusion of the hearings, Cheney, five other House  Republicans, and two Senate Republicans issued a minority report
          (largely authored by committee staffer Michael J. Malbin, a political  science professor) disputing the majority conclusions.
         Warren Rudman,  the Republican vice chairman of the Senate side of the investigation,  called Cheney’s Minority Report
         “pathetic” and paraphrased an Adlai  Stevenson quip, stating, “this particular report is one in which the
          editors separated the wheat from the chaff and, unfortunately, it  printed the chaff.”[8]  The Minority Report described the bipartisan Majority Report as  “hysterical” and insisted that although “President
         Reagan and his staff  made mistakes in the Iran-Contra affair,” they were merely “mistakes in  judgment, and nothing
         more. There was no constitutional crisis, no  systematic disrespect for the 'rule of law,' no grand conspiracy, and no  administration-wide
         dishonesty or cover-up.” Cheney’s view of unbridled  executive power is clearly evident in the Minority Report.
         Even as the  report acknowledged that Reagan violated the 1984 Bolan amendments by  raising third-party funds for the Contras,
         it reached the conclusion  that the President was allowed to break this law because, “we are firmly  convinced that
         the Constitution protects such diplomacy by the  president or by any of his designated agents —whether on the NSC staff,
          State Department or anywhere else.”  
  
  Document 06 “Arnold
             Kanter/Robert D. Blackwill, Memorandum for Brent Scowcroft, “Possible  Initiatives in the Context of Malta,”
            November 24, 1989.  1989-11-24  Source:
          George H.W. Bush Presidential Library; National Security Council Files;  Kanter, Arnold Files; Subject File; Summit (Malta)
         – November 1989 [5];  OA/ID Number: CF00770-022 President  George H.W.
         Bush appointed Dick Cheney as secretary of defense after  Bush’s first choice, John Tower, lost his Senate confirmation
         vote due  to allegations of alcoholism and other improprieties. The Bush team in  many ways represented the coming of the
         “hawks” after the Reagan “doves”  who had negotiated elimination of intermediate-range nuclear missiles
          in 1987. Bush resented Gorbachev’s international popularity (and  Reagan’s) and defined his strategic mission
         as “Getting Ahead of  Gorbachev” (in the words of one key memo in spring 1989), rather than  understanding the
         Soviet leader’s unilateral offers as an arms race in  reverse.[9]  One of Cheney’s greatest legacies in public office is his leading role  in the failure to capitalize on Gorbachev’s
         disarmament proposals, which  were very much in the interests of U.S. national security. Russia today  possesses tens of thousands
         of tactical nuclear weapons (as does the  U.S.) that Gorbachev was willing to reduce, but Cheney stood in the way.  Even among
         the Bush hawks, Cheney stood out as “the most skeptical,”  according to national security adviser Brent Scowcroft,
         “holding the  view that the changes [in Moscow] were primarily cosmetic and we should  essentially do nothing.”[10]
  As  secretary of defense, Cheney served as a negative check against all of  Bush’s attempts to come up with
         arms control initiatives that would  match what Gorbachev was offering, until it was almost too late, in  September 1991,
         after the hardline coup against Gorbachev had failed,  when Bush unilaterally removed tactical nuclear weapons from U.S. ships
          (along with several other de-escalations) and Gorbachev reciprocated.  The Soviet leader had offered exactly this move two
         years earlier, at  the Malta summit, but Cheney’s recalcitrance and misjudgment of  Gorbachev prevented any progress.
         This document is one of hundreds of  examples in the record of Cheney’s obstructionism: a November 1989  memorandum
         from National Security Council staffers Arnold Kanter and  Robert Blackwill (part of a series in the Kanter files of ideas
         for arms  control initiatives) that comments “Reading between the lines of  today’s meeting, it appears as though
         Cheney and [Colin] Powell may  resist all efforts to advance any concrete ideas or initiatives [for  arms reductions] at Malta.
         They are innately suspicious of any such  approach … Cheney is said to believe that our effort to assess possible 
         initiatives is a ‘bad idea.’”  
  
  Document 07 “FY  94-98
            Defense Planning Guidance Sections for Comment,” from Dale A.  Vesser to Secretaries of the Military Departments, Chairman
            of the Joint  Chiefs of Staff, Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Assistant  Secretary of Defense for Program Analysis
            and Evaluation, and  Comptroller of the Department of Defense, February 18, 1992.  1992-02-18  Source:
          Department of Defense Mandatory Declassification Review request.  Published in William Burr, “’Prevent the Reemergence
         of a New Rival’:  The Making of the Cheney Regional Defense Strategy 1991-1992,” National Security Archive Briefing Book 245 From  February to May 1992, Secretary of Defense Cheney, who portrayed  himself
         as a “[s]elf-described and proud of it hawk… who never met a  weapons system he didn’t vote for,”[11]  oversaw the completion of the first post-Cold War Defense Planning  Guidance. According to the detailed account by James
         Mann in a chapter  titled “Death of an Empire, Birth of a Vision” in his book Rise of The Vulcans,[12]  the lead author was Zalmay Khalilzad (now President Trump’s envoy to  Afghanistan, but then an assistant to defense
         undersecretary for policy  Paul Wolfowitz).
  On March 8, 1992, a leaked draft of the document made front-page headlines
         in The New York Times, “U.S.  Strategy Plan Calls for Ensuring No Rivals Develop.” Wolfowitz and his
          drafters, led by I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, recast the document so that  it would pass public scrutiny while meeting
         Cheney's requirements for a  strategy of military supremacy. In a March 31, 1992, cover memo of a draft,  Libby wrote to Cheney that the latest draft had softened the phrases  about acting “unilaterally” and “alone”
         to such phrasings as “with only  limited additional help.” Foreshadowing 2003 Iraq War’s “Coalition of the Willing,”  Libby justified the changes to Cheney by stating, “we believe these  formulations are more defensible”
         because the U.S. would always “have at  least political support from some limited number of countries.” Below
          his signature approving a May draft of the document, Wolfowitz wrote, “Scooter and his folks have done a remarkable job. We have never had a Defense Guidance this ambitious before.”
  Although the Department of Defense’s release of these documents has been fragmentary, the National Security
         Archive has catalogued and analyzed every available draft of the guidance, including its official unclassified version.  Expert Freedom of Information Act requesters will note that many  sections have been blacked out, citing the pre-decisional
         Exemption  Five. The 2016 FOIA Improvement Act Amendments have now forbidden such  redactions for documents older than twenty-five
         years.  
  
  Document 08 “Iraqi
            Oilfields and Exploration Blocks,” and “Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts as of 5 March 2001.”  2001-03-05  Source:
         Sierra Club and Judicial Watch FOIA lawsuit Despite oil industry denials to Congress
         and Cheney’s claims of executive privilege–which led to a lawsuit that ultimately reached the Supreme Court–White House visitor logs revealed  that Cheney’s Energy Policy Task Force met with approximately 300  groups and individuals from February to April 2001.
         The vast majority of  these meetings were with representatives of the fossil fuels industry.  Among the recommendations produced by  the Task Force in May 2001 was the recommendation to “support  initiatives by Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Algeria, Qatar,
         the UAE, and other  suppliers to open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign  investment.” Although not mentioned
         in the official report, Energy  Policy Task Force documents won by a Sierra Club and Judicial Watch FOIA  lawsuit–and
         featured in VICE–included a map of Iraqi oilfields,  pipelines, refineries, and terminals and charts of Iraqi oil and
         gas  projects.  
  
  Document 09 “Conflicting
            Evidence” on VICE’s 9/11 account  2004-07-22 The  public has yet to see the full record of President George W. Bush’s
         and  Vice President Dick Cheney’s meeting with the 9/11 Commission. The two  agreed to meet with the Commission only
         if there was no recording or  formal transcription of the session, and if the commissioners met the  two together, not individually.
         The Commission Report cites the  testimony of every other key actor as an “interview,” but uniquely calls  the
         Bush and Cheney discussion the “President Bush and Vice President  Cheney meeting.” Commission Chairmen Thomas
         Kean and Lee Hamilton have  written that the Bush-Cheney refusal to be interviewed separately and  insistence that no formal
         recording or transcription be made was “tied  to their view of presidential privilege.”[13]  To this day, neither the Commission nor the administration’s notes of  the meeting are available to the public. The
         9/11 Commission documents  are held by the U.S. National Archives, which states, “Because the Commission was part of the legislative branch its records are not subject to the Freedom of Information
         Act.”
  According  to the 9/11 Commission, after watching the second plane strike the  World Trade Center,
         Cheney entered an underground tunnel leading to the  White House shelter at 9:37 A.M. There, Cheney took charge. One of the
          issues that would come up about his role at the time had to do with the  authorization to shoot down United Flight 93 and
         other potentially  hijacked aircraft. The Commission’s report found “conflicting evidence”  as to who issued
         the orders. Cheney has stated that the President  authorized rules of engagement of the combat air patrol over Washington
          during a phone call with the vice president at just after 10:00 A.M. The  president told the Commission at its sole meeting
         with him–Dick Cheney  listening at his side–that he recalled such a conversation and that “it  reminded
         him of when he had been an interceptor pilot.” Whatever the  substance of the conversation, Scooter Libby recalls that
         in a call with  the Defense Department minutes later, Cheney authorized military  aircraft to engage Flight 93 “in about
         the time it takes a batter to  decide to swing.” After Cheney’s authorization, White House Deputy Chief  of Staff
         Joshua Bolten approached Cheney and suggested that the vice  president “get in touch with the President and confirm
         the engage  order.”  
  
  Document 10 CIA Memorandum
            for the Record, Subject: Review of Interrogation Program on 29 July 2003, August 5, 2003.  2003-08-05  Source:
         CIA Freedom of Information Act release, 2014/09/11 C06238939 The  CIA’s
         embrace of torture after 9/11 as standard treatment for suspected  terrorists is well documented, not least in the massive
         Senate  Intelligence Committee report declassified in 2014 that details all the  ways the CIA lied to themselves and their
         superiors about torture’s  effectiveness.[14]  Less well documented is then-Vice President Dick Cheney’s leading role  in justifying and supporting the torture program.
         This CIA memo from  2003 was one of the exhibits published by a group of former CIA officers  under the rubric “CIA
         Saved Lives” but, as Georgetown Law professor  David Cole commented, the CIA officers intended these records to be 
         “exculpatory” in the sense that they show CIA did not act on its own,  since the White House and Justice Department
         approved, but in fact they  are arguably “inculpatory” since they show so many other senior  officials involved.[15]  This White House meeting is one of a sequence, as President George W.  Bush or his spokespeople or other government officials
         asserted that the  U.S. was treating detainees “humanely,” and CIA Director George Tenet,  who knew better, sought
         White House assurances his people were not being  left out on a limb. What is striking about this July 29, 2003, meeting 
         is the role Cheney plays. After Tenet and his counsel Scott Muller open  the meeting and Attorney General John Ashcroft asserts
         his total support  for the program, it is Cheney who asks how the media could have gotten  the impression that “stress
         and duress” techniques are prohibited. When  the number of waterboarding sessions administered to 9/11 planner Khalid
          Sheik Mohammed is mentioned (119), it is Cheney who remarks that KSM  was a “tough customer.” When Tenet asks
         to make sure CIA is carrying out  administration policy, “not merely acting lawfully,” it is Cheney who  reassures
         him.  
  
  Document 11 Office of Special
            Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald, Re: United States v. I. Lewis Libby, January 23, 2006.  2006-01-23 Then-Vice  President
         Cheney’s chief of staff, Scooter Libby (a lead author of the  1992 Defense Policy Guidance) was caught up in a special
         counsel  investigation in 2005 over the issue of who leaked the covert identity  of CIA operative Valerie Plame. The details
         of the story are far too  convoluted to spell out here, involving Plame’s husband, Joe Wilson, and  faked intelligence
         justifying the invasion of Iraq, but the  second-to-last paragraph of this letter to Libby’s lawyers from the  special
         counsel contained the bombshell: “In an abundance of caution, we  advise you that we have learned that not all email
         of the Office of  Vice President and the Executive Office of President for certain time  periods in 2003 was preserved through
         the normal archiving process of  the White House computer system.” By April 2007, the public interest  group Citizens
         for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) had  found a whistleblower alleging as many as five million emails had
         gone  missing. By September 2007, both the National Security Archive and CREW  had sued the White House to compel recovery
         of emails; and in 2009 the  Obama administration not only settled the lawsuits but recovered as many  as 22 million emails
         that had been missing from earlier archiving  efforts.[16]  Entire days in 2003 (exactly the period of the invasion of Iraq) had  featured zero e-mails from the Office of the Vice
         President in the  inventory of the White House e-mail system. When Presidential Records  Act restrictions on George W. Bush
         documents elapse in 2021, the missing  emails will no doubt rank at the top of the list for Freedom of  Information Act requests.[17]  
 
  
  Document 12B Kenedy County
            Sheriff’s Department Incident Report, February 15, 2006.  2006-02-15 On  February 11, 2006, Dick Cheney accidentally shot his hunting partner,  Harry
         Whittington, in the face, on a ranch in Texas. Within days, given  the media interest, the local sheriff released an incident
         report, and  the Smoking Gun web site published the document. Although the movie VICE  depicts Cheney shooting Whittington
         from the back of an automobile,  Whittington stated in a recent interview  that the incident happened when the hunting party was on foot,  following dogs which flushed the quail. After a bird flew
         into the air,  Cheney, according to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Hunting Accident and  Incident Report, “swung on a
         bird and fired striking Whittington in the  face, neck and chest at approximately 30 yards.” Cheney shot Whittington
          with a 28-gauge Perazzi Brescia shotgun loaded with birdshot. The  incident occurred on Saturday, February 11, but the Kenedy
         County  Sheriff’s Department Incident Report states that neither Cheney nor the  other witnesses were interviewed until
         the next day, February 12. The  owner of the ranch, prominent Republican activist and former Ambassador  to Great Britain
         Anne Armstrong, told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times that  Cheney had been involved in a hunting accident at 11:00
         AM on February  12, 2006. The White House did not announce the incident until the  afternoon of February 12. The Texas Parks
         and Wildlife Department  released a Hunting Accident and Incident Report on February 13. The  Kenedy County Sheriff’s
         Department released its Incident Report on  February 16. The statements and affidavits of the hunting party have not  been
         released to the public.                                     
                                                 
                                 NOTES  [1] Richard W. Stevenson and Adam Liptak, “Cheney Defends Eavesdropping Without Warrants,” The New York Times, December 21, 2005.   [2] Amy Belasco, “The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11,” Congressional Research Service, December 9, 2014.  Posted at Federation of American Scientists.   [3] Phil McCombs, “The Unsettling Calm of Dick Cheney,” The Washington Post, April 3, 1991.   [4] Timothy Noah, “Elizabeth Cheney, Deferment Baby,” Slate, March 18, 2004.   [5] See James Rosen, “The April 2015 Playboy Interview with Dick Cheney,” March 1, 2015.   [6] Bob Woodward, The Commanders (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991), p. 70. 
          [7] See Sean Wilentz, “Mr. Cheney’s Minority Report,” The New York Times, July 9, 2007.  North’s convictions were later vacated on a technicality.   [8] See George Lardner, “GOP Minority Denounces Panel Findings as ‘Hysterical,’” Washington Post, November 19, 1987.   [9]  For extensive detail on the Bush administration’s characteristic  insecurity vis-a-vis Gorbachev in 1989, see Thomas
         Blanton, “U.S. Policy  and the Revolutions of 1989,” in Svetlana Savranskaya, Thomas Blanton,  and Vladislav Zubok,
         ‘Masterpieces of History’: The Peaceful End of the Cold War in Europe 1989 (Budapest/New York: CEU Press,
         2010.   [10] See George Bush and Brent Scowcroft, A World Transformed (New York: Knopf, 1998), p. 44.   [11] Address to the American Enterprise Institute Forum, February 21, 1991.   [12] See James Mann, Rise of the Vulcans: The History of Bush’s War Cabinet (New York: Viking Penguin, 2004) pp.
         198-215.   [13] See Thomas H. Kean and Lee H. Hamilton with Benjamin Rhodes, Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9/11 Commission,
         (New York: Knopf, 2006), p. 207.   [14] See National Security Archive Briefing Book No. 497, “Torture Report Finally Released.”   [15] See David Cole, “’New Torture Files’: Declassified Memos Detail Roles of Bush White House and DOJ Officials Who Conspired to Approve Torture,” Just Security, March 2, 2015.   [16] See “National Security Archive and White House Reach Agreement for Restoration of Missing Bush White House E-mails,” December 14, 2009; for the back story, see “White House Admits No Back-Up Tapes for E-mail Before October 2003.”   [17] See Nina Burleigh, “The George W. Bush White House ‘Lost’ 22 Million Emails,” Newsweek, September 12, 2016.                     
                         
      
    
   
                 
   
   
                 
   
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