Just in time for President Obama’s speech on Afghanistan, John Kerry and the Democratic staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee are revisiting an old canard in the War on Terror.
In a report released yesterday–just in time for the Sunday papers and talk shows– the panel’s Democratic majority repeats claims that Osama bin Laden was “within our grasp” at Tora Bora in December 2001, when U.S. military leaders made the decision not to pursue him with massive force.
And, if you believe Mr. Kerry’s narrative, we’re still paying the price for that mistake today. Surviving to fight another day, bin Laden’s escape “laid the foundation for today’s reinvigorated Afghan insurgency,” and inflamed the internal strife which threatens neighboring Pakistan. As the Associated Press reports:
“Removing the al-Qaida leader from the battlefield eight years ago would not have eliminated the worldwide extremist threat,” the report says. “But the decisions that opened the door for his escape to Pakistan allowed bin Laden to emerge as a potent symbolic figure who continues to attract a steady flow of money and inspire fanatics worldwide. The failure to finish the job represents a lost opportunity that forever altered the course of the conflict in Afghanistan and the future of international terrorism.”
The report states categorically that bin Laden was hiding in Tora Bora when the U.S. had the means to mount a rapid assault with several thousand troops at least. It says that a review of existing literature, unclassified government records and interviews with central participants “removes any lingering doubts and makes it clear that Osama bin Laden was within our grasp at Tora Bora.”
On or about Dec. 16, 2001, bin Laden and bodyguards “walked unmolested out of Tora Bora and disappeared into Pakistan’s unregulated tribal area,” where he is still believed to be based, the report says.
While  the AP clearly accepts the committee’s version of events, more careful  readers will note that the Senate report was carefully crafted to  endorse Mr. Kerry’s long-held views. While committee members (and  staffers) have security clearances–and access to classified  information–their assessment was largely based on unclassified  government records and other open sources. 
Why does that matter?  Because the intelligence record on bin Laden’s presence at Tora Bora is  far less conclusive. While a former Delta Force commander (who  participated in the battle) claims to have advanced within 2,000 yards  of bin Laden’s suspected position, Al Qaida fighters who were later  captured said their leader was only in the area for only a short time,  and departed before the main battle began. Intelligence summaries  prepared after the battle have raised similar questions about how long  bin Laden was at Tora Bora and the possibility that he was never “in our  grasp.” 
Similarly, claims about bin Laden’s radio chatter at  Tora Bora are based on the opinions of a CIA expert who was with U.S.  forces. How does the expert’s claims stack up against NSA analysis of  the traffic? Readers of the report will never know, since Kerry’s  staffers never bothered to consult the world’s premier SIGINT agency or  if they did, NSA’s conclusions never made the final report. 
It’s  also worth noting that some of the “sources” cited in the report have  their own axe to grind with the Bush Administration and the military  chain-of-command. The Delta operative, who uses the pen name “Dalton  Fury” wrote a book that is highly critical of how military commanders  handled operations at Tora Bora. A CIA paramilitary officer–also  present for the operation–reached the same conclusion, and emerges as  another primary source for the Kerry report. 
Meanwhile, the  assessment is less charitable towards key players who changed their  minds, namely retired Marine Corps Lieutenant General Mike DeLong, who  served as the Deputy Commander at CENTCOM under General Tommy Franks.  While noting that General DeLong initially supported claims about bin  Laden’s presence at Tora Bora, the report also hints that the former  flag officer’s later views may have been influenced by politics. The  Senate study observes that DeLong’s change-of-heart came just before the  2004 presidential election, and only weeks after General Franks  published similar claims about Tora Bora. 
But there’s also the  possibility that DeLong simply revised his position after reconsidering  what he knew as the battle unfolded–and what he subsequently learned  from available reporting. As he told Senate staffers in an interview:
‘‘What  I put in the book was what the intel said at the time,’’ he said. ‘‘The  intel is not always right. I read it that he was there. We even heard  that he was injured. Later intel was that he may or may not have been  there. Did anybody have eyeballs on him? No. The intel stated that he  was there at the time, but we got shot in the face by bad intel many  times.’’
Obviously, both DeLong and his former boss,  General Franks, have a dog in the fight, trying to preserve their  reputations against the pull of both history and politics. But the same  holds true for Mr. Kerry. Five years ago, he tried to indict George W.  Bush for “failing” to get bin Laden, but that issue never resonated with  the American public. Now, as a Democratic president prepares to justify  a major troop increase in Afghanistan, Senator Kerry finds it  convenient to (once again) blame his political rival, insisting that the  war against Al Qaida could have been won at Tora Bora in December 2001.  
Naturally, that theory has more holes that a block of Swiss. Al  Qaida has managed to muddle along for the past eight years, despite long  stretches when bin Laden was incommunicado–thanks largely to U.S.  military pressure. While the terror leader remains an inspirational  figure among radical Islamists, but there is ample reason to believe  that bin Laden’s movement would have survived his demise. 
Indeed,  post 9-11 attacks in locations as diverse as Bali, Madrid, London and  Fort Hood illustrate that terror splinter cells and “lone wolves” may  pose the greatest threat to western security, regardless of Al Qaida’s  current status, or that of its founding father.
Was an opportunity  missed at Tora Bora? Probably. But our inability to “get” bin Laden at  that moment, in the snowy mountains along the Afghan-Pakistan  border–was not a decisive failure, a mistake that doomed our effort, as  Mr. Kerry would suggest. Truth is, the war against our Islamic  terrorists will continue long after bin Laden is gone, regardless of  when that occurs. 
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As part of its assessment, the Senate  report claims that the “vast array of American military power, from  sniper teams to the most mobile divisions of the Army and Marine Corps,”  was kept on the sidelines. But that ignores some rather inconvenient  facts; the window of opportunity at Tora Bora was relatively narrow, and  secondly, it takes considerable effort to transport thousands of troops  (and required logistics) high into the mountainous terrain of the  Afghan border region. Preparations for the kind of battle envisioned by  Kerry and his armchair strategists would have taken weeks–and provided a  clear tip-off for bin Laden and his entourage. By the time that force  was assembled, the terror leader would have been long gone. 
But don’t tell that to the military experts on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. 
ADDENDUM:  The Wall Street Journal reminds us that  Mr. Kerry was actually against more troops for the Tora Bora campaign  back in 2001, telling CNN’s Larry King that the strategy then in place  was “the best way to protect the troops and sort of minimalize the  proximity, if you will.”  That means Kerry is now in the awkward  position of supporting a troop surge for Tora Bora, eight years after he  was against it.
Sound familiar?
