He kept our homeland safe from terrorists.
That is the legacy of John Ashcroft's service as attorney general. No matter what else he achieves in his already tremendously accomplished career, history will remember him for this. Americans owe Ashcroft a great debt of gratitude for the central role he played in securing our neighborhoods and towns in the three years following Sept. 11, 2001.
Unfortunately, statesmen such as John Ashcroft are rare. Like Ronald Reagan, John Ashcroft emerged out of Middle America believing in, and exemplifying, Middle American values. Like Ronald Reagan, his unshakable commitment to these values made him a favorite object of ridicule among the jaded media elites of the Northeastern liberal establishment. Like Ronald Reagan, Ashcroft never backed down.
To measure Ashcroft's success in securing the home front in the war against terrorism, set his record beside a yardstick put down by one of his sharpest critics, outgoing Sen. Bob Graham, the Florida Democrat.
On Feb. 1, 2001, Graham voted against confirming Ashcroft as attorney general. In the months immediately before, and for more than a year after, the 2001 terrorist attacks, Graham himself served in a key national security position as chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. On Feb. 23, 2002, he appeared on CNN's "Novak, Hunt & Shields" and, with all the prestige and authority of his office, confirmed an alarming threat to our domestic security.
Co-host Al Hunt asked Graham: "Mr. Chairman, you have said that another attack on the United States, unfortunately, is probable. Would the source of that, do you think, most likely be the sleepers of al Qaeda, or do you think it's another source?"
Graham answered: "The estimate is that there are 100 or more al Qaeda operatives inside the United States, some who have been here for a considerable period of time, all of whom went through a training process to prepare them to carry out terrorist plots when they were called upon to do so. That probably is the most immediate threat of a terrorist attack against the United States. But there are also maybe a dozen or more other international terrorist organizations, some of which also have agents inside the United States."
It took only 19 al Qaeda sleepers to murder more Americans than died at Pearl Harbor. Sen. Graham told the world on national television he believed more than five times that number of al Qaeda sleepers were still in the United States more than five months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attack.
But we have not suffered another attack.
Given his own assessment of our predicament three years ago, Bob Graham ought to be calling today for a monument to be raised to the attorney general he voted not to confirm.
And what happened to all those terrorists Graham talked about? Were they phantoms -- like the weapons of mass destruction that the CIA (under Bob Graham's congressional oversight) mistakenly believed were stockpiled in Iraq? Continued... |