http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A15565-2004Mar22.htmlInterviewed on ABC's "Good Morning America" about his book, "Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror," Clarke said this morning that the day after the Sept. 11 attacks, "the president, in a very intimidating way, left us -- me and my staff -- with the clear implication that he wanted us to come back with the word that there was an
Iraqi hand behind 9/11 because they had been planning to do
something about Iraq from before the time they came into office." Clarke said Bush "didn't ask me about al Qaeda. I think they had . . .
a plan from day one that they wanted to do something about Iraq. And while the World Trade Center was still smoldering, while they were still digging bodies out, people in the White House were thinking -- ah,
this gives us the opportunity we've been looking for to go after Iraq." Clarke said that after debating for a week after Sept. 11 whether to attack Iraq or Afghanistan, the administration decided that
"they had to do Afghanistan first" because it was obvious that al Qaeda, which was based in Afghanistan, was behind the attacks. But he said the response "was slow and small" and the Bush administration did not go all out to send troops into Afghanistan and eliminate al Qaeda and bin Laden because it was
holding back a larger effort for Iraq. "We should have put
U.S. special forces in immediately, not many weeks later," Clark told ABC. "U.S. special forces didn't get into the area where bin Laden was for two months, and we tried to have the Afghans do it. You know, basically the
president botched the response to 9/11. He should have gone right after Afghanistan, right after bin Laden. And then he made the
whole war on terrorism so much worse by invading Iraq."