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John Brennan rails on Dick Cheney, explains 'systemic failure'

John Brennan, Obama's top counterterrism aide, offered a strong rebuke of Dick Cheney's criticism and suggested that post-9/11 intelligence-gathering networks still can't bring all the relevant information together.

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William B. Plowman/Meet The Press/AP
John Brennan, President Obama's top terrorism adviser, appears on 'Meet the Press' at the NBC studios Sunday in Washington.

John Brennan, President Obama鈥檚 top terrorism adviser, rallied to the defense of the administration Sunday, taking on critic-in-chief Dick Cheney and explaining the deep-seated 鈥渟ystemic failure鈥 that Obama mentioned in comments last week.

Mr. Obama has come under heavy criticism from Republicans since an attempt to blow up Northwest Flight 253 over Detroit failed on Christmas Day, primarily because the man charged in the incident, Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, was on a US terrorism watch list.

Mr. Cheney has arguably been the most pointed in his criticism of Obama, declaring last week that the president 鈥渋s trying to pretend that we are not at war鈥 by his decision to delay any public comments about the attack for several days and by changing some Bush-era antiterrorism policies.

On NBC鈥檚 鈥Meet the Press鈥 Sunday, Mr. Brennan said the former vice president was either lying or ignorant. "Either the vice president is willfully mischaracterizing this president's position 鈥 both in terms of language he uses, and the actions he's taken 鈥 or he's ignorant of the fact.鈥

Brennan, who noted that he has worked for presidents of both parties, said he was 鈥渄isappointed鈥 by the partisan reaction to the Christmas bombing attempt.

System can't sift the relevant clues

In other ways, however, Sunday marked a dialing back of the partisan rhetoric. Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R) of Michigan, the ranking member of the House intelligence committee and one of the fiercest administration critics in recent days, acknowledged that no terrorist tracking system is perfect.

鈥淚t's a reality [that] it's very, very difficult to stop every single attack,鈥 he said on ABC鈥檚 鈥淭his Week.鈥 鈥淚t doesn't mean that we should stop trying to improve the mechanisms that we put in place.鈥

His comments built upon those of Brennan, who said that the US still doesn鈥檛 have the capacity to sift the most important material from reams of data on potential terrorists.

Speaking on 鈥淭his Week,鈥 Brennan acknowledged the US intelligence agencies had 鈥渁 number of streams of information鈥 about Mr. Abdulmutallab, including a warning from his father and 鈥渓ittle snippets鈥 from Al Qaeda intercepts that mentioned parts of his name and a Nigerian asset. But there was no smoking gun, he added.

The incident showed that the reforms taken after 9/11 have not yet created a system that is 鈥渁ble to put all that information together,鈥 he said.

What's ahead on Capitol Hill

Lawmakers agreed with Brennan and suggested that the issue could be a focus of congressional hearings scheduled for this month.

鈥淚n 2004, we focused on making sure that we were collecting all of the information that we needed to collect,鈥 said Mr. Hoekstra, speaking of post-9/11 reforms.

鈥淭he challenge that we now face is that we are collecting so much information, we are sharing it, we now need to develop the capabilities to do a better job of analysis,鈥 he added.

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