A senior House Democrat who has been
sharply critical of State Department reporting on terrorism is accusing
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice of denying Congress and the public
important information about the number of incidents. "There appears to
be a pattern in the administration's approach to terrorism data:
favorable facts are revealed while unfavorable facts are suppressed,''
Rep. Henry A. Waxman of California said in a letter to the department's
acting inspector general, Cameron R. Hume. Waxman said that Rice's
predecessor, Colin Powell, had consulted Congress and never sought to
withhold data from the public. The question is "whether political
considerations played a role in Secretary Rice's decision.'' His letter
came after an announcement Monday that the department had decided to
stop publishing an annual statistical account of terror incidents
worldwide, turning the task over to a government center established
last year by Congress - the National Counterterrorism Center. Last
year, the department reported a decline in significant incidents of
terror in 2003 and then isssued a corrected version showing an
increase, The falloff had been used by senior Bush administration
officials to bolster President Bush's claim of success in countering
terrorism. Waxman said at the time that the Bush administration had
"tried to take self-serving political credit'' based on inaccurate
information. "The numbers were off,'' then-Secretary of State Powell
acknowledged. He said "we have identified how we have to do this in
the future.'' [more]
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