Members of the
9/11 Commission, including its executive director
Philip Zelikow, had conflicts of interest, critics allege. Philip Shenon, a reporter for
The New York Times, in a book released in February 2008, entitled
The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation claims that Zelikow had closer ties with the White House than he publicly disclosed and that he tried to influence the
final report in ways that the staff often perceived as limiting the
Bush administration’s responsibility and furthering its anti-
Iraq agenda. According to the book, Zelikow had at least four private conversations with former
White House political director
Karl Rove, and appears to have had many frequent telephone conversations with people in the
White House. The Commission staff kept a record only of calls Zelikow received, but
Government Accountability Office records show his frequent calls to the
456 telephone exchange in the
202 area code used exclusively by the White House. Also, the book states that Zelikow ordered his assistant to stop keeping a log of his calls, although the Commission's general counsel overruled him. Zelikow had pledged to have no contact with Rove and Condoleezza Rice during his work for the 9/11 Commission. The book also reports that some panel staffers believed Zelikow stopped them from submitting a report depicting
Condoleezza Rice's and Bush's performance as "amounting to incompetence or something not far from it". Zelikow has denied discussing the commission's work with Rove and further added "I was not a very popular person in the Bush White House when this was going on" and remarked the staffers were disgruntled. According to Shenon, Rove always feared that a commission report that laid the blame for the
September 11 attacks at the president's doorstep was the one development that could most jeopardize Bush's
2004 re-election. As a result,
White House lawyers attempted to stonewall the creation of the commission and to hamstring its work from the outset. As Shenon reports, when Bush terrorism "czar"
Richard Clarke could no longer be prevented from testifying about his urgent warnings over the summer of 2001 to Rice about the imminent threat of terrorist attack on US soil, White House counsel
Alberto Gonzales and his aides feverishly drafted tough questions and phoned them in to Republican commissioners to undermine Clarke's credibility." According to Shenon, it was this defensive strategy that Zelikow may have been coordinating with the White House. According to Shenon's book, Zelikow attempted to bolster the
Bush administration's false claim of a link between
al-Qaeda and
Iraq by trying to change a 9/11 Commission staff report to state that the terrorist network repeatedly tried to communicate with the government of Saddam Hussein, a claim of cooperation the administration had cited to justify the war in Iraq. Zelikow backed down when the 9/11 Commission staff refused to go along with his attempted change. She also is on the board of United Technologies. Gorelick's firm has agreed to represent
Prince Mohammed al Faisal in the suit by the 9/11 families. The families contend that al Faisal has legal responsibility for the
September 11 attacks.
Henry Kissinger The
White House insisted that it was to appoint the commission's chair, leading some to question the commission's "independence". The initial person appointed to head the commission,
Henry Kissinger, has been accused by many of having been involved in past government cover ups in
South America, including the
overthrow of the
Salvador Allende government in
Chile on September 11, 1973, and of having ongoing business relationships with members of the
Bin Laden family in
Saudi Arabia. Even after Kissinger resigned, the
White House was often cited as having attempted to block the release of information to the
9/11 Commission and for refusing to give interviews without tight conditions attached leading to threats to subpoena. The Bush Administration has further been accused of attempting to derail the commission by giving it one of the smallest independent commission funding levels in recent history ($3 million), and by giving the commission a very short deadline. The White House insists that they have given the commission "unprecedented cooperation". While President Bush and Vice President
Dick Cheney ultimately agreed to testify, they did so only under several conditions: • They would be allowed to testify jointly; • They would not be required to take an oath before testifying; • The testimony would not be recorded electronically or transcribed, and that the only record would be notes taken by one of the commission staffers; • These notes would not be made public. The commission agreed to these conditions, and the president and vice president gave their testimony on April 29. ==Resistance to investigation==