Obama takes responsibility for lapses, sets reforms

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama took  ultimate responsibility yesterday for security lapses that  allowed the attempted Christmas Day bombing of a U.S. airliner  and ordered reforms aimed at thwarting future attacks.

Obama outlined the new steps, including tightened passenger  screening and expanded terrorism watchlists, as the White House  released a declassified account of what went wrong leading up  to the Dec. 25 incident in which a Nigerian man allegedly came  close to blowing up a flight from Amsterdam.

With an eye to the potential political fallout over his  administration’s response, Obama again sought to reassure  Americans he was doing everything possible to fix intelligence  faults and beef up security to prevent further attacks.

“I am less interested in passing out blame than I am in  learning from and correcting these mistakes to make us safer.  For ultimately the buck stops with me,” Obama said at the White  House. “As president I have a solemn responsibility to protect  our nation and our people, and when the system fails, it is my  responsibility.”

Addressing Americans about the near-disaster for the second  time in three days, Obama said he was ordering implementation  of reforms to plug the security gaps exposed by the attempted  bombing, including wider distribution of intelligence and  expanded use of body-scanning technology at airports.

The White House report ordered by Obama detailed how spy  agencies failed to connect the dots and head off the attempted  bombing, which authorities have blamed on Umar Farouk  Abdulmutallab, 23, who has been linked to a Yemen-based branch  of al Qaeda.

Abdulmutallab will be arraigned this afternoon in  federal court in downtown Detroit, about 25 miles (40 km) from  the airport where he was taken into custody by FBI agents on  Christmas Day. Abdulmutallab, who will enter a plea at the hearing, faces  six federal counts, including attempted murder and the  attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction, that could bring  a sentence of life in prison.

By releasing the review, Obama may be seeking not only to  assuage public safety concerns but minimize political damage to  his administration before expected congressional committee  hearings on the attempted attack.

Republicans have sought to paint the Democratic president  as weak on national security issues, hoping to score political  points in a midterm election year. Obama had already  acknowledged a security “screw-up” in the incident.

“I worry that the president’s preoccupation with healthcare  and other domestic issues has distracted him from what should  be the fundamental role of our chief executive: keeping our  nation and its citizenry safe from harm,” Republican Senator  John Cornyn said.

With Obama just back this week from his Hawaiian vacation,  counterterrorism has jumped to the top of his agenda, forcing  him into a juggling act with other pressing priorities. The  White House insists he is not being distracted from tackling  double-digit unemployment and overhauling healthcare.

In his latest appearance, Obama kept up pressure on the  intelligence community, which he said failed “to connect and  understand the intelligence that we already had” that would  have uncovered the Christmas Day bomb plot.

The would-be bomber managed to slip through a security  apparatus that was supposed to detect such plots since sweeping  changes were implemented after the Sept. 11, 2001,  hijacked-plane attacks on the United States.

“Although our intelligence community had learned a great  deal about the al Qaida affiliate in Yemen, called al Qaida in  the Arabian Peninsula, that we knew that they sought to strike  the United States and that they were recruiting operatives to  do so, the intelligence community did not aggressively follow  up on and prioritize particular streams of intelligence,” Obama  said.

Abdulmutallab’s name was in a database of about 550,000  with suspected terrorist ties but was never added to a no-fly  list of several thousand people despite information gathered  about him.

Among the intelligence lapses was the fact Abdulmutallab’s  father had gone to the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria and told  officials his son had taken up radical views.

A top Yemeni official said yesterday that Abdulmutallab  was recruited by al Qaeda in London and met a radical American  Muslim cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, in Yemen. Awlaki has been  linked to the gunman charged with killing 13 people at the Fort  Hood army base in Texas in November.

An administration official said Customs and Border  Protection officers had planned to question Abdulmutallab on  arrival in Detroit after finding a record about him in an  intelligence database once the plane was airborne. But the  official stressed the available information would not have been  enough to keep him from boarding the flight in Amsterdam.

Obama ordered measures aimed at improving the collection,  sharing and analyzing of intelligence and at lowering the  threshold for “keeping dangerous people off airplanes.”

“I’m ordering an immediate effort to strengthen the  criteria used to add individuals to our terrorist watchlists,  especially the no-fly list,” he said.