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Over at National Review online, Andrew McCarthy has an superb piece on a bit of fraud being  perpetuated on the American people by the Obama Administration.  And  no, he’s not talking about the gun-control crusade or the green energy  jobs scam.  Mr. McCarthy is referring to the administration’s  “investigation” of the Boston Marathon bombing, and the surviving  suspect, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.  As he describes it, recent revelations  about additional plots are little more than distractions, aimed at  diverting public attention away from the government’s handling of the  case:
Unlike you, federal government officials are immune from charges of fraud .  The executive branch, vested with all of the government’s prosecutorial  authority and discretion, is not going to investigate its own  operatives for carrying out its own mendacious policies.
That is the story of last week’s Boston Marathon bombing and the frantic efforts of the bombers, the brothers Tsarnaev,  to evade capture, shoot it out with police (one of whom they killed,  and another of whom they wounded), and — we’re now told — detonate more  bombs in Times Square.
The Times  Square non-attack is quite interesting. The specter of it, projected in  the immediate wake of the Marathon murders and maimings, is  horrific . . . so horrific that the government, in leaking this tidbit  from its botched interrogation of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, knew that news  media were certain to lead their broadcasts with it. The press would  never wonder why they, and thus we, were being told about it.    
Mind you, there is nothing inappropriate about government officials’ speaking about matters on thepublic record — such as the allegations lodged in criminal complaints. But the Times Square non-attack is not mentioned in the complaint filed against Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. In fact, the complaint includes no information from Tsarnaev’s interrogation.
Yet somehow the airwaves are now full of startling revelations from his Miranda-aborted  16-hour post-arrest interview, including not least his confession, and,  of course, his assurance, as Allah is his witness, that no one other  than he and his Svengali older brother — and certainly no foreign  Islamic terrorist organization — had anything to do with their terror  spree.
And the reason for these  machinations?  According to Mr. McCarthy–a former federal prosecutor  who won convictions against jihadists in the 1993 World Trade Center  attack–the Obama Administration is desperate to convince the public  (and its friends in the media) that Islamic terror threats can be  handled through the criminal justice system.  No need to classify the  younger Tsarnaev as an enemy combatant and use intelligence  interrogation methods to extract information from him.  Just read him  his Miranda rights and let him stop talking–on the advice of counsel,  naturally.
In his piece, McCarthy thoroughly  obliterates the various arguments accompanying Team Obama’s handling of  the case.  For starters, he notes that the “public safety exception”  that allows a slight delay in Mirandizing a suspect does not grant 48  hours of free-wheeling interrogation.  In fact, the countdown to reading  a defendant his rights begins as soon as he is rendered defenseless.   So, FBI agents and intelligence operatives had a very narrow window for  interrogating Dzhokhar, and it began when he climbed out of that boat  in suburban Boston.  
Secondly, Mr. McCarthy observes that  it was President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder who triggered  the rush to Mirandize the terror suspect.  Representatives from the U.S.  Attorneys office in Boston rushed into federal court last Sunday night  to file charges against Dzhokhar.  That begs a rather obvious question–why?–but  it also mandated that Tsarnaev be informed of his rights.  When that  federal magistrate arrived at Dzhokhar’s hospital room, she was merely  concluding a chain of events put into motion at the highest levels of  American government.  
But the most telling bit of deception  may be found in the third “rationale” offered by the Obama  Administration, namely that we had gained all of the vital intelligence  from Dzhokhar by the time that magistrate advised him of his  constitutional rights.   
In fact, it seems rather obvious that  the government is managing the entire affair to fit a certain template:  the Tsarnaev brothers acted on their own; they became radicalized here  in the United States, and there is no evidence of a wider conspiracy  involving terrorist elements in their native Chechnya.  
So far, that effort has produced only  mixed results.  While the fawning U.S. press corps is ready to report  any disclosure from the administration–even those meant to mislead and  distract–certain inconvenient facts keep popping up.  First of all,  there are the warnings we received about Tamerlan Tsarnaev from Russian  security services more than two years ago.  We have subsequently learned  that the Russians notified their FBI and CIA counterparts about  Tamerlan’s radical activities on at least two different occasions.  FBI  agents even interviewed the over Tsarnaev brother, at Moscow’s request,  but found nothing to suggest he had become radicalized or posed a  security threat.  
Apparently, the feds never bothered  to look at his social media postings, which included an assortment of  jihadist videos and comments suggesting an affinity for Al Qaida.  There  have also been reports that Russian security officers witnessed  Tamerlan in contact with suspected terrorists on six different occasions  during an extended visit to Dagestan last year.  It is unclear if that  information was shared with American intelligence and the FBI and we’ve  learned more recently that the Russians monitored phone conversations  where Tamerlan vaguely discussed jihad with his mother.  They also  recorded her conversations with another man in southern Russia, who is  now under investigation by U.S. authorities.   Unfortunately, Moscow  didn’t pass along the results of its wiretaps until this week. 
That raises a very disturbing  question that may explain some of the legal chicanery now on display.   Why didn’t the U.S.’s vast signals intelligence (SIGINT) network detect  these same calls?  The National Security Agency (NSA) doesn’t rely on  the Russians to monitor communications between Muslim terrorists  operating in the Caucasus regions.  With its global resources, NSA and  its partners are quite capable of handling the task, but there has been  no confirmation that our communications intelligence (COMINT) detected  these calls, let alone reported them.  
If that was the case, then the  Tsarnaev case represents a major intelligence failure.  True, some calls  are missed, and others are never isolated among the flood of  communications intercepted by NSA each day.  But the western SIGINT  community has been much more proficient at capturing, translating and  analyzing terror-related communications in recent years; in fact, many  of our counter-terrorism successes began with intercepted phone calls or  e-mails that sent other intel operatives (and law enforcement) in the  right direction.  
Based on the limited information that  keeps trickling out, it seems increasingly likely that the Tsarnaev  brothers were foot soldiers in a wider terrorist conspiracy, one that  was probably rooted in Chechnya and Dagestan.  Putting the plan into  motion required some sort of communication between Tamerlan and his  handlers, but there is no record (so far) of phone calls, e-mails or  other contacts that were intercepted by western intelligence.  That  could indicate that the terrorists found some way to beat U.S.  surveillance.  If that actually happened, the potential repercussions  are positively frightening.  
On the other hand, there is the  equally disturbing scenario that a probe of the Tsarnaev brothers was  undone by bureaucratic bungling and political correctness.  Given  Tamerlan’s status as a permanent resident alien, any extended monitoring  of his communications would have required a FISA warrant at some point.   Yet, there is no record the Obama Justice Department ever sought such  approval, despite persistent warnings from the Russians.  Once again,  the salient question is why? Did we ever pursue a FISA-approved  wiretap against the Tsarnaevs and if we did, why did the bomb plot go  undetected?  Or did someone at DOJ decide to give the matter a pass,  fearing cries of profiling and discrimination if the surveillance effort  was ever disclosed? 
If either of these explanations  proves correct, then a lot of folks in the intel community and at DOJ  need to be fired.  But then again, we’ve never been very good at holding  individuals accountable, no how badly they screw up.  Not a single  intel official was dismissed after 9-11, and high-level administration  officials have been immune in such scandals as Fast and Furious.  
If the Boston bombings case follows a  similar pattern, the future chain of events will go something                                                    
like this.  There will be a few more  articles bemoaning the FBI’s inability to complete its interrogation of  Dzhokhar, followed by defense team leaks about prosecutors refusing to  discuss a potential plea deal.  The case will eventually fade from  public view until the day that Dzhokhar is scheduled to face trial.   Amid all the media speculation about defense strategies, government  evidence and courthouse security, the actual trial will prove  anti-climactic.  As the trial gets underway, the defendant will enter  into a plea deal that spares his life–and prevents the feds from having  to divulge the screw-ups that led to the terror attack–and the  subsequent political maneuvering that denied the collection of needed  intelligence.   
Dzhokhar will eventually emerge from  federal prison in his early 50s, after completing a 30-year “life”  sentence.  By that time, the masterminds of the legal fraud that Andy  McCarthy describes will be dead, and their reputations firmly secured.    At that point, no one will really care about the claims of a former  terrorist, convicted in a case that happened four decades earlier.  Call  it the Benghazi template.  Seven months after terrorists murdered four  Americans at our consulate in that Libyan city, that scandal has been  apparently sealed off, behind a wall of official silence.  A similar  veil is now descending on Boston, but no one seems to notice.  
***
ADDENDUM: In the past 24 hours, two respected figures in the national security establishment, former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, and Representative Mike McCaul, Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, have suggested that others were involved in the marathon bombings.
Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” Mr. McCaul said he believes the Tsarnaev were “trained” to carry out the attack, and their mother played a key role in their radicalization. McCaul said that assessment is based (in part) on the sophistication of their pressure cooker bombs. In a separate interview with the network, Mr. Mukasey offered similar thoughts saying the belief the bombers followed instructions from the internet “doesn’t do it” for him. He also suggested that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could still be questioned for intelligence purposes and that information could be “kept separate” from criminal proceedings.
Excellent idea, but the odds of that happening are approximately zero. Just ask President Obama, or Eric Holder.
***
ADDENDUM: In the past 24 hours, two respected figures in the national security establishment, former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, and Representative Mike McCaul, Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, have suggested that others were involved in the marathon bombings.
Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” Mr. McCaul said he believes the Tsarnaev were “trained” to carry out the attack, and their mother played a key role in their radicalization. McCaul said that assessment is based (in part) on the sophistication of their pressure cooker bombs. In a separate interview with the network, Mr. Mukasey offered similar thoughts saying the belief the bombers followed instructions from the internet “doesn’t do it” for him. He also suggested that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could still be questioned for intelligence purposes and that information could be “kept separate” from criminal proceedings.
Excellent idea, but the odds of that happening are approximately zero. Just ask President Obama, or Eric Holder.
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