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Original Source: Political Transcript Wire
SECRETARY POWELL HOLDS A NEWS CONFERENCE REGARDING THE STATE DEPARTMENT TERRORISM REPORT
JUNE 22, 2004
SPEAKER: COLIN L. POWELL, U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE
J. COFER BLACK, COORDINATOR FOR COUNTERTERRORISM, STATE DEPARTMENT
JOHN BRENNAN, DIRECTOR, TERRORIST THREAT INTEGRATION CENTER (TTIC) [*] POWELL: Well, good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. Sorry I'm a few minute late.
Before getting into the subject of our first briefing this afternoon on our corrected global terrorism report for 2003, let me talk about another issue, and that is the tragedy that we see on our screens this afternoon indicating that the South Korea hostage in Iraq, Mr. Kim Sun Il was beheaded by the evil terrorists who kidnapped him.
He was an innocent man, there to help the people of Iraq, cut down by senseless barbarism.
We condemn such acts of terrorism against civilians who are there to build a peaceful and democratic Iraq.
We offer our sympathy and condolences to his family. And we stand with the people of South Korea at this time.
As the president said a few moments ago, these evildoers will not stop us from our work. I'm pleased that the South Korean government has been steadfast over the last several days and remains steadfast in the face of this kind of terrorism.
I'm here today to brief you on the corrections that we have made to our Patterns of Global Terrorism Report for 2003.
Let me start out with an observation about the report. The report is mostly a narrative document which goes through patterns and trends of terrorist activities in countries throughout the world and what progress those countries those countries have made and what the pattern looks like within that country.
On balance, it is a good report. The narrative is sound, and we're not changing any of the narrative.
POWELL: Shortly after the report was issued in late April, it came to our attention, principally through the efforts of Congressman Henry Waxman and his staff, that they saw data errors in some of the tables that were in the report and some of the trends that were divined from those data tables.
When I asked my staff about it and we begin looking into it, we discovered that Congressman Waxman and his staff were correct; there were errors.
for the past two weeks now, we have had a major effort underway within the State Department and within the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, the center which accumulates this date, a new organization created last year, an independent organization that reports directly to the director of central intelligence.
And, in earlier years, it was accumulated in a different manner within the CIA.
But the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, the TTIC, and my staff have been hard at work for the past two weeks to get to the bottom of the data error and determine what corrections were appropriate and to make those corrections so we could show those corrections to the American people.
The State Department and the TTIC and, of course, all of us in the administration and the president, take seriously our responsibility to provide the Congress and the American people with the best information and analysis available. And, therefore, I welcome this opportunity to correct the record.
The results of our review, which will be spelled out to you in greater detail in a moment or two, shows that from 2002 to 2003, using the rules that have been in place to analyze incidents and categorize them one way or another, the number of incidents as categorized by our system went up from 198 in 2002 to a corrected number in 2003 that will be explained to you momentarily of 208, a slight rise in the overall number of incidents, both what are called significant events or significant incidents and non-significant incidents that arrive at this total.
POWELL: But the numbers don't tell the full story, the number of incidents. You also have to look at the number of individuals who are killed or injured as a result of these terrorist attacks.
And as we look at those numbers, we find that the number of killed, going from 2002 to 2003, has dropped on an annual basis. But the number of injured have gone up quite a bit, and you'll see that in a moment.
Why? In some cases, a particular instance gives rise to more casualties than another instance. And so you can't expect a direct correlation between the number of incidents and the number of casualties. But we also found computational and accounting errors as we went through the data over the last several weeks, and that also will be explained to you in a moment.
Our effort is to put out the most accurate information we can. And as we go forward from this position, I think as a result of the last two weeks' worth, we have identified how we have to do this in the future, in order to make sure we don't run into this kind of problem again.
We've shared the results of our analysis with Mr. Waxman's staff yesterday, and I'm sure the congressman will be making a statement of his own.
Additional questions were presented to us by Mr. Waxman and his staff as to how we should go forward with this process in the future. And we look forward to working with that committee and other committees of Congress to make sure that we all have a common understanding of what we are trying to accumulate in the way of data from the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, and how we use that data when it comes over to the State Department, so we can put together this annual report.
The annual report is based on what we get from the TTIC in the form of data, but it also depends on analyses that are done at our embassies around the world, the information we get from them, from other government agencies, resulting in this annual report, which is a combination of narrative discussions, of the pattern of terrorism around the world, as well as the actual numbers of incidents and casualties reported under the reporting system.
We recognize that terrorism is a danger that is not going away soon. And even if you looked at the report that was issued on the 29th of April, before we found that there were data errors in it, that report makes it clear that terrorism is alive, it is affecting the entire civilized world, it makes us more determined to go after the perpetrators of terrorism, and I don't think there is any question that that was the import of the original report.
POWELL: The corrected report matter remains the same, and the numbers you'll be able to see for yourself in a few moments.
And so, now it is my pleasure to turn the briefing over to the experts on this matter: Ambassador Cofer Black, my coordinator in the State Department for counterterrorism; and Mr. John Brennan, who is the director of the Terrorism Threat Integration Center reporting directly to the director of central intelligence.
With that, I will turn it over to Cofer and John.
Thank you.
QUESTION: One question.
Why should the American people have confidence in the Terrorist Threat Integration Center which was created to help the government prevent attacks like the September 11th attacks? Why should the American people have confidence it can do that when it was unable to accurately count what happened last year?
POWELL: Well, you will hear in a moment what the problem was. TTIC is a new organization.
And when we found out there was a problem in the data -- and frankly, we have spent the last two weeks going back through years and years of data, and assembling not only the data, but how were things categorized, what system was in place, to see if we could have solid trend analysis over time.
And we discovered gaps in the data, we discovered errors in the way the data was being added up. And over the last two weeks -- this is working seven days a week -- all of the analysts have come together and agreed on what you are about to receive from these two gentlemen.
And this will be the basis upon which the TTIC and the State Department will be doing our work in the future. And we will also be consulting with Congress and any other experts who can help us do a better job.
We have only one goal with this report, and that is to accurately reflect the pattern of terrorism that existed throughout the world during the period of the report. The report is not designed to make our efforts look better or worse, or terrorism look better or worse, but to provide the facts to the American people. And I think the way in which we have responded to this challenge to the report, by coming straight out and saying you're right, it needs correction and it has been corrected, and as soon as this briefing is over, before the afternoon's over, I expect that the corrected information will be in our Web sites and then we'll figure out how to put out errata sheets or additional information that will correct the hard copy versions of the report.
POWELL: So the American people can have confidence in what we are doing and what we have done. This report is inaccurate in the sense that the numbers are off. When you hear the briefing, you will see that they were off, but not off by wild amounts. And the number of wounded is off quite a bit, which is a function, as I said, some calculating errors, as …