Attorney General Ashcroft and Deputy Attorney General
Thompson Announce
Reorganization and Mobilization of the Nation's Justice
and Law Enforcement Resources
November 8, 2001
ATTY GEN. ASHCROFT: (Applause.) Thank you very
much. Thank you.
Thank you, Deputy Attorney General Thompson. I want to
take this opportunity in front of this unprecedented
audience to thank you -- and I do it in front of people
who have dedicated themselves to service. Your own
dedicated and selfless service to the nation is mirrored
in the lives of these with whom we meet today, and I'm
grateful for it. Your heritage of justice involvement,
spanning several decades now, is a model which I will
seek to follow. You've been a courageous leader of this
department, faithful servant to the president of the
United States, and a dogged advocate of justice. We're
all grateful for your effort. (Applause.)
I took it as a sign that we are making the difficult
adjustments necessary for living with the threat of
terrorism when "Saturday Night Live" decided to
parody one of my press conferences this weekend. I don't
know if you saw it or not -- I didn't -- but I'm told I
was portrayed as urging Americans to go about their
normal lives by doing everyday things like, quote,
"going to the gas mask store."
(Laughter.)
Accepting new realities, it is said, begins with
laughter. Well, just as the American people have had to
accept new challenges, I must now accept that Darrell
Hammond does a reasonably accurate impression of me.
(Laughter.)
I stand in awe here in this great hall, aware of our
predecessors, who have dedicated themselves to the
pursuit of justice. We build on their heritage, the men
and women who were the "trust busters" of the
20th century, who safeguarded our nation's internal
security from fascists and communists; who declared a
legal war on organized crime -- the mafia bosses and
corrupt political machines; and who crusaded for every
American's equality and civil rights. Their victories
built the foundation upon which we now stand.
They helped to secure the liberties we must now safeguard
from terrorism.
The Justice Department today may be more complex, but our
mission must be just as clear as it was for our
predecessors. On Sunday, it will be two months since the
president's words -- in his words, "The nation was
awakened to danger and called to defend freedom by a
terrorist assault on our homeland."
The attacks of September 11th have redefined the mission
of the Department of Justice. Defending our nation and
defending the citizens of America against terrorist
attacks is now our first and overriding priority. To
fulfill this mission, we are devoting all the resources
necessary to eliminate terrorist networks, to prevent
terrorist attacks, and to bring to justice those who kill
Americans in the name of murderous ideologies. We are
engaged in an aggressive arrest and detention campaign of
lawbreakers with a single objective: to get terrorists
off the street before they can harm more Americans.
We have modeled our tactics after a previous Justice
Department fighting a different threat in this same
nation. The Justice Department of Robert F. Kennedy, it
was said, would arrest a mobster for spitting on the
sidewalk if it would help in the fight against organized
crime. In the war on terror, it is the policy of this
Department of Justice to be equally aggressive in
protecting Americans. We will arrest and detain any
suspected terrorist who has violated our laws. Suspects
without links to terrorism or who are not guilty of
violations of the law will not be detained. But
terrorists who are in violation of the law will be
convicted; in some cases they'll be deported; in all
cases they'll be prevented from doing further harm to
Americans.
In the Department of Justice's fight against terrorism,
the American people have been our valued and trusted and
indispensable ally. Our partners in state and law
enforcement have been our eyes and ears and muscle on the
ground.
For two months America has been subjected to constant
terrorist threats based on credibly intelligence. Two
periods of extremely high threat have passed. For two
months we've endured the videotaped tauntings of Osama
bin Laden.
For two months, Americans have had their lives disrupted,
and law enforcement has had to work overtime, to say the
least, through dozens of warnings to law enforcement, a
deliberate campaign of terrorist disruption, tighter
security and potential targets -- tighter security around
potential targets -- and over a thousand arrests and
detention.
This has only made America stronger. It has inspired us.
It has united us. We now know that we can and will
prevail. We cannot know with certainty what acts of
terrorism our combined efforts have thwarted or
prevented, but we have trusted the American people to act
responsibly in the face of threats, and thanks to their
patience and to their vigilance, we know this: We have
not suffered another major terrorist attack.
The home front has witnessed the opening battle in the
war against terrorism, and America has emerged
victorious. The opening battle has passed, but the war
ahead will be long. The weeks, the months and years to
come will impose additional burdens and will call for
additional sacrifice.
Just as our service men and women are risking their lives
to battle the enemy overseas, it falls to the men and
women of Justice and law enforcement to lead America in
the battle against the enemy at home. The war on
terrorism has required adjustments by the American
people, and so, too, we must adjust. Our new mission
requires a new way of doing business. When terrorism
threatens our future, we cannot afford to live in the
past. We must focus on our core mission and
responsibilities, understanding that the department will
not be all things to all people. We cannot do everything
we once did because lives now depend on us doing a few
things very well. We must strive to maximize our
potential, even as we recognize our limitations.
The men and women of the Justice Department are the
finest legal minds and law enforcement officers in the
world. But we cannot win this battle alone. We must forge
new relationships of cooperation and trust with our
partners in state and local law enforcement. Bureaucratic
turf battles must cease when terrorists threaten the very
ground beneath our feet.
Today I am announcing a wartime reorganization and
mobilization of the nations's justice and law enforcement
resources to meet the mission of the Department of
Justice.
The Department of Justice's strategic plan for fiscal
years 2001 to 2006 is a carefully crafted blueprint for
the comprehensive reorganization of the department to
meet our new antiterrorism mission. It is the product of
close consultation with the deputy attorney general, whom
I have asked to lead this effort. I have asked him to
lead it with the assistance of the Strategic Management
Council. This afternoon, I will discuss with the
Strategic Management Council how we will develop
necessary measures necessary to accomplish this plan's
goals. I will submit this new strategic plan to Congress
today.
The plan being announced today contains 10 new
initiatives for the systematic reform and restructuring
of the Department of Justice. It is a blueprint for
change. It is also a call to you, the men and women of
the Justice Department, to embrace fully our new mission;
that we would together commit ourselves to rebuilding and
remaking the department; to rededicate ourselves to the
highest and most noble form of public service -- the
preservation of American lives and liberty. The reforms
and restructuring we must undertake in the next five
years are designed, first and foremost, to sharpen the
capacity of the Department of Justice to act deliberately
and decisively in support of our mission.
Our first initiative is the elimination of waste
and the retargeting of resources to fight against
terrorism. In today's Justice Department, multiple
agencies perform similar functions. Within six months, we
must have in place a detailed plan to streamline,
eliminate or consolidate duplicative functions. We should
not expect our budgets to give us limitless resources. We
must protect Americans, regardless of the level of the
resources provided by OMB and Congress. We should take
responsibility, ourselves, to find ways to get our jobs
done.
Second: We will refocus our resources on frontline
positions. The war on terrorism will not be fought in
Washington but in the field, by agents, prosecutors,
investigators and analysts. Our long- term goal is to
transfer 10 percent of the current headquarters-based
positions to the field -- to field offices, where
citizens are served and where America is protected.
Our restructuring initiatives are demanding, and they're
service oriented.
The third point of our plan challenges us to hold
each other accountable. Performance should be measured by
outcomes and results, not by inputs.
Fourth: We must attract a diverse, high-quality
workforce to the department and train ourselves to be the
best-trained and best and most talented workforce in the
world.
Fifth: We must develop a seamless relationship
with state and local law-enforcement agencies.
Sixth: We must have information technology from
this decade, not from several generations ago, so that we
can share intelligence and have the interoperability that
a coordinated response to terrorism demands. Major city
police departments are better equipped today than is the
Justice Department.
Finally, the remaining points of our strategic plan
mandate fundamental change in several of the most
critical components of American justice and law
enforcement, starting with the organization that is at
the center of our counter terrorism effort, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. In its history, the FBI has been
many things: the protector of our institutions when they
were under assault from organized crime; the keeper of
our security when it was threatened by international
espionage; and the defender of our civil rights when they
were denied to some Americans on the basis of their race,
color or creed.
Today the American people call upon the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to put prevention of terrorism at the
center of its law- enforcement and national-security
efforts. Since September the 11th, Director Mueller has
been engaged in a thorough review of the FBI -- its
management, its organization. Under the plan being
announced today, the Strategic Management Council will
develop and implement a series of reforms to and with the
FBI. We expect preliminary recommendations for reform by
the end of this year.
Our strategic plan also restructures the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, consistent with the president's
goal of separating the function of serving and the
function of enforcing. Of course, we have the
responsibility to protect the borders of the United
States, as well. Commissioner Zigler has already begun --
launched substantial effort, devoted significant
resources to the development of a strategy of reforming
the INS, and I expect that plan soon to be
unveiled.
As a nation of immigrants, the United States will
continue to welcome America's friends. But we will not
allow our welcome to be abused by America's enemies. In
the war on terrorism, the restructured Immigration and
Naturalization Service will focus on preventing aliens
who engage in or support terrorist activity from entering
our country. It will lead the campaign to detain,
prosecute or deport terrorist aliens who are already
inside the nation's borders.
In either case, the Department of Justice will not allow
terrorists to use our hospitality as a weapon against the
American people.
The department's Office of Justice Programs and grant
management system also will be fundamentally restructured
to meet our new antiterrorism mission. I will submit a
plan for restructuring our grant programs to Congress
within a month. Not only will we make our grant process
more efficient, more accountable, we will target our
resources to maximize the public benefit. State and local
law enforcement, victims' groups, and others on the
frontlines in the war against terrorism will have
improved access to services and information from this
Justice Department.
And while we tackle the institutional barriers to the
realization of our antiterrorism mission, we will address
the legal and cultural barriers as well.
In his remarks, Deputy Attorney General Thompson will
describe the actions we are taking today to implement new
tools passed by Congress in the USA Patriot Act. This
landmark antiterrorism legislation contains provisions
that begin to break down the barriers to information
sharing, to communication and cooperation between and
within the intelligence and law enforcement
communities.
Today I am issuing a series of directives to the
Department of Justice component heads requesting that
they review information in their possession that may now
be shared with other federal agencies, and to do so where
appropriate. I have also directed that components assess
their intelligence-analysis capabilities, improve those
analysis capabilities, where necessary, and coordinate
their efforts with other affected federal agencies and
with state and local law enforcement officials.
In this war on terror, information sharing and
cooperation are critical to our strategic mission and to
our victory. Terrorists live in the shadows, under the
cover of darkness. In order to identify, capture, to
incapacitate them, law enforcement investigators and
intelligence agents must be able to work cooperatively.
Under our new antiterrorism mandate, there will be
maximum dissemination, to the fullest extent permitted by
law, of appropriate terrorist-related information to all
federal officials engaged in the common fight against
terrorism.
Such dissemination will occur regardless of whether the
source of information is a criminal investigation or a
counterintelligence investigation. The Department of
Justice is fully committed to breaking down the
bureaucratic and cultural barriers that prevent
meaningful coordination and cooperation between criminal
law enforcement and the counterintelligence operations,
both within the department and between the department and
other federal intelligence agencies.
In just a short time -- two months on Sunday -- the men
and women of American justice and law enforcement have
risen once again to answer the call to duty. I thank you
-- the nation thanks you -- for the sacrifices that you
have made and for your willingness to defend freedom with
the law. Like the men and women of World War II, the
greatest generation, your sacrifice and that of your
families is a testimony to the American spirit -- a quiet
but determined show of faith in the rightness of our
cause, the endurance of freedom, and the certainty of
justice.
At the conclusion of World War II came the reckoning at
Nuremberg. Former Attorney General and Supreme Court
Justice Robert Jackson led the prosecution of 21 Nazi
defendants for crimes against their countrymen, against
their neighbors -- indeed, crimes against humanity. All
pleaded not guilty. Some claimed that they were merely
following orders. Others disputed the jurisdiction of the
court. But Jackson successfully argued their guilt with a
sense of urgency born of a civilization threatened by a
new force of evil. "The wrongs which we seek to
condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant,
and so devastating," said Jackson, "that
civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored, because
it cannot survive their being repeated."
It is now as it was then. A calculated, malignant, and
devastating evil has arisen in the world. Civilization
cannot ignore the wrongs that have been done. America
will not tolerate their being repeated. Justice has a new
mission -- a new calling against an old evil.
I thank you for your hard work. I thank you for your
leadership. God bless the United States of America.
(Applause.)
END.
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