Mayor
Willie Brown ... got a call
from what he described as his
airport security -- a full
eight hours before yesterday's
string of terrorist attacks --
advising him that Americans
should be cautious about their
air travel.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2001, Page A -
17
Willie
Brown got low-key early warning about air
travel
Phillip Matier, Andrew Ross
FOR Mayor Willie Brown, the
first signs that something was amiss came
late Monday when he got a call from what
he described as his airport security -- a
full eight hours before yesterday's string
of terrorist attacks -- advising him that
Americans should be cautious about their
air travel.
David Irving comments:
ACCORDING to a report today
Friday, May 17, 2002, on Pacifica
Radio, the warning to San
Francisco's mayor came from
squeaky-clean Condoleezza
Rice. I recall that attorney
general John Ashcroft
received
a similar warning in
July.
I watched
Ms. Huxtable, uh, Rice, on
C-Span a day or two ago, and she
seemed genuinely rattled by the
disclosure of these facts; not by
the facts themselves, just by the
disclosure.
We hear a
lot about her intellect, and
sometimes even see her playing
the classical piano (in staged
photo opportunities); but she
still always seems to me more
like an asylum-seeker, newly
escaped from the terrors of the
Bill Cosby Show, than a Cabinet
minister.
Radical's
Diary on Sept.11, 2001
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The mayor, who was booked to fly to New
York yesterday morning from San Francisco
International Airport, said the call
"didn't come in any alarming fashion,
which is why I'm hesitant to make an
alarming statement."
In fact, at the time, he didn't pay it
much mind.
"It was not an abnormal call. I'm
always concerned if my flight is going to
be on time, and they always alert me when
I ought to be careful."
Exactly where the call came from is a
bit of a mystery. The mayor would say only
that it came from "my security people at
the airport."
Mike McCarron, assistant deputy
director at SFO [airport], said
the Federal Aviation Administration
"routinely" issues security notices about
possible threats.
He said two or three such notices have
been received in the past couple of
months, but none in recent days.
Whatever the case, Brown didn't think
about it again until he was up, dressed
and waiting for his ride to the airport
for an 8 a.m. flight to New York, where he
was to attend a state retirement board
meeting. That was when he turned on the
TV, and like millions of other Americans,
saw the twin towers of the World Trade
Center crumble and the Pentagon go up in
smoke.
Before the mayor was even out the door,
District Attorney Terence Hallinan
-- the man Brown said just last week
should be recalled -- was checking in and
offering help.
What followed was a conversation made
up of equal parts gravity and
formality.
"You know, you're the first call I've
gotten on this," Brown said to Hallinan,
as they were signing off.
With that, the mayor hung up and headed
for City Hall. Along the way, he made the
call to close all city buildings for the
day and city schools as well.
He also talked with representatives of
the Bank of America building and the
Transamerica Pyramid, who agreed that
because the structures were such
high-profile symbols they too should be
closed for the day.
Once Brown arrived at City Hall, calls
were made in quick order to Municipal
Railway director Michael Burns: "I
want a complete backup in case anything
happens to the subway tunnels," Brown
said.
The Coast Guard: "To make sure the
bridges were being protected."
And to the health, police and fire
departments to make sure they were staffed
for the emergency.
The last call went to Tom
Ammiano, the mayor's longtime
political nemesis and president of the
Board of Supervisors.
"We may have to declare a state of
emergency, although it's not something I
want to do at this point because it kicks
in all sorts of things -- but we may have
to be ready," the mayor said.
Ammiano apparently agreed, because an
hour or so later -- when the two sat next
to each other at a city department heads
meeting at the command center the call was
made for only a "limited" state of
emergency. One that would allow the
courts, city offices and schools to close,
but still keep the city pretty much in
working order.
"What I want," the mayor said, "is for
things to be to run as normally as
possible, but sagely."
And for the most part they did. As for
what comes next?
"With any luck, we'll be back to normal
by tomorrow -- but with a heightened sense
of awareness," Brown said as he sipped
coffee with reporters at Citizen Cake on
Grove Street.
But as for long-term safety?
"We can only do what we can," the mayor
said, adding, "Hell, if they can't protect
the Pentagon from attack, what can they
protect?"
BART BLOCKS: Don't go looking for a
rest room on BART -- they're all
locked.
According to BART information officer
Ron Rodriguez, a memorandum went out
yesterday ordering all station rest rooms
to be locked until further notice. They've
also put out the word to watch for
suspicious packages.
THE OTHER BROWN: Over in Oakland,
Mayor Jerry Brown was trying his
best to keep things normal as well.
"We're carrying on," Brown said. "I
think the most important thing is for
people to stay calm and understand that
the power of terrorism is psychological.
"The goal is to sow disunity and to
undermine our faith in the leadership of
the country."
A few blocks away, Democratic pollster
Paul Maslin sat in his office high-
rise and wondered about the long-term
effect of the attacks.
"It's like one part Pearl Harbor, one
part Northern Ireland and one part I don't
know what," was how Maslin summed it
up.
Maslin -- who does polling for Gov.
Gray Davis, among others -- said
the strangest call he got yesterday was
from one of the biggest Democratic
consultants in Washington, D.C., who had
just bolted his apartment.
"This was a grown man in his 50s, and
he was scared out of his wits because he'd
heard that a second plane was headed for
the Pentagon," Maslin said.
"We can't even begin to gauge the
long-term effects of this yet, but I will
say, I don't think we'll ever be the
same."
- White
House: Bush Was Warned of Hijack
Threat
-
July 2001
story shows FBI warned Ashcroft not to
fly commercial airlines
- What
did President Bush see at 9 a.m. on
September 11?
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