The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Intel failures flagged over Capitol riot

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WASHINGTON: The deadly US Capitol riot on Jan 6 exposed devastatin­g security and intelligen­ce weaknesses, with military authoritie­s reacting too slowly to calls for National Guard backup against an overwhelmi­ng mob, security officials told Congress Tuesday.

Among the most serious lapses revealed: the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion sent US Capitol Police a report on the eve of the unrest warning that extremists groups were coming to Washington “ready for war,” but the document did not reach USCP leadership.

And lawmakers also heard that military officials had been “reluctant” to send troops to defend Congress, even when it was clear conditions at the Capitol had deteriorat­ed.

In the first congressio­nal hearing on the attack, police chiefs and the House and Senate sergeants at arms acknowledg­ed they were blindsided by lack of intelligen­ce and response coordinati­on to the worst domestic insurrecti­on since the Civil War.

In compelling testimony they painted a picture of officers badly outnumbere­d by armed and coordinate­d insurgents.

They pointed to a series of intelligen­ce shortcomin­gs about the threat level, including assessment­s of “remote” and “improbable” chances of major violence on January 6, even though extremist groups like the

Proud Boys made clear they were coming to Washington that day to stir up trouble.

“No entity, including the FBI, provided any intelligen­ce indicating that there would be a coordinate­d violent attack on the United States Capitol by thousands of well-equipped armed insurrecti­onists,” a situation that left his officers woefully unprepared against a violent mob, said the US Capitol Police’s then-chief Steven Sund.

Later in the four-hour joint hearing before the Senate homeland security and rules committees, however, Sund said the USCP “did get” the FBI report warning of violence, but “no leadership, myself included, over at Capitol Police was made aware of that at the time of the event.”

“That’s very concerning,” Senator Jeff Merkley told Sund during questionin­g.

Sund resigned his post days after the riot, which left five dead including one police officer and four other people. Two other police officers died by suicide shortly afterwards.

House sergeant-at-arms Paul Irving and Senate sergeantat-arms Michael Stenger also resigned.

The unpreceden­ted breach of the citadel of American democracy occurred on Jan 6 after then-president Donald Trump whipped up a crowd of his supporters, urging them to march on Congress and “fight like hell.”

The riot, fuelled by Trump’s repeated false claims that the election was rigged, appeared aimed at blocking the certificat­ion of Joe Biden as winner of the Nov 3 vote.

Washington’s acting police chief Robert Contee said his officers were literally “fighting for their lives” on Capitol Hill.

But he was “stunned at the response” by the Department of the Army, which he said was “reluctant” to send National Guard troops to protect the Capitol.

Officials participat­ing in the hearing agreed that a thorough review of intelligen­ce sharing operations and internal processes is needed to determine reforms to be made in order to prevent any new attacks. — AFP

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