Porterville Recorder

Senate report details broad failures around Jan. 6 attack

- By MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — A Senate investigat­ion of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol found a broad intelligen­ce breakdown across multiple agencies, along with widespread law enforcemen­t and military failures that led to the violent attack.

There were clear warnings and tips that supporters of former President Donald Trump, including right-wing extremist groups, were planning to “storm the Capitol” with weapons and possibly infiltrate the tunnel system underneath the building. But that intelligen­ce never made it up to top leadership.

The result was chaos. A Senate report released Tuesday details how officers on the front lines suffered chemical burns, brain injuries and broken bones, among other injuries, after fighting the attackers, who quickly overwhelme­d them and broke into the building. Officers told the Senate investigat­ors they were left with no leadership or direction when command systems broke down.

The Senate report is the first — and could be the last — bipartisan review of how hundreds of Trump supporters were able to push violently past security lines and break into the Capitol that day, interrupti­ng the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election victory. The failures detailed in the report highlighte­d how, almost 20 years after the Sept. 11 attacks, U.S. intelligen­ce agencies are still beset by a fundamenta­l issue: a failure of imaginatio­n.

The report recommends immediate changes to give the Capitol Police chief more authority, to provide better planning and equipment for law enforcemen­t and to streamline intelligen­ce gathering among federal agencies.

But as a bipartisan effort, the report does not delve into the root causes of the attack, including Trump’s role as he called for his supporters to “fight like hell” to overturn his election defeat that day. It does not call the attack an insurrecti­on, even though it was. And it comes two weeks after Republican­s blocked a bipartisan, independen­t commission that would investigat­e the insurrecti­on more broadly.

“This report is important in the fact that it allows us to make some immediate improvemen­ts to the security situation here in the Capitol,” said Democratic Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan, the chair of the Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, which conducted the probe along with the Senate Rules Committee. “But it does not answer some of the bigger questions that we need to face, quite frankly, as a country and as a democracy.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday that the findings show an even greater need for a bipartisan commission to investigat­e the root causes of the attack, referring to Trump’s unfounded claims about the 2020 election.

“As the ‘big lie’ continues to spread, as faith in our elections continues to decline, it is crucial — crucial — that we establish a trusted, independen­t record of what transpired,” said Schumer, D-N.Y.

But Senate Republican leader Mitch Mcconnell, who led the blockade against such a commission, said he’s confident the ongoing reviews by lawmakers and law enforcemen­t will be sufficient.

The House in May passed legislatio­n to create a commission that would be modeled after a panel that investigat­ed the Sept. 11 attacks.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., told colleagues in a letter Tuesday that if the Senate fails to approve the commission, her chamber will launch its own investigat­ions.

The top Republican on the rules panel, Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt, has opposed the commission, arguing that investigat­ion would take too long. He said the recommenda­tions made in the Senate can be implemente­d faster, such as legislatio­n that he and Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, the rules committee chair, intend to introduce soon that would give the chief of Capitol Police more authority to request assistance from the National Guard.

The Senate report recounts how the Guard was delayed for hours Jan. 6 as officials in multiple agencies took bureaucrat­ic steps to release the troops. It details hours of calls between officials in the Capitol and the Pentagon and as the then-chief of the Capitol Police, Steven Sund, begged for help.

It finds that the Pentagon spent hours “mission planning” and seeking multiple layers of approvals as Capitol Police were being overwhelme­d and brutally beaten by the attackers. It also says the Defense Department’s hesitant response was influenced by criticism of its heavy-handed response to protests in the summer of 2020 after the killing of George Floyd in police custody.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JULIO CORTEZ ?? In this Jan. 6 photo, U.S. Capitol Police officers hold off rioters loyal to President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington.
AP PHOTO BY JULIO CORTEZ In this Jan. 6 photo, U.S. Capitol Police officers hold off rioters loyal to President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington.

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