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Bombing Suspect Shouldn’t Be ‘Political Football,’ Brennan Says (Bloomberg)

Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) -- John Brennan, President Barack

Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, said Republican congressional

leaders learned on Christmas night about the interrogation of

terror suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, and called subsequent

criticism “a bit of an outcry after the fact.”

“I’m just very concerned on behalf of the counterterrorism

professionals throughout our government that politicians

continue to make this a political football and are using it for

whatever political or partisan purposes,” Brennan said

yesterday on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and House

Republican Leader John Boehner were among senior members of

Congress that Brennan said he called after Abdulmutallab was

arrested that day on suspicion of trying to detonate explosives

as Northwest Airlines Flight 253 approached Detroit carrying 279

passengers and 11 crew members.

“None of those individuals raised any concerns with me at

that point,” Brennan said.

McConnell is among Republicans who have said Abdulmutallab

should be tried in the military-justice system rather than

civilian U.S. courts, where the 23-year-old Nigerian man was

provided access to a lawyer.

Senator Christopher Bond of Missouri and Representative

Pete Hoekstra of Michigan also were briefed after the arrest,

Brennan said.

Hoekstra, the House Intelligence Committee’s senior

Republican, called Brennan’s statements “absolutely

outrageous.”

Brennan “called and gave me a brief update as to what was

going on,” Hoekstra said in a telephone interview. “He didn’t

get into, ‘Here’s our legal strategy of how we’re going to treat

them.’”

Miranda Warning

The White House adviser said he told lawmakers that

Abdulmutallab “was in FBI custody,â€

Bond said Brennan “never told me of any plans to Mirandize

the Christmas day bomber.” If he had, Bond said in an e-mail

statement, “I would have told him the administration was making

a mistake.”

Abdulmutallab pleaded not guilty on Jan. 8 to six charges

including attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction,

attempted murder and trying to wreck an aircraft.

Brennan said Republicans and Democrats both have tried to

use terrorism for political advantage.

U.S. counterterrorism officers “deserve the support of our

Congress” instead of “second-guessing what they’re doing,”

Brennan said.

Brennan rebutted a charge that the Obama administration may

have leaked classified information last week that Abdulmutallab

was cooperating with FBI agents, saying reporters were given

some details only after the information had already been

reported by some news organizations.

To contact the reporter on this story:

Alan Bjerga in Washington at

abjerga@bloomberg.net

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