President Bush, who continued to insist that he has "seen no evidence to date that indicates that this country could have prevented the [September 11] attack," nonetheless called for a new cabinet-level agency for domestic security. The proposal combines 22 federal agencies into one but leaves the C.I.A. and the F.B.I., whose computers are so primitive that agents are able to search files for "aviation" and "schools" but not for "aviation schools," essentially untouched. Attorney General
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
President Bush, who continued to insist that he has "seen no evidence to date that indicates that this country could have prevented the [September 11] attack," nonetheless called for a new cabinet-level agency for domestic security. The proposal combines 22 federal agencies into one but leaves the C.I.A. and the F.B.I., whose computers are so primitive that agents are able to search files for "aviation" and "schools" but not for "aviation schools," essentially untouched. Attorney General