TERRORISM Senator who shut offices faces ridicule, anger



Democratic and Republican colleagues called the Minnesotan 'paranoid.'
WASHINGTON POST
WASHINGTON -- In a worst-case scenario quietly presented last month by a joint CIA-FBI agency that analyzes intelligence, Al-Qaida would use weapons of mass destruction to launch multiple simultaneous attacks on the United States and overwhelm the U.S. government.
It was an extreme possibility on a menu of unknowns that had less-threatening options. All 535 members of Congress continued to work as usual until this week, when Sen. Mark Dayton, D-Minn., shut his offices, sent his staff home and cautioned people against visiting Capitol Hill.
The surprising response by the freshman senator from Minnesota to the latest in a series of warnings prompted ridicule and a flurry of angry reactions Wednesday. Washington Democratic Mayor Anthony Williams said Dayton's decision was "ill-informed." The senior senator from Minnesota, Norm Coleman, R-Minn., called Dayton reckless. D.C. delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton compared him with the boy who called wolf. Colleagues on both sides of the aisle whispered "paranoid."
First to flee
The seat of the nation's government has been menaced by repeated threats, from shootings to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to anthrax to Code Orange alerts. There have been repeated security briefings from federal authorities about various and unspecific threats. But no member has fled, until Tuesday evening.
Dayton, who along with his colleagues began a pre-election recess this week, remained unrepentant Wednesday. "I would not advise someone to visit Capitol Hill between now and the election, out of extreme precaution," Dayton said in an interview. "I would not bring my two sons to Capitol Hill between now and the election."
Dayton defended his decision, saying it would be immoral to expose his staff to risks that he himself would not be taking because of the recess. "I still believe in my soul I made the necessary and wise decision to protect my staff and constituents who might visit my office."
His decision was in response to a series of recent briefings given on Capitol Hill by the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, a joint CIA-FBI agency that performs intelligence analysis. As part of the briefings, officials presented the alarming Al-Qaida scenario, according to a U.S. government official who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.
"This scenario was way over the top," said the official, who described it as "fire and brimstone raining down from the skies" and "the continental U.S. up in smoke." Other government agencies, including the Homeland Security Department, had asked the joint agency to place this extreme scenario in context when describing less scary possibilities.
Deserted suite
On Wednesday, the corridor outside Dayton's third-floor suite in the Russell Senate Office Building was a lonely stretch of marble, with only the stray passer-by stopping to read Dayton's statement on the front door that the office was closed, thanks to a recent "top-secret intelligence report."
Across the hall, Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., poked fun at his neighbor.
"Since I assume Senator Dayton won't feel safe any time soon, I suggest that you find Senator Dayton permanent space off Capitol Hill and that you allocate his Russell Office Space to me," Sessions wrote in a letter to Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn.
Downstairs in the cafeteria, junior staffers working for Republicans wondered aloud whether Dayton was trying to come up with a work excuse that would pay for plane tickets home for his employees. There was snickering about the rest of Dayton's staff hiding in an "undisclosed location," somewhere in the District.
In the bathrooms and tunnels of the Capitol complex, cashiers and janitorial staff had heard about the lone senator who had abandoned his offices.
"It's kind of scary to me that he might know something others don't," said Thomas Jordan, 45, a general laborer who has worked on the Senate side for a year after 10 years on the House side. "We just had a general meeting today, we're supposed to have one every other Wednesday. ... One of the staffers happened to bring it up -- that one of the senators had gotten a little paranoid."
Bafflement
Democratic staff members dismissed the political speculation as ridiculous but acknowledged that they were equally baffled. "We don't have the same level of concern here," said one such member. "If you're going to attack the Capitol complex, you'd pretty much want to do it when Congress is here."
Even the Senate sergeant-at-arms, William Pickle, joked to a reporter that the CIA called and "wondered what information we had that they didn't have."
Pickle addressed the concerns raised by Dayton's decision. He said he reassured those in attendance, telling them there was "no specific threat" even though the Capitol complex is known to be a potential target for terrorists.
Pickle said the presentation by the CIA-FBI joint agency provided "pretty sobering intelligence" of a possible terror attack on the United States before the Nov. 2 elections. But he said intelligence officials last week provided a new report that "somewhat diminished the information that we previously received" while affirming the threat was "still serious."
Washington Police Chief Charles Ramsey called Dayton's reaction ridiculous. "It's not based on any credible information that's come in. Nobody knows why he is doing what he is doing. It doesn't take a brain surgeon to think that the White House and the Capitol are targets. But there is no credible information about planned attacks -- nothing to set off the reaction we saw yesterday."