Barack Obama faced his first terror threat before he was even sworn in. There was strong evidence suggesting that a terror cell intended to attack his inauguration, so Obama and his team worked tirelessly on the issue with George W. Bush’s outgoing team. It was a surprisingly smooth collaboration, that ushered in a White House counterterror team strangely in-step with Bush, writes Peter Baker in an in-depth New York Times Magazine piece on Obama’s battle with terrorists.
Obama’s approach from his predecessors’ chiefly in what one adviser calls “mood music”—a changing of terminology and tone, coupled with outreach to the Muslim world. It’s a change even Bush’s appointees welcomed. “Mr. President-elect we’re doing things very well, but we’re losing the message war,” the director of the National Counterterrorism Center told him. “You have an opportunity to change that message.” Obama didn’t hesitate. “We’re going to do that,” he replied. (More Barack Obama stories.)