She used to work in Bill Clinton's National Security Council and she pressured Albright to turn down an offer to get Bin Laden from Sudan. So if she and Richard Clarke didn't play bureaucratic games about not having a reason to ask for him when he declared war on the United States, then 9-11 probably would not have happened.
Form Wikipedia:
In a 2002 op-ed piece in the Washington Post, former Ambassador to Sudan Timothy Carney and news contributor Mansoor Ijaz implicated Rice and counter-terrorism czar Richard Clarke in missing an opportunity to neutralize Osama bin Laden while he was still in Sudan. They write that Sudan and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright were ready to cooperate on intelligence potentially leading to bin Laden, but that Rice and Clarke persuaded National Security Advisor Sandy Berger to overrule Albright.[31] Similar allegations have been made by Vanity Fair contributing editor David Rose[32] and Richard Miniter, author of Losing bin Laden, in a November 2003 interview with World.[33]
While the writings of Carney, Ijaz, Rose and Miniter each claim that Sudan offered to turn bin Laden over to the US and that Rice was central in the decision not to accept the offer, The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks on the United States (the 9-11 Commission) concluded in part “Sudan's minister of defense, Fatih Erwa, has claimed that Sudan offered to hand Bin Laden over to the United States. The Commission has found no credible evidence that this was so. Ambassador Carney had instructions only to push the Sudanese to expel bin Laden. Ambassador Carney had no legal basis to ask for more from the Sudanese since, at the time, there was no indictment out-standing.”[34]