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The strange case of Zacarias Moussaoui: FBI refused to investigate
man charged in September 11 attacks
By Patrick Martin
5 January 2002
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The case of Zacarias Moussaoui raises many questions about
the conduct of the FBI and other US intelligence agencies in the
period leading up the September 11. It is the clearest example
of the almost inexplicable refusal on the part of these agencies
to take any action that could have prevented the bloodiest terrorist
attack in American history.
Moussaoui was arraigned January 3 on six counts of conspiracy
to commit murder and terrorism in the September 11 attacks. A
French-born man of Moroccan Arab descent, Moussaoui refused in
the name of Allah to make a plea, and a plea of not guilty
was entered for him at the request of his public defender.
The 30-minute hearing in a federal courthouse in Alexandria,
Virginia concluded with US District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema setting
a trial date for next October, despite defense protests that this
would put jury selection around the first anniversary of the attacks
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
Defense lawyers suggested they would seek a change of venue
from Alexandria, only a few miles from the Pentagon where 189
people were killed when a hijacked American Airlines jet slammed
into the building on September 11. Brinkema indicated that she
was not inclined to grant a change of venue, saying that a fair
jury could be found in northern Virginia.
Four of the six charges against Moussaoui carry the death penalty,
although he was arrested a month before the September 11 attacks
and therefore could not have played any active role in the mass
murder. Prosecutors have until March 29 to announce whether they
will seek death sentences. Moussaoui would be the first French
citizen to face the death penalty in the United States since the
US Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976.
FBI refusal to act
Moussaoui was arrested in Minnesota August 16 after officials
of a flight school, the Pan Am International Flight Academy in
Eagan, a suburb of Minneapolis, tipped off the FBI that he was
seeking flight training on a Boeing 747 jumbo jet.
His conduct aroused suspicion: his attitude was belligerent,
he was evasive about his personal background, he declined to speak
French with an instructor who knew the language, and he paid the
$6,300 fee in cash. He insisted on training to fly a jumbo jet
despite an obvious lack of skill even with small planes. The prospective
student reportedly did not want to learn how to take off or land,
only how to steer the jet while it was in the air.
The instructor and a vice president of the flight school briefed
two Democratic congressmen from the Minneapolis area in November
about their repeated efforts to get the FBI to take an interest
in Moussaouis conduct. Their accounts were first reported
in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, then in the New
York Times December 22.
The vice president of the flight school, who briefed Minnesota
Congressmen James Oberstar and Martin Sabo, said it took four
to six phone calls to the FBI to find an agent who would help.
The instructor became so frustrated by the lack of response that
he gave a prescient warning to the FBI that a 747 loaded
with fuel can be used as a bomb.
Investigation blocked in Washington
Moussaoui was detained by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service on charges of violating the terms of his visa. Local FBI
investigators in Minneapolis immediately viewed Moussaoui as a
terrorist suspect and sought authorization for a special counterintelligence
surveillance warrant to search the hard drive of his home computer.
This was rejected by higher-level officials in Washington, who
claimed there was insufficient evidence to meet the legal requirements
for the warrant.
FBI agents tracked Moussaouis movements to the Airman
Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma, where he logged 57 hours of
flight time earlier in 2001 but was never allowed to fly on his
own because of his poor skills. This alone should have set off
alarm bells, since a confessed Al Qaeda operative, Abdul Hakim
Murad, had trained at the same school, as part of preparations
for a suicide hijack attack on CIA headquarters. Murad testified
about these plans in the 1996 trial of Ramzi Ahmed Yusef, the
principal organizer of the 1993 World Trade Center car-bombing.
Several of the September 11 hijackers had either enrolled in
or visited the Oklahoma flight school, as a more thorough investigation
determined in the aftermath of the suicide hijackings.
On August 26, FBI headquarters was notified by French intelligence
that Moussaoui had ties to the Al Qaeda organization and Osama
bin Laden. Even this report did not spur the agency to action.
A special counterterrorism panel of the FBI and CIA reviewed the
information against him, but concluded there was insufficient
evidence that he represented any threat, despite his refusal to
answer questions and the French allegations. Moussaoui was not
even transferred from INS detention to FBI custody until after
September 11.
The French warning arrived on the day after the first two suicide
hijackers purchased their one-way, first class tickets for flights
on September 11. More tickets were purchased on August 26, 27,
28 and 29, while the FBI was refusing to pursue a more intensive
investigation into Moussaoui or search his computer.
The New York Times commented December 22 that the Moussaoui
case raised new questions about why the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and other agencies did not prevent the hijackings.
FBI officials responded indirectly to this criticism, flatly
denying the account of the warning given by the flight school
personnel. The notion of flying a plane into a building
or using it as a bomb never came up, one senior official
to the Washington Post January 2. It was a straight
hijacking scenario that they were worried about.
This issue is of critical importance, and the flight school
instructor, unlike the FBI, has absolutely no reason to lie. In
the wake of September 11, FBI Director Robert Mueller flatly declared
that the FBI had no indication that terrorists were seeking to
use hijacked airliners as flying bombs. His assurances were accepted
uncritically by the American media. The account given by the flight
school shows that these assurances were lies.
A security stand-down
The Moussaoui case is only one of a number of indications that
the US government had ample warning that a major terrorist operation
was under way in the United States and yet did nothing to preempt
or block it.
* The governments of at least four countriesRussia, Germany,
Israel and Egyptgave Washington specific warnings of terrorist
attacks in the United States involving the use of hijacked airplanes
as weapons, in the months leading up to September 11.
* The US government itself had multiple indications of the
danger of suicide hijackings, based on its own investigations
into other terrorist attacks attributed to Osama bin Laden and
his Al Qaeda network.
* The US government was monitoring the electronic communications
of bin Laden and his associates during the extensive period of
advance planning which preceded the September 11 attack.
* Several of the September 11 hijackers, including Mohammed
Atta, the alleged ringleader, were under direct surveillance by
US agencies as suspected terrorists during 2000 and 2001.Yet they
were allowed to travel freely into and out of the US and eventually
carry out their plans.
September 11 took place amid a virtual stand-down of the security
forces which permits no innocent explanation. The circumstances
of the terrorist attacks deserve the most serious and conscientious
investigation. Both the Bush administration and the Democrats
and Republicans in Congress have rejected any such probe, suggesting
that to question the role of the FBI, CIA and other intelligence
agencies is unpatriotic.
But the facts which are known so far point to the conclusion
that officials at the highest levels of the US government knew
that a major terrorist attack was under way and made no serious
effort to prevent it. The political motive can be inferred: they
permitted an attack to go forwardwhether they knew its full
dimensions or notin order to provide the necessary pretext
for carrying out a right-wing agenda of military intervention
abroad and attacks on democratic rights at home.
See Also:
US planned war in
Afghanistan long before September 11
[20 November 2001]
The 2000 election
and Bush's attack on democratic rights
[14 November 2001]
Bush's war at home:
a creeping coup d'état
[7 November 2001]
The US
War in Afghanistan
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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