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Was the US government alerted to the September 11 attack?
Part 3: The United States and Mideast terrorism
By Patrick Martin
22 January 2002
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See Part 1: Warnings in advance
, Part 2: Watching the hijackers
, and Part 4: The refusal to investigate]
An essential aspect of the official version of the attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagonwhich maintains
that these attacks came as a complete surprise to the US government
and its intelligence apparatusis the claim that the CIA
and other intelligence agencies relied too heavily on electronic
surveillance rather than on-the-spot agents infiltrated into the
terrorist organizations.
As a result, so the story goes, without agents among the Islamic
fundamentalists, the CIA and FBI were unable to discover the plans
of Osama bin Laden and forestall them. The absence of American
agents is simply asserted, without any examination of the evidence.
The argument is largely circular. The very success of the attack
on September 11 is taken to prove that the US government had no
agents in the milieu which supported the hijackers.
There are two assumptions here: first, that US agents could
not penetrate the terrorist circles; and second, that American
agents would have intervened to stop an attack had they learned
of it in advance. Both these assumptions are questionable.
The official claim of no human intelligence about
September 11 is of course difficult to analyze or refute on the
basis of empirical or forensic evidence. It is in the nature of
such activities that they take place in secret, and remain largely
unknown to the public. But the credibility of this claim can be
judged in the light of the historical record of the relationship
between American imperialism and Islamic fundamentalism.
The United States has been deeply involved in the Middle East
for more than half a century, and in Afghanistan for more than
two decades. US intelligence agencies have had long and intimate
ties with Islamic fundamentalists and encouraged them to engage
in terrorist violence. Without this US role there would have been
no al Qaeda, bin Laden would have remained a construction magnate
in Saudi Arabia, and September 11 would never have taken place.
The origins of the mujahedin
Those who carried out the terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001 were not even born when the US government first began to
sponsor violent Islamic fundamentalists and use them against political
opponents in the Middle East. As far back as the 1950s, the United
States and its main Arab client state, Saudi Arabia, gave financial
support to fundamentalist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt. US officials backed the fundamentalists against the pan-Arab
nationalism of Egypts Gamal Abdel Nasser, as well as against
socialist elements in the Arab working class, especially in the
Saudi oilfields.
One analyst of this process writes: It was during the
1958-60 period that the US State Department began to exaggerate
the communist threat to the Middle East, and the ARAMCO CIA, and
indeed the Beirut and Cairo CIAs, began supporting Islamic fundamentalist
groups as a counterweight to Nasser. In part, this was an extension
of Kim Roosevelts earlier successful use of Muslim elements
(Fadayeen Islam) against leftists in Iran. The anti-Nasser Muslim
Brotherhood was funded, religious leaders were prodded to attack
the USSR for its anti-Muslim ways (Said K. Aburish, The Rise,
Corruption and Coming Fall of the House of Saud, St. Martins
Press, New York, NY, 1996, p. 161).
This relationship expanded quantitatively and qualitatively
with the outbreak of civil war in Afghanistan. Even before the
invasion of the country by the Soviet Union in December 1979,
the United States had decided to give financial and military backing
to the Islamic fundamentalist parties engaged in guerrilla warfare
against the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul, which had come to power
in an April 1978 military coup.
US national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski hoped that
a full-scale war in Afghanistan would prove as debilitating for
the USSR as the Vietnam War had been for the United States. The
Carter administration began to pour in weapons and money, especially
favoring the most right-wing Islamic fundamentalists, those who
became the ideological forebears of the Taliban and Osama bin
Laden.
Carters successor Ronald Reagan enthusiastically embraced
the fundamentalists. He hailed as freedom fighters
political organizations that sought to establish a state based
on a medieval version of Islamic law: a religious dictatorship
which practiced slavery, oppression of women and barbaric mutilations
for alleged lawbreakers.
But the man who really deserved the title of founding
father of al Qaeda was Reagans CIA director, William
Casey. It was Casey who initiated the campaign to recruit Islamic
militants from all over the world to come to Afghanistan and fight
in the anti-Soviet cause. Islamic fundamentalists from dozens
of countriesfrom Morocco to Indonesia, and including even
some black Muslims from the United Statestraveled to Afghanistan
under CIA auspices, received training in weapons and explosives
from CIA trainers and went into combat with US-supplied arms.
Osama bin Laden himself was a product of this process. He first
went to Afghanistan in the early 1980s as a sympathizer of the
Afghan mujahedin, using his knowledge of construction to help
build roads, bases and other facilities, paid for with a combination
of his own and US money. It was in Afghanistan that he made the
contacts among Islamic fundamentalists worldwide which made possible
the organization of later terrorist attacks on US targets. What
the Bush administration and the American media today demonize
as a global conspiracy of Islamic extremists is thus a Frankenstein
monster created by the American government itself.
This history is well understood by the more conscious strategists
for American imperialism. Zbigniew Brzezinski suggested cynically
a few years ago that the emergence of al Qaeda was an acceptable
price to further US interests in the Middle East and internationally.
He told a French newspaper: Which was more important in
world history? The Taliban or the fall of the Soviet empire? A
few over-excited Islamists or the liberation of Central Europe
and the end of the Cold War? (Interview with Vincent Javert
in Le Nouvel Observateur, January 15-21, 1998)
Al Qaeda and the CIA
Bin Laden, as is now widely reported, turned against the United
States in 1991-92 after the deployment of large numbers of American
troops in Saudi Arabia in the course of the Persian Gulf War.
The official story is that this marked the end of all contacts
between US intelligence agencies and the Islamic fundamentalists
who would go on to form al Qaeda.
Here our analysis necessarily moves into an area where established
facts are few and far between, and inference and probability must
be relied on. Is it credible that the CIA, after a decade of the
most intimate ties with the Afghan mujahedin, was suddenly cut
off from all information and unable to determine what its erstwhile
protégés were doing?
The servile American media has never challenged Bush administration,
Pentagon or FBI spokesmen on this subject, and one should not
hold ones breath until a highly paid American journalist
puts his job on the line by asking such questions. But the long-term,
close-knit relationship between the CIA and the Afghan mujahedin
makes the sudden drying up of all sources of intelligence unlikely.
The CIA is in the business of knowing its collaborators intimately,
and it worked with bin Laden and his supporters and followers
for a dozen years. Even today, after a decade of increasing hostilities,
those described by US government sources as key bin Laden aides
are for the most part drawn from the Egyptian and Saudi Islamic
fundamentalists radicalized during the war in Afghanistan. The
CIA knew their families, their weaknesses and their vices, and
it has never been squeamish about using such information to compromise
individuals and secure cooperation with its purposes.
That is not to say that there was not a real conflict between
bin Laden and the US government, or that al Qaeda is simply a
front organization. It is not necessary to resort to such a conspiracy
theory to reject the claim that the US government had no idea
of the plans being laid by the terrorist group. It is the official
version which is preposterous and far fetched: the claim that
the most extensive and well-financed intelligence apparatus in
the world could not make a dent in an organization consisting
largely of its former employees.
Despite the current official mystification, bin Laden &
Co. were a far more accessible target than, say, such Stalinist-ruled
regimes as North Vietnam or North Korea. The CIA has cultivated
sources among the Islamic fundamentalists since the 1950s. Moreover,
friendly intelligence services, including at least those of Egypt,
Saudi Arabia and Pakistanto say nothing of Israelwould
have had their own contacts as well.
The role of agents provocateurs
It is critical to consider September 11 in the context of earlier
terrorist attacks on American targets, particularly the 1993 bombing
of the World Trade Center and the 1998 bombings of US embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania. In both these attacks, it has come to light
that American agents provocateurs played a central role. This
casts doubt on the claims that US intelligence was unable to penetrate
al Qaeda. And it raises the question whether similar agents had
some connection to September 11.
Those charged in the 1993 World Trade Center attack and for
a subsequent conspiracy to blow up other targets in New York City
were mostly former guerrilla fighters in Afghanistan who entered
the United States with the covert assistance of US intelligence
agencies. Among them was a former Egyptian intelligence agent
and US government informer, Emad Salem, who was identified as
a principal instigator of plans to bomb targets in the New York
City area.
Salem and the FBI claimed that he had functioned as an informer
in 1991-92 and then again from April 1993 on, but not during the
period of the actual organization of the March 1993 bomb blast
which killed six people and destroyed the sub-basement area of
the twin towers. This was a transparent effort to avoid questions
being raised about why the FBI, tipped off by its informant, did
nothing to stop the attack.
In the 1998 events, it was revealed that the US government
received advance warning of the Kenya bombing two weeks before
it took place. During the trial last year of four men charged
in the bombings, defense lawyers were able to demonstrate that
US officials did not pass on the warnings to the personnel of
the threatened embassies, thus contributing to the high death
toll, especially among local civilians who were in or near the
facilities at the time of the blasts.
As with at least one of the warnings about September 11, this
information came through the Israeli intelligence service Mossad.
Moreover, one of those charged in the Kenya and Tanzania bombings
was a former Green Beret sergeant and special warfare instructor,
Ali A. Mohamed, another former Egyptian security officer who was
brought into the United States under a special CIA program to
provide citizenship for key informants. Although Mohamed supposedly
turned against the US government because of the 1991 Gulf War,
he was still serving as a government informant as late as 1995.
No doubt most of those who participated in the 1993 World Trade
Center bombing, the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania
in 1998, and similar outrages, were Islamic fundamentalists who
believed that they were somehow striking a blow against the US
government. But in the murky world of agents, double agents, and
agents provocateurs, they may well have been used to serve the
purposes of American imperialism, which has utilized terrorist
attacksand above all September 11as the pretext for
carrying out military actions overseas and attacks on democratic
rights at home.
Terrorist attacks on innocent civilians, whatever the motivation
or pretext, are politically reactionary. Moreover, because terrorism
substitutes the armed action of a tiny minority for a struggle
to develop the political consciousness of the masses, it is much
easier for imperialist agents to feign sympathy and penetrate
and manipulate the organization involved. From this political
standpoint, the claim that US intelligence was unable to infiltrate
al Qaeda is not believable.
Some curious connections
Perhaps the murkiest aspect of September 11 is establishing
the actual relationship between bin Laden himself and the US government.
He was, of course, a CIA asset for more than a decade. He is one
of several dozen sons of a Saudi construction billionaire whose
family has longstanding ties to the United States and, in particular,
to the family of George W. Bush. (The bin Ladens were investors
in the Carlyle Group, the multibillion-dollar venture capital
firm which employs the presidents father, the former president,
as a well-paid rainmaker, drumming up business in
the Middle East. They sold their holdings in the firm after September
11.)
As late as 1996, more than four years after Osama bin Laden
announced his intention to drive the US out of Saudi Arabia, the
US government declined an offer by Sudan to extradite him. US
officials suggested there was not enough evidence to convict bin
Laden of terrorist actions in a US court. Even after the 1998
embassy bombings made him a household name, the CIA had surprising
difficulty in locating him in Afghanistan.
Last October 31, the French daily newspaper Le Figaro one
of the countrys more conservative journalspublished
a sensational story claiming that bin Laden had met with CIA officials
at some point during a nearly two-week stay, July 4-14, 2001,
at the American Hospital in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates,
where he was treated for kidney disease.
The report was roundly denied by US and UAE officials, and
there is no way to verify it independently. But the newspaper
is certainly well-connected. One of its major investors is the
Carlyle Group, the private equity firm which directly links the
Bush family and the bin Laden family.
There are other indications that the relations between the
US government and Islamic terrorists are not as they appear in
the American media.
There is the case of Nabil al-Marabh, who was caught at the
Niagara Falls, New York border crossing in June 2001, stowed away
inside a tractor-trailer with a forged passport, and was turned
back to Canada by US immigration officials. Nine months
earlier, he had been identified to American intelligence agents
as one of Osama bin Ladens operatives in the United States.
American customs agents knew about money he had transferred to
an associate of Osama bin Laden in the Middle East. And the Boston
police had issued a warrant for his arrest after he violated probation
for stabbing a friend with a knife. Al-Marabh was released
on bail in Canada, and later arrested near Chicago after the September
11 attacks. While he was jailed in Canada, Marabh boasted
to his cellmates that he was special to the F.B.I.
(New York Times, October 5, 2001)
Then there is the report which appeared September 24 in Newsweek.
The weekly magazine reported that on September 10 a group
of top Pentagon officials suddenly canceled travel plans for the
next morning, apparently because of security concerns. This
suggests that some level of the American state had knowledge,
not only of the imminence of the attack, but even of its exact
timing. Needless to say, no major American publication has followed
up this report.
And what is one to make of an article that appeared in the
Washington Post September 23, on the newspapers front
page, under a double headline: Investigators Identify 4
to 5 Groups Linked to Bin Laden Operating in US. No Connection
Found Between Cell Members and 19 Hijackers, Officials
Say?
The article reports that the FBI had identified multiple al
Qaeda groups operating for the last several years
in the United States, but found no connection between them and
the 19 hijackers who carried out the September 11 attack. This
is an astonishing admission, given that the entire US military
campaign against Afghanistan has been predicated on holding Osama
bin Laden responsible for the suicide hijackings. The article
continues:
The FBI has not made any arrests because the group members
entered the country legally in recent years and have not been
involved in illegal activities since they arrived, the officials
said.
Government officials say they do not know why the cells
are here, what their purpose is or whether their members are planning
attacks. One official even described their presence as possibly
benign, though others have a more sinister interpretation
and give assurances that measures are in place to protect the
public.
Here the mind boggles: amid a nationwide dragnet, with hundreds
of Arab-Americans and Muslim-Americans rounded up and questioned
for no other reason than their national origin and religion, the
FBI tells the principal daily newspaper in the nations capital
that it has not arrested known collaborators of Osama bin Laden
because they have done nothing wrong since they arrived in the
US. Their presence may even be benign, an astonishing
adjective to use after the murder of nearly 3,000 people.
The Post article was written jointly by Bob Woodward
and Walter Pincus, a fact which adds to its significance. Woodward
needs no introduction to those familiar with the Watergate scandal.
He was the recipient of the most famous leak in US history, obtaining
inside information about Nixons actions in Watergate from
a source Woodward dubbed Deep Throat, never identified
but believed to be a top official in the national security apparatus.
Walter Pincus is a national-security reporter for the Post,
covering the CIA and Pentagon. He worked as a CIA operative in
the 1960s, as a member of the National Student Association, a
fact which was only revealed two decades later.
An article by these two individuals, given the prominence of
front-page publication in the Washington Post, should be
understood as a semiofficial hint by the US intelligence services
that their relationship with Osama bin Laden is considerably more
complex than that presented in the propaganda which now dominates
the media.
Was the US government alerted to September
11 attack?
Part 1: Warnings in advance
[16 January 2002]
Was the US government alerted to September
11 attack?
Part 2: Watching the hijackers
[18 January 2002]
Was the US government alerted to September
11 attack?
Part 4: The refusal to investigate
[24 January 2002]
The strange case of Zacarias Moussaoui:
FBI refused to investigate man charged in September 11 attacks
[5 January 2002]
US planned war in
Afghanistan long before September 11
[20 November 2001]
Suspicious trading
points to advance knowledge by big investors of September 11 attacks
[5 October 2001]
The US
War in Afghanistan
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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