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Furor over visas for 911 hijackers
Bush sacks immigration officials: Who is accountable, and
who is not
By Patrick Martin
19 March 2002
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Letters from the US Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS), reporting visa approvals for two of the September 11 hijackers,
arrived at a Florida flight school on March 11, six months after
the destruction of the World Trade Center. The visas were for
Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi, believed to be on board the
two airliners that crashed into the twin towers in New York City.
The letters became a media sensation for several days. Bush
was asked about them at his March 13 press conference and pronounced
himself really hot about this seeming example of bureaucratic
inertia. The next day, four top officials of the INS were removed
from their positions, as the Bush administration announced a drastic
shakeup of the agency.
INS Commissioner James W. Ziglar, a Bush appointee, declared,
The breakdown in communication, highlighted by this weeks
events, at INS is unacceptable and will not be allowed. These
changes begin the process of accountability as we move forward
with restructuring the INS. Neither Ziglar nor the other
top political appointee, Stuart Anderson, director of policy and
plans, will be affected.
The four officials removed or reassigned include the executive
associate commissioner for field operations (the number three
man in the agency and the senior career official), the director
for international affairs, the assistant deputy executive associate
commissioner for immigration services, and the assistant commissioner
for inspections.
At the same time, in a letter to the House Appropriations subcommittee
responsible for overseeing the INS, Attorney General John Ashcroft
asked for new legislation empowering him to remove any INS official.
Ashcroft wrote: [I]t is essential that I have the authority
to quickly discipline or terminate individuals for acts of negligence,
mismanagement or disregard for Department of Justice policies.
The official explanation of the letters was that Atta and Al-Shehhi
had applied for student visas in the summer of 2000, when they
enrolled at Huffman Aviation in Delray Beach, Florida. These visas
were approved in July and August 2001more than 12 months
after the initial application, but before the suicide hijackingsand
the INS sent letters to Atta and Al-Shehhi notifying them.
The confirmation letters to the school, however, were delayed
another seven or eight months, arriving long after the September
11 hijackings. An investigation is now under way to determine
whether the responsibility for this second long delay lies with
the INS or the private company that is the subcontractor for issuing
the documents.
The furor in the media and in political circles, both the Bush
administration and the Democrats and Republicans in Congress,
involves a great deal of posturing, but little in the way of a
serious examination of the implications of the INS snafu. The
press accounts and pronouncements of political leaders leave untouched
the most important issues raised by the incident.
Most striking is the contrast between the swift reaction to
apparent INS incompetence and the failure of the Bush administration
or Congress to conduct any investigation into a far bigger case
of negligence (or something worse): the failure of the intelligence
and military apparatus to foresee or prevent the terrorist attacks
of September 11.
Heads are rolling in the INS over an embarrassment: the delivery
of letters approving visas for men long dead and now notorious.
But no one has been held responsible at the CIA, the FBI or the
Pentagon for the biggest breach of security in US history, which
cost the lives of more than 3,000 people. Where is the process
of accountability which the Bush administration claims to
uphold?
The criminal investigation into September 11 has been essentially
shut down. Whatever internal inquiries were conducted by the Bush
administration have not been made public and no officials have
been removed or even reprimanded. Not one congressional hearing
has been held into the events that caused the greatest civilian
casualties of any act of violence in US history.
The reason for this disparity is not hard to discern. The INS
officials transferred or demoted last week are minor functionaries
who can easily be scapegoated. Those responsible for the security
breach that led to September 11 stand at the highest levels of
the national security apparatus, close to the levers of governmental
power.
The official cover-up of the circumstances surrounding the
September 11 attacks has continued, even in the course of the
denunciations of the INS. Both the Bush administration and the
media have distorted the background to the granting of a student
visa to Mohammed Atta, the man alleged to have been the ringleader
of the hijackers.
An official statement declared, When the applications
were approved, the INS had no information indicating that Atta
or Al-Shehhi had ties to terrorist organizations. The Washington
Post reported this denial uncritically, writing that officials
had no knowledge that the two men were connected to terrorist
groups at the time.
In fact, Mohammed Atta had been under FBI surveillance as a
suspected terrorist during the previous year. According to television
reports in Germany, Atta was being followed by the FBI for several
months in 2000 as he made purchases of chemicals which could be
used in terrorist attacks.
Despite this, he was allowed to reenter the United States early
in 2001although a routine Customs inquiry revealed a discrepancy
in his visa status, since he identified himself as a student at
the south Florida flight school, but was traveling on a tourist
visa. Over the next six months, the INS processed Attas
application, approved it and issued him a student visa.
The FBI surveillance of Atta has never been mentioned in the
American press, despite the well-documented reports in Germany.
This is a central part of the whitewash of the role of the CIA,
FBI and other intelligence agencies in the period leading up to
September 11. Whether these agencies were guilty of colossal negligence,
or complicit in permitting the attacks to go forward, there is
ample evidence that they were informed of the preparations for
the hijackings.
Another issue raised by this incident is the high-handed and
anti-democratic basis on which hundreds of immigrants from the
Middle East and South Asia have been rounded up and imprisoned
in the post-September 11 dragnet carried out by the Bush administration.
Most of the more than 1,000 people detained were sent to prison,
not for any criminal charge, but because of technical violations
in their visa status.
Now the INS admits that it is guilty of protracted delays in
approving visas and notifying applicants. If one accepts the official
version, that the visas for Atta and Al-Shehri were treated in
typical fashion, then it is evident that hundreds of thousands
of immigrants encounter such bureaucratic obstacles to their right
to travel, study or work.
It is not uncommon for immigrants to file in a timely fashion
for an extension or alteration of their status, only to wait months
on end for the INS to respond. In some cases, immigrants are left
in a legal limbo when their paperwork gets buried in the INS backlog
and the protracted delay results in their current status lapsing.
How many of those arrested and jailed since September 11 were
guilty of just such visa infractions? In many casesincluding
one of the best known, that of Rabih Haddad, the Moslem cleric
from Ann Arbor, Michigandelays in INS processing contributed
to or caused the violations that authorities used as a legal pretext
for arrest and indefinite detention.
As a result of deficiencies in paperwork, hundreds have been
held for months, while the Justice Department refuses to divulge
their identities, severely restricts their contact with family
members, and spies on their conversations with attorneys.
See Also:
Bushs press conference: the questions
not asked, the answers not given
[18 March 2002]
Further delay in US congressional investigation
into September 11 attacks
[6 March 2002]
Was the US government alerted
to September 11 attack?
[16 January 2002]
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