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FBI inspector generals report: more evidence of government
complicity in 9/11 attacks
By Patrick Martin
15 June 2005
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A report released June 9 by the FBIs Office of the Inspector
General raises new questions about the role of the US government
in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The internal FBI
study provides several important revelations about how US intelligence
agencies ignored and even suppressed warnings in the period leading
up to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that
killed nearly 3,000 people.
Press accounts published within hours of the reports
release gave a very distorted picture of the document, which runs
to more than 400 pages. No follow-up reports, based on a thorough
study of the text, have yet appeared in the mass media.
The initial media commentary invariably voiced the now-standard
claim that the FBI and CIA were guilty of a failure to connect
the dots, due to bureaucratic lethargy, individual incompetence,
inter-agency rivalries, even poorly performing software systems.
This presentation of events is utterly unserious.
The US intelligence apparatus is the most powerful instrument
for spying in the world, not a group of Keystone Cops. If it ignored
warnings and suppressed information, a legitimate presumption
is that it did so willfully. The question must be posed: did one
or more agencies or high-level officials provide protection for
known Al Qaeda associates who ultimately participated in the hijack-bombings?
Exactly who knew what, and at what level of the government,
is not yet clear. But the political benefits of 9/11 for the Bush
administration are undeniable. It used the terrorist attacks as
a lever to swing American public opinion behind a major shift
in policy, both foreign and domestic. Without 9/11, it would have
been politically impossible for the government to embark on military
interventions in Central Asia and the Middle East and launch an
unprecedented attack on civil liberties at home.
The Phoenix memo
The FBI internal report examines the three best-known episodes
in which the bureau, which is the lead agency for counterterrorist
activities within the United States, missed or ignored important
signals of the coming terrorist attacks. Two of the cases involved
local FBI agents who voiced suspicions that were disregarded or
suppressed by FBI headquarters. In the third case, the CIA deliberately
kept the FBI in the darkwith the assistance of certain FBI
officials.
The first instance is the electronic memo of July 10, 2001
from Kenneth Williams, an FBI agent in Phoenix, Arizona, noting
the number of students with ties to radical Islamic fundamentalists
enrolled at local aviation training schools, and suggesting that
a nationwide canvass of these schools be carried out to determine
if there was a pattern.
The second is the bureaus response to the arrest of Zaccarias
Moussaoui, an Islamic fundamentalist who was detained by the Immigration
and Naturalization Service after his attempts to obtain training
on a Boeing 747 aroused suspicions at a Minneapolis-area flight
school. Moussaoui was detained on immigration charges in early
August 2001, but FBI headquarters blocked efforts by Minneapolis
agents to pursue an investigation that could have identified other
Al Qaeda operatives at US flight schools.
The third is the case of Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi,
believed to have participated in the hijacking of American Airlines
Flight 77, which hit the Pentagon on 9/11. Despite being on a
CIA watch list because of connections to Al Qaeda, the two lived
openly in San Diego, California for a year or more. The CIA only
notified the FBI of their presence in the US on August 27, 2001,
20 months after their arrival, and only two weeks before September
11.
The chapter in the inspector generals report on the Phoenix
memo (called an Electronic Communication or EC, in FBI jargon),
reveals that the document was sent to the attention of six people
at FBI headquarters and two more at the New York Division. The
recipients included personnel and leadership of both the Usama
Bin Laden Unit and the Radical Fundamentalists Unit, the latter
comprising a separate group of agents assigned to investigate
Islamist militants not directly affiliated to Al Qaeda.
None of the agents who received the EC took any serious action.
Several did not even read it. The report attributes the inaction
and inattention to the lack of resources committed to anti-terrorist
activities in the summer of 2001. For instance, there was only
a single research analyst assigned to the FBIs Bin Laden
Unit in 2001, and she was transferred to another unit in July
2001.
One agent at a field office who was sent the Phoenix EC replied
that it was no big secret that Arab men were receiving
aviation training in the United States. (Williamss concern,
however, was not over Arab men, but rather individuals
affiliated with radical Islamic fundamentalists who publicly justified
terrorist attacks on US targets.) The FBIs New York Field
Office, which had the lead role in counterterrorism, flatly rejected
Williamss proposal for a more in-depth study of the flight
school issue.
In passing, the inspector generals report notes that
there was already considerable information contained in
FBI files about airplanes and flight schools at the time the Phoenix
EC was received at FBI HQ. It mentions four examples, implying
that many more could be cited.
One of these examples is the following: In August 1998,
an intelligence agency advised the FBIs New York Division
of an alleged plan by unidentified Arabs to fly an explosive laden
aircraft from Libya into the World Trade Center.
This previously unreported warning directly contradicts the
claims, made repeatedly by Bush administration officials, especially
Condoleezza Rice, that no one could have imagined
hijacked airplanes being used as flying bombs against US targets.
The Moussaoui case
The entire chapter on Moussaoui, 115 pages long, is redacted
from the version published last week, at the order of the federal
judge who has been presiding over Moussaouis terrorism trial.
Only a few references to Moussaoui survive in other parts of the
report.
A fuller analysis of this episode awaits the release of the
redacted chapter, after Moussaouis sentencing. But the gist
of the situation is that local Minneapolis FBI agents asked for
permission to conduct further inquiries, including searching Moussaouis
computer, while supervisors at FBI headquarters cited the necessity
for a warrant from a special court established under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The supervisors refused
to apply for the FISA warrant, saying the case did not meet the
courts criteria.
In one passage, the inspector generals report cites a
top FBI lawyers statement that he had never seen a
supervisory special agent in Headquarters so adamant that a FISA
warrant could not be obtained and at the same time a field office
so adamant that it could. The report also notes that the
Minneapolis field office sought an expedited FISA,
which normally involved reports of a suspected imminent
attack or other imminent danger.
While FBI supervisors were blocking action on Moussaoui, a
CIA liaison officer in Minneapolis was reporting his arrest to
the CIA. George Tenet, the CIA director, was briefed on the matter.
By the end of August, French intelligence officials had provided
the US government with information on Moussaouis connections
to Islamic fundamentalist groups, but the FBI still took no action.
Moussaoui, who was being held on immigration violations, was not
even transferred from the Immigration and Naturalization Service
to FBI custody until after September 11.
The San Diego hijackers
By far the most damning material in the FBI inspector generals
report relates to Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, two of
the 9/11 hijackers who lived in the San Diego area for much of
2000 and 2001. The report details at least five instances during
this period when the FBI could have or should have become aware
of their presence and purpose.
The two men entered the United States on January 15, 2000,
flying from Bangkok, Thailand to Los Angeles International Airport.
Mihdhar was a participant at a January 5, 2000 meeting of Al Qaeda
operatives in Malaysia, where he and others were photographed
by an unnamed intelligence service. These photos were supplied
to the CIA.
The US National Security Agency had separately identified Hazmi
as an associate of Mihdhar. The two men were tracked by the CIA
traveling from Malaysia to Thailand.
CIA cables contemporaneously discussed Mihdhars travel
and the fact that he had a US visa in his Saudi passport. So intensive
was the surveillance that agents obtained a photocopy of the passport
and visa stamp and delivered it to CIA headquarters in Langley,
Virginia. Two months later, the Bangkok CIA station identified
Hazmi as Mihdhars traveling companion and reported that
he had traveled on from Bangkok to Los Angeles on January 15,
2000.
The most critical information about Mihdhar and Hazmi was withheld
from the FBI for more than a year and a half. The FBI was informed
about the Malaysia meeting as soon as it happened, and even about
Mihdhars presence at it. But there was no mention of his
passport with a multiple-entry US visa, giving him easy access
to American territory, where the FBI had the principal responsibility
for counterterrorism. Nor did the CIA tell the FBI that Hazmi
had actually entered the country, which would certainly have triggered
an alert. The CIA itself did not put either man on any other security
watch list.
Two weeks after their arrival in Los Angeles, Mihdhar and Hazmi
moved to San Diego, apparently at the urging of a new acquaintance,
Omar Bayoumi, a man once under FBI surveillance and believed to
be an operative or asset of the Saudi intelligence service. He
invited the two newly arrived Saudis to San Diego, where they
rented an apartment in the complex where he lived. Bayoumi co-signed
the lease and even wrote a check for the rent because the two
had only cash.
In May 2000, the two men rented a room from another San Diego
man who was an FBI informant, and who reported their arrival and
their first names to his handler. The handler did not ask the
last names or show any other interest.
The informant is not named in the inspector generals
report, but he has been identified in previous press accounts
as Abdussattar Shaikh, another Saudi immigrant. (Both Shaikh and
his FBI handler, now retired, refused to speak with the FBI inspector
general probing the bureaus response to 9/11, a remarkable
circumstance that is recorded in the report only in a footnote,
and without explanation.)
The actions of Hazmi and Mihdhar strongly suggest that they
were being protected and were themselves aware of it. They conducted
themselves, not as underground conspirators, trying to keep one
step ahead of the most powerful spy apparatus in the world, but
as men seemingly indifferent to threats to their security.
According to the FBI report: ... they did not attempt
to hide their identities. Using the same names contained in their
travel documents and known to at least some in the Intelligence
Community, they rented an apartment, obtained drivers licenses
from the state of California Department of Motor Vehicles, opened
bank accounts and received bank credit cards, purchased a used
vehicle and automotive insurance, took flying lessons at a local
flying school, and obtained local phone service that included
Hazmis listing in the local telephone directory.
Even though this is not the first time the actions of Hazmi
and Mihdhar have been detailed, one rubs ones eyes in astonishment
at this passage. Hazmi could only have made himself more obvious
if he had taken out an ad in the Yellow Pages under T
for terrorist. But the CIA, which knew who he was, chose not to
expose him to the FBI.
In June 2000, Mihdhar left the US, not returning until July
4, 2001, when he flew into John F. Kennedy International Airport
in New York City. Hazmi lived in San Diego for several more months,
then moved to Phoenix and eventually the East Coast.
Following the bombing of the USS Cole in December 2000, interest
in Mihdhar and Hazmi revived. A US intelligence source identified
one of the participants in the January 2000 Malaysia meeting as
the ringleader of the Cole attack, and the FBI, which had lead
responsibility for the investigation, began to review all those
who attended that meeting.
However, in discussions in January 2001 and again in May and
June 2001, CIA officials did not tell the FBI that Mihdhar, now
known to be associated with the suspected organizer of the Cole
bombing, had a US visa, or that Hazmi, Mihdhars associate,
had entered the United States.
Much of this material in the report is difficult to follow,
partly because of bureaucratic complexities, partly because of
the large amount of redaction, apparently to conceal the nationality
of the intelligence agency that had monitored the Malaysia meeting
(most likely the Israeli Mossad). The inspector generals
report cites cooperation by Malaysian, Thai and Yemeni security
services without redaction.
The CIA finally told the FBI what it knew about Mihdhar and
Hazmi on August 27, 2001, five days after the FBI had discovered
independently, on August 22, that Mihdhar might be in the US,
and the agency had opened its own investigation. The New York
FBI office was notified, but the job of tracking down Mihdhar
was assigned to a novice agent as his first intelligence case,
an indication of the low priority given to the investigation.
Only perfunctory steps to locate Mihdhar and Hazmi had been taken
by September 11, when the two men boarded the American Airlines
jet.
Indications of a CIA cover-up
The FBI inspector generals report reveals for the first
time that the CIA not only failed to inform the FBI about Mihdhar,
but that CIA officials intervened to suppress a memorandum drafted
by an FBI agent detailed to the CIA-run Counter-Terrorism Center
(CTC), who wanted to notify the FBI about the suspected terrorist
with a US visa. The blow-by-blow account of this incident in the
FBI report strongly implies a CIA cover-up.
The FBI agent, dubbed Dwight in the inspector generals
report, drafted the memorandum, a Central Intelligence Report
(CIR), on January 5, 2000, only hours after the Malaysia meeting
had taken place. The same day, a CIA desk officer, dubbed Michelle,
relayed instructions from her supervisor barring distribution
of the CIR to the FBI.
Three hours later, Michelle drafted and circulated
an internal CIA cable which summarized the information on Mihdhar,
including his multiple-entry US visa. This cable declared that
his travel documents had been copied and passed to the FBI
for further investigation. This was a lie, which was later
used by the CIA to substantiate its initial claim that it had
notified the FBI about Mihdhar.
This cable could not possibly be an innocent mistake, since
it was sent out after its author had relayed the instructions
to Dwight that his memo to the FBI not be sent.
Under questioning from the inspector general, no one at the CIA
or the FBI could corroborate the claim in the cable by Michelle
that the CIA had notified the FBI about Mihdhara claim that
was diametrically opposed to what the CIA was doing in practice.
The report notes that the CIA initially withheld information
about the existence of the January 2000 memorandum by Dwight
from the inspector generals office. Quoting from the report:
In February 2004, however, while we were reviewing a
list of CIA documents that had been accessed by FBI employees
assigned to the CIA, we noticed the title of a document that appeared
to be relevant to this review and had not been previously disclosed
to us. The CIA OIG [Office of the Inspector General] had not previously
obtained this document in connection with its review. We obtained
this document, known as a Central Intelligence Report (CIR). This
CIR was a draft document addressed to the FBI containing information
about Mihdhars travel and possession of a US visa. As a
result of the discovery of this new document, a critical document
that we later determined had not been sent to the FBI before the
September 11 attacks (see Section III, A, 4 below), we had to
re-interview several FBI and CIA employees and obtain additional
documents from the CIA. The belated discovery of this CIA document
delayed the completion of our review.
The aggrieved tone is unmistakable. First the CIA withheld
the document from the FBI, then the CIA attempted to conceal the
existence of the document from the FBIs postmortem probe.
The cover-up was followed by a curious epidemic of amnesia.
No one who worked on, received or read the draft CIR from Dwight,
including Dwight himself, could remember anything
about it. Again the report:
When we interviewed all of the individuals involved with
the CIR, they asserted that they recalled nothing about it. Dwight
told the OIG that he did not recall being aware of the information
about Mihdhar, did not recall drafting the CIR, did not recall
whether he drafted the CIR on his own initiative or at the direction
of his supervisor, and did not recall any discussions about the
reason for delaying completion and dissemination of the CIR. Malcolm
said he did not recall reviewing any of the cable traffic or any
information regarding Hazmi and Mihdhar. Eric told the OIG that
he did not recall the CIR.
The CIA employees also stated that they did not recall
the CIR. Although James, the CIA employee detailed to FBI Headquarters,
declined to be interviewed by us, he told the CIA OIG that he
did not recall the CIR. John (the deputy chief of the Bin Laden
Unit) and Michelle, the desk officer who was following this issue,
also stated that they did not recall the CIR, any discussions
putting it on hold, or why it was not sent.
Again, the tone of incredulity is clear. None of these people
remember anything, and one of them actually refuses to be interviewed!
And this is not about a minor matter, but concerns the first report
on a man who was one of the 19 hijackers on 9/11.
A politically motivated whitewash
The FBI inspector generals report is, like all previous
official investigations into the events of 9/11, a cover-up for
the state apparatus. These investigations share one common feature:
they completely exclude, a priori, any question of government
complicity in terrorist attacks. Instead, we have the familiar
litany of breast-beating over mistakes, complacency, inattention
and inadequate resources.
Despite the all-purpose explanation that mistakes were
made, names are never named in any of these probes. No one
is ever held accountable. No one is shamed or punished.
There is a definite reason for this: the US government does
not want to generate a Watergate syndrome, in which punishment
meted out at a lower level leads to people implicating higher-ups
and focuses attention on the role of top officials.
There can hardly remain any serious doubt that a section of
the American intelligence apparatus functioned as the guardian
angels for at least some of the suicide hijackers. The question
is: why?
Until there is an investigation of 9/11 by a genuinely independent
bodyone wholly free of the US military/intelligence apparatusit
is impossible to specify precisely the role of the government
in these events.
But on the basis of a political analysis alone, it is clear
that 9/11 did not come as a bolt from the blue. As in the investigation
of any crime, a critical question to be posed is: who benefits?
For powerful sections of the US ruling elite and its state apparatus,
a major terrorist attack on US soil was anticipated, desired and,
most probably, facilitated in order to provide the necessary climate
of fear and patriotic fervor to implement a sweeping program of
political reaction, both at home and abroad.
Without 9/11, there would be no US occupation of Iraq, putting
an American army squarely at the center of the worlds largest
pool of oil. Without 9/11, there would be no US bases across Central
Asia, guarding the second largest source of oil and gas. And without
9/11, the Bush administration would have been unable to sustain
itself politically, faced with a deteriorating economy and widespread
opposition to its tax cuts for millionaires and social measures
to appease the fundamentalist Christian Right.
The Democratic Party is deeply implicated, supporting both
the war in Iraq and the cover-up of the role of the state in the
9/11 attacks. The Clinton administration sought to provoke a confrontation
with Iraq in 1998, but had to back off in the face of public opposition
to a new war in the Middle Eastopposition that was only
overcome in the wake of September 11. Moreover, the connection
between US intelligence agencies and reactionary Islamic fundamentalists
like bin Laden goes back nearly two decades, involving Democratic
and Republican administrations alike.
Despite its tactical differences with the White House and squabbles
over positions of influence, the Democratic Party accepts the
basic program of the Bush administration. Should the Democrats
return to power, they would not withdraw US forces from Iraq or
Central Asia, nor rescind Bushs tax cuts for the wealthy,
nor repeal the USA Patriot Act or attacks on democratic rights.
See Also:
What the September
11 commission hearings revealed
[22 April 2004]
Was the US government
alerted to September 11 attack?
[16 January 2002]
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