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1999: Zacarias Moussaoui, living in London,
is observed by French intelligence making several trips to Pakistan and
Afghanistan. French investigators later claim the British spy agency MI5 was
alerted and requested to place Moussaoui under surveillance. The request appears to have been ignored. [Independent,
12/11/01] September-October 2000:
Zacarias Moussaoui visits Malaysia twice, and stays at the very same condominium
where the January al-Qaeda meeting was held (see January
5-8, 2000). [CNN,
8/30/02, Los
Angeles Times, 2/2/02, Washington
Post, 2/3/02] After that meeting, Malaysian
intelligence keeps watch on the condominium at the request of the CIA. But the
CIA stops the surveillance before Moussaoui arrives, spoiling a chance to expose
the 9/11 plot by monitoring Moussaoui's later travels. The Malaysians later say
they were surprised by the CIA's lack of interest. "We couldn't fathom it,
really," Rais Yatim, Malaysia’s Legal Affairs minister, told Newsweek. "There
was no show of concern." [Newsweek,
6/2/02] While Moussaoui is in Malaysia, Yazid Sufaat,
the owner of the condominium, signs letters falsely identifying Moussaoui as a
representative of his wife's company. [Reuters,
9/20/02, Washington
Post, 2/3/02] When Moussaoui is later arrested in the US about one
month before the 9/11 attacks, this letter in his possession could have led
investigators back to the condominium and the connections with the January 2000
meeting attended by two of the hijackers (see January
5-8, 2000). [USA
Today, 1/30/02] Moussaoui's belongings also contained phone numbers that
could have linked him to Ramzi bin al-Shibh (and his roommate Atta), another
participant in the Malaysian meeting. [Associated Press,
12/12/01] But the papers aren't examined until after the 9/11 attack (see September
11, 2001). February
23, 2001: Zacarias Moussaoui flies to the US. He starts
flight training in Norman, Oklahoma three days later. He trains there until May,
but doesn't do well and drops out before getting a pilot's license. His visa
expires on May 22, but he doesn't attempt to renew it or get another by briefly
leaving the country. He stays in Norman, making arrangements to change flight
schools and frequently exercising in a gym. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02, MSNBC,
12/11/01] According to US investigators, would-be hijacker Ramzi bin
al-Shibh (see November
20, 2002) said he met Moussaoui in Karachi (Pakistan) in June 2001. [Washington
Post, 11/20/02] Moussaoui moves to a flight school in Minnesota in August
(see August
13-15, 2001) and is arrested by the FBI a short time later (see August
15, 2001). [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02, MSNBC,
12/11/01] August 1, 2001 (C): A motel owner in Oklahoma City
later claims that Zacarias Moussaoui and hijackers Atta and Marwan Alshehhi all
come to his motel on this day. Although the FBI has investigated this lead, they
have not commented on it, and prosecutors have not attempted to use the incident
as evidence in their case against Moussaoui. It is widely admitted the case
against Moussaoui is not strong (for instance, Newsweek states: "there's nothing
that shows Moussaoui ever had contact with any of the 9/11 hijackers" [Newsweek,
8/5/02]). The LA Weekly speculates the FBI may want to
ignore this lead because it "could force the FBI to reopen its investigation of
Middle Eastern connections to the 1995 Oklahoma City blast, because convicted
bombers Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols reportedly stayed at the same motel,
interacting with a group of Iraqis during the weeks before the bombing." [LA Weekly,
8/2/02] August 13-15,
2001: Zacarias Moussaoui trains at the Pan Am
International Flight School in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he pays $8,300
($1500 by credit card and the remainder in cash) to use a Boeing 474 Model 400
aircraft simulator. After just one day of training most of the staff is
suspicious that he's a terrorist. They discuss "how much fuel [is] on board a
747-400 and how much damage that could cause if it hit[s] anything."
They call the FBI with their concerns later that day. [New York Times,
2/8/02, Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] They are
suspicious because: August 15, 2001: Based
on the concerns of flight school staff (see August
13-15, 2001), Zacarias Moussaoui is arrested and detained in Minnesota
on the excuse of an immigration violation. [Time,
5/27/02, some reports say the 16th because the arrest happened late at
night] The FBI confiscates his possessions, including a computer laptop, but
don't have a search warrant to search through them. But when arresting him they
note he possesses two knives, fighting gloves and shin guards, and had prepared
"through physical training for violent confrontation." An FBI interview of him
adds more concerns. For example, he is supposedly in
the US working as a "marketing consultant" for a computer company, but is unable
to provide any details of his employment. Nor can he convincingly explain his
$32,000 bank balance. [MSNBC,
12/11/01, Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] An FBI report states that when asked about
his trips to Pakistan, the gateway to Afghanistan, "the questioning caused him
to become extremely agitated, and he refused to discuss the matter further." The
report also notes "Moussaoui was extremely evasive in many of his answers." [CNN,
9/28/02] His roommate is interviewed on the same day, and tells agents that
Moussaoui believes it is "acceptable to kill civilians who harm Muslims," that
Moussaoui approves of Muslims who die as "martyrs", and says Moussaoui might be
willing to act on his beliefs. [Washington
Post, 5/24/02] But Minnesota FBI agents
quickly become frustrated at the lack of interest in the case from higher ups.
[New York
Times, 2/8/02] For instance, on August 21 they e-mail FBI headquarters
saying it's "imperative" that the Secret Service be warned of the danger a plot
involving Moussaoui might pose to the President's safety. But no such warning is
ever sent. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02, New York Times,
10/18/02] (Also note that there is another report [Boston
Herald, 9/14/01] of a terrorist arrest that sounds almost the same as the
Moussaoui story. The only differences are that this unnamed man was arrested in
Boston, not Minnesota, and was called Algerian instead of French, though it
notes he had a French passport. It is very possible this is a slightly garbled,
early version of the same Moussaoui case.) August 20, 2001: Roughly around this day, Ramzi bin al-Shibh, supporting the 9/11
attacks from Germany, receives a coded e-mail about the 9/11 plot from Atta. It
reads, "The first term starts in three weeks ... There are 19 certificates for
private studies and four exams." Bin al-Shibh learns the exact day of the attack
on August 29 (see August
29, 2001 (C)). Apparently bin al-Shibh communicates the date, via
messenger, to bin Laden a few days after leaving Hamburg on September 5 (see September
4-5, 2001). [Guardian,
9/9/02] Hijacker Hani Hanjour also makes surveillance test flights near the
Pentagon and WTC around this time, showing the targets have been confirmed as
well. [CBS,
10/9/02] Information in a notebook later found in
Afghanistan suggests the 9/11 attack was planned for later, but was moved up at
the last minute. [MSNBC,
1/30/02] The FBI has noticed spikes in
cell phone use between the hijackers just after the arrest of Zacarias Moussaoui
and just before the men began to buy tickets for the flights they would hijack.
[New York
Times, 9/10/02] CIA Director Tenet has hinted
that Zacarias Moussaoui's arrest a few days earlier (see August
15, 2001) may be connected to when the date of the attack was picked.
[CIA,
6/18/02] Could there be such a connection? August 22,
2001: The French give the FBI information
requested about Zacarias Moussaoui. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] The French say Moussaoui has ties with
radical Islamic groups and recruits men to fight in Chechnya. They believe he
spent time in Afghanistan (see 1999).
He had been on a French watch list for several years, preventing him from
entering France. A French justice official later says
"the government gave the FBI 'everything we had" on Moussaoui, "enough to make
you want to check this guy out every way you can. Anyone paying attention would
have seen he was not only operational in the militant Islamist world but had
some autonomy and authority as well." [Time,
5/27/02] A senior French investigator later says "Even a neophyte working in
some remote corner of Florida, would have understood the threat based on what
was sent." [Time,
8/4/02] The French Interior Minister also emphasizes, "We did not hold back
any information." [ABC
News, 9/5/02] But senior officials at FBI headquarters
still maintain that the information "was too sketchy to justify a search warrant
for his computer." [Time,
8/4/02] August 23, 2001
(E): Two FBI agents in the Oklahoma City Field
Office visit Airman Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma, to learn about Zacarias
Moussaoui's recent training there (see February
23, 2001). One of these agents had visited
the same school in September 1999, to learn more about Ihab Ali, who trained
there in 1993 and has been identified as bin Laden's personal pilot (see September
1999). Apparently this agent forgets the connection when he visits the
school to look into Moussaoui; he later says he should have connected the two
cases. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02, Boston
Globe, 9/18/01] The Oklahoma City office should also have recalled a memo
that had come from its office in 1998 warning that "large numbers of Middle
Eastern males" were receiving flight training in Oklahoma and could be planning
terrorist attacks (see May
18, 1998). August 23-27, 2001: In the
wake of the French intelligence report on Zacarias Moussaoui (see August
22, 2001), FBI agents in Minnesota are "in a frenzy" and "absolutely
convinced he [is] planning to do something with a plane." One agent writes notes
speculating Moussaoui might "fly something into the World Trade Center." [Newsweek,
5/20/02] Minnesota FBI agents become "desperate to search the computer lap
top" and "conduct a more thorough search of his personal effects," especially
since Moussaoui acted as if he was hiding something important in the laptop when
arrested. [Time,
5/21/02, Time,
5/27/02] FTW They decide to apply for a search warrant under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). "FISA allows the FBI to carry out wiretaps
and searches that would otherwise be unconstitutional" because "the goal is to
gather intelligence, not evidence." [Washington
Post, 11/4/01] Standards to get a warrant through FISA are so low that out
of 10,000 requests over more than 20 years, not a single one was turned down.
When the FBI didn't have a strong enough case, it appears it
simply lied to FISA. In May 2002, the FISA court complained that the FBI had
lied in at least 75 warrant cases during the Clinton administration, once even
by the FBI Director. [New York Times,
8/27/02] However, as FBI agent Coleen Rowley later puts it, FBI headquarters
"almost inexplicably, throw[s] up roadblocks" and undermines their efforts.
Headquarters personnel bring up "almost ridiculous questions in their apparent
efforts to undermine the probable cause." One Minneapolis agent's e-mail says
FBI headquarters is "setting this up for failure." That turns out to be correct
(see August
28, 2001). [Time,
5/21/02, Time,
5/27/02] August 24, 2001:
Frustrated with lack of response from FBI
headquarters about Zacarias Moussaoui, the Minnesota FBI contact an FBI agent
working with the CIA's Counter-Terrorism Center, and asks the CIA for help.
[Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] On this day,
the CIA sends messages to stations and bases overseas requesting information
about Moussaoui. The message says that the FBI is investigating Moussaoui for
possible involvement in the planning of a terrorist attack and mentions his
efforts to obtain flight training. It also suggests he might be "involved in a
larger plot to target airlines traveling from Europe to the US." [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 9/18/02] It calls him a
"suspect 747 airline attacker" and a "suspect airline suicide hijacker" -
showing that the form of the 9/11 attack isn't a surprise, at least to the CIA.
[Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] FBI
headquarters responds by chastising the Minnesota FBI for notifying the CIA
without approval. [Time,
5/21/02] August 27, 2001
(B): An agent at the FBI headquarters' Radical
Fundamentalist Unit (RFU) tells the FBI Minnesota office supervisor that the
supervisor is getting people "spun up" over Moussaoui. The supervisor replies
that he is trying to get people at FBI headquarters "spun up" because he is
trying to make sure that Moussaoui does "not take control of a plane and fly it
into the World Trade Center." He later alleges the headquarters agent replies,
"[T]hat's not going to happen. We don't know he's a terrorist. You don't have
enough to show he is a terrorist. You have a guy interested in this type of
aircraft - that is it." [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] Three weeks earlier, Dave Frasca,
the head of the RFU unit, had received Ken Williams' memo
expressing concern about terrorists training in US flight schools (see July
10, 2001) and he also knew all about the Moussaoui case, but he
apparently wasn't "spun up" enough to connect the two cases. [Time,
5/27/02] Neither he nor anyone else at FBI headquarters who saw Williams's
memo informed anyone at the FBI Minnesota office about it before 9/11. [Time,
5/21/02] August 28, 2001
(D): A previously mentioned unnamed RFU agent (see August
27, 2001 (B)) edits the Minnesota FBI's request for a FISA search
warrant to search Zacarias Moussaoui's possessions. Minnesota is trying to prove
that Moussaoui is connected to al-Qaeda through a rebel group in Chechnya, but
the RFU agent removes information connecting the Chechnya rebels to al-Qaeda.
Not surprisingly, the FBI Deputy General Counsel who receives the edited request
decides on this day that there isn't enough connection to al-Qaeda to allow an
application for a search warrant through FISA, so FISA is never even asked.
[Senate Intelligence
Committee, 10/17/02] According to a later memo
written by Minneapolis FBI legal officer Coleen Rowley (see an edited version of
the memo here: Time,
5/21/02), FBI headquarters is to blame for not getting the FISA warrant
because of this rewrite of the request. She says "I feel that certain facts ...
have, up to now, been omitted, downplayed, glossed over and/or mis-characterized
in an effort to avoid or minimize personal and/or institutional embarrassment on
the part of the FBI and/or perhaps even for improper political reasons." She
asks, "Why would an FBI agent deliberately sabotage a case?" The superiors
acted so strangely that some agents in the Minneapolis office openly joked that
these higher-ups "had to be spies or moles ... working for Osama bin Laden."
Failing to approve the warrant through FISA, FBI headquarters also refuses to
contact the Justice Department to try and get a search warrant through ordinary
means. Rowley and others are unable to search Moussaoui's computer until after
the 9/11 attacks. Rowley later notes that the headquarters agents who blocked
the Minnesota FBI were promoted after 9/11 (see December
4, 2002). [Sydney
Morning Herald, 5/28/02, Time,
5/21/02] FTW
September 4, 2001
(B): FBI headquarters dispatches a message to the
entire US intelligence community about the Zacarias Moussaoui investigation.
According to a later Congressional inquiry, the message notes "that Moussaoui
was being held in custody but [it doesn't] describe any particular threat that
the FBI thought he posed, for example, whether he might be connected to a larger
plot. [It also does] not recommend that the addressees take any action or look
for any additional indicators of a terrorist attack, nor [does] it provide any
analysis of a possible hijacking threat or provide any specific warnings." [Congressional
Intelligence Committee, 9/24/02] The FAA is also given the warning, but the
FAA decides not to issue a security alert to the nation's airports. An FAA
spokesman says, "He was in jail and there was no evidence he was connected to
other people." [New
York Post, 5/21/02] This is in sharp contrast to
an internal CIA warning sent out earlier based on even less information (see August
24, 2001), which stated Moussaoui might be "involved in a larger plot to
target airlines traveling from Europe to the US." [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 9/18/02] Would the hijackers have been stopped at
the airports if the FBI warning was as strong as the CIA warning?
It turns out that prior to this point terrorist Ahmed Ressam
(see December
14, 1999) had started cooperating with investigators. He had trained
with Moussaoui in Afghanistan and willingly shared this information after 9/11.
The FBI dispatch, with its notable lack of urgency and details, failed to prompt
the agents in Seattle holding Ressam to ask him about Moussaoui. Had the
connection between these two been learned before 9/11, presumably the search
warrant for Moussaoui would have been approved and the 9/11 plot might have
unraveled. [Sunday
Times, 2/3/02] September 5-6, 2001: French and US intelligence officials hold meetings in Paris on
combating terrorism. The French newspaper Le Monde claims that the French
try again to warn their US counterparts about Moussaoui, "but the American
delegation ... paid no attention ... basically concluding that they were
going to take no one's advice, and that an attack on American soil was
inconceivable." The US participants also say Moussaoui's case is in the
hands of the immigration authorities and is not a matter for the FBI. [Independent,
12/11/01, Village Voice,
5/28/02] The FBI arranges to deport Moussaoui to France on September 17, so
the French can search his belongings and tell the FBI the results. Due to the
9/11 attacks, the deportation never happens. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] September 11, 2001 (J):
Zacarias Moussaoui watches the 9/11 attack on TV inside a prison, where he is
being held on immigration charges. He cheers the attacks. [BBC, 12/12/01]
Within an hour of the attacks, the Minnesota FBI uses a memo written to FBI
headquarters shortly after Moussaoui's arrest to ask permission from a judge for
the search warrant they have been desperately seeking. Even after the
attacks, FBI headquarters is still attempting to block the search of Moussaoui's
computer, characterizing the WTC attacks as a mere coincidence with suspicions
about Moussaoui (the person still trying to block the search is later promoted).
[Time,
5/21/02] However, a federal judge approves the warrant that afternoon. [New Yorker,
9/30/02] Minnesota FBI agent Coleen Rowley notes that this very memo was
previously deemed insufficient by FBI headquarters to get a search warrant, and
the fact that they are immediately granted one when finally allowed to ask shows
"the missing piece of probable cause was only the [FBI headquarters'] failure to
appreciate that such an event could occur." [Time,
5/21/02] The search uncovers information
suggesting Moussaoui may have been planning an attack using crop dusters, but it
doesn't turn up any direct connection to the 9/11 hijackers. However, they find
some German telephone numbers and the name "Ahad Sabet." The numbers allow them
to determine the name is an alias for Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Atta's former
roommate, and they find he wired Moussaoui money. They also find a document
connecting Moussaoui with the Malaysian Yazid Sufaat, a lead that could have led
to hijackers Khalid Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi (see September-October
2000). [New Yorker,
9/30/02, MSNBC,
12/11/01] Rowley later suggests that if they would had received the search
warrant sooner, "There is at least some chance that ... may have limited the
Sept. 11th attacks and resulting loss of life." [Time,
5/27/02] September 14, 2001
(F): FBI Director Mueller describes reports
that several of the hijackers had received flight training in the US as "news,
quite obviously," adding: "If we had understood that to be the case, we would
have -- perhaps one could have averted this." It is later discovered that
contrary to Mueller's claims, the FBI had interviewed various flight school
staffs about Middle Eastern terrorists on numerous occasions, from 1996 until a
few weeks before 9/11 (see 1996,
May
18, 1998, September
1999 (E), September
2000 (B), July
10, 2001, August
23, 2001). [Washington
Post, 9/23/01, Boston
Globe, 9/18/01] Three days later he says, "There were no warning signs that
I'm aware of that would indicate this type of operation in the country." [Department
of Justice transcript, 9/17/01] Slate magazine later contrasts this with
numerous other contradictory statements and articles, and awards Mueller the
"Whopper of the Week." [Slate,
5/17/02] December 11, 2001: Zacarias Moussaoui is criminally indicted for his role in the
9/11 attacks. If found guilty, he could be sentenced to death. [MSNBC,
12/11/01, AP,
12/12/01] Moussaoui has admitted to being a member of al-Qaeda, but while he
has been involved in terrorist activity, many have expressed doubts that he had
any involvement in the 9/11 plot (see September
5, 2002 and September
30, 2002). May 21, 2002: Minnesota FBI agent Coleen
Rowley, upset with what she considers lying from FBI Director Mueller and others
in the FBI about the handling of the Moussaoui case, makes public a long memo
she's written about the topic (previously discussed, see August
28, 2001 (D), and see the memo here: [Time,
5/21/02]). She also applies for whistleblower protection. Time
magazine calls the memo a "colossal indictment of our chief law-enforcement
agency's neglect" and says it "raises serious doubts about whether the FBI is
capable of protecting the public - and whether it still deserves the public's
trust." [Time,
5/27/02] After 9/11 Mueller made statements such as
"There were no warning signs that I'm aware of that would indicate this type of
operation in the country" (see September
14, 2001 (F)). Coleen Rowley and other Minnesota FBI agents "immediately
sought to reach [Mueller's] office through an assortment of higher-level FBI
[headquarters] contacts, in order to quickly make [him] aware of the background
of the Moussaoui investigation and forewarn [him] so that [his] public
statements could be accordingly modified," yet Mueller continued to make similar
comments, including in a Senate hearing on May 8, 2002. [Time,
5/21/02 , New York Times,
5/30/02] Finally, after Rowley's memo becomes public, Mueller states, "I
cannot say for sure that there wasn't a possibility we could have come across
some lead that would have led us to the hijackers." He also admits: "I have made
mistakes occasionally in my public comments based on information or a lack of
information that I subsequently got." [New
York Times, 5/30/02] Time
magazine later names Rowley one of three "Persons of the Year" for 2002, along with fellow whistleblowers Cynthia Cooper of
Worldcom and Sherron Watkins of Enron. [Time,
12/22/02, Time,
12/22/02] June 3, 2002: Former
FBI Deputy Director Weldon Kennedy states: "Even in the [Zacarias] Moussaoui
case, there's lots of uproar over the fact that the - there was a failure to
obtain a warrant to search his computer. Well, the facts now are that warrant
was ultimately obtained. The computer was searched and guess what? There was
nothing significant on there pertaining to 9/11." [CNN, 6/3/02] Three
days later, The Washington Post reports: "Amid the latest revelations about FBI
and CIA lapses prior to the Sept. 11 attacks, congressional investigators say it
is now clear that the evidence that lay unexamined in Zacarias Moussaoui's
possession was even more valuable than previously believed. A notebook and
correspondence of Moussaoui's not only appears to link him to the main hijacking
cell in Hamburg, Germany, but also to an al-Qaeda associate in Malaysia whose
activities were monitored by the CIA more than a year before the terror attacks
on New York and Washington." [Washington
Post, 6/6/02] Slate magazine later gives Kennedy the "Whopper of the Week"
award for his comment. [Slate,
6/7/02] August 28, 2002: The
judge presiding over the Moussaoui trail is puzzled why the FBI claims it
couldn't find an e-mail account used by Moussaoui: "We do not understand why an
immediate and thorough investigation into the defendant's e-mail and computer
activities did not lead investigators to the ... account, if it existed," the
judge says. She adds, "A more detailed explanation from the United States is
warranted." Moussaoui was carrying a Kinko's receipt when he was arrested in
August 2001, and was known to have used Kinko's computers for e-mail. His
Hotmail account was erased by Hotmail because it wasn't used for 90 days - the
judge doesn't understand why that didn't give the FBI plenty of time to find his
e-mails after 9/11. [AP,
8/28/02] Could it be that the FBI did find the account, but didn't like
what it saw, and so claimed ignorance? September 5, 2002:
Based on the recent interrogations of terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui's al-Qaeda
associates, including his alleged handler, French intelligence believes
Moussaoui was not part of the 9/11 attacks, but was being readied for a second
wave of attacks. Says one French official: "Moussaoui was going to be a foot
soldier in a second wave of attacks that was supposed to culminate in early 2002
with simultaneous bombings against US embassies in Europe, the Middle East and
Asia, as well as several hijackings in the United States." However, the US has charged him with being the "20th hijacker" who
planned to be on Flight 77 in the 9/11 attack. [ABC
News, 9/5/02] Other accounts suggest he wasn't meant to the 20th hijacker
(for instance, see September
30, 2002). Why doesn't the US prosecute Moussaoui on other
charges? September 24, 2002:
Federal prosecutors say a business card found in the wreckage of Flight 93
provides a link between alleged conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui and hijacker Ziad
Jarrah. Supposedly a business card belonging to Jarrah has a phone number
written on it, and Moussaoui had once called that number. It was not explained
what the number is, whose phone number it was, when Moussaoui called it, when
the card was found, or how investigators know the card belonged to Jarrah. [MSNBC,
9/24/02, Washington
Post, 9/25/02] Interestingly, this find comes just as the case against
Moussaoui is facing trouble. For instance, one month earlier, USA Today said
investigators had found no link between Moussaoui and the other hijackers. [USA
Today, 8/29/02] Prosecutors have been trying to get permission to play the
Flight 93 cockpit voice recordings to the jury, but on September 13, the judge
said, "the recordings appear to have marginal evidentiary value while posing
unfair prejudice to the defendant." [Washington
Post, 9/25/02] Was it just incredible luck to have found this card a year
after 9/11, or could someone have created new evidence by writing a phone number
on a card? September 25, 2002: In
an interview with CBS, FBI Director Mueller states, "I can tell you there are
things I wish we had done differently. That there are things we should have
followed up on. But the bottom line is I do not believe that we would have been
able to prevent September 11th." Speaking about the Zacarias Moussaoui case, he
says, "That took us several months, to follow that lead, and it also required
the full support of the German authorities, and it would have been very, I think
impossible to have followed that particular lead in the days between the time in
which Moussaoui was detained and September 11th." [CBS,
9/25/02] This negativism is in sharp contrast to a previous statement he
made (see May
21, 2002 (C)), as well as the opinion of many rank and file FBI
officers, some of whom have made a chart showing how all the hijackers could
have been caught if certain leads had been followed. [Newsweek,
6/2/02] Mueller's opinion on the Moussaoui case is contradicted by many,
including FBI agents working on that case. [Time,
5/21/02] The media also doesn't agree. For instance the Independent stated
information on Moussaoui's computer "might have been enough to expose the
Hamburg cell, which investigators believe was the key planning unit for 11
September." [Independent,
12/11/01] September 30, 2002:
Seymour Hersh of New Yorker magazine reveals that, despite a weak case
against Zacarias Moussaoui, no federal prosecutor has discussed a plea bargain
with him since he was indicted in November 2001. Hersh reports that "Moussaoui's
lawyers, and some FBI officials, remain bewildered at the government's failure
to pursue a plea bargain." Says a federal public defender, "I've never been in a
conspiracy case where the government wasn't interested in knowing if the
defendant had any information - to see if there wasn't more to the conspiracy."
Apparently a plea bargain isn't being considered because Attorney General
Ashcroft wants nothing less than the death penalty for Moussaoui. One former CIA
official claims, "They cast a wide net and [Moussaoui] happened to be a little
fish who got caught up in it. They know it now. And nobody will back off." A
legal expert says, "It appears that Moussaoui is not competent to represent
himself, because he doesn't seem to understand the fundamentals of the charges
against him, but I am starting to feel that the rest of us are crazier ... we
may let this man talk himself to death to soothe our sense of vulnerability."
[New Yorker,
9/30/02] October 22, 2002: The recent
capture of would-be hijacker Ramzi bin al-Shibh (see September
11, 2002) is threatening the trials of Zacarias Moussaoui in the US and
Atta associate Mounir El Motassadeq in Germany. Bin al-Shibh is connected to
both, and would normally be an extremely important witness in both cases. But
the US does not want bin al-Shibh to testify. Both Moussaoui and Motassadeq have
a good chance to win their trials on the argument that they cannot get a fair
trial if they cannot call bin al-Shibh as a witness. As a result, there is talk
that the US may have to abandon Moussaoui's civilian court trial, and retry him
in a military court. It appears a judge has delayed the Moussaoui trial until
June 2003 to give the US time to interrogate bin al-Shibh. But the US wants to
secretly interrogate him for a couple years, at least. [New York Times,
10/22/02, Washington
Post, 10/23/02] Does bin al-Shibh know secrets about 9/11 that would
embarrass the US? November 20, 2002: The US claims that captured
would-be hijacker Ramzi bin al-Shibh says Zacarias Moussaoui met 9/11 mastermind
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed in Afghanistan during the winter of 2000-01 and Mohammed
gave him names of US contacts. [Washington
Post, 11/20/02] Bin al-Shibh and Mohammed agreed Moussaoui should be nothing
more than a backup figure in the 9/11 plot because he could not keep a secret
and was too volatile and untrustworthy. Supposedly, bin al-Shibh wired Moussaoui
money intended for other terrorist activities, not 9/11. [USA
Today, 11/20/02] The Washington Post has suggested this may cause Moussaoui
to not want to call bin al-Shibh as a witness in his trial, but it appears
Moussaoui still wants him as a witness. [Washington
Post, 11/20/02] There have been suggestions that the US may move
Moussaoui's case from a civilian court to a military tribunal, which would
prevent bin al-Shibh from testifying, but the issue remains undecided (see October
22, 2002). [USA
Today, 11/20/02] December 4,
2002: Marion (Spike) Bowman, head of the FBI's
National Security Law Unit and the person who refused to seek a special warrant
for a search of Zacarias Moussaoui's belongings before the 9/11 attacks (see
August
23-27, 2001 and August
28, 2001 (D)) is among nine recipients of bureau awards for "exceptional
performance." FBI Director Mueller says the honorees "are strongly linked to our
counter-terrorism efforts" and "have gone out on a limb to improve our
administrative practices [and] our legal tools." The awards include cash bonuses
of up to 35% of each recipient's base salary. The award came shortly after a
9/11 Congressional inquiry report that said Bowman's unit gave Minneapolis FBI
agents "inexcusably confused and inaccurate information" that was ''patently
false'." [Minneapolis
Star Tribune, 12/22/02] Bowman's unit also blocked an urgent request by FBI
agents to begin searching for Khalid Almihdhar after his name was put on a watch
list (see August
29, 2001). In early 2000, the FBI acknowledged serious blunders in
surveillance Bowman's unit conducted during sensitive terrorism and espionage
investigations, including agents who illegally videotaped suspects, intercepted
e-mails without court permission, and recorded the wrong phone conversations.
[AP,
1/10/03] Mueller also promotes Pasquale D'Amuro, the FBI's counter-terrorism
chief in New York City before 9/11, to the bureau's top counterterrorism post. A
former Justice Department official says Mueller has "promoted the exact same
people who have presided over the ... failure." [Time,
12/30/02]
Zacarias Moussaoui passing
through a London
airport. [BBC]
1) In contrast to all the other students at this
high-level flight school, he has no aviation background, little previous
training and no pilot's license. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02]
2) He wants
to fly a 747 not because he plans to be a pilot, but as an "ego boosting thing."
[New York
Times, 10/18/02] Yet within hours of his arrival, it is clear he "was not
some affluent joy-rider." [New York Times,
2/8/02]
3) He is "extremely" interested in the operation of the plane's
doors and control panel. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] He also is very
keen on learning the protocol for communicating with the flight tower despite
having no plans to actually become a pilot. [New York Times,
2/8/02]
4) He is evasive and belligerent when asked about his
background. When an instructor, who notes from his records that Moussaoui
is from France, attempts to greet him in French, Moussaoui appears not to
understand, saying that he had spent very little time in France and that he is
from the Middle East. The instructor considers it odd that Moussaoui did not
specify the Middle Eastern country. [Minneapolis St. Paul
Star Tribune, 12/21/01; Washington
Post, 1/2/02]
5) He tells a flight instructor he is not a Muslim, but
the instructor senses he is lying, badly, about it. [New Yorker,
9/30/02]
6) He says he would "love" to fly a simulated flight from London
to New York, raising fears he has plans to hijack such a flight. [Senate
Intelligence Committee, 10/17/02] His original
e-mail to the flight school similarly stated he wanted to be good enough to fly
from London to New York. [New York Times,
2/8/02]
7) He pays for thousands of dollars in expenses from a large wad
of cash. [New
York Times, 2/8/02]
8) He seemed to be trying to pack a large amount of
training in a short period of time for no apparent reason. [New York Times,
2/8/02]
9) He mostly practices flying in the air, not taking off or
landing (although note that reports claiming he didn't want to take off or land
at all appear to be an exaggeration). [New York Times,
2/8/02, Slate, 5/21/02, Minneapolis St. Paul
Star Tribune, 12/21/01, New York Times,
5/22/02]
Failing to get much initial interest from the FBI, the flight
instructor tells the FBI agents, "Do you realize how serious this is? This man
wants training on a 747. A 747 fully loaded with fuel could be used as a
weapon!" [New
York Times, 2/8/02]
Zacarias Moussaoui. [AFP]
FBI officer Coleen Rowley.
[AP]
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