by John J. Lumpkin
Associated Press Writer
8/21/02
15:08 PDT Washington (AP)
In
what the government describes as a bizarre coincidence,
one U.S. intelligence agency was planning an exercise
last Sept. 11 in which an errant aircraft would crash
into one of its buildings. But the cause wasn't
terrorism -- it was to be a simulated accident.
Officials at the Chantilly, Va.-based National
Reconnaissance Office had scheduled an exercise that
morning in which a small corporate jet would crash into
one of the four towers at the agency's headquarters
building after experiencing a mechanical failure.
The agency is about four miles from the runways of
Washington Dulles International Airport.
Agency chiefs came up with the scenario to test
employees' ability to respond to a disaster, said
spokesman Art Haubold. No actual plane was to be
involved -- to simulate the damage from the crash, some
stairwells and exits were to be closed off, forcing
employees to find other ways to evacuate the building.
"It was just an incredible coincidence that this
happened to involve an aircraft crashing into our
facility," Haubold said. "As soon as the real world
events began, we canceled the exercise."
Terrorism was to play no role in the exercise, which had
been planned for several months, he said.
Adding to the coincidence, American Airlines Flight 77
-- the Boeing 767 that was hijacked and crashed into the
Pentagon -- took off from Dulles at 8:10 a.m. on Sept.
11, 50 minutes before the exercise was to begin. It
struck the Pentagon around 9:40 a.m., killing 64 aboard
the plane and 125 on the ground.
The National Reconnaissance Office operates many of the
nation's spy satellites. It draws its personnel from the
military and the CIA.
After the Sept. 11 attacks, most of the 3,000 people who
work at agency headquarters were sent home, save for
some essential personnel, Haubold said.
An
announcement for an upcoming homeland security
conference in Chicago first noted the exercise.
In
a promotion for speaker John Fulton, a CIA officer
assigned as chief of NRO's strategic gaming division,
the announcement says, "On the morning of September 11th
2001, Mr. Fulton and his team ... were running a
pre-planned simulation to explore the emergency response
issues that would be created if a plane were to strike a
building. Little did they know that the scenario would
come true in a dramatic way that day."
The conference is being run by the National Law
Enforcement and Security Institute.