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by 9/11 Commission
Staff
Updated: 1:30 p.m. ET April 13,
2004
Threats and Responses in 2001
Staff Statement No. 10
Members of
the Commission, with your help, your staff has developed preliminary
findings regarding awareness of the threat of terrorist attack in the
months leading up to September 11, 2001, and some aspects of the immediate
response.
This report
reflects the results of our work so far. We remain ready to revise our
understanding as our work continues. This staff statement represents the
collective effort of a number of members of our staff. Barbara Grewe,
Michael Jacobson, Thomas Eldridge, and Susan Ginsburg did much of the work
reflected in this statement.
We have
built upon the substantial work carried out by the Joint Inquiry of the
House and Senate Intelligence Committees. We have obtained excellent
cooperation from the CIA, FBI, and the Office of Inspector General of the
Department of Justice. They made significant material available for the
preparation of this statement.
The 2001 Threat
For years
the U.S. government had experienced surges of threat reports. Significant
surges had been experienced, for example, at the end of 1999 as part of a
more generalized fear of attacks associated with Millennium events. There
had been other surges in threat reporting during the summer of 2000 and in
the Ramadan period at the end of 2000. But until 2001 the Millennium had
set a kind of benchmark, and so it is worth recalling that episode.
In early
December 1999, Jordanian authorities discovered a cell planning attacks on
a hotel and other tourist sites. The CIA learned of links between this
cell and people living in Boston and Los Angeles. Then, in mid-December,
U.S. border inspectors caught Ahmed Ressam at the Canadian border trying
to smuggle explosives into the United States. Investigators later learned
his true target was the Los Angeles International Airport. The FBI linked
Ressam to a terrorist cell in Montreal that, in turn, had links to
individuals in Brooklyn. NSC Counterterrorism Coordinator Richard Clarke
told us that at that point the U.S. government went to what we would now
call an "orange" alert. In an extraordinary effort, spurred by Attorney
General Janet Reno, the FBI mobilized its field offices nationwide to
prevent an attack.
Beginning
in December, there was an intense period with frequent phone calls and
meetings among cabinet-level principals. The FBI asked for and obtained an
extraordinary number of FISA warrants. Principals participated directly in
tracking the progress of various domestic investigations. Berger, in
particular, met or spoke constantly with Tenet and Attorney General Reno.
He visited the FBI and the CIA on Christmas Day 1999 to raise the morale
of exhausted officials. After the Millennium passed, a more normal work
pace returned. But, as Tenet recalled to us, the Millennium was followed
by the October 2000 Cole bombing, then threats during the Ramadan
period at the end of 2000. "You're running like hell" during this entire
period, he said. Until officials live through one of these periods, he
added, they cannot understand what it is like.
In spring
2001, the level of reporting on terrorist threats and planned attacks
began to increase dramatically, representing the most significant spike in
activity since the Millennium. At the end of March the Intelligence
Community disseminated a Terrorist Threat Advisory, indicating there was a
heightened threat of Sunni extremist terrorist attacks against U.S.
facilities, personnel, and other interests in the coming weeks. In April
and May 2001 the drumbeat of reporting increased. Articles presented to
top officials contained headlines such as: "Bin Ladin planning multiple
operations." "Bin Ladin public profile may presage attack." "Bin Ladin
network's plans advancing." By late May there were reports of a hostage
plot against Americans to force the release of prisoners, including Sheikh
Omar Abdel Rahman, the "Blind Sheikh," who was serving a life sentence for
his role in the 1993 plot to blow up sites in New York City. The reporting
noted that the operatives may opt to hijack an aircraft or storm a U.S.
embassy. The reporting also mentioned that Abu Zubaydah was planning an
attack and expected to carry out more if things went well. The U.S.
government redoubled efforts, ongoing since late 1999, to capture Abu
Zubaydah. National Counterterrorism Coordinator Clarke also called
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice's attention to possible plots
in Yemen and Italy, and by an alleged cell in Canada that might be
planning an attack against the United States.
Reports
similar to these were made available to President Bush in morning meetings
with DCI Tenet, usually attended by Vice President Cheney and National
Security Adviser Rice as well. None of these reports mentioned that the
attacks might occur in the United States. At the end of May,
Counterterrorist Center (CTC) Chief Cofer Black told Rice that the current
threat level was a "7" on a scale of 10, as compared to an "8" during the
Millennium.
The threat
reports surged again in June and July, reaching an even higher peak of
urgency. A Terrorist Threat Advisory in late June indicated that there was
a high probability of near-term "spectacular" terrorist attacks resulting
in numerous casualties. Headlines from intelligence reports were stark:
"Bin Ladin threats are real." "Bin Ladin planning high profile attacks."
The intelligence reporting consistently described the upcoming attacks as
occurring on a catastrophic level, indicating that they would cause the
world to be in turmoil, consisting of possible multiple-but not
necessarily simultaneous-attacks. A late June report stated that Bin Ladin
operatives expect near-term attacks to have dramatic consequences of
catastrophic proportion.
Rice told
us Clarke and his Counterterrorism and Security Group (CSG) were "the
nerve center" in coordinating responses but that principals were also
involved. In addition to his daily meetings with President Bush, and
weekly meetings to go over other issues with National Security Adviser
Rice, Tenet continued his regular meetings with Secretary Powell and
Secretary Rumsfeld. The foreign policy principals talked on the phone
every day on a variety of subjects, including the threat. The summer
threats seemed to be focused on Saudi Arabia, Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait,
Yemen, and possibly Rome, but the danger could be anywhere-including a
possible attack on the G-8 summit in Genoa, where air defense measures
were taken. Disruption operations were launched involving twenty
countries. Several terrorist operatives were detained by foreign
governments, possibly disrupting operations in the Gulf and Italy and
perhaps averting attacks against two or three U.S. embassies. U.S. armed
forces in at least six countries were placed on higher alert. Units of the
Fifth Fleet were redeployed. Embassies were alerted. Vice President Cheney
contacted Crown Prince Abdullah to get more Saudi help. DCI Tenet phoned
or met with approximately twenty top security officials from other
countries. Deputy National Security Adviser Hadley apparently called
European counterparts. Clarke worked with senior officials in the Gulf.
At Rice's
request, on July 5 the CIA briefed Attorney General John Ashcroft on the
al Qaeda threat, warning that a significant terrorist attack was imminent,
and a strike could occur at any time. That same day, officials from
domestic agencies, including the FAA, met with Clarke to discuss the
current threat. Rice worked directly with Tenet on security issues for the
G-8 summit. In addition to the individual reports, on July 11 top
officials received a summary recapitulating the mass of al Qaeda-related
threat reporting on several continents. Tenet told us that in his world
"the system was blinking red," and by late July it could not have been any
worse. Tenet told us he felt that President Bush and other officials
grasped the urgency of what they were being told.
On July 27
Clarke informed Rice and Hadley that the spike in signals intelligence
about a nearterm attack had stopped. He urged keeping readiness high
during the August vacation period, warning that another report suggested
an attack had just been postponed for a few months. On August 3 the
Intelligence Community issued a Threat Advisory warning that the threat of
impending al Qaeda attacks would likely continue indefinitely. The
advisory cited threats in the Arabian Peninsula, Jordan, Israel, and
Europe, and suggested that al Qaeda was lying in wait and searching for
gaps in security before moving forward with the planned attacks.
During the
spring and summer of 2001, President Bush had occasionally asked his
briefers whether any of the threats pointed to the United States.
Reflecting on these questions, the CIA decided to write a briefing article
summarizing its understanding of this danger. The article, which the
President received on August 6, is attached to this staff statement.
Despite the
large number of threats received, there were no specifics regarding time,
place, method, or target. Disruption efforts continued. An al Qaeda
associate from North Africa, connected to Abu Zubaydah, was arrested in
the United Arab Emirates on August 13. He had apparently been planning an
attack against the U.S. Embassy in Paris.
CIA
analysts who have recently reviewed the threat surge of the summer of 2001
told us they believe it may have been related to a separate stream of
events. These threats may have been referring to the 9/11 attack, the
planned assassination of Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud, or
other operations.
In July
2001, the CSG alerted federal law enforcement agencies and asked the FAA
to send out security advisories. Beginning on July 27 the FAA issued
several security directives to U.S. air carriers prior to September 11. In
addition, the FAA issued a number of general warnings about potential
threats, primarily overseas, to civil aviation. None of these warnings
required the implementation of additional aviation security measures. They
urged air carriers to be alert.
Although
there was no credible evidence of an attack in the United States, Clarke
told us, the CSG arranged for the CIA to brief senior intelligence and
security officials from the domestic agencies. The head of
counterterrorism at the FBI, Dale Watson, said he had many discussions
about possible attacks with Cofer Black at the CIA. They had expected an
attack on July 4. Watson said he felt deeply that something was going to
happen. But he told us the threat information was "nebulous." He wished he
had known more. He wished he had had "500 analysts looking at Usama Bin
Ladin threat information instead of two."
Rice and
Hadley told us that, before 9/11, they did not feel they had the job of
handling domestic security. They felt that Clarke and the CSG were the
NSC's bridge between foreign and domestic threats.
In late
August, working-level CIA and FBI officials realized that one or more al
Qaeda operatives might be in the United States. We have found no evidence
that this discovery was ever briefed to the CSG, to principals, or to
senior counterterrorism officials at the FBI or the CIA. Nor was the White
House told about the arrest of Zacarias Moussaoui.
We
investigated awareness of the terrorist threat within the Department of
Justice and the FBI during the spring and summer of 2001. Rice told us
that she believed the FBI had tasked its 56 U.S. field offices to increase
surveillance of suspected terrorists and to reach out to informants who
might have information about terrorist plots. An NSC document at the time
describes such a tasking having occurred in late June, although it does
not indicate whether the tasking was generated by the NSC or the FBI.
At this
point we have found the following: On April 13 FBI Headquarters alerted
field offices to a heightened threat from al Qaeda against U.S. interests.
The communication detailed the threats against U.S. interests abroad, but
made no mention of any possible threat inside the United States. The field
offices were asked to "task all resources to include electronic databases
and human sources for any information pertaining to the current
operational activities relating to Sunni extremism."
On July 2
the FBI Counterterrorism Division sent a message to federal agencies and
state and local law enforcement agencies that summarized information
regarding threats against U.S. interests from Bin Ladin. The message
reported that there was an increased volume of threat reporting indicating
a potential for attacks against U.S. targets abroad from groups "aligned
with or sympathetic to Usama bin Ladin." It further stated, "[t]he FBI has
no information indicating a credible threat of terrorist attack in the
United States." However, it went on to emphasize that the possibility of
attack in the United States could not be discounted. It also noted that
the July 4 holiday might heighten the threats. The report asked the
recipients to "exercise vigilance" and "report suspicious activities" to
the FBI.
Acting FBI
Director Thomas Pickard recently told us that during his summer telephone
calls with Special Agents in Charge of each FBI field office, he mentioned
to each the heightened threat, among other subjects. He also told us that
he had a conference call with all Special Agents in Charge on July 19 in
which he discussed a variety of subjects. He said one of the items he
mentioned was that they needed to have their evidence response teams ready
to move at a moment's notice in case they needed to respond to an attack.
We found in
our field office visits last fall, however, that a number of FBI
personnel-with the exception of those in the New York field office-did not
recall a heightened sense of threat from al Qaeda within the United States
in summer 2001. For example, an international terrorism squad supervisor
in the Washington Field Office told us he was neither aware in summer 2001
of an increased threat, nor did his squad take any special steps or
actions. The Special Agent in Charge of the Miami Field Office told us he
did not learn of the high level of threat until after September 11.
Pickard
said in late June and through July he met with Attorney General Ashcroft
once a week. He told us that although he initially briefed the Attorney
General regarding these threats, after two such briefings the Attorney
General told him he did not want to hear this information anymore. The
Justice Department has informed us that Attorney General Ashcroft, his
former deputy, and his chief of staff deny that the Attorney General made
any such statement to Pickard.
Ashcroft
told us that he asked Pickard whether there was intelligence about attacks
in the United States. Pickard said he replied that he could not assure
Ashcroft that there would be no attacks in the United States, although the
reports of threats were related to overseas targets. Ashcroft said he
therefore assumed that the FBI was doing what it needed to do. He
acknowledged that, in retrospect, this was a dangerous assumption.
Prior to
9/11 neither Ashcroft nor his predecessors received a copy of the
President's Daily Brief. After 9/11 Ashcroft began to receive portions of
the brief that relate to counterterrorism.
Mihdhar and Hazmi Continued
While top
officials in Washington were receiving and reacting to various threat
reports, we need to step further down into the bureaucracy to trace a now
significant story of how particular al Qaeda associates were addressed by
lower-level officials. In Staff Statement No. 2 presented at our January
hearing, we discussed the complex story of successes and failures in
tracking and identifying hijackers Khalid al Mihdhar, Nawaf al Hazmi,
Nawaf's brother Salem al Hazmi, and the Cole bomber "Khallad."
Those
efforts had trailed off in January 2000. No one at CIA headquarters
reacted to the March 2000 cable from Bangkok that someone named Nawaf al
Hazmi had traveled to the United States. But there were three episodes in
2001 when the CIA and/or the FBI had apparent opportunities to refocus on
the significance of Hazmi and Mihdhar and reinvigorate the search for
them. As in the 2000 story, the details are complex.
January 2001: Identification of Khallad
Almost one
year after the original trail had been lost in Bangkok, the January 2000
rendezvous of suspected terrorists in Kuala Lumpur resurfaced. The FBI and
the CIA learned from a conspirator in the U.S.S. Cole attack in
Yemen that a person he knew as "Khallad" had helped direct the Cole
bombing. One of the members of the FBI's investigative team in Yemen
realized that he had previously heard of Khallad from a joint FBI/CIA
source, who had said Khallad was close to Bin Ladin. Khallad was also
linked to the East Africa embassy bombings in 1998.
The FBI
agent obtained, from a foreign government, a photo of the person believed
to have directed the Cole bombing. The joint source confirmed
that the man in that photograph was the same Khallad he had described.
In December
2000, based on some analysis of information associated with Khalid al
Mihdhar, the CIA's Bin Ladin Station speculated that Khallad and Khalid al
Mihdhar might be one and the same. So the CIA asked that a Kuala Lumpur
surveillance photo of Mihdhar be shown to the joint source who had already
identified an official photograph of Khallad.
In early
January 2001 two photographs from the Kuala Lumpur meeting were shown to
the joint source. One was a known photograph of Mihdhar, the other a
photograph of an unknown subject. The joint source did not recognize
Mihdhar. But he indicated he was ninety percent certain that the other
individual was Khallad.
This meant
that Khallad and Mihdhar were two different people. But the fact that both
had attended the meeting in Kuala Lumpur also meant that there was a link
between Khallad, a suspected leader in the Cole bombing, the
Kuala Lumpur meeting, and Mihdhar. Despite this new information, we found
no effort by the CIA to renew the long-abandoned search for Mihdhar or his
travel companions.
In
addition, we found that the CIA did not notify the FBI of this
identification until late August. DCI Tenet and Cofer Black testified
before the Joint Inquiry that the FBI had access to this identification
from the beginning. But based on an extensive record, including documents
that were not available to CIA personnel who drafted that testimony, we
conclude they were in error. The FBI's primary Cole investigators
had no knowledge of Khallad's possible participation in the Kuala Lumpur
meeting until after the September 11 attacks.
This is an
example of how day-to-day gaps in information sharing can emerge even in a
situation of goodwill on all sides. The information was from a joint
FBI/CIA source. The source spoke essentially no English. The FBI person on
the scene overseas did not speak the languages the source spoke. Due to
travel and security issues, the amount of time spent with the source was
necessarily kept short. As a result, the CIA officer usually did not
simultaneously translate either the questions or the answers for his
accompanying FBI colleague, and friend.
For
interviews without such simultaneous translation, the FBI agent on the
scene received copies of the reports that the CIA disseminated to other
agencies, but he was not given access to the CIA's internal operational
traffic that contained more detail. The information regarding the January
2001 identification of Khallad was only reported in operational traffic to
which the relevant FBI investigators did not have access. The CIA officer
does not recall this particular identification and thus cannot say why it
was not shared with his FBI colleague. But he may have misunderstood the
possible significance of the new identification.
Mihdhar
left the United States in June 2000. It is possible that if, in January
2001, agencies had resumed their search for him or placed him on the
TIPOFF watchlist, they might have found him before or at the time Mihdhar
applied for a new visa in June 2001. Or they might have been alerted to
him when he returned to the United States the following month. We cannot
know.
Spring 2001: Looking again at Kuala Lumpur
By mid-May
2001, as the threat reports were surging again, a CIA official detailed to
the International Terrorism Operations Section at the FBI wondered where
the attacks might occur. We will call him John. John recalled the Kuala
Lumpur travel of Mihdhar and his associates around the Millennium. He
searched the CIA's databases for information regarding the travel. On May
15 he and an official at CIA reexamined many of the old cables from early
2000, including the information that Mihdhar had a U.S. visa, and that
Hazmi had come to Los Angeles on January 15, 2000.
The CIA
official who reviewed the cables took no action regarding these cables.
She cannot recall this work. John, however, began a lengthy exchange with
a CIA analyst to figure out what these cables meant. He recognized the
relationship to the bombing case, and he was aware that someone had
identified Khallad in one of the surveillance photographs from the
Malaysia meeting. He concluded that "something bad was definitely up."
Despite the U.S. links evident in this traffic, John did not raise that
aspect with his FBI counterparts. He was focused on Malaysia.
John's
focus on the overseas target area might be understood from his description
of the CIA as an agency that tended to play a "zone defense." In contrast,
he said, the FBI tends to play "man-to- man." Desk officers at the CIA's
Bin Ladin Station did not have "cases" in the same sense as an FBI agent
who works something beginning to end. Thus, when the trail went cold after
the Kuala Lumpur meeting in January 2000, the desk officer moved on to
different things. By the time the March 2000 cable arrived with
information that one of the travelers had flown to Los Angeles, the case
officer was not responsible for following up that information. While
several individuals at the Bin Ladin Station opened the cable when it
arrived in March 2000, it was no one's concern, and no action was taken.
We discussed some of the management issues raised by this in January, in
Staff Statement No. 2.
The CIA's
zone defense concentrated on "where," not "who." Had its information been
shared with the FBI, a combination of the CIA's zone defense and the FBI's
man-to-man approach might have been far more productive.
August 2001: The Search for Mihdhar and Hazmi Begins and
Fails
During the
summer of 2001 John asked an FBI official detailed to the CIA to review
all of the Kuala Lumpur materials one more time. We will call her Mary. He
asked her to do the research in her free time. She began her work on July
24. That day she found the cable reporting that Mihdhar had a visa to the
United States. A week later she found the cable reporting that Mihdhar's
visa application-what was later discovered to be his first
application-listed New York as his destination. On August 21 she located
the March 2000 cable that "noted with interest" that Hazmi had flown to
Los Angeles in January 2000. She grasped the significance of this
information.
Mary and an
FBI analyst working the case, whom we will call Jane, promptly met with an
INS representative at FBI Headquarters. On August 22 INS told them that
Mihdhar had entered the United States on January 15, 2000, and again on
July 4, 2001. Jane and Mary also learned that there was no record that
Hazmi had left since January 2000, but they were not certain if he was
still here and assumed that he had left with Mihdhar in June 2000. They
decided that if Mihdhar was in the United States, he should be found.
They
divided up the work. Mary asked the Bin Ladin Station to draft a cable
requesting that Mihdhar and Hazmi be put on the TIPOFF watchlist. Jane
took responsibility for the search effort inside the United States. As the
information indicated that Mihdhar had last arrived in New York and this
was determined to be related to the Bin Ladin case in New York, she began
drafting a lead for the FBI's New York field office. She called an agent
in New York to give him a "heads up" on the matter, but her draft lead was
not sent until August 28. Her e-mail told the New York agent that she
wanted him to get started on this as soon as possible, but she labeled the
lead as "Routine." A "Routine" designation informs the receiving office
that it has thirty days to respond to the lead.
The agent
who received the lead forwarded it to his squad supervisor. That same day
the supervisor forwarded the lead to an intelligence agent to open an
intelligence case. He also sent it to the Cole case agents and an
agent who had spent significant time in Malaysia searching for another
Khalid-Khalid Sheikh Mohammad.
The
suggested goal of the investigation was to locate Mihdhar, determine his
contacts and reasons for being in the United States, and possibly conduct
an interview. Before sending the lead, Jane had discussed it with John,
the CIA official on detail to the FBI, and with the acting head of the
FBI's Bin Ladin Unit. The discussion apparently was limited to whether the
search should be classified as an intelligence investigation or as a
criminal one, a legally important distinction for reasons we explained
earlier today in Staff Statement No. 9. Neither of those individuals
apparently disagreed with the analyst's proposed plan. No one apparently
felt they needed to inform higher levels of management in either the FBI
or CIA about the case.
One of the
Cole case agents read the lead with interest and contacted Jane
to obtain more information. Jane took the position, however, that because
the agent was a designated "criminal" agent, the "wall" kept him from
participating in any search for Mihdhar. In fact, she felt he had to
destroy his copy of the lead because it contained information she believed
could not be shared with any criminal agents. The Joint Inquiry covered
the details of their heated exchanges, and we will not repeat them here.
The result was that criminal agents who were knowledgeable about the
Cole and experienced with criminal investigative techniques,
including finding suspects and possible criminal charges, were excluded
from the search.
Many
witnesses have suggested that even if Mihdhar had been found, there was
nothing the agents could have done except follow him onto the planes. We
believe this is incorrect. Both Hazmi and Mihdhar could have been held for
immigration violations or as material witnesses in the Cole
bombing case. Investigation or interrogation of these individuals, and
their travel and financial activities, also may have yielded evidence of
connections to other participants in the 9/11 plot. In any case, the
opportunity did not arise.
Notably,
the lead did not draw any connections between the threat reporting that
had been coming in for months and the presence of two possible al Qaeda
operatives in the United States. Moreover, there is no evidence that the
issue was substantively discussed at any level above deputy chief of a
section within the Counterterrorism Division at FBI headquarters.
The search
was assigned to one FBI agent for whom this was his very first
counterterrorism lead. By the terms of the lead, he was given 30 days to
open an intelligence case and make some unspecified efforts to locate
Mihdhar. He started the process a week later. He checked local New York
indices for criminal record and driver's license information and checked
the hotel listed on Mihdhar's U.S. entry form. On September 11 the agent
sent a lead to Los Angeles based on the fact that Mihdhar had initially
arrived in Los Angeles in January 2000. Time had run out on the search.
The Phoenix Memo
The Phoenix
Memo was investigated at length by the Joint Inquiry. We will recap it
briefly here. In July 2001, an FBI agent in the Phoenix field office sent
a memo to FBI headquarters and to two agents on international terrorism
squads in the New York field office advising of the "possibility of a
coordinated effort by Usama Bin Ladin" to send students to the United
States to attend civil aviation schools. The agent based his theory on the
"inordinate number of individuals of investigative interest" attending
such schools in Arizona.
The agent
made four recommendations to FBI headquarters: to compile a list of civil
aviation schools, to establish liaison with those schools, to discuss his
theories about Bin Ladin with the Intelligence Community, and to seek
authority to obtain visa information on persons applying to flight
schools. His recommendations were not acted upon prior to September 11.
His memo was forwarded to one field office. Managers of the Usama Bin
Ladin unit and the Radical Fundamentalist unit at FBI headquarters were
addressees, but did not even see the memo until after September 11. No
managers at headquarters saw the memo before September 11. The New York
field office took no action. It was not shared outside the FBI.
As its
author told us, the Phoenix Memo was not an alert about suicide pilots.
His worry was more about a Pan Am 103 scenario in which explosives were
placed on an aircraft. The memo's references to aviation training were
broad, including electronics and aircraft maintenance.
Moussaoui
On August
15, 2001, the Minneapolis FBI field office initiated an intelligence
investigation on Zacarias Moussaoui. He had entered the country on
February 23, 2001, and began flight lessons at Airman Flight School in
Oklahoma City. He began flight training at the Pan American flight
training school in Minneapolis on August 13. Moussaoui had none of the
usual qualifications for flight training on Pan Am's Boeing 747 flight
simulators. Contrary to popular belief, Moussaoui did not say he was not
interested in learning how to take off or land. Instead, he stood out
because, with little knowledge of flying, he wanted to learn how to take
off and land a Boeing 747.
The FBI
agent who handled the case in conjunction with the INS representative on
the Minneapolis Joint Terrorism Task Force suspected Moussaoui of wanting
to hijack planes. Because Moussaoui was a French national who had
overstayed his visa, he was detained by the INS.
The FBI
agent sent a summary of his investigation to FBI headquarters on August
18. In his message he requested assistance from the FBI field office in
Oklahoma City and from the FBI legal attache in Paris. Each of these
offices responded quickly. By August 24 the Minneapolis agent had also
contacted a FBI detailee and a CIA analyst at the Counterterrorist Center
about the case. DCI Tenet was briefed about the Moussaoui case. He told us
that no connection to al Qaeda was apparent to him before 9/11.
Moussaoui
had lived in London, so the Minneapolis agent also requested assistance
from the legal attache in London. The legal attache promptly prepared a
written request of the British government for information concerning
Moussaoui and hand-delivered the request on August 21. He informed the
British of developments in the case on September 4. The case, though
handled expeditiously at the American end, was not handled by the British
as a priority amid a large number of other terrorist-related inquiries. On
September 11, after the attacks, the legal attache renewed his request for
information.
After 9/11
the British government, in response to U.S. requests, supplied some basic
biographical information about Moussaoui. The British government has
informed us that it also tasked intelligence collection facilities for
information potentially relating to Moussaoui. On September 13, the
British received new, sensitive intelligence that Moussaoui had attended
an al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan. It passed this intelligence the
same day to the United States.
Had this
information been available in late August 2001, the Moussaoui case would
almost certainly have received intense and much higher-level attention.
Prior to 9/11, there was a continuing dispute between FBI agents in
Minneapolis and supervisors at headquarters about whether evidence had
been sufficient to seek a FISA warrant to search Moussaoui's computer hard
drive and belongings. After 9/11, the FBI learned that Millennium
terrorist Ressam, who was cooperating with investigators, could have
recognized Moussaoui from the Afghan camps. Either the British information
or the Ressam identification would have broken the logjam. A maximum U.S.
effort to investigate Moussaoui could conceivably have unearthed his
connections to the Hamburg cell, though this might have required an
extensive effort, with help from foreign governments. The publicity about
the threat also might have disrupted the plot. But this would have been a
race against time.
Information Issues
We have
identified several major issues that had a detrimental impact on the
information flow between the agencies that caused the missed opportunities
described above.
-- There
were organizational restrictions on information sharing. We heard numerous
complaints regarding the lack of authorization to share information. This
lack of authorization was not limited to low-level employees. Tom Pickard,
who was acting director of the FBI in the summer of 2001, told us Dale
Watson briefed him that the CIA was taking a second look at the Kuala
Lumpur meeting. Pickard thought that concern about the meeting was driving
the higher threat levels that summer. Pickard said that Watson told him
this information was "close hold." Pickard said he understood this to mean
that he had no authority to brief the Attorney General about the meeting.
-- There
were misunderstandings regarding responsibility for information sharing.
The CIA has repeatedly argued that it did not withhold information from
the FBI because it gave FBI detailees access to critical databases. The
CIA believed the detailees were responsible for identifying and
communicating information of interest to the FBI. The FBI did not
understand this to be the case. There were no memoranda of understanding
regarding the roles of detailees and no management direction overseeing
them. The individuals who filled the roles did not view their primary
roles to be information sharers. The problems of information flow also
worked in reverse. The CIA complained its detailees did not get meaningful
access to FBI's automated case system.
-- There
were different views on classification levels for identical information.
We found that the CIA classified identical information at a significantly
higher level than the FBI. This precluded important information from being
available on the FBI agents' computers.
-- We found
there was an underlying concern by the CIA that information it shared with
the FBI might be disclosed in the course of the discovery process or at
trial.
-- There
were significant problems sharing information within the FBI, including
the "wall" between criminal and intelligence investigations. We discussed
this issue in this morning's staff statement.
Immediate Response to 9/11
We conclude
our statement with preliminary findings to date on two post-9/11 events:
the flights of Saudi nationals departing the United States, and preventive
detentions and other immigration law enforcement initiatives.
The Saudi Flights
National
air space was closed on September 11. Fearing reprisals against Saudi
nationals, the Saudi government asked for help in getting some of its
citizens out of the country. We have not yet identified who they contacted
for help. But we have found that the request came to the attention of
Richard Clarke and that each of the flights we have studied was
investigated by the FBI and dealt with in a professional manner prior to
its departure.
No
commercial planes, including chartered flights, were permitted to fly
into, out of, or within the United States until September 13, 2001. After
the airspace reopened, six chartered flights with 142 people, mostly Saudi
Arabian nationals, departed from the United States between September 14
and 24. One flight, the so-called Bin Ladin flight, departed the United
States on September 20 with 26 passengers, most of them relatives of Usama
Bin Ladin. We have found no credible evidence that any chartered flights
of Saudi Arabian nationals departed the United States before the reopening
of national airspace.
The Saudi
flights were screened by law enforcement officials, primarily the FBI, to
ensure that people on these flights did not pose a threat to national
security, and that nobody of interest to the FBI with regard to the 9/11
investigation was allowed to leave the country. Thirty of the 142 people
on these flights were interviewed by the FBI, including 22 of the 26
people (23 passengers and 3 private security guards) on the Bin Ladin
flight. Many were asked detailed questions. None of the passengers stated
that they had any recent contact with Usama Bin Ladin or knew anything
about terrorist activity.
The FBI
checked a variety of databases for information on the Bin Ladin flight
passengers and searched the aircraft. It is unclear whether the TIPOFF
terrorist watchlist was checked. At our request, the Terrorist Screening
Center has rechecked the names of individuals on the flight manifests of
these six Saudi flights against the current TIPOFF watchlist. There are no
matches.
The FBI has
concluded that nobody was allowed to depart on these six flights who the
FBI wanted to interview in connection with the 9/11 attacks, or who the
FBI later concluded had any involvement in those attacks. To date, we have
uncovered no evidence to contradict this conclusion.
Immigration Law Enforcement Initiatives
Beginning
on September 11, 2001, Attorney General Ashcroft, with the FBI and, at
times, with other cabinet departments, initiated a series of
immigration-related programs to disrupt terrorist activities in the United
States. We report preliminarily on four of them. We will report later on
two other important initiatives-the voluntary interview program and the
special registration program.
The "Special Interest" Detainees. Beginning on
September 11, 2001, INS agents working in cooperation with the FBI began
arresting individuals for immigration violations based on leads in the
PENTTBOM case. Eventually, 768 so-called "special interest" aliens were
detained. Attorney General Ashcroft told us that he saw his job in
directing this effort as "risk minimization," both to find out who
committed the attacks and to prevent a subsequent attack. His policy was
that no "special interest" alien should be granted bond. Rather, they
should be held until they were "cleared" of terrorist connections by the
FBI and other agencies. Ashcroft also ordered all "special interest"
immigration hearings closed to the public and press. INS attorneys charged
with prosecuting the immigration violations had difficulty getting
information about the detainees, and their terrorist connections, from the
FBI. The "clearance" process approved by the Justice Department was
involved and time consuming, lasting on average 80 days. We continue to
investigate what counterterrorism benefits and costs were associated with
these detentions.
Twenty-Day Hold. After September 11, the
Department of Justice pressed the State Department to reduce the number of
visas issued to individuals from countries with significant Muslim
populations. Justice Department proposals included stopping the issuance
of all visas, suspending visa issuance entirely to nationals of selected
countries, and requiring that the FBI and CIA check each applicant from
certain countries before a visa is issued. Effective November 14, 2001,
the State Department issued a blanket 20-day hold before any visa could be
issued to males 16 to 45 years old from 26 countries in the Middle East
and North Africa, plus Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia. This program
was discontinued in October 2002. Records we have reviewed suggest it
yielded no useful anti-terrorist information and led to no visa denials.
The Visas Condor Program was initiated on
January 26, 2002. It mandated additional screening by the FBI and other
agencies for certain visa applicants from 26 predominantly Muslim
countries. However, neither the FBI nor the CIA was able to process these
visa applicants in a timely fashion because of their other burgeoning
responsibilities after the September 11 attacks. In July 2002, the FBI
acknowledged it could not meet the agreed upon 30-day target for name
checks, and the State Department agreed to place these visa applicants on
indefinite hold until the FBI responded. In September 2002 the CIA
withdrew from the program because it had uncovered no significant
information from these visa applicants. The CIA was already placing all
important information into the TIPOFF terrorist watchlist, used by the
State Department to screen these same applicants at the outset.
Approximately 130,000 name checks have been completed. At present, there
are nearly 1,700 checks that have been pending for more than 30 days,
almost 1,100 for more than four months. No terrorists have been uncovered
by the Visas Condor program.
Absconder Apprehension Initiative. Absconders
are non-citizens who fail to depart the United States after receiving a
final order of deportation from an Immigration Judge. After September 11,
INS Commissioner Ziglar proposed the inclusion of the names of 314,000
absconders in the National Crime Information Center database. Attorney
General Ashcroft decided to start a program called the Absconder
Apprehension Initiative targeting a smaller number of citizens from
countries where there has been al Qaeda terrorist presence or activity, to
locate and remove them. The INS mounted a nationwide search for over 5,000
non-citizens under this program. By early 2003, 1,139 had been
apprehended, of whom 803 had been deported, 224 were in custody awaiting
deportation, and U.S. Attorneys were criminally prosecuting 45. So far, we
have not learned that any of the absconders were deported under a
terrorism statute, prosecuted for terrorist related crimes, or linked in
any way to terrorism. Our investigation continues.
Declassified and Approved for Release, 10 April 2004
Bin Ladin
Determined To Strike in US
Clandestine, foreign government, and media reports indicate Bin Ladin
since 1997 has wanted to conduct terrorist attacks in the US. Bin Ladin
implied in US television interviews in 1997 and 1998 that his followers
would follow the example of World Trade Center bomber Ramzi Yousef and
"bring the fighting to America."
After US
missile strikes on his base in Afghanistan in 1998, Bin Ladin told
followers he wanted to retaliate in Washington, according to a (blacked
out) service.
An Egyptian
Islamic Jihad (EIJ) operative told an (blacked out) service at the same
time that Bin Ladin was planning to exploit the operative's access to the
US to mount a terrorist strike.
The
millennium plotting in Canada in 1999 may have been part of Bin Ladin's
first serious attempt to implement a terrorist strike in the US. Convicted
plotter Ahmed Ressam has told the FBI that he conceived the idea to attack
Los Angeles International Airport himself, but that Bin Ladin lieutenant
Abu Zubaydah encouraged him and helped facilitate the operation. Ressam
also said that in 1998 Abu Zubaydah was planning his own US attack.
Ressam says
Bin Ladin was aware of the Los Angeles operation.
Although
Bin Ladin has not succeeded, his attacks against the US Embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania in 1998 demonstrate that he prepares operations years in
advance and is not deterred by setbacks. Bin Ladin associates surveilled
our Embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam as early as 1993, and some
members of the Nairobi cell planning the bombings were arrested and
deported in 1997.
Al-Qa'ida
members-including same who are US citizens-have resided in or traveled to
the US for years, and the group apparently maintains a support structure
that could aid attacks. Two al-Qa’ida members found guilty in the
conspiracy to bomb our Embassies in East Africa were US citizens, and a
senior EIJ member lived in California in the mid-1990s.
A
clandestine source said in 1998 that a Bin Ladin cell in New York was
recruiting Muslim-American youth for attacks.
We have not
been able to corroborate some of the more sensational threat reporting,
such as that from a (blacked out) service in 1998 saying that Bin Ladin
wanted to hijack a US aircraft to gain the release of "Blind Shaykh" 'Umar'
Abd aI-Rahman and other US-held extremists.
Nevertheless, FBI information since that time indicates patterns of
suspicious activity in this country consistent with preparations for
hijackings or other types of attacks, including recent surveillance of
federal buildings in New York.
The FBI is
conducting approximately 70 full field investigations throughout the US
that it considers Bin Ladin-related. CIA and the FBI are investigating a
call to our Embassy in the UAE in May saying that a group or Bin Ladin
supporters was in the US planning attacks with explosives.
For the
President Only 6 August 2001
Declassified and Approved for Release, 10 April 2004
The Associated Press
contributed to this report.
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