9/11 Commission Probes Clinton Administration's Failure to Track Hijacker
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2004
WASHINGTON The federal commission reviewing the Sept. 11
attacks is examining whether the United States failed to
aggressively track one of the hijackers after obtaining his first
name and phone number more than two years before the attacks.
The tip, received in March 1999, appears to be one of the
earliest signs that U.S. officials had about one of the 2001
hijackers. It also may have represented a missed chance for U.S.
intelligence to uncover a terror cell in Germany that was a key
element of the hijacking plot.
"The commission has been actively investigating the issue for
some time," Philip Zelikow, executive director of the Sept. 11
commission, said Monday.
"I'm not going to comment on the progress of our investigation,
but the Hamburg cell and what was known about the plotters" is an
important part of the review, he said.
The New York Times on Tuesday quoted German
intelligence officials who said they had given the CIA the first
name and telephone number of Marwan al-Shehhi, and asked U.S.
officials to track him. The Germans said they never heard back from
U.S. officials until after Sept. 11.
Al-Shehhi was a member of the al-Qaida cell in Hamburg, Germany,
and a roommate of suspected Sept. 11 ringleader Mohammed Atta.
Al-Shehhi was the hijacker who took the controls of United Airlines
Flight 175, which flew into the south tower of the World Trade
Center, while Atta took over American Airlines Flight 11, which
crashed into the north tower.
A U.S. official told The Associated Press late Monday that
thousands of full names of suspected terrorists come across the
intelligence community's screens regularly, making them
hard to always track.
"A first name, and a common one at that, is a scrap of
information and doesn't take you anywhere without the benefit of
hindsight," the U.S. official said, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
The Sept. 11 panel, formally the National Commission on
Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, was established by
Congress to study the nation's preparedness before the attacks and
its response. It also is to recommend ways to guard against similar
disasters.
In its previous hearings, the commission has highlighted
intelligence miscommunications and missteps about al-Qaida
operatives dating back to the mid-1990s and hijackers who were
allowed to enter the United States repeatedly despite lacking
proper visa documentation.
The panel planned to meet Tuesday to discuss the status of its
investigations, but the Hamburg tip was not on the agenda, Zelikow
said.
The commission faces a May 27 deadline to finish its
work, and has asked for at least a two-month extension, citing
delays because of disputes with the administration over access to
documents and witnesses.
Former New Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean, the commission's
Republican chairman, has said the panel will be forced to pare
inquiries into intelligence failures if Congress doesn't act this
week to give it more time.
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