9/11 Report: 10-Plane Attack Was Planned
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, June 16, 2004
WASHINGTON Sept. 11 plot mastermind Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed originally envisioned an attack involving 10 hijacked
planes, including one he would pilot and, after all male passengers
were killed, land at an airport and make an anti-American speech,
according to a report Wednesday from the commission investigating
the attacks.
The report, compiled by the commission's staff from interviews
with government officials and documents they reviewed, said
Mohammed initially proposed hitting CIA and FBI headquarters,
unidentified nuclear plants and tall buildings in California and
Washington state, in addition to the World Trade Center, Pentagon
and White House or Capitol.
Mohammed, who is in U.S. custody at an undisclosed overseas
location, told interrogators that rather than crashing his hijacked
plane into a target, he wanted to land and make a political
statement. Mohammed proposed killing every male passenger,
landing at a U.S. airport and making a "speech denouncing U.S.
policies in the Middle East before releasing all the women and
children."
That plan was rejected by Osama bin Laden, who ultimately
approved a scaled-back mission involving four planes. Training for
it began in 1999.
Officials Stymied Some of the Terrorists
The report said Mohammed wanted more hijackers, up to 26
instead of the 19 who participated. The commission
identified at least 10 al-Qaida operatives who were to participate
but could not take part for various reasons including visa problems
and suspicion by officials at airports in the United States and
overseas.
Far from a seamless operation, the report portrays a plot riven
by internal dissent, including disagreement over whether to target
the White House or the Capitol, a conflict that apparently never
was resolved before the attacks. Bin Laden also had to overcome
opposition to attacking the United States from Mullah Omar, leader
of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, who was under pressure from
Pakistan to keep al-Qaida confined.
The pilot of the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania, Ziad
Jarrah, nearly quit the plot, leading Mohammed to consider
replacing him with Zacarias Moussaoui, who was taking flight
training in Minnesota, according to the report. Mohammed, however,
has told his interrogators that Moussaoui was being
considered for a second wave of attacks still in the early stages of planning.
Moussaoui is awaiting trial on conspiracy charges. He's the only
person charged in the United States in connection with the Sept. 11
plot.
German Connection
Ultimately, Jarrah was persuaded to participate by Ramzi
Binalshibh, who helped plan and finance the attacks from Germany.
He also is in U.S. custody overseas.
Among other new disclosures in the commission's report:
Mohamed Atta, the pilot of one of the planes that struck the
World Trade Center and leader of the 19 hijackers, never met with
Iraqi agents in Prague, Czech Republic. That purported meeting was
cited as evidence of a possible al-Qaida connection to Iraq. "We
do not believe that such a meeting occurred," the report said.
Mohdar Abdullah, an illegal alien living in San Diego,
provided assistance to two of the hijackers and later made
jailhouse claims that he had advance knowledge of the attacks.
Abdullah last month was deported to Yemen.
Bin Laden originally wanted the attacks to occur on May 12,
2001, seven months after the al-Qaida attack on the USS Cole in
Yemen that killed 17 sailors. Later, bin Laden sought to have the
attacks occur in June or July 2001 because Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon was scheduled to visit the White House. In both cases,
Mohammed insisted the teams were not ready. Ultimately, Atta picked
Sept. 11 because Congress would be in session.
Bin Laden wanted the fourth plane to strike the White House,
but Atta believed the White House was too difficult to hit.
Eventually, Atta agreed to the White House but kept the Capitol in
reserve. However, based on other exchanges between the hijackers,
it remains unclear which was the target on Sept 11.
Atta said the hijackers planned to crash their planes to the
ground if problems arose during the flights. Atta himself planned
to crash his into the streets of New York if he couldn't strike the
World Trade Center. The fourth plane crashed into a Pennsylvania
field after passengers fought back against the hijackers.
The plot cost more than $500,000, and no credible evidence has
emerged that anyone in the United States provided financial
support. Nor is there evidence that Saudi Princess Haifa al
Faisal, wife of that country's U.S. ambassador, Prince Bandar,
provided any money to the conspiracy, directly or indirectly.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
"CATASTROPHE" Reveals the Secret Story Behind 9/11
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