9/11 Commission Says Hijackers Got Help Inside U.S.
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, June 28, 2004
WASHINGTON The FBI long has contended that not one al-Qaida operative in the United States collaborated with the 19
hijackers in the Sept. 11 attacks. Yet the commission investigating
the attacks has identified two Muslim men who might have had advance
knowledge of the plot.
The commission found that two hijackers got substantial help
from Mohdar Abdullah and Anwar Aulaqi after settling in California
in 2000. The bipartisan panel created by Congress said it could not
discount the possibility the men knew the hijackers' plans.
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Abdullah, who recently was deported to Yemen, helped the
hijackers get driver's licenses. He bragged, while in U.S. custody
after the hijackings, that he had known the attacks were coming.
Aulaqi, a cleric who left the United States shortly after Sept.
11, 2001, introduced the two hijackers, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid
al-Mihdhar, to other people who helped provide living arrangements
in this country.
The previously undisclosed information about Abdullah and Aulaqi
was contained in one of the commission reports released this month.
The FBI is seeking to find and interview Aulaqi about his
contacts with al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar. It is unclear if U.S.
officials know where Aulaqi is.
FBI spokesman Mike Kortan said the Sept. 11 investigation was
"ongoing and active" and that any new evidence will be examined
closely.
A congressional investigation has concluded that the discovery
of al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar in the United States probably
represented the best chance for the FBI and CIA to disrupt the
plot.
Both were known to the CIA because of connections to the October
2000 terrorist bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen that killed 17 U.S.
sailors. Both had contacts with a longtime FBI informant.
FBI agents were searching for them in the weeks before the
attacks because their names were on terrorism watch lists.
Al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar were among the first four al-Qaida
members chosen in 1999 by Osama bin Laden for the hijacking plot
proposed by Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, or KSM, the Sept. 11 mastermind
now in U.S. custody.
Much of the commission report is derived from classified
interrogations of Mohammed and another senior al-Qaida planner
in custody, Ramzi Binalshibh.
In general, the 19 hijackers were told to blend in while in the
United States by avoiding mosques and fellow Islamic extremists.
But al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar were different.
"Recognizing that neither Hazmi nor Mihdhar spoke English or
was familiar with Western culture, KSM instructed these operatives
to seek help from the local Muslim community," the report said.
Mohammed told the men to settle in San Diego. So they went there
in February 2000 from Los Angeles with help from Omar al-Bayoumi, a
Saudi who had an apartment complex there. Although Bayoumi helped
the hijackers settle in San Diego, there is no evidence he knew
they were terrorists, investigators say.
Al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar made friends in San Diego with some
foreign students at the Rabat Mosque in suburban La Mesa. One was
Mohdar Abdullah, who the report said was among those students who
"appear to have held extremist sympathies."
Abdullah helped al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar get driver's licenses
and enroll in schools in California. Shortly after the attacks,
Abdullah told FBI agents in an interview he knew nothing about the
plot.
But later, while held on immigration charges, Abdullah bragged
to follow inmates that he had advance knowledge of the Sept. 11
mission and even had instructions to pick up plot operatives at Los
Angeles International Airport before the attacks, according to the
commission's report.
A fellow inmate wrote the Homeland Department last spring about
Abdullah's claim, according to Jacqueline Maguire, an FBI agent
working on the Sept. 11 investigation.
The FBI could not corroborate the inmate's story, she told the
commission during its public hearing two weeks ago.
"Another inmate gave another story and the details differed
quite significantly," Maguire said.
Ultimately, the FBI chose not to seek criminal charges against
Abdullah. The bureau did have Abdullah deported to Yemen in May.
The CIA was aware of the decision and knows he is in
Yemen, Maguire said.
According to the commission's report, Al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar also
established a relationship with Aulaqi, an imam at Rabat
Mosque. Aulaqi later moved to Virginia and worshipped at the Dar
al-Hijra mosque in Falls Church, Va. Early in 2001, al-Hazmi and
al-Mihdhar drove across the country, settled in Alexandria, Va.,
and began attending Dar al-Hijra.
The commission report cited information that Aulaqi had
"extremist ties, and the circumstances surrounding his
relationship with the hijackers remains suspicious. However, we
have not uncovered evidence that he associated with the hijackers
knowing they were terrorists."
At the Falls Church mosque, the imam introduced the hijackers to
a Jordanian, Eyad al Rababah, who helped them find an apartment.
In May 2001, al Rababah suggested that al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar
move with him to Fairfield, Conn. The three eventually traveled to
Paterson, N.J., where they rented an apartment with two other
al-Qaida operatives.
The commission report said that despite this assistance, there
is "insufficient basis" to conclude that Rababah knew that
al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar were terrorists.
Though al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar did not succeed in their original
mission, to learn English and become pilots, they were part of
the team that commandeered the plane that crashed into the Pentagon
on Sept. 11.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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