<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<documents>
  <document>
    <docID>100_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

perceived as deadlier than hijacking and therefore of greater consequence. In 
1996,a presidential commission on aviation safety and security chaired byVice 
President Al Gore reinforced the prevailing concern about sabotage and explosives 
on aircraft.The Gore Commission also flagged, as a new danger, the possibility 
of attack by surface-to-air missiles. Its 1997 final report did not discuss 
the possibility of suicide hijackings.50 

The FAA set and enforced aviation security rules, which airlines and airports 
were required to implement.The rules were supposed to produce a “layered” 
system of defense.This meant that the failure of any one layer of security 
would not be fatal, because additional layers would provide backup security. 
But each layer relevant to hijackings—intelligence, passenger prescreening, 
checkpoint screening, and onboard security—was seriously flawed prior to 
9/11.Taken together, they did not stop any of the 9/11 hijackers from getting 
on board four different aircraft at three different airports.51 

The FAA’s policy was to use intelligence to identify both specific plots and 
general threats to civil aviation security, so that the agency could develop and 
deploy appropriate countermeasures. The FAA’s 40-person intelligence unit 
was supposed to receive a broad range of intelligence data from the FBI, CIA, 
and other agencies so that it could make assessments about the threat to aviation. 
But the large volume of data contained little pertaining to the presence 
and activities of terrorists in the United States. For example, information on 
the FBI’s effort in 1998 to assess the potential use of flight training by terrorists 
and the Phoenix electronic communication of 2001 warning of radical 
Middle Easterners attending flight school were not passed to FAA headquarters. 
Several top FAA intelligence officials called the domestic threat picture a 
serious blind spot.52 

Moreover, the FAA’s intelligence unit did not receive much attention from 
the agency’s leadership.Neither Administrator Jane Garvey nor her deputy routinely 
reviewed daily intelligence,and what they did see was screened for them. 
She was unaware of a great amount of hijacking threat information from her 
own intelligence unit, which, in turn, was not deeply involved in the agency’s 
policymaking process.Historically,decisive security action took place only after 
a disaster had occurred or a specific plot had been discovered.53 

The next aviation security layer was passenger prescreening. The FAA 
directed air carriers not to fly individuals known to pose a “direct” threat to 
civil aviation. But as of 9/11, the FAA’s “no-fly” list contained the names of 
just 12 terrorist suspects (including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed), even though government watchlists contained the names of 
many thousands of known and suspected terrorists.This astonishing mismatch 
existed despite the Gore Commission’s having called on the FBI and CIA four 
years earlier to provide terrorist watchlists to improve prescreening.The longtime 
chief of the FAA’s civil aviation security division testified that he was not 
even aware of the State Department’sTIPOFF list of known and suspected ter</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>FAA’s</Misc>
    <Location>Phoenix</Location>
    <Person>Jane Garvey</Person>
    <Organization>Gore Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Al Gore</Person>
    <Location>Middle Easterners</Location>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed )</Person>
    <Organization>Gore Commission’s</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department’sTIPOFF</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>101_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

rorists (some 60,000 before 9/11) until he heard it mentioned during the 
Commission’s January 26,2004,public hearing.The FAA had access to some 
TIPOFF data, but apparently found it too difficult to use.54 

The second part of prescreening called on the air carriers to implement an 
FAA-approved computerized algorithm (known as CAPPS, for Computer 
Assisted Passenger Prescreening System) designed to identify passengers whose 
profile suggested they might pose more than a minimal risk to aircraft. 
Although the algorithm included hijacker profile data, at that time only passengers 
checking bags were eligible to be selected by CAPPS for additional 
scrutiny. Selection entailed only having one’s checked baggage screened for 
explosives or held off the airplane until one had boarded. Primarily because of 
concern regarding potential discrimination and the impact on passenger 
throughput, “selectees” were no longer required to undergo extraordinary 
screening of their carry-on baggage as had been the case before the system was 
computerized in 1997.55 This policy change also reflected the perception that 
nonsuicide sabotage was the primary threat to civil aviation. 

Checkpoint screening was considered the most important and obvious layer 
of security. Walk-through metal detectors and X-ray machines operated by 
trained screeners were employed to stop prohibited items. Numerous government 
reports indicated that checkpoints performed poorly, often failing to 
detect even obvious FAA test items. Many deadly and dangerous items did not 
set off metal detectors, or were hard to distinguish in an X-ray machine from 
innocent everyday items.56 

While FAA rules did not expressly prohibit knives with blades under 4 
inches long,the airlines’checkpoint operations guide (which was developed in 
cooperation with the FAA),explicitly permitted them.The FAA’s basis for this 
policy was (1) the agency did not consider such items to be menacing,(2) most 
local laws did not prohibit individuals from carrying such knives, and (3) such 
knives would have been difficult to detect unless the sensitivity of metal detectors 
had been greatly increased. A proposal to ban knives altogether in 1993 
had been rejected because small cutting implements were difficult to detect and 
the number of innocent “alarms” would have increased significantly, exacerbating 
congestion problems at checkpoints.57 

Several years prior to 9/11, an FAA requirement for screeners to conduct 
“continuous” and “random” hand searches of carry-on luggage at checkpoints 
had been replaced by explosive trace detection or had simply become ignored 
by the air carriers. Therefore, secondary screening of individuals and their 
carry-on bags to identify weapons (other than bombs) was nonexistent,except 
for passengers who triggered the metal detectors.Even when small knives were 
detected by secondary screening, they were usually returned to the traveler. 
Reportedly, the 9/11 hijackers were instructed to use items that would be 
undetectable by airport checkpoints.58 

In the pre-9/11 security system,the air carriers played a major role.As the</docText>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CAPPS</Organization>
    <Misc>FAA-approved</Misc>
    <Misc>Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System</Misc>
    <Location>Commission’s January</Location>
    <Date>January 26,2004</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>102_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

Inspector General of the Department of Transportation told us,there were great 
pressures from the air carriers to control security costs and to “limit the impact 
of security requirements on aviation operations,so that the industry could concentrate 
on its primary mission of moving passengers and aircraft. . . . [T]hose 
counterpressures in turn manifested themselves as significant weaknesses in 
security.”A longtime FAA security official described the air carriers’approach 
to security regulation as “decry, deny and delay” and told us that while “the air 
carriers had seen the enlightened hand of self-interest with respect to safety, 
they hadn’t seen it in the security arena.”59 

The final layer, security on board commercial aircraft, was not designed to 
counter suicide hijackings.The FAA-approved “Common Strategy” had been 
elaborated over decades of experience with scores of hijackings, beginning in 
the 1960s. It taught flight crews that the best way to deal with hijackers was to 
accommodate their demands, get the plane to land safely, and then let law 
enforcement or the military handle the situation. According to the FAA, the 
record had shown that the longer a hijacking persisted, the more likely it was 
to end peacefully.The strategy operated on the fundamental assumption that 
hijackers issue negotiable demands (most often for asylum or the release of prisoners) 
and that, as one FAA official put it,“suicide wasn’t in the game plan” of 
hijackers. FAA training material provided no guidance for flight crews should 
violence occur.60 

This prevailing Common Strategy of cooperation and nonconfrontation 
meant that even a hardened cockpit door would have made little difference in 
a hijacking.As the chairman of the Security Committee of the Air Line Pilots 
Association observed when proposals were made in early 2001 to install reinforced 
cockpit doors in commercial aircraft,“Even if you make a vault out of 
the door, if they have a noose around my flight attendant’s neck, I’m going to 
open the door.” Prior to 9/11, FAA regulations mandated that cockpit doors 
permit ready access into and out of the cockpit in the event of an emergency. 
Even so, rules implemented in the 1960s required air crews to keep the cockpit 
door closed and locked in flight.This requirement was not always observed 
or vigorously enforced.61 

As for law enforcement, there were only 33 armed and trained federal air 
marshals as of 9/11.They were not deployed on U.S.domestic flights,except 
when in transit to provide security on international departures. This policy 
reflected the FAA’s view that domestic hijacking was in check—a view held 
confidently as no terrorist had hijacked a U.S.commercial aircraft anywhere in 
the world since 1986.62 

In the absence of any recent aviation security incident and without “specific 
and credible” evidence of a plot directed at civil aviation, the FAA’s leadership 
focused elsewhere, including on operational concerns and the 
ever-present issue of safety. FAA Administrator Garvey recalled that “every day 
in 2001 was like the day before Thanksgiving.” Heeding calls for improved air</docText>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Transportation</Organization>
    <Misc>FAA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Garvey</Person>
    <Organization>Common Strategy of cooperation</Organization>
    <Organization>Security Committee</Organization>
    <Organization>Air Line Pilots Association</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.domestic</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>103_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

service, Congress concentrated its efforts on a “passenger bill of rights,” to 
improve capacity, efficiency, and customer satisfaction in the aviation system. 
There was no focus on terrorism.63 

3.4 ...AND IN THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY 
The National Security Act of 1947 created the position of Director of Central 
Intelligence (DCI). Independent from the departments of Defense, State, Justice, 
and other policy departments,the DCI heads the U.S.intelligence community and 
provides intelligence to federal entities. 

The sole element of the intelligence community independent from a cabinet 
agency is the CIA.As an independent agency, it collects, analyzes, and disseminates 
intelligence from all sources.The CIA’s number one customer is the 
president of the United States, who also has the authority to direct it to conduct 
covert operations.64 Although covert actions represent a very small fraction 
of the Agency’s entire budget, these operations have at times been 
controversial and over time have dominated the public’s perception of the CIA. 

The DCI is confirmed by the Senate but is not technically a member of the 
president’s cabinet.The director’s power under federal law over the loose, confederated 
“intelligence community” is limited.65 He or she states the community’s 
priorities and coordinates development of intelligence agency budget 
requests for submission to Congress. 

This responsibility gives many the false impression that the DCI has line 
authority over the heads of these agencies and has the power to shift resources 
within these budgets as the need arises. Neither is true. In fact, the DCI’s real 
authority has been directly proportional to his personal closeness to the president, 
which has waxed and waned over the years, and to others in government, 
especially the secretary of defense. 

Intelligence agencies under the Department of Defense account for 
approximately 80 percent of all U.S. spending for intelligence, including some 
that supports a national customer base and some that supports specific Defense 
Department or military service needs.66 As they are housed in the Defense 
Department, these agencies are keenly attentive to the military’s strategic and 
tactical requirements. 

One of the intelligence agencies in Defense with a national customer base 
is the National Security Agency, which intercepts and analyzes foreign communications 
and breaks codes.The NSA also creates codes and ciphers to protect 
government information. Another is the recently renamed National 
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), which provides and analyzes imagery 
and produces a wide array of products, including maps, navigation tools, and 
surveillance intelligence. A third such agency in Defense is the National 
Reconnaissance Office. It develops, procures, launches, and maintains in orbit</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Location>Justice</Location>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI</Organization>
    <Location>State</Location>
    <Location>Defense</Location>
    <Organization>NGA</Organization>
    <Misc>DCI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>National Reconnaissance Office</Organization>
    <Misc>Agency’s</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.intelligence</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Act of 1947</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>104_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

information-gathering satellites that serve other government agencies. 

The Defense Intelligence Agency supports the secretary of defense, Joint 
Chiefs of Staff,and military field commanders.It does some collection through 
human sources as well as some technical intelligence collection. The Army, 
Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps have their own intelligence components 
that collect information, help them decide what weapons to acquire, and serve 
the tactical intelligence needs of their respective services. 

In addition to those from the Department of Defense,other elements in the 
intelligence community include the national security parts of the FBI; the 
Bureau of Intelligence and Research in the State Department; the intelligence 
component of the Treasury Department; the Energy Department’s Office of 
Intelligence and Counterintelligence, the former of which, through leveraging 
the expertise of the national laboratory system, has special competence in 
nuclear weapons; the Office of Intelligence of the Coast Guard; and, today, the 
Directorate of Intelligence Analysis and Infrastructure Protection in the 
Department of Homeland Security. 

The National Security Agency 

The National Security Agency’s intercepts of terrorist communications often 
set off alarms elsewhere in the government. Often, too, its intercepts are conclusive 
elements in the analyst’s jigsaw puzzle. NSA engineers build technical 
systems to break ciphers and to make sense of today’s complex signals environment. 
Its analysts listen to conversations between foreigners not meant for 
them.They also perform “traffic analysis”—studying technical communications 
systems and codes as well as foreign organizational structures, including those 
of terrorist organizations. 

Cold War adversaries used very hierarchical, familiar, and predictable military 
command and control methods.With globalization and the telecommunications 
revolution,and with loosely affiliated but networked adversaries using 
commercial devices and encryption, the technical impediments to signals collection 
grew at a geometric rate. At the same time, the end of the Cold War 
and the resultant cuts in national security funding forced intelligence agencies 
to cut systems and seek economies of scale.Modern adversaries are skilled users 
of communications technologies.The NSA’s challenges, and its opportunities, 
increased exponentially in “volume, variety, and velocity.”67 

The law requires the NSA to not deliberately collect data on U.S. citizens 
or on persons in the United States without a warrant based on foreign intelligence 
requirements. Also, the NSA was supposed to let the FBI know of any 
indication of crime, espionage, or “terrorist enterprise” so that the FBI could 
obtain the appropriate warrant. Later in this story, we will learn that while the 
NSA had the technical capability to report on communications with suspected 
terrorist facilities in the Middle East, the NSA did not seek FISA Court warrants 
to collect communications between individuals in the United States and</docText>
    <Organization>Treasury Department</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>FISA Court</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Agency</Organization>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense Intelligence Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Homeland Security</Organization>
    <Organization>Air Force</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Organization>Staff</Organization>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>Counterintelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Coast Guard</Organization>
    <Organization>Office of Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Army</Organization>
    <Organization>Navy</Organization>
    <Organization>Bureau of Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Research</Organization>
    <Organization>Infrastructure Protection</Organization>
    <Organization>Marine Corps</Organization>
    <Organization>Energy Department’s Office of Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate of Intelligence Analysis</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Agency’s</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>105_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

foreign countries, because it believed that this was an FBI role. It also did not 
want to be viewed as targeting persons in the United States and possibly violating 
laws that governed NSA’s collection of foreign intelligence.68 

An almost obsessive protection of sources and methods by the NSA, and its 
focus on foreign intelligence, and its avoidance of anything domestic would, as 
will be seen, be important elements in the story of 9/11. 

Technology as an Intelligence Asset and Liability 

The application of newly developed scientific technology to the mission of U.S. 
war fighters and national security decisionmakers is one of the great success stories 
of the twentieth century. It did not happen by accident. Recent wars have 
been waged and won decisively by brave men and women using advanced technology 
that was developed, authorized, and paid for by conscientious and diligent 
executive and legislative branch leaders many years earlier. 

The challenge of technology, however, is a daunting one. It is expensive, 
sometimes fails, and often can create problems as well as solve them. Some of 
the advanced technologies that gave us insight into the closed-off territories 
of the Soviet Union during the Cold War are of limited use in identifying and 
tracking individual terrorists. 

Terrorists,in turn,have benefited from this same rapid development of communication 
technologies.They simply could buy off the shelf and harvest the 
products of a $3 trillion a year telecommunications industry.They could acquire 
without great expense communication devices that were varied, global, 
instantaneous, complex, and encrypted. 

The emergence of the World Wide Web has given terrorists a much easier 
means of acquiring information and exercising command and control over 
their operations.The operational leader of the 9/11 conspiracy,Mohamed Atta, 
went online from Hamburg, Germany, to research U.S. flight schools.Targets 
of intelligence collection have become more sophisticated.These changes have 
made surveillance and threat warning more difficult. 

Despite the problems that technology creates,Americans’love affair with it 
leads them to also regard it as the solution. But technology produces its best 
results when an organization has the doctrine, structure, and incentives to 
exploit it.For example,even the best information technology will not improve 
information sharing so long as the intelligence agencies’ personnel and security 
systems reward protecting information rather than disseminating it. 

The CIA 

The CIA is a descendant of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS),which President 
Roosevelt created early in World War II after having first thought the FBI 
might take that role.The father of the OSS was William J.“Wild Bill”Donovan, 
a Wall Street lawyer. He recruited into the OSS others like himself—well 
traveled, well connected, well-to-do professional men and women.69</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Misc>World War II</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Soviet Union</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>OSS</Organization>
    <Organization>Office of Strategic Services</Organization>
    <Location>Wall Street</Location>
    <Organization>Intelligence Asset and Liability The</Organization>
    <Misc>World Wide Web</Misc>
    <Person>Roosevelt</Person>
    <Person>William J.“Wild Bill”Donovan</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>106_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

An innovation of Donovan’s,whose legacy remains part of U.S.intelligence 
today, was the establishment of a Research and Analysis Branch.There large 
numbers of scholars from U.S.universities pored over accounts from spies,communications 
intercepted by the armed forces, transcripts of radio broadcasts, 
and publications of all types, and prepared reports on economic, political, and 
social conditions in foreign theaters of operation. 

At the end of World War II, to Donovan’s disappointment, President Harry 
Truman dissolved the Office of Strategic Services.Four months later,the President 
directed that “all Federal foreign intelligence activities be planned,developed 
and coordinated so as to assure the most effective accomplishment of the 
intelligence mission related to the national security,” under a National Intelligence 
Authority consisting of the secretaries of State,War, and the Navy, and a 
personal representative of the president.This body was to be assisted by a Central 
Intelligence Group, made up of persons detailed from the departments of 
each of the members and headed by a Director of Central Intelligence.70 

Subsequently, President Truman agreed to the National Security Act of 
1947,which,among other things,established the Central Intelligence Agency, 
under the Director of Central Intelligence. Lobbying by the FBI, combined 
with fears of creating a U.S. Gestapo,71 led to the FBI’s being assigned responsibility 
for internal security functions and counterespionage. The CIA was 
specifically accorded “no police, subpoena, or law enforcement powers or 
internal security functions.”72 This structure built in tensions between the CIA 
and the Defense Department’s intelligence agencies,and between the CIA and 
the FBI. 

Clandestine and Covert Action. With this history, the CIA brought to the 
era of 9/11 many attributes of an elite organization, viewing itself as serving on 
the nation’s front lines to engage America’s enemies. Officers in its Clandestine 
Service,under what became the Directorate of Operations,fanned out into stations 
abroad. Each chief of station was a very important person in the organization, 
given the additional title of the DCI’s representative in that country. He 
(occasionally she) was governed by an operating directive that listed operational 
priorities issued by the relevant regional division of the Directorate,constrained 
by centrally determined allocations of resources. 

Because the conduct of espionage was a high-risk activity, decisions on the 
clandestine targeting, recruitment, handling, and termination of secret sources 
and the dissemination of collected information required Washington’s approval 
and action.But in this decentralized system,analogous in some ways to the culture 
of the FBI field offices in the United States, everyone in the Directorate 
of Operations presumed that it was the job of headquarters to support the field, 
rather than manage field activities. 

In the 1960s, the CIA suffered exposure of its botched effort to land Cuban 
exiles at the Bay of Pigs.The Vietnam War brought on more criticism.A promi</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>World War II</Misc>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense Department’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Misc>Gestapo</Misc>
    <Misc>America’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Navy</Organization>
    <Misc>DCI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Research</Organization>
    <Misc>Donovan’s</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.intelligence</Misc>
    <Person>Analysis Branch.There</Person>
    <Misc>U.S.universities</Misc>
    <Person>Harry Truman</Person>
    <Organization>Office of Strategic Services.Four</Organization>
    <Organization>National Intelligence Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence Group</Organization>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence.70 Subsequently</Organization>
    <Person>Truman</Person>
    <Organization>National Security Act of 1947</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate</Organization>
    <Misc>Cuban</Misc>
    <Misc>Vietnam War</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>107_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

nent feature of the Watergate era was investigations of the CIA by committees 
headed by Frank Church in the Senate and Otis Pike in the House.They published 
evidence that the CIA had secretly planned to assassinate Fidel Castro 
and other foreign leaders.The President had not taken plain responsibility for 
these judgments. CIA officials had taken most of the blame, saying they had 
done so in order to preserve the President’s “plausible deniability.”73 

After the Watergate era, Congress established oversight committees to 
ensure that the CIA did not undertake covert action contrary to basic American 
law. Case officers in the CIA’s Clandestine Service interpreted legislation, 
such as the Hughes-Ryan Amendment requiring that the president approve and 
report to Congress any covert action, as sending a message to them that covert 
action often leads to trouble and can severely damage one’s career. Controversies 
surrounding Central American covert action programs in the mid-1980s 
led to the indictment of several senior officers of the Clandestine Service.During 
the 1990s, tension sometimes arose, as it did in the effort against al Qaeda, 
between policymakers who wanted the CIA to undertake more aggressive 
covert action and wary CIA leaders who counseled prudence and making sure 
that the legal basis and presidential authorization for their actions were undeniably 
clear. 

The Clandestine Service felt the impact of the post–Cold War peace dividend, 
with cuts beginning in 1992. As the number of officers declined and 
overseas facilities were closed, the DCI and his managers responded to developing 
crises in the Balkans or in Africa by “surging,” or taking officers from 
across the service to use on the immediate problem. In many cases the surge 
officers had little familiarity with the new issues. Inevitably, some parts of the 
world and some collection targets were not fully covered, or not covered at all. 
This strategy also placed great emphasis on close relations with foreign liaison 
services, whose help was needed to gain information that the United States 
itself did not have the capacity to collect. 

The nadir for the Clandestine Service was in 1995, when only 25 trainees 
became new officers.74 In 1998, the DCI was able to persuade the administration 
and the Congress to endorse a long-range rebuilding program.It takes five 
to seven years of training, language study, and experience to bring a recruit up 
to full performance.75 

Analysis. The CIA’s Directorate of Intelligence retained some of its original 
character of a university gone to war. Its men and women tended to judge one 
another by the quantity and quality of their publications (in this case, classified 
publications).Apart from their own peers,they looked for approval and guidance 
to policymakers. During the 1990s and today, particular value is attached 
to having a contribution included in one of the classified daily “newspapers”— 
the Senior Executive Intelligence Brief—or, better still, selected for inclusion 
in the President’s Daily Brief.76</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>Watergate</Misc>
    <Location>Balkans</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI</Organization>
    <Location>Africa</Location>
    <Organization>Clandestine Service</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA’s Clandestine Service</Organization>
    <Person>Frank Church</Person>
    <Person>Otis Pike</Person>
    <Person>Fidel Castro</Person>
    <Misc>Hughes-Ryan Amendment</Misc>
    <Organization>Clandestine</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA’s Directorate of Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>Senior Executive Intelligence</Organization>
    <Person>Brief.76</Person>
    <Date>74 In 1998</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>108_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

The CIA had been created to wage the Cold War. Its steady focus on one 
or two primary adversaries,decade after decade,had at least one positive effect: 
it created an environment in which managers and analysts could safely invest 
time and resources in basic research, detailed and reflective. Payoffs might not 
be immediate. But when they wrote their estimates, even in brief papers, they 
could draw on a deep base of knowledge. 

When the Cold War ended, those investments could not easily be reallocated 
to new enemies. The cultural effects ran even deeper. In a more fluid 
international environment with uncertain, changing goals and interests, intelligence 
managers no longer felt they could afford such a patient, strategic 
approach to long-term accumulation of intellectual capital. A university culture 
with its versions of books and articles was giving way to the culture of the 
newsroom. 

During the 1990s, the rise of round-the-clock news shows and the Internet 
reinforced pressure on analysts to pass along fresh reports to policymakers at an 
ever-faster pace,trying to add context or supplement what their customers were 
receiving from the media.Weaknesses in all-source and strategic analysis were 
highlighted by a panel, chaired by Admiral David Jeremiah, that critiqued the 
intelligence community’s failure to foresee the nuclear weapons tests by India 
and Pakistan in 1998, as well as by a 1999 panel, chaired by Donald Rumsfeld, 
that discussed the community’s limited ability to assess the ballistic missile threat 
to the United States. Both reports called attention to the dispersal of effort on 
too many priorities, the declining attention to the craft of strategic analysis, and 
security rules that prevented adequate sharing of information.Another Cold War 
craft had been an elaborate set of methods for warning against surprise attack, 
but that too had faded in analyzing new dangers like terrorism.77 

Security. Another set of experiences that would affect the capacity of the CIA 
to cope with the new terrorism traced back to the early Cold War, when the 
Agency developed a concern,bordering on paranoia,about penetration by the 
Soviet KGB.James Jesus Angleton,who headed counterintelligence in the CIA 
until the early 1970s,became obsessed with the belief that the Agency harbored 
one or more Soviet “moles.”Although the pendulum swung back after Angleton’s 
forced retirement, it did not go very far. Instances of actual Soviet penetration 
kept apprehensions high.78 Then, in the early 1990s, came the Aldrich 
Ames espionage case,which intensely embarrassed the CIA.Though obviously 
unreliable,Ames had been protected and promoted by fellow officers while he 
paid his bills by selling to the Soviet Union the names of U.S. operatives and 
agents, a number of whom died as a result. 

The concern about security vastly complicated information sharing. Information 
was compartmented in order to protect it against exposure to skilled and 
technologically sophisticated adversaries. There were therefore numerous 
restrictions on handling information and a deep suspicion about sending infor</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Aldrich Ames</Person>
    <Person>Ames</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Soviet</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>Soviet Union</Location>
    <Person>Donald Rumsfeld</Person>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Misc>Internet</Misc>
    <Organization>Agency</Organization>
    <Person>David Jeremiah</Person>
    <Person>Jesus Angleton</Person>
  </document>
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    <docID>109_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

mation over newfangled electronic systems, like email, to other agencies of the 

U.S. government.79 
Security concerns also increased the difficulty of recruiting officers qualified 
for counterterrorism.Very few American colleges or universities offered 
programs in Middle Eastern languages or Islamic studies.The total number of 
undergraduate degrees granted in Arabic in all U.S. colleges and universities in 
2002 was six.80 Many who had traveled much outside the United States could 
expect a very long wait for initial clearance.Anyone who was foreign-born or 
had numerous relatives abroad was well-advised not even to apply.With budgets 
for the CIA shrinking after the end of the Cold War, it was not surprising 
that, with some notable exceptions, new hires in the Clandestine Service 
tended to have qualifications similar to those of serving officers: that is, they 
were suited for traditional agent recruitment or for exploiting liaison relationships 
with foreign services but were not equipped to seek or use assets inside 
the terrorist network. 

Early Counterterrorism Efforts 

In the 1970s and 1980s, terrorism had been tied to regional conflicts, mainly 
in the Middle East.The majority of terrorist groups either were sponsored by 
governments or,like the Palestine Liberation Organization,were militants trying 
to create governments. 

In the mid-1980s,on the basis of a report from a task force headed byVice 
President George Bush and after terrorist attacks at airports in Rome and 
Athens,the DCI created a Counterterrorist Center to unify activities across the 
Directorate of Operations and the Directorate of Intelligence.The Counterterrorist 
Center had representation from the FBI and other agencies.In the formal 
table of organization it reported to the DCI,but in fact most of the Center’s 
chiefs belonged to the Clandestine Service and usually looked for guidance to 
the head of the Directorate of Operations.81 

The Center stimulated and coordinated collection of information by CIA 
stations,compiled the results,and passed selected reports to appropriate stations, 
the Directorate of Intelligence analysts, other parts of the intelligence community,
or to policymakers.The Center protected its bureaucratic turf.The Director 
of Central Intelligence had once had a national intelligence officer for 
terrorism to coordinate analysis; that office was abolished in the late 1980s and 
its duties absorbed in part by the Counterterrorist Center. Though analysts 
assigned to the Center produced a large number of papers, the focus was support 
to operations.A CIA inspector general’s report in 1994 criticized the Center’s 
capacity to provide warning of terrorist attacks.82 

Subsequent chapters will raise the issue of whether,despite tremendous talent,
energy,and dedication,the intelligence community failed to do enough in 
coping with the challenge from Bin Ladin and al Qaeda.Confronted with such 
questions, managers in the intelligence community often responded that they 
had meager resources with which to work.83</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Organization>Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Organization>Palestine Liberation Organization</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Rome</Location>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate of Intelligence</Organization>
    <Misc>Counterterrorism Efforts</Misc>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>Clandestine Service</Organization>
    <Organization>Center’s</Organization>
    <Person>George Bush</Person>
    <Location>Middle East.The</Location>
    <Location>Middle Eastern</Location>
    <Location>Athens</Location>
    <Organization>Directorate of Intelligence.The Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Directorate of Operations.81 The Center</Organization>
    <Date>970s and 1980</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>10_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COMMISSION 
STAFF 


Philip Zelikow, Executive Director 
Christopher A. Kojm, Deputy Executive Director 
Daniel Marcus, General Counsel 


Joanne M.Accolla 

Staff Assistant 

Alexis Albion 

Professional Staff Member 

Scott H.Allan, Jr. 

Counsel 

John A.Azzarello 

Counsel 

Caroline Barnes 

Professional Staff Member 

Warren Bass 

Professional Staff Member 

Ann M. Bennett 

Information Control Officer 

Mark S. Bittinger 

Professional Staff Member 

Madeleine Blot 

Counsel 

Antwion M. Blount 

Systems Engineer 

Sam Brinkley 

Professional Staff Member 

Geoffrey Scott Brown 

Research Assistant 

Daniel Byman 

Professional Staff Member 

Dianna Campagna 

Manager of Operations 

Samuel M.W. Caspersen 

Counsel 

Melissa A. Coffey 

Staff Assistant 

Lance Cole 

Consultant 

Marquittia L. Coleman 

Staff Assistant 

Marco A. Cordero 

Professional Staff Member 

Rajesh De 

Counsel 

George W. Delgrosso 

Investigator 

Gerald L. Dillingham 

Professional Staff Member 

Thomas E. Dowling 

Professional Staff Member 

Steven M. Dunne 

Deputy General Counsel 

Thomas R. Eldridge 

Counsel 

Alice Falk 

Editor 

John J. Farmer, Jr. 

Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

Alvin S. Felzenberg 

Deputy for Communications</docText>
    <Person>Philip Zelikow</Person>
    <Person>Christopher A. Kojm</Person>
    <Person>Daniel Marcus</Person>
    <Person>Counsel Joanne M.Accolla Staff Assistant Alexis Albion Professional Staff Member Scott H.Allan</Person>
    <Organization>Counsel John A.Azzarello Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>Caroline Barnes Professional Staff Member Warren Bass Professional Staff Member Ann M. Bennett Information Control Officer Mark S. Bittinger Professional Staff Member Madeleine Blot Counsel Antwion M. Blount Systems Engineer Sam Brinkley Professional Staff Member Geoffrey Scott Brown Research Assistant Daniel Byman Professional Staff Member Dianna Campagna Manager</Person>
    <Person>Samuel M.W. Caspersen Counsel Melissa A. Coffey Staff Assistant Lance Cole Consultant Marquittia L. Coleman Staff Assistant Marco A. Cordero Professional Staff Member Rajesh De Counsel George W. Delgrosso Investigator Gerald L. Dillingham Professional Staff Member Thomas E. Dowling Professional Staff Member Steven M. Dunne Deputy General Counsel Thomas R. Eldridge Counsel Alice Falk Editor John J. Farmer</Person>
    <Organization>Counsel &amp; Team Leader</Organization>
    <Person>Alvin S. Felzenberg Deputy</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

Cuts in national security expenditures at the end of the Cold War led to 
budget cuts in the national foreign intelligence program from fiscal years 1990 
to 1996 and essentially flat budgets from fiscal years 1996 to 2000 (except for 
the so-called Gingrich supplemental to the FY1999 budget and two later, 
smaller supplementals).These cuts compounded the difficulties of the intelligence 
agencies. Policymakers were asking them to move into the digitized 
future to fight against computer-to-computer communications and modern 
communication systems, while maintaining capability against older systems, 
such as high-frequency radios and ultra-high- and very-high-frequency (line 
of sight) systems that work like old-style television antennas.Also,demand for 
imagery increased dramatically following the success of the 1991 Gulf War. 
Both these developments,in turn,placed a premium on planning the next generation 
of satellite systems, the cost of which put great pressure on the rest of 
the intelligence budget. As a result, intelligence agencies experienced staff 
reductions, affecting both operators and analysts.84 

Yet at least for the CIA, part of the burden in tackling terrorism arose from 
the background we have described: an organization capable of attracting 
extraordinarily motivated people but institutionally averse to risk, with its 
capacity for covert action atrophied, predisposed to restrict the distribution of 
information, having difficulty assimilating new types of personnel, and accustomed 
to presenting descriptive reportage of the latest intelligence.The CIA, 
to put it another way,needed significant change in order to get maximum effect 
in counterterrorism. President Clinton appointed George Tenet as DCI in 
1997, and by all accounts terrorism was a priority for him. But Tenet’s own 
assessment, when questioned by the Commission, was that in 2004, the CIA’s 
clandestine service was still at least five years away from being fully ready to 
play its counterterrorism role.85 And while Tenet was clearly the leader of the 
CIA, the intelligence community’s confederated structure left open the question 
of who really was in charge of the entire U.S. intelligence effort. 

3.5 ...AND IN THE STATE DEPARTMENT AND THE 
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 
The State Department 

The Commission asked Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage in 2004 
why the State Department had so long pursued what seemed, and ultimately 
proved, to be a hopeless effort to persuade the Taliban regime in Afghanistan 
to deport Bin Ladin. Armitage replied: “We do what the State Department 
does, we don’t go out and fly bombers, we don’t do things like that[;] . . . we 
do our part in these things.”86 

Fifty years earlier, the person in Armitage’s position would not have spoken 
of the Department of State as having such a limited role. Until the late 1950s, 
the department dominated the processes of advising the president and Con</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Misc>Gulf War</Misc>
    <Person>George Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Richard Armitage</Person>
    <Organization>Armitage</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Gingrich</Person>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>Department of State</Organization>
    <Misc>FY1999</Misc>
    <Organization>STATE DEPARTMENT</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department The Commission</Organization>
    <Date>1996 to 2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

gress on U.S.relations with the rest of the world.The National Security Council 
was created in 1947 largely as a result of lobbying from the Pentagon for a 
forum where the military could object if they thought the State Department 
was setting national objectives that the United States did not have the wherewithal 
to pursue. 

The State Department retained primacy until the 1960s, when the 
Kennedy and Johnson administrations turned instead to Robert McNamara’s 
Defense Department, where a mini–state department was created to analyze 
foreign policy issues. President Richard Nixon then concentrated policy planning 
and policy coordination in a powerful National Security Council staff, 
overseen by Henry Kissinger. 

In later years, individual secretaries of state were important figures, but the 
department’s role continued to erode. State came into the 1990s overmatched 
by the resources of other departments and with little support for its budget 
either in the Congress or in the president’s Office of Management and Budget. 


Like the FBI and the CIA’s Directorate of Operations,the State Department 
had a tradition of emphasizing service in the field over service in Washington. 
Even ambassadors, however, often found host governments not only making 
connections with the U.S. government through their own missions in Washington,
but working through the CIA station or a Defense attaché.Increasingly, 
the embassies themselves were overshadowed by powerful regional commanders 
in chief reporting to the Pentagon.87 

Counterterrorism 

In the 1960s and 1970s, the State Department managed counterterrorism policy. 
It was the official channel for communication with the governments presumed 
to be behind the terrorists. Moreover, since terrorist incidents of this 
period usually ended in negotiations, an ambassador or other embassy official 
was the logical person to represent U.S. interests. 

Keeping U.S. diplomatic efforts against terrorism coherent was a recurring 
challenge. In 1976, at the direction of Congress, the department elevated its 
coordinator for combating terrorism to the rank equivalent to an assistant secretary 
of state.As an “ambassador at large,” this official sought to increase the 
visibility of counterterrorism matters within the department and to help integrate 
U.S.policy implementation among government agencies.The prolonged 
crisis of 1979–1981,when 53 Americans were held hostage at the U.S.embassy 
in Tehran, ended the State Department leadership in counterterrorism. President 
Carter’s assertive national security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, took 
charge,and the coordination function remained thereafter in the White House. 

President Reagan’s second secretary of state,George Shultz,advocated active 
U.S.efforts to combat terrorism,often recommending the use of military force. 
Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger opposed Shultz,who made little head</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Tehran</Location>
    <Person>Johnson</Person>
    <Person>Kennedy</Person>
    <Organization>CIA’s Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Person>Shultz</Person>
    <Organization>world.The National Security Council</Organization>
    <Person>Robert McNamara’s Defense Department</Person>
    <Person>Richard Nixon</Person>
    <Person>Henry Kissinger</Person>
    <Person>Defense</Person>
    <Misc>Pentagon.87 Counterterrorism</Misc>
    <Organization>U.S.policy</Organization>
    <Person>Zbigniew Brzezinski</Person>
    <Person>George Shultz</Person>
    <Person>Caspar Weinberger</Person>
    <Date>960s and 1970</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>112_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

way against Weinberger, or even within his own department.Though Shultz 
elevated the status and visibility of counterterrorism coordination by appointing 
as coordinator first L. Paul Bremer and then Robert Oakley, both senior 
career ambassadors of high standing in the Foreign Service, the department 
continued to be dominated by regional bureaus for which terrorism was not a 
first-order concern. 

Secretaries of state after Shultz took less personal interest in the problem. 
Only congressional opposition prevented President Clinton’s first secretary of 
state, Warren Christopher, from merging terrorism into a new bureau that 
would have also dealt with narcotics and crime.The coordinator under Secretary 
Madeleine Albright told the Commission that his job was seen as a minor 
one within the department.88 Although the description of his status has been 
disputed, and Secretary Albright strongly supported the August 1998 strikes 
against Bin Ladin, the role played by the Department of State in counterterrorism 
was often cautionary before 9/11.This was a reflection of the reality 
that counterterrorism priorities nested within broader foreign policy aims of 
the U.S. government. 

State Department consular officers around the world, it should not be forgotten, 
were constantly challenged by the problem of terrorism, for they handled 
visas for travel to the United States. After it was discovered that Abdel 
Rahman, the Blind Sheikh, had come and gone almost at will, State initiated 
significant reforms to its watchlist and visa-processing policies. In 1993, Congress 
passed legislation allowing State to retain visa-processing fees for border 
security; those fees were then used by the department to fully automate the 
terrorist watchlist. By the late 1990s, State had created a worldwide, real-time 
electronic database of visa,law enforcement,and watchlist information,the core 
of the post-9/11 border screening systems. Still, as will be seen later, the system 
had many holes.89 

The Department of Defense 

The Department of Defense is the behemoth among federal agencies.With an 
annual budget larger than the gross domestic product of Russia,it is an empire. 
The Defense Department is part civilian,part military.The civilian secretary of 
defense has ultimate control,under the president.Among the uniformed military, 
the top official is the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who is supported 
by a Joint Staff divided into standard military staff compartments—J-2 
(intelligence), J-3 (operations), and so on. 

Because of the necessary and demanding focus on the differing mission of 
each service, and their long and proud traditions, the Army, Navy, Air Force, 
and Marine Corps have often fought ferociously over roles and missions in war 
fighting and over budgets and posts of leadership.Two developments diminished 
this competition. 

The first was the passage by Congress in 1986 of the Goldwater-Nichols</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Person>Abdel Rahman</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>Air Force</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs of Staff</Organization>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Person>Madeleine Albright</Person>
    <Person>Robert Oakley</Person>
    <Person>L. Paul Bremer</Person>
    <Organization>Department of State</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton’s</Person>
    <Organization>Army</Organization>
    <Organization>Navy</Organization>
    <Misc>Goldwater-Nichols</Misc>
    <Person>Shultz</Person>
    <Person>Weinberger</Person>
    <Person>Warren Christopher</Person>
    <Organization>holes.89 The Department of Defense The Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Marine Corps</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Act, which, among other things, mandated that promotion to high rank 
required some period of duty with a different service or with a joint (i.e., 
multiservice) command.This had strong and immediate effects, loosening the 
loyalties of senior officers to their separate services and causing them to think 
more broadly about the military establishment as a whole.90 However, it also 
may have lessened the diversity of military advice and options presented to the 
president.The Goldwater-Nichols example is seen by some as having lessons 
applicable to lessening competition and increasing cooperation in other parts 
of the federal bureaucracy, particularly the law enforcement and intelligence 
communities. 

The second, related development was a significant transfer of planning and 
command responsibilities from the service chiefs and their staffs to the joint 
and unified commands outside of Washington, especially those for Strategic 
Forces and for four regions:Europe,the Pacific,the Center,and the South.Posts 
in these commands became prized assignments for ambitious officers, and the 
voices of their five commanders in chief became as influential as those of the 
service chiefs. 

Counterterrorism 

The Pentagon first became concerned about terrorism as a result of hostage 
taking in the 1970s. In June 1976, Palestinian terrorists seized an Air France 
plane and landed it at Entebbe in Uganda, holding 105 Israelis and other Jews 
as hostages.A special Israeli commando force stormed the plane,killed all the 
terrorists,and rescued all but one of the hostages.In October 1977,a West German 
special force dealt similarly with a Lufthansa plane sitting on a tarmac in 
Mogadishu: every terrorist was killed, and every hostage brought back safely. 
The White House, members of Congress, and the news media asked the Pentagon 
whether the United States was prepared for similar action.The answer 
was no. The Army immediately set about creating the Delta Force, one of 
whose missions was hostage rescue. 

The first test for the new force did not go well. It came in April 1980 during 
the Iranian hostage crisis, when Navy helicopters with Marine pilots flew 
to a site known as Desert One, some 200 miles southeast of Tehran, to rendezvous 
with Air Force planes carrying Delta Force commandos and fresh fuel. 
Mild sandstorms disabled three of the helicopters,and the commander ordered 
the mission aborted. But foul-ups on the ground resulted in the loss of eight 
aircraft,five airmen,and three marines.Remembered as “Desert One,”this failure 
remained vivid for members of the armed forces. It also contributed to the 
later Goldwater-Nichols reforms. 

In 1983 came Hezbollah’s massacre of the Marines in Beirut.President Reagan 
quickly withdrew U.S. forces from Lebanon—a reversal later routinely 
cited by jihadists as evidence of U.S. weakness. A detailed investigation produced 
a list of new procedures that would become customary for forces</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Misc>Jews</Misc>
    <Misc>Iranian</Misc>
    <Location>Pacific</Location>
    <Location>Uganda</Location>
    <Misc>Palestinian</Misc>
    <Misc>Israelis</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Air Force</Organization>
    <Location>Tehran</Location>
    <Misc>Israeli</Misc>
    <Person>Reagan</Person>
    <Organization>Army</Organization>
    <Misc>Marines</Misc>
    <Misc>Goldwater-Nichols</Misc>
    <Organization>Delta Force</Organization>
    <Misc>Desert One</Misc>
    <Organization>Strategic Forces</Organization>
    <Organization>Center ,</Organization>
    <Misc>South.Posts</Misc>
    <Organization>Air France</Organization>
    <Location>Entebbe</Location>
    <Location>West German</Location>
    <Location>Lufthansa</Location>
    <Location>Mogadishu:</Location>
    <Misc>Marine</Misc>
    <Location>Lebanon—a</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>114_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

deployed abroad.They involved a number of defensive measures,including caution 
not only about strange cars and trucks but also about unknown aircraft 
overhead. “Force protection” became a significant claim on the time and 
resources of the Department of Defense. 

A decade later, the military establishment had another experience that 
evoked both Desert One and the withdrawal from Beirut.The first President 
Bush had authorized the use of U.S. military forces to ensure humanitarian 
relief in war-torn Somalia.Tribal factions interfered with the supply missions. 
By the autumn of 1993, U.S. commanders concluded that the main source of 
trouble was a warlord, Mohammed Farrah Aidid. An Army special force 
launched a raid on Mogadishu to capture him. In the course of a long night, 
two Black Hawk helicopters were shot down, 73 Americans were wounded, 
18 were killed, and the world’s television screens showed images of an American 
corpse dragged through the streets by exultant Somalis. Under pressure 
from Congress, President Clinton soon ordered the withdrawal of U.S. forces. 
“Black Hawk down” joined “Desert One” as a symbol among Americans in 
uniform, code phrases used to evoke the risks of daring exploits without maximum 
preparation, overwhelming force, and a well-defined mission. 

In 1995–1996, the Defense Department began to invest effort in planning 
how to handle the possibility of a domestic terrorist incident involving 
weapons of mass destruction (WMD).The idea of a domestic command for 
homeland defense began to be discussed in 1997, and in 1999 the Joint Chiefs 
developed a concept for the establishment of a domestic Unified Command. 
Congress killed the idea. Instead, the Department established the Joint Forces 
Command, located at Norfolk, Virginia, making it responsible for military 
response to domestic emergencies, both natural and man-made.91 

Pursuant to the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici Domestic Preparedness Program, 
the Defense Department began in 1997 to train first responders in 120 of the 
nation’s largest cities.As a key part of its efforts,Defense created National Guard 
WMD Civil Support Teams to respond in the event of a WMD terrorist incident.
A total of 32 such National Guard teams were authorized by fiscal year 
2001. Under the command of state governors, they provided support to civilian 
agencies to assess the nature of the attack,offer medical and technical advice, 
and coordinate state and local responses.92 

The Department of Defense, like the Department of State, had a coordinator 
who represented the department on the interagency committee concerned 
with counterterrorism. By the end of President Clinton’s first term, this official 
had become the assistant secretary of defense for special operations and 
low-intensity conflict.93 

The experience of the 1980s had suggested to the military establishment 
that if it were to have a role in counterterrorism, it would be a traditional military 
role—to act against state sponsors of terrorism.And the military had what 
seemed an excellent example of how to do it. In 1986, a bomb went off at a</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Organization>Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Organization>WMD</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of State</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton’s</Person>
    <Organization>National Guard</Organization>
    <Organization>Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Desert One</Misc>
    <Misc>Beirut.The</Misc>
    <Person>Mohammed Farrah Aidid</Person>
    <Location>Mogadishu</Location>
    <Misc>Somalis</Misc>
    <Organization>Unified Command</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Forces Command</Organization>
    <Location>Norfolk</Location>
    <Misc>Nunn-Lugar-Domenici Domestic Preparedness Program</Misc>
    <Organization>National Guard WMD Civil Support Teams</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

disco in Berlin, killing two American soldiers. Intelligence clearly linked the 
bombing to Libya’s Colonel Muammar Qadhafi. President Reagan ordered air 
strikes against Libya.The operation was not cost free:the United States lost two 
planes. Evidence accumulated later, including the 1988 bombing of Pan Am 
103, clearly showed that the operation did not curb Qadhafi’s interest in terrorism.
However,it was seen at the time as a success.The lesson then taken from 
Libya was that terrorism could be stopped by the use of U.S. air power that 
inflicted pain on the authors or sponsors of terrorist acts. 

This lesson was applied, using Tomahawk missiles, early in the Clinton 
administration.George H.W.Bush was scheduled to visit Kuwait to be honored 
for his rescue of that country in the Gulf War of 1991. Kuwaiti security 
services warned Washington that Iraqi agents were planning to assassinate the 
former president. President Clinton not only ordered precautions to protect 
Bush but asked about options for a reprisal against Iraq.The Pentagon proposed 
12 targets for Tomahawk missiles. Debate in the White House and at the CIA 
about possible collateral damage pared the list down to three, then to one— 
Iraqi intelligence headquarters in central Baghdad. The attack was made at 
night,to minimize civilian casualties.Twenty-three missiles were fired.Other 
than one civilian casualty, the operation seemed completely successful: the 
intelligence headquarters was demolished. No further intelligence came in 
about terrorist acts planned by Iraq.94 

The 1986 attack in Libya and the 1993 attack on Iraq symbolized for the 
military establishment effective use of military power for counterterrorism— 
limited retaliation with air power,aimed at deterrence.What remained was the 
hard question of how deterrence could be effective when the adversary was a 
loose transnational network. 

3.6 ...AND IN THE WHITE HOUSE 
Because coping with terrorism was not (and is not) the sole province of any 
component of the U.S. government, some coordinating mechanism is neces-
sary.When terrorism was not a prominent issue, the State Department could 
perform this role.When the Iranian hostage crisis developed, this procedure 
went by the board:National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski took charge 
of crisis management. 

The Reagan administration continued and formalized the practice of having 
presidential staff coordinate counterterrorism. After the killing of the 
marines in Beirut, President Reagan signed National Security Directive 138, 
calling for a “shift . . . from passive to active defense measures” and reprogramming 
or adding new resources to effect the shift. It directed the State Department 
“to intensify efforts to achieve cooperation of other governments” and 
the CIA to “intensify use of liaison and other intelligence capabilities and also</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Location>Libya</Location>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Misc>Iranian</Misc>
    <Misc>Gulf War</Misc>
    <Location>Kuwait</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Beirut</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>Berlin</Location>
    <Person>Reagan</Person>
    <Location>Baghdad</Location>
    <Misc>Tomahawk</Misc>
    <Person>Muammar Qadhafi</Person>
    <Misc>Libya.The</Misc>
    <Misc>Pan Am 103</Misc>
    <Misc>H.W.Bush</Misc>
    <Misc>Kuwaiti</Misc>
    <Organization>Iraq.The Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>board:National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Directive</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>116_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

to develop plans and capability to preempt groups and individuals planning 
strikes against U.S. interests.”95 

Speaking to the American Bar Association in July 1985, the President characterized 
terrorism as “an act of war” and declared:“There can be no place on 
earth left where it is safe for these monsters to rest, to train, or practice their 
cruel and deadly skills. We must act together, or unilaterally, if necessary to 
ensure that terrorists have no sanctuary—anywhere.”96 The air strikes against 
Libya were one manifestation of this strategy. 

Through most of President Reagan’s second term, the coordination of 
counterterrorism was overseen by a high-level interagency committee chaired 
by the deputy national security adviser. But the Reagan administration closed 
with a major scandal that cast a cloud over the notion that the White House 
should guide counterterrorism. 

President Reagan was concerned because Hezbollah was taking Americans 
hostage and periodically killing them. He was also constrained by a bill he 
signed into law that made it illegal to ship military aid to anticommunist Contra 
guerrillas in Nicaragua, whom he strongly supported. His national security 
adviser,Robert McFarlane,and McFarlane’s deputy,Admiral John Poindexter, 
thought the hostage problem might be solved and the U.S.position in the Middle 
East improved if the United States quietly negotiated with Iran about 
exchanging hostages for modest quantities of arms. Shultz and Weinberger, 
united for once, opposed McFarlane and Poindexter. 

A staffer for McFarlane and Poindexter, Marine Lieutenant Colonel Oliver 
North, developed a scheme to trade U.S. arms for hostages and divert the proceeds 
to the Contras to get around U.S. law. He may have had encouragement 
from Director of Central Intelligence William Casey.97 

When the facts were revealed in 1986 and 1987,it appeared to be the 1970s 
all over again: a massive abuse of covert action. Now, instead of stories about 
poisoned cigars and Mafia hit men,Americans heard testimony about a secret 
visit to Tehran by McFarlane, using an assumed name and bearing a chocolate 
cake decorated with icing depicting a key.An investigation by a special counsel 
resulted in the indictment of McFarlane, Poindexter, North, and ten others, 
including several high-ranking officers from the CIA’s Clandestine 
Service. The investigations spotlighted the importance of accountability and 
official responsibility for faithful execution of laws. For the story of 9/11, the 
significance of the Iran-Contra affair was that it made parts of the bureaucracy 
reflexively skeptical about any operating directive from the White House.98 

As the national security advisor’s function expanded, the procedures and 
structure of the advisor’s staff, conventionally called the National Security 
Council staff,became more formal.The advisor developed recommendations 
for presidential directives, differently labeled by each president. For President 
Clinton,they were to be Presidential Decision Directives;for President George 
W.Bush,National Security Policy Directives.These documents and many oth</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Hezbollah</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Libya</Location>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Location>Tehran</Location>
    <Person>Reagan</Person>
    <Person>George W.Bush</Person>
    <Organization>American Bar Association</Organization>
    <Person>Reagan’s</Person>
    <Misc>Contra</Misc>
    <Location>Nicaragua</Location>
    <Person>Robert McFarlane</Person>
    <Misc>McFarlane’s</Misc>
    <Person>John Poindexter</Person>
    <Person>Shultz</Person>
    <Person>Weinberger</Person>
    <Person>McFarlane</Person>
    <Person>Poindexter</Person>
    <Person>Oliver North</Person>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence William Casey.97</Organization>
    <Person>North</Person>
    <Organization>CIA’s Clandestine Service</Organization>
    <Location>Iran-Contra</Location>
    <Misc>White House.98 As</Misc>
    <Misc>Presidential Decision Directives</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Policy Directives.These</Organization>
    <Date>1986 and 1987</Date>
  </document>
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    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

ers requiring approval by the president worked their way through interagency 
committees usually composed of departmental representatives at the assistant 
secretary level or just below it.The NSC staff had senior directors who would 
sit on these interagency committees, often as chair, to facilitate agreement and 
to represent the wider interests of the national security advisor. 

When President Clinton took office, he decided right away to coordinate 
counterterrorism from the White House. On January 25, 1993, Mir Amal 
Kansi, an Islamic extremist from Pakistan, shot and killed two CIA employees 
at the main highway entrance to CIA headquarters in Virginia. (Kansi drove 
away and was captured abroad much later.) Only a month afterward came the 
World Trade Center bombing and,a few weeks after that,the Iraqi plot against 
former President Bush. 

President Clinton’s first national security advisor, Anthony Lake, had 
retained from the Bush administration the staffer who dealt with crime, narcotics, 
and terrorism (a portfolio often known as “drugs and thugs”), the veteran 
civil servant Richard Clarke.President Clinton and Lake turned to Clarke 
to do the staff work for them in coordinating counterterrorism. Before long, 
he would chair a midlevel interagency committee eventually titled the Counterterrorism 
Security Group (CSG).We will later tell of Clarke’s evolution as 
adviser on and, in time, manager of the U.S. counterterrorist effort. 

When explaining the missile strike against Iraq provoked by the plot to kill 
President Bush,President Clinton stated:“From the first days of our Revolution,
America’s security has depended on the clarity of the message:Don’t tread 
on us.A firm and commensurate response was essential to protect our sovereignty, 
to send a message to those who engage in state-sponsored terrorism, to 
deter further violence against our people, and to affirm the expectation of civilized 
behavior among nations.”99 

In his State of the Union message in January 1995,President Clinton promised 
“comprehensive legislation to strengthen our hand in combating terrorists, 
whether they strike at home or abroad.” In February, he sent Congress 
proposals to extend federal criminal jurisdiction, to make it easier to deport 
terrorists, and to act against terrorist fund-raising. In early May, he submitted a 
bundle of strong amendments.The interval had seen the news from Tokyo in 
March that a doomsday cult,Aum Shinrikyo,had released sarin nerve gas in a 
subway,killing 12 and injuring thousands.The sect had extensive properties and 
laboratories in Japan and offices worldwide,including one in New York.Neither 
the FBI nor the CIA had ever heard of it. In April had come the bombing 
of the Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City; immediate suspicions 
that it had been the work of Islamists turned out to be wrong,and the bombers 
proved to be American antigovernment extremists named Timothy McVeigh 
and Terry Nichols. President Clinton proposed to amend his earlier proposals 
by increasing wiretap and electronic surveillance authority for the FBI,requiring 
that explosives carry traceable taggants, and providing substantial new 
money not only for the FBI and CIA but also for local police.100</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Misc>Islamists</Misc>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Clarke’s</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Misc>America’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Counterterrorism Security Group</Organization>
    <Organization>Aum Shinrikyo</Organization>
    <Location>Tokyo</Location>
    <Location>Japan</Location>
    <Person>Amal Kansi</Person>
    <Person>Timothy McVeigh</Person>
    <Location>Oklahoma City</Location>
    <Person>Kansi</Person>
    <Person>Anthony Lake</Person>
    <Person>Richard Clarke.President Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Lake</Person>
    <Organization>Union</Organization>
    <Misc>Murrah</Misc>
    <Person>Terry Nichols</Person>
    <Date>January 25, 1993</Date>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

President Clinton issued a classified directive in June 1995, Presidential 
Decision Directive 39, which said that the United States should “deter, defeat 
and respond vigorously to all terrorist attacks on our territory and against our 
citizens.”The directive called terrorism both a matter of national security and 
a crime,and it assigned responsibilities to various agencies.Alarmed by the incident 
in Tokyo,President Clinton made it the very highest priority for his own 
staff and for all agencies to prepare to detect and respond to terrorism that 
involved chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons.101 

During 1995 and 1996, President Clinton devoted considerable time to 
seeking cooperation from other nations in denying sanctuary to terrorists. He 
proposed significantly larger budgets for the FBI, with much of the increase 
designated for counterterrorism. For the CIA, he essentially stopped cutting 
allocations and supported requests for supplemental funds for counterterrorism.
102 

When announcing his new national security team after being reelected in 
1996,President Clinton mentioned terrorism first in a list of several challenges 
facing the country.103 In 1998, after Bin Ladin’s fatwa and other alarms, President 
Clinton accepted a proposal from his national security advisor, Samuel 
“Sandy” Berger, and gave Clarke a new position as national coordinator for 
security, infrastructure protection, and counterterrorism. He issued two Presidential 
Decision Directives, numbers 62 and 63, that built on the assignments 
to agencies that had been made in Presidential Decision Directive 39; laid out 
ten program areas for counterterrorism; and enhanced, at least on paper, 
Clarke’s authority to police these assignments. Because of concerns especially 
on the part of Attorney General Reno, this new authority was defined in precise 
and limiting language.Clarke was only to “provide advice”regarding budgets 
and to “coordinate the development of interagency agreed guidelines” for 
action.104 

Clarke also was awarded a seat on the cabinet-level Principals Committee 
when it met on his issues—a highly unusual step for a White House staffer.His 
interagency body, the CSG, ordinarily reported to the Deputies Committee of 
subcabinet officials, unless Berger asked them to report directly to the principals. 
The complementary directive, number 63, defined the elements of the 
nation’s critical infrastructure and considered ways to protect it. Taken 
together, the two directives basically left the Justice Department and the FBI 
in charge at home and left terrorism abroad to the CIA,the State Department, 
and other agencies, under Clarke’s and Berger’s coordinating hands. 

Explaining the new arrangement and his concerns in another commencement 
speech, this time at the Naval Academy, in May 1998, the President said: 

First,we will use our new integrated approach to intensify the fight against 
all forms of terrorism: to capture terrorists, no matter where they hide; to 
work with other nations to eliminate terrorist sanctuaries overseas; to 
respond rapidly and effectively to protect Americans from terrorism at</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Clarke’s</Organization>
    <Location>Reno</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Deputies Committee</Organization>
    <Organization>Principals Committee</Organization>
    <Location>Tokyo</Location>
    <Person>Samuel “Sandy” Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Presidential Decision Directives</Organization>
    <Organization>Presidential Decision Directive</Organization>
    <Organization>Naval Academy</Organization>
    <Date>1995 and 1996</Date>
  </document>
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    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

home and abroad.Second,we will launch a comprehensive plan to detect, 
deter,and defend against attacks on our critical infrastructures,our power 
systems, water supplies, police, fire, and medical services, air traffic control, 
financial services, telephone systems, and computer networks. . . . 
Third,we will undertake a concerted effort to prevent the spread and use 
of biological weapons and to protect our people in the event these terrible 
weapons are ever unleashed by a rogue state, a terrorist group, or an 
international criminal organization. . . . Finally, we must do more to protect 
our civilian population from biological weapons.105 

Clearly, the President’s concern about terrorism had steadily risen.That 
heightened worry would become even more obvious early in 1999, when 
he addressed the National Academy of Sciences and presented his most 
somber account yet of what could happen if the United States were hit, 
unprepared, by terrorists wielding either weapons of mass destruction or 
potent cyberweapons. 

3.7 ...AND IN THE CONGRESS 
Since the beginning of the Republic,few debates have been as hotly contested 
as the one over executive versus legislative powers.At the Constitutional Convention, 
the founders sought to create a strong executive but check its powers. 
They left those powers sufficiently ambiguous so that room was left for Congress 
and the president to struggle over the direction of the nation’s security 
and foreign policies. 

The most serious question has centered on whether or not the president 
needs congressional authorization to wage war. The current status of that 
debate seems to have settled into a recognition that a president can deploy military 
forces for small and limited operations, but needs at least congressional 
support if not explicit authorization for large and more open-ended military 
operations. 

This calculus becomes important in this story as both President Clinton and 
President Bush chose not to seek a declaration of war on Bin Ladin after he 
had declared and begun to wage war on us, a declaration that they did not 
acknowledge publicly. Not until after 9/11 was a congressional authorization 
sought. 

The most substantial change in national security oversight in Congress took 
place following World War II.The Congressional Reorganization Act of 1946 
created the modern Armed Services committees that have become so powerful 
today. One especially noteworthy innovation was the creation of the Joint 
House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee,which is credited by many with the 
development of our nuclear deterrent capability and was also criticized for 
wielding too much power relative to the executive branch.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>World War</Misc>
    <Organization>National Academy of Sciences</Organization>
    <Location>Republic</Location>
    <Organization>CONGRESS</Organization>
    <Organization>Armed Services</Organization>
    <Organization>Constitutional Convention</Organization>
    <Organization>Congressional Reorganization Act of</Organization>
    <Organization>Atomic Energy Committee</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>11_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COMMISSION STAFF 

Lorry M. Fenner 

Professional Staff Member 

Susan Ginsburg 

Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

T. Graham Giusti 
Security Officer 

Nicole Marie Grandrimo 

Professional Staff Member 

Douglas N. Greenburg 

Counsel 

Barbara A. Grewe 

Senior Counsel, Special Projects 

Elinore Flynn Hartz 

Family Liaison 

Leonard R. Hawley 

Professional Staff Member 

L. Christine Healey 
Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

Karen Heitkotter 

Executive Secretary 

Walter T. Hempel II 

Professional Staff Member 

C. Michael Hurley 
Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

Dana J. Hyde 

Counsel 

John W. Ivicic 

Security Officer 

Michael N. Jacobson 

Counsel 

Hunter W. Jamerson 

Intern 

Bonnie D. Jenkins 

Counsel 

Reginald F. Johnson 

Staff Assistant 

R.William Johnstone 

Professional Staff Member 

Stephanie L. Kaplan 

Special Assistant &amp; Managing Editor 

Miles L. Kara, Sr. 

Professional Staff Member 

Janice L. Kephart 

Counsel 

Hyon Kim 

Counsel 

Katarzyna Kozaczuk 

Financial Assistant 

Gordon Nathaniel Lederman 

Counsel 

Daniel J. Leopold 

Staff Assistant 

Sarah Webb Linden 

Professional Staff Member 

Douglas J. MacEachin 

Professional Staff Member &amp; Team Leader 

Ernest R. May 

Senior Adviser 

Joseph McBride 

Intern 

James Miller 

Professional Staff Member 

Kelly Moore 

Professional Staff Member 

Charles M. Pereira 

Professional Staff Member 

John Raidt 

Professional Staff Member 

John Roth 

Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

Peter Rundlet 

Counsel 

Lloyd D. Salvetti 

Professional Staff Member 

Kevin J. Scheid 

Professional Staff Member &amp; Team Leader 

Kevin Shaeffer 

Professional Staff Member 

Tracy J. Shycoff 

Deputy for Administration &amp; Finance 

Dietrich L. Snell 

Senior Counsel &amp; Team Leader 

Jonathan DeWees Stull 

Communications Assistant 

Lisa Marie Sullivan 

Staff Assistant 

Quinn John Tamm, Jr. 

Professional Staff Member 

Catharine S.Taylor 

Staff Assistant 

Yoel Tobin 

Counsel 

Emily Landis Walker 

Professional Staff Member &amp; Family Liaison 

Garth Wermter 

Senior IT Consultant 

Serena B.Wille 

Counsel 

Peter Yerkes 

Public Affairs Assistant</docText>
    <Misc>STAFF Lorry M. Fenner Professional Staff</Misc>
    <Organization>Member Susan Ginsburg Senior Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>T. Graham Giusti Security Officer Nicole Marie Grandrimo Professional</Person>
    <Misc>Staff Member</Misc>
    <Person>Douglas N. Greenburg Counsel Barbara A. Grewe Senior Counsel</Person>
    <Person>Elinore Flynn Hartz Family Liaison Leonard R. Hawley Professional</Person>
    <Person>L. Christine Healey Senior Counsel</Person>
    <Person>Karen Heitkotter Executive Secretary Walter T. Hempel</Person>
    <Organization>Professional Staff</Organization>
    <Organization>Member C. Michael Hurley Senior Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>Dana J. Hyde Counsel John W. Ivicic Security Officer Michael N. Jacobson Counsel Hunter W. Jamerson Intern Bonnie D. Jenkins Counsel Reginald F. Johnson</Person>
    <Misc>Staff Assistant</Misc>
    <Organization>Johnstone Professional</Organization>
    <Person>Stephanie L. Kaplan Special Assistant</Person>
    <Person>Miles L. Kara</Person>
    <Organization>Professional</Organization>
    <Organization>Member Janice L. Kephart Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>Hyon Kim</Person>
    <Organization>Counsel</Organization>
    <Organization>Kozaczuk Financial Assistant Gordon</Organization>
    <Person>Nathaniel Lederman Counsel Daniel J. Leopold Staff Assistant Sarah Webb Linden Professional</Person>
    <Person>Douglas J. MacEachin Professional</Person>
    <Person>Ernest R. May Senior Adviser Joseph McBride Intern James Miller Professional Staff</Person>
    <Organization>Member Kelly Moore Professional</Organization>
    <Person>Charles M. Pereira Professional Staff</Person>
    <Organization>Member John Raidt Professional</Organization>
    <Organization>Member John Roth Senior Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>Peter Rundlet Counsel Lloyd D. Salvetti Professional</Person>
    <Person>Kevin J. Scheid Professional</Person>
    <Person>Kevin Shaeffer Professional</Person>
    <Person>Tracy J. Shycoff Deputy</Person>
    <Organization>Administration &amp; Finance Dietrich L. Snell Senior Counsel</Organization>
    <Person>Jonathan DeWees Stull Communications Assistant Lisa Marie Sullivan Staff Assistant Quinn John Tamm</Person>
    <Organization>Member Catharine</Organization>
    <Person>Yoel Tobin Counsel Emily Landis Walker Professional Staff Member</Person>
    <Person>Garth Wermter Senior</Person>
    <Person>Serena B.Wille Counsel Peter Yerkes Public Affairs Assistant</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

Ironically, this committee was eliminated in the 1970s as Congress was 
undertaking the next most important reform of oversight in response to the 
Church and Pike investigations into abuses of power. In 1977, the House and 
Senate created select committees to exercise oversight of the executive 
branch’s conduct of intelligence operations. 

The Intelligence Committees 

The House and Senate select committees on intelligence share some important 
characteristics.They have limited authorities.They do not have exclusive 
authority over intelligence agencies.Appropriations are ultimately determined 
by the Appropriations committees.The Armed Services committees exercise 
jurisdiction over the intelligence agencies within the Department of Defense 
(and,in the case of the Senate,over the Central Intelligence Agency).One consequence 
is that the rise and fall of intelligence budgets are tied directly to 
trends in defense spending. 

The president is required by law to ensure the congressional Intelligence 
committees are kept fully and currently informed of the intelligence activities 
of the United States.The committees allow the CIA to some extent to withhold 
information in order to protect sources,methods,and operations.The CIA 
must bring presidentially authorized covert action Findings and Memoranda 
of Notification to the Intelligence committees, and it must detail its failures. 
The committees conduct their most important work in closed hearings or 
briefings in which security over classified material can be maintained. 

Members of the Intelligence committees serve for a limited time, a restriction 
imposed by each chamber. Many members believe these limits prevent 
committee members from developing the necessary expertise to conduct effective 
oversight. 

Secrecy, while necessary, can also harm oversight.The overall budget of the 
intelligence community is classified,as are most of its activities.Thus,the Intelligence 
committees cannot take advantage of democracy’s best oversight 
mechanism: public disclosure. This makes them significantly different from 
other congressional oversight committees, which are often spurred into action 
by the work of investigative journalists and watchdog organizations. 

Adjusting to the Post–Cold War Era 

The unexpected and rapid end of the Cold War in 1991 created trauma in the 
foreign policy and national security community both in and out of government.
While some criticized the intelligence community for failing to forecast 
the collapse of the Soviet Union (and used this argument to propose drastic 
cuts in intelligence agencies), most recognized that the good news of being 
relieved of the substantial burden of maintaining a security structure to meet 
the Soviet challenge was accompanied by the bad news of increased insecurity. 
In many directions, the community faced threats and intelligence challenges 
that it was largely unprepared to meet.</docText>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>Pike</Misc>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence Agency</Organization>
    <Misc>Soviet</Misc>
    <Location>Soviet Union</Location>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Organization>House</Organization>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Misc>United States.The</Misc>
    <Organization>Intelligence Committees The House</Organization>
    <Organization>Armed Services</Organization>
    <Organization>Memoranda of Notification</Organization>
    <Misc>Post–Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>Era The</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

So did the intelligence oversight committees. New digitized technologies, 
and the demand for imagery and continued capability against older systems, 
meant the need to spend more on satellite systems at the expense of human 
efforts. In addition, denial and deception became more effective as targets 
learned from public sources what our intelligence agencies were doing.There 
were comprehensive reform proposals of the intelligence community, such as 
those offered by Senators Boren and McCurdy. That said, Congress still took 
too little action to address institutional weaknesses.106 

With the Cold War over,and the intelligence community roiled by the Ames 
spy scandal, a presidential commission chaired first by former secretary of 
defense Les Aspin and later by former secretary of defense Harold Brown examined 
the intelligence community’s future. After it issued recommendations 
addressing the DCI’s lack of personnel and budget authority over the intelligence 
community,the Intelligence committees in 1996 introduced implementing 
legislation to remedy these problems. 

The Department of Defense and its congressional authorizing committees 
rose in opposition to the proposed changes.The President and DCI did not 
actively support these changes.Relatively small changes made in 1996 gave the 
DCI consultative authority and created a new deputy for management and 
assistant DCIs for collection and analysis.These reforms occurred only after the 
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence took the unprecedented step of 
threatening to bring down the defense authorization bill. Indeed, rather than 
increasing the DCI’s authorities over national intelligence,the 1990s witnessed 
movement in the opposite direction through, for example, the transfer of the 
CIA’s imaging analysis capability to the new imagery and mapping agency created 
within the Department of Defense. 

Congress Adjusts 

Congress as a whole, like the executive branch, adjusted slowly to the rise of 
transnational terrorism as a threat to national security. In particular, the growing 
threat and capabilities of Bin Ladin were not understood in Congress.As the 
most representative branch of the federal government, Congress closely tracks 
trends in what public opinion and the electorate identify as key issues. In the 
years before September 11, terrorism seldom registered as important.To the 
extent that terrorism did break through and engage the attention of the Congress 
as a whole, it would briefly command attention after a specific incident, 
and then return to a lower rung on the public policy agenda. 

Several points about Congress are worth noting. First, Congress always has 
a strong orientation toward domestic affairs. It usually takes on foreign policy 
and national security issues after threats are identified and articulated by the 
administration. In the absence of such a detailed—and repeated—articulation, 
national security tends not to rise very high on the list of congressional priorities.
Presidents are selective in their use of political capital for international issues.</docText>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Senate Select Committee</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Misc>DCI’s</Misc>
    <Person>Senators Boren</Person>
    <Person>McCurdy</Person>
    <Organization>Ames</Organization>
    <Person>Les Aspin</Person>
    <Person>Harold Brown</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>122_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

In the decade before 9/11, presidential discussion of and congressional and 
public attention to foreign affairs and national security were dominated by 
other issues—among them, Haiti, Bosnia, Russia, China, Somalia, Kosovo, 
NATO enlargement, the Middle East peace process, missile defense, and glob-
alization.Terrorism infrequently took center stage; and when it did, the context 
was often terrorists’ tactics—a chemical, biological, nuclear, or computer 
threat—not terrorist organizations.107 

Second,Congress tends to follow the overall lead of the president on budget 
issues with respect to national security matters.There are often sharp arguments 
about individual programs and internal priorities, but by and large the overall 
funding authorized and appropriated by the Congress comes out close to the 
president’s request. This tendency was certainly illustrated by the downward 
trends in spending on defense, intelligence, and foreign affairs in the first part 
of the 1990s.The White House, to be sure, read the political signals coming 
from Capitol Hill, but the Congress largely acceded to the executive branch’s 
funding requests.In the second half of the decade,Congress appropriated some 
98 percent of what the administration requested for intelligence programs.Apart 
from the Gingrich supplemental of $1.5 billion for overall intelligence programs 
in fiscal year 1999, the key decisions on overall allocation of resources 
for national security issues in the decade before 9/11—including counterterrorism 
funding—were made in the president’s Office of Management and Budget.
108 

Third, Congress did not reorganize itself after the end of the Cold War to 
address new threats. Recommendations by the Joint Committee on the Organization 
of Congress were implemented, in part, in the House of Representatives 
after the 1994 elections, but there was no reorganization of national 
security functions.The Senate undertook no appreciable changes.Traditional 
issues—foreign policy, defense, intelligence—continued to be handled by 
committees whose structure remained largely unaltered, while issues such as 
transnational terrorism fell between the cracks.Terrorism came under the jurisdiction 
of at least 14 different committees in the House alone, and budget and 
oversight functions in the House and Senate concerning terrorism were also 
splintered badly among committees.Little effort was made to consider an integrated 
policy toward terrorism, which might range from identifying the threat 
to addressing vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure; and the piecemeal 
approach in the Congress contributed to the problems of the executive branch 
in formulating such a policy.109 

Fourth, the oversight function of Congress has diminished over time. In 
recent years, traditional review of the administration of programs and the 
implementation of laws has been replaced by “a focus on personal investigations, 
possible scandals, and issues designed to generate media attention.”The 
unglamorous but essential work of oversight has been neglected,and few members 
past or present believe it is performed well.DCI Tenet told us:“We ran</docText>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Location>China</Location>
    <Location>Somalia</Location>
    <Location>Bosnia</Location>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Organization>House of Representatives</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>House</Organization>
    <Organization>NATO</Organization>
    <Person>Gingrich</Person>
    <Organization>Organization of Congress</Organization>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Location>Capitol Hill</Location>
    <Organization>Joint Committee</Organization>
    <Location>Kosovo</Location>
    <Location>Haiti</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>123_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

from threat to threat to threat. . . . [T]here was not a system in place to say,‘You 
got to go back and do this and this and this.’” Not just the DCI but the entire 
executive branch needed help from Congress in addressing the questions of 
counterterrorism strategy and policy,looking past day-to-day concerns.Members 
of Congress, however, also found their time spent on such everyday matters, 
or in looking back to investigate mistakes, and often missed the big 
questions—as did the executive branch. Staff tended as well to focus on 
parochial considerations, seeking to add or cut funding for individual (often 
small) programs, instead of emphasizing comprehensive oversight projects.110 

Fifth, on certain issues, other priorities pointed Congress in a direction that 
was unhelpful in meeting the threats that were emerging in the months leading 
up to 9/11. Committees with oversight responsibility for aviation focused 
overwhelmingly on airport congestion and the economic health of the airlines, 
not aviation security. Committees with responsibility for the INS focused on 
the Southwest border,not on terrorists. Justice Department officials told us that 
committees with responsibility for the FBI tightly restricted appropriations for 
improvements in information technology, in part because of concerns about 
the FBI’s ability to manage such projects. Committees responsible for South 
Asia spent the decade of the 1990s imposing sanctions on Pakistan,leaving presidents 
with little leverage to alter Pakistan’s policies before 9/11. Committees 
with responsibility for the Defense Department paid little heed to developing 
military responses to terrorism and stymied intelligence reform.All committees 
found themselves swamped in the minutiae of the budget process,with little 
time for consideration of longer-term questions, or what many members 
past and present told us was the proper conduct of oversight.111 

Each of these trends contributed to what can only be described as Congress’s 
slowness and inadequacy in treating the issue of terrorism in the years 
before 9/11.The legislative branch adjusted little and did not restructure itself 
to address changing threats.112 Its attention to terrorism was episodic and splintered 
across several committees. Congress gave little guidance to executive 
branch agencies, did not reform them in any significant way, and did not systematically 
perform oversight to identify, address, and attempt to resolve the 
many problems in national security and domestic agencies that became apparent 
in the aftermath of 9/11. 

Although individual representatives and senators took significant steps, the 
overall level of attention in the Congress to the terrorist threat was low.We 
examined the number of hearings on terrorism from January 1998 to September 
2001.The Senate Armed Services Committee held nine—four related to 
the attack on the USS Cole. The House Armed Services Committee also held 
nine, six of them by a special oversight panel on terrorism.The Senate Foreign 
Relations Committee and its House counterpart both held four.The Senate 
Select Committee on Intelligence, in addition to its annual worldwide threat 
hearing, held eight; its House counterpart held perhaps two exclusively</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Location>South Asia</Location>
    <Organization>Senate Armed Services Committee</Organization>
    <Organization>Senate Select Committee</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI</Organization>
    <Organization>House</Organization>
    <Person>USS Cole</Person>
    <Organization>House Armed Services Committee</Organization>
    <Location>Southwest</Location>
    <Organization>Senate Foreign Relations Committee</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>124_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 

devoted to counterterrorism, plus the briefings by its terrorist working group. 
The Senate and House intelligence panels did not raise public and congressional 
attention on Bin Ladin and al Qaeda prior to the joint inquiry into the attacks 
of September 11, perhaps in part because of the classified nature of their work. 
Yet in the context of committees that each hold scores of hearings every year 
on issues in their jurisdiction, this list is not impressive.Terrorism was a second- 
or third-order priority within the committees of Congress responsible 
for national security.113 

In fact, Congress had a distinct tendency to push questions of emerging 
national security threats off its own plate, leaving them for others to consider. 
Congress asked outside commissions to do the work that arguably was at the 
heart of its own oversight responsibilities.114 Beginning in 1999, the reports of 
these commissions made scores of recommendations to address terrorism and 
homeland security but drew little attention from Congress. Most of their 
impact came after 9/11.</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Organization>House</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>125_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>4 


RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S 
INITIAL ASSAULTS 


4.1 BEFORE THE BOMBINGS IN KENYA 
AND TANZANIA 
Although the 1995 National Intelligence Estimate had warned of a new type 
of terrorism, many officials continued to think of terrorists as agents of states 
(Saudi Hezbollah acting for Iran against Khobar Towers) or as domestic criminals 
(Timothy McVeigh in Oklahoma City).As we pointed out in chapter 3, 
the White House is not a natural locus for program management.Hence,government 
efforts to cope with terrorism were essentially the work of individual 
agencies. 

President Bill Clinton’s counterterrorism Presidential Decision Directives 
in 1995 (no.39) and May 1998 (no.62) reiterated that terrorism was a national 
security problem,not just a law enforcement issue.They reinforced the authority 
of the National Security Council (NSC) to coordinate domestic as well as 
foreign counterterrorism efforts, through Richard Clarke and his interagency 
Counterterrorism Security Group (CSG). Spotlighting new concerns about 
unconventional attacks, these directives assigned tasks to lead agencies but did 
not differentiate types of terrorist threats.Thus,while Clarke might prodorpush 
agencies to act,what actually happened was usually decided at the State Department,
the Pentagon,the CIA,or the Justice Department.The efforts of these 
agencies were sometimes energetic and sometimes effective.Terrorist plots were 
disrupted and individual terrorists were captured.But the United States did not, 
before 9/11, adopt as a clear strategic objective the elimination of al Qaeda. 

Early Efforts against Bin Ladin 

Until 1996,hardly anyone in the U.S.government understood that Usama Bin 
Ladin was an inspirer and organizer of the new terrorism. In 1993, the CIA 
noted that he had paid for the training of some Egyptian terrorists in Sudan. 
The State Department detected his money in aid to the Yemeni terrorists who</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Egyptian</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Khobar Towers</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Person>Richard Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>National Intelligence Estimate</Organization>
    <Organization>interagency Counterterrorism Security Group</Organization>
    <Location>KENYA</Location>
    <Location>TANZANIA</Location>
    <Organization>Saudi Hezbollah</Organization>
    <Person>Timothy McVeigh</Person>
    <Location>Oklahoma City</Location>
    <Person>Bill Clinton’s</Person>
    <Organization>Presidential Decision Directives</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

set a bomb in an attempt to kill U.S.troops in Aden in 1992.State Department 
sources even saw suspicious links with Omar Abdel Rahman, the “Blind 
Sheikh”in the New York area,commenting that Bin Ladin seemed “committed 
to financing ‘Jihads’ against ‘anti Islamic’ regimes worldwide.” After the 
department designated Sudan a state sponsor of terrorism in 1993, it put Bin 
Ladin on its TIPOFF watchlist, a move that might have prevented his getting 
a visa had he tried to enter the United States. As late as 1997, however, even 
the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center continued to describe him as an “extremist 
financier.”1 

In 1996, the CIA set up a special unit of a dozen officers to analyze intelligence 
on and plan operations against Bin Ladin. David Cohen, the head of the 
CIA’s Directorate of Operations, wanted to test the idea of having a “virtual 
station”—a station based at headquarters but collecting and operating against 
a subject much as stations in the field focus on a country.Taking his cue from 
National Security Advisor Anthony Lake,who expressed special interest in terrorist 
finance,Cohen formed his virtual station as a terrorist financial links unit. 
He had trouble getting any Directorate of Operations officer to run it;he finally 
recruited a former analyst who was then running the Islamic Extremist Branch 
of the Counterterrorist Center.This officer,who was especially knowledgeable 
about Afghanistan, had noticed a recent stream of reports about Bin Ladin and 
something called al Qaeda, and suggested to Cohen that the station focus on 
this one individual. Cohen agreed.Thus was born the Bin Ladin unit.2 

In May 1996,Bin Ladin left Sudan for Afghanistan.A few months later,as 
the Bin Ladin unit was gearing up, Jamal Ahmed al Fadl walked into a U.S. 
embassy in Africa,established his bona fides as a former senior employee of Bin 
Ladin,and provided a major breakthrough of intelligence on the creation,character,
direction,and intentions of al Qaeda.Corroborating evidence came from 
another walk-in source at a different U.S.embassy.More confirmation was supplied 
later that year by intelligence and other sources, including material gathered 
by FBI agents and Kenyan police from an al Qaeda cell in Nairobi.3 

By 1997,officers in the Bin Ladin unit recognized that Bin Ladin was more 
than just a financier.They learned that al Qaeda had a military committee that 
was planning operations against U.S. interests worldwide and was actively trying 
to obtain nuclear material. Analysts assigned to the station looked at the 
information it had gathered and “found connections everywhere,” including 
links to the attacks on U.S. troops in Aden and Somalia in 1992 and 1993 and 
to the Manila air plot in the Philippines in 1994–1995.4 

The Bin Ladin station was already working on plans for offensive operations 
against Bin Ladin.These plans were directed at both physical assets and 
sources of finance. In the end, plans to identify and attack Bin Ladin’s money 
sources did not go forward.5 

In late 1995, when Bin Ladin was still in Sudan, the State Department and 
the CIA learned that Sudanese officials were discussing with the Saudi gov</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>al Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Philippines</Location>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Kenyan</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Somalia</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Person>Jamal Ahmed</Person>
    <Person>Fadl</Person>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Location>Aden</Location>
    <Person>Omar Abdel Rahman</Person>
    <Organization>Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Person>Cohen</Person>
    <Person>David Cohen</Person>
    <Location>Africa</Location>
    <Organization>CIA’s Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA’s Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Location>Sheikh”in</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic’</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Anthony Lake</Organization>
    <Misc>Islamic Extremist Branch</Misc>
    <Misc>Center.This</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.A</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.embassy.More</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.These</Organization>
    <Date>1992 and 1993</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>127_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

ernment the possibility of expelling Bin Ladin.U.S.Ambassador Timothy Carney 
encouraged the Sudanese to pursue this course.The Saudis,however,did 
not want Bin Ladin, giving as their reason their revocation of his citizenship.6 

Sudan’s minister of defense, Fatih Erwa, has claimed that Sudan offered to 
hand Bin Ladin over to the United States.The Commission has found no credible 
evidence that this was so.Ambassador Carney had instructions only to push 
the Sudanese to expel Bin Ladin.Ambassador Carney had no legal basis to ask 
for more from the Sudanese since, at the time, there was no indictment outstanding.
7 

The chief of the Bin Ladin station, whom we will call “Mike,” saw Bin 
Ladin’s move to Afghanistan as a stroke of luck.Though the CIA had virtually 
abandoned Afghanistan after the Soviet withdrawal, case officers had reestablished 
old contacts while tracking down Mir Amal Kansi, the Pakistani gunman 
who had murdered two CIA employees in January 1993.These contacts 
contributed to intelligence about Bin Ladin’s local movements, business activities, 
and security and living arrangements, and helped provide evidence that 
he was spending large amounts of money to help the Taliban.The chief of the 
Counterterrorist Center,whom we will call “Jeff,”told Director George Tenet 
that the CIA’s intelligence assets were “near to providing real-time information 
about Bin Ladin’s activities and travels in Afghanistan.” One of the contacts 
was a group associated with particular tribes among Afghanistan’s ethnic 
Pashtun community.8 

By the fall of 1997, the Bin Ladin unit had roughed out a plan for these 
Afghan tribals to capture Bin Ladin and hand him over for trial either in the 
United States or in an Arab country. In early 1998, the cabinet-level Principals 
Committee apparently gave the concept its blessing.9 

On their own separate track,getting information but not direction from the 
CIA,the FBI’s New York Field Office and the U.S.Attorney for the Southern 
District of New York were preparing to ask a grand jury to indict Bin Ladin. 
The Counterterrorist Center knew that this was happening.10 The eventual 
charge, conspiring to attack U.S. defense installations, was finally issued from 
the grand jury in June 1998—as a sealed indictment.The indictment was publicly 
disclosed in November of that year. 

When Bin Ladin moved to Afghanistan in May 1996, he became a subject 
of interest to the State Department’s South Asia bureau. At the time, as one 
diplomat told us, South Asia was seen in the department and the government 
generally as a low priority. In 1997, as Madeleine Albright was beginning her 
tenure as secretary of state, an NSC policy review concluded that the United 
States should pay more attention not just to India but also to Pakistan and 
Afghanistan.11 With regard to Afghanistan, another diplomat said, the United 
States at the time had “no policy.”12 

In the State Department, concerns about India-Pakistan tensions often 
crowded out attention to Afghanistan or Bin Ladin. Aware of instability and</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>U.S.Attorney</Person>
    <Organization>Southern District of New York</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Misc>Soviet</Misc>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>South Asia</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Person>George Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI’s New York Field Office</Organization>
    <Organization>Principals Committee</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Madeleine Albright</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban.The</Misc>
    <Person>Carney</Person>
    <Organization>State Department’s South Asia</Organization>
    <Misc>India-Pakistan</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.U.S.Ambassador Timothy Carney</Organization>
    <Person>Fatih Erwa</Person>
    <Organization>United States.The Commission</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.Ambassador Carney</Organization>
    <Person>Amal Kansi</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan.” One</Location>
    <Person>Pashtun</Person>
    <Person>Afghanistan.11 With</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

growing Islamic extremism in Pakistan,State Department officials worried most 
about an arms race and possible war between Pakistan and India.After May 1998, 
when both countries surprised the United States by testing nuclear weapons, 
these dangers became daily first-order concerns of the State Department.13 

In Afghanistan,the State Department tried to end the civil war that had continued 
since the Soviets’ withdrawal.The South Asia bureau believed it might 
have a carrot for Afghanistan’s warring factions in a project by the Union Oil 
Company of California (UNOCAL) to build a pipeline across the country. 
While there was probably never much chance of the pipeline actually being 
built, the Afghan desk hoped that the prospect of shared pipeline profits might 
lure faction leaders to a conference table.U.S.diplomats did not favor the Taliban 
over the rival factions. Despite growing concerns, U.S. diplomats were 
willing at the time, as one official said, to “give the Taliban a chance.”14 

Though Secretary Albright made no secret of thinking the Taliban “despicable,” 
the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, led a delegation 
to South Asia—including Afghanistan—in April 1998.No U.S.official 
of such rank had been to Kabul in decades.Ambassador Richardson went primarily 
to urge negotiations to end the civil war. In view of Bin Ladin’s recent 
public call for all Muslims to kill Americans, Richardson asked the Taliban to 
expel Bin Ladin.They answered that they did not know his whereabouts. In 
any case, the Taliban said, Bin Ladin was not a threat to the United States.15 

In sum, in late 1997 and the spring of 1998, the lead U.S. agencies each pursued 
their own efforts against Bin Ladin.The CIA’s Counterterrorist Center was 
developing a plan to capture and remove him from Afghanistan. Parts of the Justice 
Department were moving toward indicting Bin Ladin, making possible a 
criminal trial in a New York court.Meanwhile,the State Department was focused 
more on lessening Indo-Pakistani nuclear tensions, ending the Afghan civil war, 
and ameliorating the Taliban’s human rights abuses than on driving out Bin 
Ladin. Another key actor, Marine General Anthony Zinni, the commander in 
chief of the U.S. Central Command, shared the State Department’s view.16 

The CIA Develops a Capture Plan 

Initially, the DCI’s Counterterrorist Center and its Bin Ladin unit considered 
a plan to ambush Bin Ladin when he traveled between Kandahar, the Taliban 
capital where he sometimes stayed the night, and his primary residence at the 
time,Tarnak Farms.After the Afghan tribals reported that they had tried such 
an ambush and failed,the Center gave up on it,despite suspicions that the tribals’ 
story might be fiction.Thereafter, the capture plan focused on a nighttime 
raid on Tarnak Farms.17 

A compound of about 80 concrete or mud-brick buildings surrounded by 
a 10-foot wall,Tarnak Farms was located in an isolated desert area on the outskirts 
of the Kandahar airport. CIA officers were able to map the entire site, 
identifying the houses that belonged to Bin Ladin’s wives and the one where</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>Center</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Muslims</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Kabul</Location>
    <Organization>Bin</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department’s</Organization>
    <Organization>DCI’s Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Organization>United Nations</Organization>
    <Person>Anthony Zinni</Person>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Organization>Tarnak Farms</Organization>
    <Organization>U.S. Central Command</Organization>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Organization>UNOCAL</Organization>
    <Person>Richardson</Person>
    <Person>Bill Richardson</Person>
    <Organization>State Department.13 In Afghanistan</Organization>
    <Misc>Soviets’</Misc>
    <Misc>South Asia</Misc>
    <Organization>Union Oil Company</Organization>
    <Misc>South Asia—including</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.They</Person>
    <Location>United States.15</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.The CIA’s Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Misc>Indo-Pakistani</Misc>
    <Organization>Capture Plan Initially</Organization>
    <Person>Tarnak Farms.After</Person>
    <Organization>Tarnak Farms.17</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Bin Ladin himself was most likely to sleep.Working with the tribals,they drew 
up plans for the raid.They ran two complete rehearsals in the United States 
during the fall of 1997.18 

By early 1998, planners at the Counterterrorist Center were ready to come 
back to the White House to seek formal approval. Tenet apparently walked 
National Security Advisor Sandy Berger through the basic plan on February 13. 
One group of tribals would subdue the guards, enter Tarnak Farms stealthily, 
grab Bin Ladin, take him to a desert site outside Kandahar, and turn him over 
to a second group.This second group of tribals would take him to a desert landing 
zone already tested in the 1997 Kansi capture. From there, a CIA plane 
would take him to New York, an Arab capital, or wherever he was to be 
arraigned. Briefing papers prepared by the Counterterrorist Center acknowledged 
that hitches might develop. People might be killed, and Bin Ladin’s supporters 
might retaliate,perhaps taking U.S.citizens in Kandahar hostage.But the 
briefing papers also noted that there was risk in not acting.“Sooner or later,” 
they said,“Bin Ladin will attack U.S.interests,perhaps using WMD [weapons 
of mass destruction].”19 

Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security Group reviewed the capture plan for 
Berger. Noting that the plan was in a “very early stage of development,” the 
NSC staff then told the CIA planners to go ahead and, among other things, 
start drafting any legal documents that might be required to authorize the 
covert action.The CSG apparently stressed that the raid should target Bin Ladin 
himself, not the whole compound.20 

The CIA planners conducted their third complete rehearsal in March, and 
they again briefed the CSG. Clarke wrote Berger on March 7 that he saw the 
operation as “somewhat embryonic”and the CIA as “months away from doing 
anything.”21 

“Mike” thought the capture plan was “the perfect operation.” It required 
minimum infrastructure.The plan had now been modified so that the tribals 
would keep Bin Ladin in a hiding place for up to a month before turning him 
over to the United States—thereby increasing the chances of keeping the U.S. 
hand out of sight.“Mike” trusted the information from the Afghan network; 
it had been corroborated by other means,he told us.The lead CIA officer in 
the field, Gary Schroen, also had confidence in the tribals. In a May 6 cable to 
CIA headquarters, he pronounced their planning “almost as professional and 
detailed . . . as would be done by any U.S. military special operations element.” 
He and the other officers who had worked through the plan with the tribals 
judged it “about as good as it can be.” (By that, Schroen explained, he meant 
that the chance of capturing or killing Bin Ladin was about 40 percent.) 
Although the tribals thought they could pull off the raid, if the operation were 
approved by headquarters and the policymakers, Schroen wrote there was 
going to be a point when “we step back and keep our fingers crossed that the 
[tribals] prove as good (and as lucky) as they think they will be.”22</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Tarnak Farms</Organization>
    <Organization>WMD</Organization>
    <Person>Gary Schroen</Person>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Misc>Kansi</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.citizens</Misc>
    <Organization>Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security Group</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Sandy Berger</Organization>
    <Misc>United States—thereby</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>12_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>PREFACE 


We present the narrative of this report and the recommendations 
that flow from it to the President of the United States, the United States 
Congress, and the American people for their consideration. Ten 
Commissioners—five Republicans and five Democrats chosen by elected 
leaders from our nation’s capital at a time of great partisan division—have 
come together to present this report without dissent. 

We have come together with a unity of purpose because our nation 
demands it. September 11, 2001, was a day of unprecedented shock and suffering 
in the history of the United States.The nation was unprepared. How 
did this happen, and how can we avoid such tragedy again? 

To answer these questions, the Congress and the President created the 
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (Public 
Law 107-306, November 27, 2002). 

Our mandate was sweeping.The law directed us to investigate “facts and 
circumstances relating to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001,” including 
those relating to intelligence agencies, law enforcement agencies, diplomacy, 
immigration issues and border control, the flow of assets to terrorist 
organizations, commercial aviation, the role of congressional oversight and 
resource allocation, and other areas determined relevant by the Commission. 

In pursuing our mandate, we have reviewed more than 2.5 million pages 
of documents and interviewed more than 1,200 individuals in ten countries. 
This included nearly every senior official from the current and previous 
administrations who had responsibility for topics covered in our mandate. 

We have sought to be independent, impartial, thorough, and nonpartisan. 
From the outset, we have been committed to share as much of our investigation 
as we can with the American people.To that end, we held 19 days of 
hearings and took public testimony from 160 witnesses.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Date>September 11, 2001</Date>
    <Misc>Republicans</Misc>
    <Misc>Democrats</Misc>
    <Organization>United States.The</Organization>
    <Organization>National Commission on Terrorist Attacks</Organization>
    <Date>November 27, 2002</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>130_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

Military officers reviewed the capture plan and, according to “Mike,” 
“found no showstoppers.”The commander of Delta Force felt “uncomfortable” 
with having the tribals hold Bin Ladin captive for so long,and the commander 
of Joint Special Operations Forces, Lieutenant General Michael Canavan, was 
worried about the safety of the tribals inside Tarnak Farms. General Canavan 
said he had actually thought the operation too complicated for the CIA—“out 
of their league”—and an effort to get results “on the cheap.” But a senior Joint 
Staff officer described the plan as “generally, not too much different than we 
might have come up with ourselves.” No one in the Pentagon, so far as we 
know, advised the CIA or the White House not to proceed.23 

In Washington,Berger expressed doubt about the dependability of the tribals. 
In his meeting with Tenet, Berger focused most, however, on the question 
of what was to be done with Bin Ladin if he were actually captured. He worried 
that the hard evidence against Bin Ladin was still skimpy and that there 
was a danger of snatching him and bringing him to the United States only to 
see him acquitted.24 

On May 18, CIA’s managers reviewed a draft Memorandum of Notification 
(MON),a legal document authorizing the capture operation.A 1986 presidential 
finding had authorized worldwide covert action against terrorism and 
probably provided adequate authority.But mindful of the old “rogue elephant” 
charge, senior CIA managers may have wanted something on paper to show 
that they were not acting on their own. 

Discussion of this memorandum brought to the surface an unease about 
paramilitary covert action that had become ingrained,at least among some CIA 
senior managers. James Pavitt, the assistant head of the Directorate of Operations,
expressed concern that people might get killed;it appears he thought the 
operation had at least a slight flavor of a plan for an assassination. Moreover, he 
calculated that it would cost several million dollars.He was not prepared to take 
that money “out of hide,” and he did not want to go to all the necessary congressional 
committees to get special money.Despite Pavitt’s misgivings,the CIA 
leadership cleared the draft memorandum and sent it on to the National Security 
Council.25 

Counterterrorist Center officers briefed Attorney General Janet Reno and 
FBI Director Louis Freeh, telling them that the operation had about a 30 percent 
chance of success.The Center’s chief,“Jeff,”joined John O’Neill,the head 
of the FBI’s New York Field Office,in briefing Mary JoWhite,the U.S.Attorney 
for the Southern District of New York,and her staff.Though “Jeff ”also 
used the 30 percent success figure, he warned that someone would surely be 
killed in the operation.White’s impression from the New York briefing was that 
the chances of capturing Bin Ladin alive were nil.26 

From May 20 to 24, the CIA ran a final, graded rehearsal of the operation, 
spread over three time zones, even bringing in personnel from the region.The 
FBI also participated. The rehearsal went well. The Counterterrorist Center</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Janet Reno</Person>
    <Person>Louis Freeh</Person>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Southern District of New York</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Person>James Pavitt</Person>
    <Person>Canavan</Person>
    <Organization>FBI’s New York Field Office</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Tarnak Farms</Organization>
    <Misc>Tenet</Misc>
    <Organization>Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Person>Michael Canavan</Person>
    <Person>Mary JoWhite</Person>
    <Person>John O’Neill</Person>
    <Organization>Delta Force</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Special Operations Forces</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Council.25 Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>131_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

planned to brief cabinet-level principals and their deputies the following week, 
giving June 23 as the date for the raid, with Bin Ladin to be brought out of 
Afghanistan no later than July 23.27 

On May 20, Director Tenet discussed the high risk of the operation with 
Berger and his deputies, warning that people might be killed, including Bin 
Ladin. Success was to be defined as the exfiltration of Bin Ladin out of 
Afghanistan.28 A meeting of principals was scheduled for May 29 to decide 
whether the operation should go ahead. 

The principals did not meet. On May 29,“Jeff ” informed “Mike” that he 
had just met with Tenet,Pavitt,and the chief of the Directorate’s Near Eastern 
Division.The decision was made not to go ahead with the operation.“Mike” 
cabled the field that he had been directed to “stand down on the operation for 
the time being.” He had been told, he wrote, that cabinet-level officials thought 
the risk of civilian casualties—“collateral damage”—was too high.They were 
concerned about the tribals’ safety, and had worried that “the purpose and 
nature of the operation would be subject to unavoidable misinterpretation and 
misrepresentation—and probably recriminations—in the event that Bin Ladin, 
despite our best intentions and efforts, did not survive.”29 

Impressions vary as to who actually decided not to proceed with the operation. 
Clarke told us that the CSG saw the plan as flawed. He was said to have 
described it to a colleague on the NSC staff as “half-assed” and predicted that 
the principals would not approve it. “Jeff ” thought the decision had been 
made at the cabinet level. Pavitt thought that it was Berger’s doing, though 
perhaps on Tenet’s advice.Tenet told us that given the recommendation of 
his chief operations officers, he alone had decided to “turn off ” the operation.
He had simply informed Berger,who had not pushed back.Berger’s recollection 
was similar. He said the plan was never presented to the White 
House for a decision.30 

The CIA’s senior management clearly did not think the plan would work. 
Tenet’s deputy director of operations wrote to Berger a few weeks later that the 
CIA assessed the tribals’ ability to capture Bin Ladin and deliver him to U.S. 
officials as low.But working-level CIA officers were disappointed.Before it was 
canceled, Schroen described it as the “best plan we are going to come up with 
to capture [Bin Ladin] while he is in Afghanistan and bring him to justice.”31 
No capture plan before 9/11 ever again attained the same level of detail and 
preparation.The tribals’ reported readiness to act diminished.And Bin Ladin’s 
security precautions and defenses became more elaborate and formidable. 

At this time, 9/11 was more than three years away. It was the duty of Tenet 
and the CIA leadership to balance the risks of inaction against jeopardizing the 
lives of their operatives and agents.And they had reason to worry about failure: 
millions of dollars down the drain; a shoot-out that could be seen as an 
assassination;and,if there were repercussions in Pakistan,perhaps a coup.The 
decisions of the U.S. government in May 1998 were made, as Berger has put</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Pavitt</Person>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Misc>Berger’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.28 A</Misc>
    <Misc>Directorate’s Near Eastern</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>132_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

it, from the vantage point of the driver looking through a muddy windshield 
moving forward, not through a clean rearview mirror.32 

Looking for Other Options 

The Counterterrorist Center continued to track Bin Ladin and to contemplate 
covert action.The most hopeful possibility seemed now to lie in diplomacy— 
but not diplomacy managed by the Department of State, which focused primarily 
on India-Pakistan nuclear tensions during the summer of 1998.The CIA 
learned in the spring of 1998 that the Saudi government had quietly disrupted 
Bin Ladin cells in its country that were planning to attack U.S. forces with 
shoulder-fired missiles.They had arrested scores of individuals, with no publicity.
When thanking the Saudis,Director Tenet took advantage of the opening 
to ask them to help against Bin Ladin. The response was encouraging 
enough that President Clinton made Tenet his informal personal representative 
to work with the Saudis on terrorism, and Tenet visited Riyadh in May 
and again in early June.33 

Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, who had taken charge from the ailing King 
Fahd, promised Tenet an all-out secret effort to persuade the Taliban to expel 
Bin Ladin so that he could be sent to the United States or to another country 
for trial.The Kingdom’s emissary would be its intelligence chief, Prince Turki 
bin Faisal.Vice President Al Gore later added his thanks to those of Tenet,both 
making clear that they spoke with President Clinton’s blessing.Tenet reported 
that it was imperative to get an indictment against Bin Ladin.The New York 
grand jury issued its sealed indictment a few days later, on June 10.Tenet also 
recommended that no action be taken on other U.S.options,such as the covert 
action plan.34 

Prince Turki followed up in meetings during the summer with Mullah 
Omar and other Taliban leaders. Apparently employing a mixture of possible 
incentives and threats,Turki received a commitment that Bin Ladin would be 
expelled, but Mullah Omar did not make good on this promise.35 

On August 5, Clarke chaired a CSG meeting on Bin Ladin. In the discussion 
of what might be done,the note taker wrote,“there was a dearth of bright 
ideas around the table,despite a consensus that the [government] ought to pursue 
every avenue it can to address the problem.”36 

4.2 CRISIS:AUGUST 1998 
On August 7, 1998, National Security Advisor Berger woke President Clinton 
with a phone call at 5:35 A.M. to tell him of the almost simultaneous bombings 
of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam,Tanzania. Suspicion 
quickly focused on Bin Ladin.Unusually good intelligence,chiefly from</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Dar es Salaam</Location>
    <Location>Kenya</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Riyadh</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Location>King Fahd</Location>
    <Person>Prince Abdullah</Person>
    <Organization>Department of State</Organization>
    <Location>Tanzania</Location>
    <Person>Clinton’s</Person>
    <Person>Turki</Person>
    <Person>Al Gore</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.The</Person>
    <Person>Prince Turki</Person>
    <Misc>Other Options The Counterterrorist Center</Misc>
    <Misc>India-Pakistan</Misc>
    <Location>York</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Berger</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.Unusually</Person>
    <Date>August 7, 1998</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>133_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the yearlong monitoring of al Qaeda’s cell in Nairobi,soon firmly fixed responsibility 
on him and his associates.37 

Debate about what to do settled very soon on one option:Tomahawk cruise 
missiles. Months earlier, after cancellation of the covert capture operation, 
Clarke had prodded the Pentagon to explore possibilities for military action. 
On June 2, General Hugh Shelton, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 
had directed General Zinni at Central Command to develop a plan, which he 
had submitted during the first week of July. Zinni’s planners surely considered 
the two previous times the United States had used force to respond to terrorism, 
the 1986 strike on Libya and the 1993 strike against Iraq.They proposed 
firing Tomahawks against eight terrorist camps in Afghanistan, including Bin 
Ladin’s compound at Tarnak Farms.38 After the embassy attacks, the Pentagon 
offered this plan to the White House. 

The day after the embassy bombings,Tenet brought to a principals meeting 
intelligence that terrorist leaders were expected to gather at a camp near 
Khowst,Afghanistan,to plan future attacks.According to Berger,Tenet said that 
several hundred would attend,including Bin Ladin.The CIA described the area 
as effectively a military cantonment, away from civilian population centers and 
overwhelmingly populated by jihadists. Clarke remembered sitting next to 
Tenet in a White House meeting,asking Tenet “You thinking what I’m thinking?” 
and his nodding “yes.”39 The principals quickly reached a consensus on 
attacking the gathering.The strike’s purpose was to kill Bin Ladin and his chief 
lieutenants.40 

Berger put in place a tightly compartmented process designed to keep all 
planning secret. On August 11, General Zinni received orders to prepare 
detailed plans for strikes against the sites in Afghanistan.The Pentagon briefed 
President Clinton about these plans on August 12 and 14.Though the principals 
hoped that the missiles would hit Bin Ladin, NSC staff recommended the 
strike whether or not there was firm evidence that the commanders were at 
the facilities.41 

Considerable debate went to the question of whether to strike targets outside 
of Afghanistan, including two facilities in Sudan. One was a tannery 
believed to belong to Bin Ladin.The other was al Shifa, a Khartoum pharmaceutical 
plant, which intelligence reports said was manufacturing a precursor 
ingredient for nerve gas with Bin Ladin’s financial support.The argument for 
hitting the tannery was that it could hurt Bin Ladin financially.The argument 
for hitting al Shifa was that it would lessen the chance of Bin Ladin’s having 
nerve gas for a later attack.42 

Ever since March 1995, American officials had had in the backs of their 
minds Aum Shinrikyo’s release of sarin nerve gas in the Tokyo subway. President 
Clinton himself had expressed great concern about chemical and biological 
terrorism in the United States. Bin Ladin had reportedly been heard to 
speak of wanting a “Hiroshima”and at least 10,000 casualties.The CIA reported</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Libya</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Location>Khartoum</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>Central Command</Organization>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Hugh Shelton</Person>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs of Staff</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Location>Khowst</Location>
    <Location>Tokyo</Location>
    <Person>Shifa</Person>
    <Organization>Iraq.They</Organization>
    <Location>Tarnak Farms.38</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.The</Organization>
    <Location>Bin Ladin.The</Location>
    <Person>Aum Shinrikyo’s</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>134_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

that a soil sample from the vicinity of the al Shifa plant had tested positive for 
EMPTA,a precursor chemical for VX,a nerve gas whose lone use was for mass 
killing.Two days before the embassy bombings, Clarke’s staff wrote that Bin 
Ladin “has invested in and almost certainly has access to VX produced at a plant 
in Sudan.”43 Senior State Department officials believed that they had received 
a similar verdict independently, though they and Clarke’s staff were probably 
relying on the same report. Mary McCarthy, the NSC senior director responsible 
for intelligence programs,initially cautioned Berger that the “bottom line” 
was that “we will need much better intelligence on this facility before we seriously 
consider any options.” She added that the link between Bin Ladin and al 
Shifa was “rather uncertain at this point.” Berger has told us that he thought 
about what might happen if the decision went against hitting al Shifa,and nerve 
gas was used in a New York subway two weeks later.44 

By the early hours of the morning of August 20, President Clinton and all 
his principal advisers had agreed to strike Bin Ladin camps in Afghanistan near 
Khowst,as well as hitting al Shifa.The President took the Sudanese tannery off 
the target list because he saw little point in killing uninvolved people without 
doing significant harm to Bin Ladin. The principal with the most qualms 
regarding al Shifa was Attorney General Reno. She expressed concern about 
attacking two Muslim countries at the same time. Looking back, she said that 
she felt the “premise kept shifting.”45 

Later on August 20, Navy vessels in the Arabian Sea fired their cruise missiles.
Though most of them hit their intended targets, neither Bin Ladin nor 
any other terrorist leader was killed.Berger told us that an after-action review 
by Director Tenet concluded that the strikes had killed 20–30 people in the 
camps but probably missed Bin Ladin by a few hours.Since the missiles headed 
for Afghanistan had had to cross Pakistan, the Vice Chairman of the Joint 
Chiefs was sent to meet with Pakistan’s army chief of staff to assure him the 
missiles were not coming from India. Officials in Washington speculated that 
one or another Pakistani official might have sent a warning to the Taliban or 
Bin Ladin.46 

The air strikes marked the climax of an intense 48-hour period in which 
Berger notified congressional leaders, the principals called their foreign counterparts,
and President Clinton flew back from his vacation on Martha’s Vineyard 
to address the nation from the Oval Office. The President spoke to the 
congressional leadership from Air Force One,and he called British Prime Minister 
Tony Blair,Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif,and Egyptian President 
Hosni Mubarak from the White House.47 House Speaker Newt Gingrich and 
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott initially supported the President.The next 
month, Gingrich’s office dismissed the cruise missile attacks as “pinpricks.”48 

At the time,President Clinton was embroiled in the Lewinsky scandal,which 
continued to consume public attention for the rest of that year and the first 
months of 1999. As it happened, a popular 1997 movie, Wag the Dog, features a</docText>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Egyptian</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>British</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Person>Hosni Mubarak</Person>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Air Force One</Organization>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Tony Blair</Person>
    <Organization>Clarke’s</Organization>
    <Location>Reno</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Person>Mary McCarthy</Person>
    <Location>Khowst</Location>
    <Misc>Arabian</Misc>
    <Organization>Oval Office</Organization>
    <Person>Shifa</Person>
    <Location>EMPTA</Location>
    <Organization>VX</Organization>
    <Location>Sudan.”43 Senior State Department</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.46</Organization>
    <Person>Nawaz Sharif</Person>
    <Organization>White House.47 House</Organization>
    <Person>Newt Gingrich</Person>
    <Person>Trent Lott</Person>
    <Misc>President.The</Misc>
    <Person>Lewinsky</Person>
    <Organization>Wag the Dog</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>135_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

president who fakes a war to distract public attention from a domestic scandal. 
Some Republicans in Congress raised questions about the timing of the strikes. 
Berger was particularly rankled by an editorial in the Economist that said that 
only the future would tell whether the U.S. missile strikes had “created 10,000 
new fanatics where there would have been none.

”49 
Much public commentary turned immediately to scalding criticism that 
the action was too aggressive. The Sudanese denied that al Shifa produced 
nerve gas, and they allowed journalists to visit what was left of a seemingly 
harmless facility.President Clinton,Vice President Gore,Berger,Tenet,and 
Clarke insisted to us that their judgment was right, pointing to the soil sample 
evidence.No independent evidence has emerged to corroborate the CIA’s 
assessment.50 
Everyone involved in the decision had, of course, been aware of President 
Clinton’s problems. He told them to ignore them. Berger recalled the President 
saying to him “that they were going to get crap either way,so they should 
do the right thing.”51 All his aides testified to us that they based their advice 
solely on national security considerations.We have found no reason to question 
their statements. 
The failure of the strikes, the “wag the dog” slur, the intense partisanship of 
the period,and the nature of the al Shifa evidence likely had a cumulative effect 
on future decisions about the use of force against Bin Ladin. Berger told us that 
he did not feel any sense of constraint.52 
The period after the August 1998 embassy bombings was critical in shaping 
U.S. policy toward Bin Ladin.Although more Americans had been killed 
in the 1996 Khobar Towers attack,and many more in Beirut in 1983,the overall 
loss of life rivaled the worst attacks in memory.More ominous,perhaps,was 
the demonstration of an operational capability to coordinate two nearly simultaneous 
attacks on U.S. embassies in different countries. 
Despite the availability of information that al Qaeda was a global network, 
in 1998 policymakers knew little about the organization.The reams of new 
information that the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit had been developing since 1996 had 
not been pulled together and synthesized for the rest of the government. 
Indeed, analysts in the unit felt that they were viewed as alarmists even within 
the CIA. A National Intelligence Estimate on terrorism in 1997 had only 
briefly mentioned Bin Ladin, and no subsequent national estimate would 
authoritatively evaluate the terrorism danger until after 9/11. Policymakers 
knew there was a dangerous individual,Usama Bin Ladin,whom they had been 
trying to capture and bring to trial. Documents at the time referred to Bin 
Ladin “and his associates”or Bin Ladin and his “network.”They did not emphasize 
the existence of a structured worldwide organization gearing up to train 
thousands of potential terrorists.53 
In the critical days and weeks after the August 1998 attacks, senior policymakers 
in the Clinton administration had to reevaluate the threat posed by Bin</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Location>Beirut</Location>
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    <Misc>Republicans</Misc>
    <Misc>Shifa</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.Although</Person>
    <Misc>Khobar Towers</Misc>
  </document>
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Ladin.Was this just a new and especially venomous version of the ordinary terrorist 
threat America had lived with for decades, or was it radically new, posing 
a danger beyond any yet experienced? 

Even after the embassy attacks,Bin Ladin had been responsible for the deaths 
of fewer than 50 Americans, most of them overseas.An NSC staffer working 
for Richard Clarke told us the threat was seen as one that could cause hundreds 
of casualties, not thousands.54 Even officials who acknowledge a vital 
threat intellectually may not be ready to act on such beliefs at great cost or at 
high risk. 

Therefore,the government experts who believed that Bin Ladin and his network 
posed such a novel danger needed a way to win broad support for their 
views, or at least spotlight the areas of dispute.The Presidential Daily Brief and 
the similar, more widely circulated daily reports for high officials—consisting 
mainly of brief reports of intelligence “news” without much analysis or context—
did not provide such a vehicle. The national intelligence estimate has 
often played this role, and is sometimes controversial for this very reason. It 
played no role in judging the threat posed by al Qaeda, either in 1998 or later. 

In the late summer and fall of 1998, the U.S. government also was worrying 
about the deployment of military power in two other ongoing conflicts.After 
years of war in the Balkans, the United States had finally committed itself to significant 
military intervention in 1995–1996.Already maintaining a NATO-led 
peacekeeping force in Bosnia, U.S. officials were beginning to consider major 
combat operations against Serbia to protect Muslim civilians in Kosovo from 
ethnic cleansing.Air strikes were threatened in October 1998;a full-scale NATO 
bombing campaign against Serbia was launched in March 1999.55 

In addition, the Clinton administration was facing the possibility of major 
combat operations against Iraq. Since 1996, the UN inspections regime had 
been increasingly obstructed by Saddam Hussein.The United States was threatening 
to attack unless unfettered inspections could resume. The Clinton 
administration eventually launched a large-scale set of air strikes against Iraq, 
Operation Desert Fox, in December 1998. These military commitments 
became the context in which the Clinton administration had to consider opening 
another front of military engagement against a new terrorist threat based 
in Afghanistan. 

A Follow-On Campaign? 

Clarke hoped the August 1998 missile strikes would mark the beginning of a 
sustained campaign against Bin Ladin. Clarke was, as he later admitted, 
“obsessed”with Bin Ladin,and the embassy bombings gave him new scope for 
pursuing his obsession.Terrorism had moved high up among the President’s 
concerns,and Clarke’s position had elevated accordingly.The CSG,unlike most 
standing interagency committees, did not have to report through the Deputies 
Committee. Although such a reporting relationship had been prescribed in</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
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    <Organization>Saddam Hussein.The United States</Organization>
    <Organization>Operation Desert Fox</Organization>
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the May 1998 presidential directive (after expressions of concern by Attorney 
General Reno, among others), that directive contained an exception that 
permitted the CSG to report directly to the principals if Berger so elected. 
In practice, the CSG often reported not even to the full Principals Committee 
but instead to the so-called Small Group formed by Berger, consisting 
only of those principals cleared to know about the most sensitive issues connected 
with counterterrorism activities concerning Bin Ladin or the Khobar 
Towers investigation.56 

For this inner cabinet, Clarke drew up what he called “Political-Military 
Plan Delenda.”The Latin delenda, meaning that something “must be destroyed,” 
evoked the famous Roman vow to destroy its rival, Carthage.The overall goal 
of Clarke’s paper was to “immediately eliminate any significant threat to Americans”
from the “Bin Ladin network.”57The paper called for diplomacy to deny 
Bin Ladin sanctuary; covert action to disrupt terrorist activities, but above all 
to capture Bin Ladin and his deputies and bring them to trial; efforts to dry up 
Bin Ladin’s money supply; and preparation for follow-on military action.The 
status of the document was and remained uncertain. It was never formally 
adopted by the principals, and participants in the Small Group now have little 
or no recollection of it. It did, however, guide Clarke’s efforts. 

The military component of Clarke’s plan was its most fully articulated element. 
He envisioned an ongoing campaign of strikes against Bin Ladin’s bases 
in Afghanistan or elsewhere,whenever target information was ripe.Acknowledging 
that individual targets might not have much value,he cautioned Berger 
not to expect ever again to have an assembly of terrorist leaders in his sights. 
But he argued that rolling attacks might persuade the Taliban to hand over Bin 
Ladin and, in any case, would show that the action in August was not a “oneoff”
event.It would show that the United States was committed to a relentless 
effort to take down Bin Ladin’s network.58 

Members of the Small Group found themselves unpersuaded of the merits 
of rolling attacks. Defense Secretary William Cohen told us Bin Ladin’s training 
camps were primitive, built with “rope ladders”; General Shelton called 
them “jungle gym” camps. Neither thought them worthwhile targets for very 
expensive missiles. President Clinton and Berger also worried about the Economist’s 
point—that attacks that missed Bin Ladin could enhance his stature and 
win him new recruits. After the United States launched air attacks against Iraq 
at the end of 1998 and against Serbia in 1999, in each case provoking worldwide 
criticism, Deputy National Security Advisor James Steinberg added the 
argument that attacks in Afghanistan offered “little benefit, lots of blowback 
against [a] bomb-happy U.S.”59 

During the last week of August 1998, officials began considering possible 
follow-on strikes. According to Clarke, President Clinton was inclined to 
launch further strikes sooner rather than later. On August 27, Under Secretary 
of Defense for Policy Walter Slocombe advised Secretary Cohen that the avail</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
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    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
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    <Location>Serbia</Location>
    <Misc>Roman</Misc>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>William Cohen</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
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    <Location>Reno</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
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    <Misc>Plan Delenda.”The Latin</Misc>
    <Organization>Defense Secretary</Organization>
    <Misc>Economist’s</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor James Steinberg</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense for Policy Walter Slocombe</Organization>
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able targets were not promising. The experience of the previous week, he 
wrote, “has only confirmed the importance of defining a clearly articulated 
rationale for military action”that was effective as well as justified.But Slocombe 
worried that simply striking some of these available targets did not add up to 
an effective strategy.60 

Defense officials at a lower level, in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for 
Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict, tried to meet Slocombe’s 
objections.They developed a plan that, unlike Clarke’s, called not for particular 
strikes but instead for a broad change in national strategy and in the institutional 
approach of the Department of Defense, implying a possible need for 
large-scale operations across the whole spectrum of U.S. military capabilities. 
It urged the department to become a lead agency in driving a national counterterrorism 
strategy forward, to “champion a national effort to take up the 
gauntlet that international terrorists have thrown at our feet.” The authors 
expressed concern that “we have not fundamentally altered our philosophy or 
our approach” even though the terrorist threat had grown.They outlined an 
eight-part strategy “to be more proactive and aggressive.” The future, they 
warned, might bring “horrific attacks,” in which case “we will have no choice 
nor,unfortunately,will we have a plan.”The assistant secretary,Allen Holmes, 
took the paper to Slocombe’s chief deputy, Jan Lodal, but it went no further. 
Its lead author recalls being told by Holmes that Lodal thought it was too 
aggressive. Holmes cannot recall what was said, and Lodal cannot remember 
the episode or the paper at all.61 

4.3 DIPLOMACY 
After the August missile strikes,diplomatic options to press the Taliban seemed 
no more promising than military options.The United States had issued a formal 
warning to the Taliban,and also to Sudan,that they would be held directly 
responsible for any attacks on Americans, wherever they occurred, carried out 
by the Bin Ladin network as long as they continued to provide sanctuary to 
it.62 

For a brief moment, it had seemed as if the August strikes might have 
shocked the Taliban into thinking of giving up Bin Ladin. On August 22, the 
reclusive Mullah Omar told a working-level State Department official that the 
strikes were counterproductive but added that he would be open to a dialogue 
with the United States on Bin Ladin’s presence in Afghanistan.63 Meeting in 
Islamabad with William Milam, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan,Taliban delegates 
said it was against their culture to expel someone seeking sanctuary but 
asked what would happen to Bin Ladin should he be sent to Saudi Arabia.64 

Yet in September 1998, when the Saudi emissary, Prince Turki, asked Mullah 
Omar whether he would keep his earlier promise to expel Bin Ladin, the</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Defense</Organization>
    <Location>Clarke’s</Location>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Organization>Defense</Organization>
    <Person>Slocombe</Person>
    <Person>Allen Holmes</Person>
    <Person>Jan Lodal</Person>
    <Person>William Milam</Person>
    <Organization>Low-Intensity Conflict</Organization>
    <Misc>Slocombe’s</Misc>
    <Person>Holmes</Person>
    <Person>Lodal</Person>
    <Misc>DIPLOMACY</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.63 Meeting</Misc>
    <Person>Prince Turki</Person>
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Taliban leader said no. Both sides shouted at each other, with Mullah Omar 
denouncing the Saudi government.Riyadh then suspended its diplomatic relations 
with the Taliban regime. (Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and the United Arab 
Emirates were the only countries that recognized the Taliban as the legitimate 
government of Afghanistan.) Crown Prince Abdullah told President Clinton 
and Vice President Gore about this when he visited Washington in late September. 
His account confirmed reports that the U.S. government had received 
independently.65 

Other efforts with the Saudi government centered on improving intelligence 
sharing and permitting U.S.agents to interrogate prisoners in Saudi custody.
The history of such cooperation in 1997 and 1998 had been strained.66 
Several officials told us,in particular,that the United States could not get direct 
access to an important al Qaeda financial official, Madani al Tayyib, who had 
been detained by the Saudi government in 1997.67Though U.S.officials repeatedly 
raised the issue, the Saudis provided limited information. In his September 
1998 meeting with Crown Prince Abdullah,Vice President Gore, while 
thanking the Saudi government for their responsiveness, renewed the request 
for direct U.S.access to Tayyib.68The United States never obtained this access. 

An NSC staff–led working group on terrorist finances asked the CIA in 
November 1998 to push again for access to Tayyib and to see “if it is possible 
to elaborate further on the ties between Usama bin Ladin and prominent individuals 
in Saudi Arabia,including especially the Bin Ladin family.”69 One result 
was two NSC-led interagency trips to Persian Gulf states in 1999 and 2000. 
During these trips the NSC,Treasury, and intelligence representatives spoke 
with Saudi officials, and later interviewed members of the Bin Ladin family, 
about Usama’s inheritance. The Saudis and the Bin Ladin family eventually 
helped in this particular effort and U.S. officials ultimately learned that Bin 
Ladin was not financing al Qaeda out of a personal inheritance.70 But Clarke 
was frustrated about how little the Agency knew, complaining to Berger that 
four years after “we first asked CIA to track down [Bin Ladin]’s finances” and 
two years after the creation of the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit,the Agency said it could 
only guess at how much aid Bin Ladin gave to terrorist groups, what were the 
main sources of his budget, or how he moved his money.71 

The other diplomatic route to get at Bin Ladin in Afghanistan ran through 
Islamabad.In the summer before the embassy bombings,the State Department 
had been heavily focused on rising tensions between India and Pakistan and 
did not aggressively challenge Pakistan on Afghanistan and Bin Ladin.But State 
Department counterterrorism officials wanted a stronger position; the department’s 
acting counterterrorism coordinator advised Secretary Albright to designate 
Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism, noting that despite high-level 
Pakistani assurances, the country’s military intelligence service continued 
“activities in support of international terrorism”by supporting attacks on civilian 
targets in Kashmir.This recommendation was opposed by the State Department’s 
South Asia bureau, which was concerned that it would damage already</docText>
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    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
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    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
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    <Location>India</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Date>1999 and 2000</Date>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Prince Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Person>Gore</Person>
    <Person>Madani</Person>
    <Misc>NSC-led</Misc>
    <Date>1997 and 1998</Date>
    <Misc>Usama’s</Misc>
    <Person>Tayyib</Person>
    <Misc>Persian</Misc>
    <Location>Islamabad.In</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.But State Department</Organization>
    <Location>Kashmir.This</Location>
    <Organization>State Department’s South Asia</Organization>
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    <docText>xvi PREFACE 

Our aim has not been to assign individual blame. Our aim has been to 
provide the fullest possible account of the events surrounding 9/11 and to 
identify lessons learned. 

We learned about an enemy who is sophisticated, patient, disciplined, 
and lethal.The enemy rallies broad support in the Arab and Muslim world 
by demanding redress of political grievances, but its hostility toward us and 
our values is limitless. Its purpose is to rid the world of religious and political 
pluralism, the plebiscite, and equal rights for women. It makes no distinction 
between military and civilian targets. Collateral damage is not in its 
lexicon. 

We learned that the institutions charged with protecting our borders, 
civil aviation, and national security did not understand how grave this threat 
could be, and did not adjust their policies, plans, and practices to deter or 
defeat it.We learned of fault lines within our government—between foreign 
and domestic intelligence, and between and within agencies.We learned of 
the pervasive problems of managing and sharing information across a large 
and unwieldy government that had been built in a different era to confront 
different dangers. 

At the outset of our work, we said we were looking backward in order 
to look forward.We hope that the terrible losses chronicled in this report 
can create something positive—an America that is safer, stronger, and wiser. 
That September day, we came together as a nation.The test before us is to 
sustain that unity of purpose and meet the challenges now confronting us. 

We need to design a balanced strategy for the long haul, to attack terrorists 
and prevent their ranks from swelling while at the same time protecting 
our country against future attacks.We have been forced to think about the 
way our government is organized. The massive departments and agencies 
that prevailed in the great struggles of the twentieth century must work 
together in new ways, so that all the instruments of national power can be 
combined. Congress needs dramatic change as well to strengthen oversight 
and focus accountability. 

As we complete our final report, we want to begin by thanking our fellow 
Commissioners, whose dedication to this task has been profound.We 
have reasoned together over every page, and the report has benefited from 
this remarkable dialogue. We want to express our considerable respect for 
the intellect and judgment of our colleagues, as well as our great affection 
for them. 

We want to thank the Commission staff.The dedicated professional staff, 
headed by Philip Zelikow, has contributed innumerable hours to the completion 
of this report, setting aside other important endeavors to take on this</docText>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Philip Zelikow</Person>
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sensitive relations with Pakistan in the wake of the May 1998 nuclear tests by 
both Pakistan and India. Secretary Albright rejected the recommendation on 
August 5,1998,just two days before the embassy bombings.72 She told us that, 
in general,putting the Pakistanis on the terrorist list would eliminate any influence 
the United States had over them.73 In October, an NSC counterterrorism 
official noted that Pakistan’s pro-Taliban military intelligence service had 
been training Kashmiri jihadists in one of the camps hit by U.S. missiles, leading 
to the death of Pakistanis.74 

After flying to Nairobi and bringing home the coffins of the American dead, 
Secretary Albright increased the department’s focus on counterterrorism. 
According to Ambassador Milam, the bombings were a “wake-up call,” and he 
soon found himself spending 45 to 50 percent of his time working the Taliban–
Bin Ladin portfolio.75 But Pakistan’s military intelligence service, known 
as the ISID (Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate),was the Taliban’s primary 
patron, which made progress difficult. 

Additional pressure on the Pakistanis—beyond demands to press the Taliban 
on Bin Ladin—seemed unattractive to most officials of the State Department. 
Congressional sanctions punishing Pakistan for possessing nuclear arms prevented 
the administration from offering incentives to Islamabad.76 In the words 
of Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott,Washington’s Pakistan policy was 
“stick-heavy.”Talbott felt that the only remaining sticks were additional sanctions 
that would have bankrupted the Pakistanis, a dangerous move that could 
have brought “total chaos”to a nuclear-armed country with a significant number 
of Islamic radicals.77 

The Saudi government,which had a long and close relationship with Pakistan 
and provided it oil on generous terms, was already pressing Sharif with 
regard to the Taliban and Bin Ladin.A senior State Department official concluded 
that Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah put “a tremendous amount of 
heat” on the Pakistani prime minister during the prince’s October 1998 visit 
to Pakistan.78 

The State Department urged President Clinton to engage the Pakistanis. 
Accepting this advice, President Clinton invited Sharif to Washington, where 
they talked mostly about India but also discussed Bin Ladin.After Sharif went 
home, the President called him and raised the Bin Ladin subject again.This 
effort elicited from Sharif a promise to talk with the Taliban.79 

Mullah Omar’s position showed no sign of softening. One intelligence 
report passed to Berger by the NSC staff quoted Bin Ladin as saying that Mullah 
Omar had given him a completely free hand to act in any country, though 
asking that he not claim responsibility for attacks in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia. 
Bin Ladin was described as grabbing his beard and saying emotionally, “By 
Allah, by God, the Americans will still be amazed.The so-called United States 
will suffer the same fate as the Russians.Their state will collapse, too.”80 

Debate in the State Department intensified after December 1998, when 
Michael Sheehan became counterterrorism coordinator. A onetime special</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
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    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
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    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
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    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Milam</Person>
    <Person>Prince Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Person>Strobe Talbott</Person>
    <Organization>Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistanis</Misc>
    <Person>Michael Sheehan</Person>
    <Person>Sharif</Person>
    <Person>Mullah Omar’s</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistanis.74</Misc>
    <Organization>Taliban– Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin—seemed</Organization>
    <Organization>Congressional</Organization>
    <Misc>Islamabad.76</Misc>
    <Organization>Washington’s Pakistan</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.A</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.After Sharif</Organization>
    <Organization>Taliban.79</Organization>
    <Location>Russians.Their</Location>
    <Date>August 5,1998</Date>
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forces officer, he had worked with Albright when she was ambassador to the 
United Nations and had served on the NSC staff with Clarke. He shared 
Clarke’s obsession with terrorism,and had little hesitation about locking horns 
with the regional bureaus.Through every available channel, he repeated the 
earlier warning to the Taliban of the possible dire consequences—including 
military strikes—if Bin Ladin remained their guest and conducted additional 
attacks.Within the department,he argued for designating the Taliban regime a 
state sponsor of terrorism.This was technically difficult to do, for calling it a 
state would be tantamount to diplomatic recognition,which the United States 
had thus far withheld. But Sheehan urged the use of any available weapon 
against the Taliban. He told us that he thought he was regarded in the department 
as “a one-note Johnny nutcase.”81 

In early 1999, the State Department’s counterterrorism office proposed a 
comprehensive diplomatic strategy for all states involved in the Afghanistan 
problem, including Pakistan. It specified both carrots and hard-hitting sticks— 
among them,certifying Pakistan as uncooperative on terrorism.Albright said 
the original carrots and sticks listed in a decision paper for principals may not 
have been used as “described on paper”but added that they were used in other 
ways or in varying degrees.But the paper’s author,Ambassador Sheehan,was 
frustrated and complained to us that the original plan “had been watered down 
to the point that nothing was then done with it.”82 

The cautiousness of the South Asia bureau was reinforced when, in May 
1999, Pakistani troops were discovered to have infiltrated into an especially 
mountainous area of Kashmir. A limited war began between India and Pakistan, 
euphemistically called the “Kargil crisis,” as India tried to drive the Pakistani 
forces out.Patience with Pakistan was wearing thin,inside both the State 
Department and the NSC. Bruce Riedel, the NSC staff member responsible 
for Pakistan,wrote Berger that Islamabad was “behaving as a rogue state in two 
areas—backing Taliban/UBL terror and provoking war with India.”83 

Discussion within the Clinton administration on Afghanistan then concentrated 
on two main alternatives.The first, championed by Riedel and Assistant 
Secretary of State Karl Inderfurth, was to undertake a major diplomatic effort 
to end the Afghan civil war and install a national unity government.The second,
favored by Sheehan,Clarke,and the CIA,called for labeling the Taliban a 
terrorist group and ultimately funneling secret aid to its chief foe, the Northern 
Alliance.This dispute would go back and forth throughout 1999 and ultimately 
become entangled with debate about enlisting the Northern Alliance 
as an ally for covert action.84 

Another diplomatic option may have been available:nurturing Afghan exile 
groups as a possible moderate governing alternative to the Taliban.In late 1999, 
Washington provided some support for talks among the leaders of exile Afghan 
groups, including the ousted Rome-based King Zahir Shah and Hamid 
Karzai, about bolstering anti-Taliban forces inside Afghanistan and linking the</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
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    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Location>Kashmir</Location>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>South Asia</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>State Department’s</Organization>
    <Organization>United Nations</Organization>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Person>Sheehan</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
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    <Person>Riedel</Person>
    <Organization>State Karl Inderfurth</Organization>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance.This</Organization>
    <Misc>Rome-based</Misc>
    <Person>Zahir Shah</Person>
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Northern Alliance with Pashtun groups. One U.S. diplomat later told us that 
the exile groups were not ready to move forward and that coordinating fractious 
groups residing in Bonn,Rome,and Cyprus proved extremely difficult.85 

Frustrated by the Taliban’s resistance, two senior State Department officials 
suggested asking the Saudis to offer the Taliban $250 million for Bin Ladin. 
Clarke opposed having the United States facilitate a “huge grant to a regime 
as heinous as the Taliban” and suggested that the idea might not seem attractive 
to either Secretary Albright or First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton—both 
critics of the Taliban’s record on women’s rights.86The proposal seems to have 
quietly died. 

Within the State Department, some officials delayed Sheehan and Clarke’s 
push either to designate Taliban-controlled Afghanistan as a state sponsor of terrorism 
or to designate the regime as a foreign terrorist organization (thereby 
avoiding the issue of whether to recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s government). 
Sheehan and Clarke prevailed in July 1999, when President Clinton 
issued an executive order effectively declaring the Taliban regime a state sponsor 
of terrorism.87 In October, a UN Security Council Resolution championed 
by the United States added economic and travel sanctions.88 

With UN sanctions set to come into effect in November, Clarke wrote 
Berger that “the Taliban appear to be up to something.”89 Mullah Omar had 
shuffled his “cabinet”and hinted at Bin Ladin’s possible departure.Clarke’s staff 
thought his most likely destination would be Somalia; Chechnya seemed less 
appealing with Russia on the offensive.Clarke commented that Iraq and Libya 
had previously discussed hosting Bin Ladin, though he and his staff had their 
doubts that Bin Ladin would trust secular Arab dictators such as Saddam Hussein 
or Muammar Qadhafi. Clarke also raised the “remote possibility” of 
Yemen, which offered vast uncontrolled spaces. In November, the CSG discussed 
whether the sanctions had rattled the Taliban,who seemed “to be looking 
for a face-saving way out of the Bin Ladin issue.”90 

In fact none of the outside pressure had any visible effect on Mullah Omar, 
who was unconcerned about commerce with the outside world.Omar had virtually 
no diplomatic contact with the West,since he refused to meet with nonMuslims.
The United States learned that at the end of 1999,the Taliban Council 
of Ministers unanimously reaffirmed that their regime would stick by Bin 
Ladin.Relations between Bin Ladin and the Taliban leadership were sometimes 
tense, but the foundation was deep and personal.91 Indeed, Mullah Omar had 
executed at least one subordinate who opposed his pro–Bin Ladin policy.92 

The United States would try tougher sanctions in 2000.Working with Russia 
(a country involved in an ongoing campaign against Chechen separatists, 
some of whom received support from Bin Ladin),the United States persuaded 
the United Nations to adopt Security Council Resolution 1333, which 
included an embargo on arms shipments to the Taliban, in December 2000.93 
The aim of the resolution was to hit the Taliban where it was most sensitive—</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Location>Libya</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Somalia</Location>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Person>Saddam Hussein</Person>
    <Location>Cyprus</Location>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Location>Rome</Location>
    <Organization>United Nations</Organization>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>UN</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Clarke’s</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Sheehan</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Organization>UN Security Council Resolution</Organization>
    <Location>Bin</Location>
    <Organization>Security Council Resolution</Organization>
    <Misc>Pashtun</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Chechen</Misc>
    <Location>Bonn</Location>
    <Person>Taliban”</Person>
    <Person>Hillary Rodham Clinton—both</Person>
    <Organization>Afghanistan’s</Organization>
    <Person>Muammar Qadhafi</Person>
    <Organization>Taliban Council of Ministers</Organization>
    <Location>Bin Ladin.Relations</Location>
  </document>
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    <docID>143_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

on the battlefield against the Northern Alliance—and criminalize giving them 
arms and providing military “advisers,” which Pakistan had been doing.94 Yet 
the passage of the resolution had no visible effect on Omar, nor did it halt the 
flow of Pakistani military assistance to the Taliban.95 

U.S. authorities had continued to try to get cooperation from Pakistan in 
pressing the Taliban to stop sheltering Bin Ladin. President Clinton contacted 
Sharif again in June 1999,partly to discuss the crisis with India but also to urge 
Sharif, “in the strongest way I can,” to persuade the Taliban to expel Bin 
Ladin.96 The President suggested that Pakistan use its control over oil supplies 
to the Taliban and over Afghan imports through Karachi. Sharif suggested 
instead that Pakistani forces might try to capture Bin Ladin themselves. 
Though no one in Washington thought this was likely to happen, President 
Clinton gave the idea his blessing.97 
The President met with Sharif in Washington in early July. Though the 
meeting’s main purpose was to seal the Pakistani prime minister’s decision to 
withdraw from the Kargil confrontation in Kashmir, President Clinton complained 
about Pakistan’s failure to take effective action with respect to the Taliban 
and Bin Ladin. Sharif came back to his earlier proposal and won approval 
for U.S. assistance in training a Pakistani special forces team for an operation 
against Bin Ladin. Then,in October 1999,Sharif was deposed by General Pervez 
Musharraf, and the plan was terminated.98 

At first,the Clinton administration hoped that Musharraf ’s coup might create 
an opening for action on Bin Ladin. A career military officer, Musharraf 
was thought to have the political strength to confront and influence the Pakistani 
military intelligence service, which supported the Taliban. Berger speculated 
that the new government might use Bin Ladin to buy concessions from 
Washington, but neither side ever developed such an initiative.99 

By late 1999,more than a year after the embassy bombings,diplomacy with 
Pakistan, like the efforts with the Taliban, had, according to Under Secretary 
of State Thomas Pickering,“borne little fruit.”100 

4.4 COVERT ACTION 
As part of the response to the embassy bombings, President Clinton signed a 
Memorandum of Notification authorizing the CIA to let its tribal assets use 
force to capture Bin Ladin and his associates. CIA officers told the tribals that 
the plan to capture Bin Ladin,which had been “turned off ”three months earlier,
was back on.The memorandum also authorized the CIA to attack Bin Ladin 
in other ways. Also, an executive order froze financial holdings that could be 
linked to Bin Ladin.101 

The counterterrorism staff at CIA thought it was gaining a better understanding 
of Bin Ladin and his network. In preparation for briefing the Senate</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Location>Kashmir</Location>
    <Misc>Bin</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Senate</Organization>
    <Person>Musharraf</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Omar</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Pervez Musharraf</Person>
    <Person>Sharif</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance—and</Organization>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin.96</Misc>
    <Location>Kargil</Location>
    <Location>State Thomas Pickering</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.101</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

Select Committee on Intelligence on September 2,Tenet was told that the intelligence 
community knew more about Bin Ladin’s network “than about any other 
top tier terrorist organization.”102 

The CIA was using this knowledge to disrupt a number of Bin Ladin–associated 
cells.Working with Albanian authorities, CIA operatives had raided an al 
Qaeda forgery operation and another terrorist cell in Tirana.These operations 
may have disrupted a planned attack on the U.S.embassy in Tirana,and did lead 
to the rendition of a number of al Qaeda–related terrorist operatives.After the 
embassy bombings, there were arrests in Azerbaijan, Italy, and Britain. Several 
terrorists were sent to an Arab country.The CIA described working with FBI 
operatives to prevent a planned attack on the U.S. embassy in Uganda, and a 
number of suspects were arrested. On September 16, Abu Hajer, one of Bin 
Ladin’s deputies in Sudan and the head of his computer operations and weapons 
procurement, was arrested in Germany. He was the most important Bin Ladin 
lieutenant captured thus far.Clarke commented to Berger with satisfaction that 
August and September had brought the “greatest number of terrorist arrests in 
a short period of time that we have ever arranged/facilitated.”103 

Given the President’s August Memorandum of Notification, the CIA had 
already been working on new plans for using the Afghan tribals to capture Bin 
Ladin.During September and October,the tribals claimed to have tried at least 
four times to ambush Bin Ladin. Senior CIA officials doubted whether any of 
these ambush attempts had actually occurred. But the tribals did seem to have 
success in reporting where Bin Ladin was.104 

This information was more useful than it had been in the past; since the 
August missile strikes, Bin Ladin had taken to moving his sleeping place frequently 
and unpredictably and had added new bodyguards. Worst of all, al 
Qaeda’s senior leadership had stopped using a particular means of communication 
almost immediately after a leak to the Washington Times.105This made it 
much more difficult for the National Security Agency to intercept his conversations. 
But since the tribals seemed to know where Bin Ladin was or would 
be, an alternative to capturing Bin Ladin would be to mark his location and 
call in another round of missile strikes. 

On November 3, the Small Group met to discuss these problems, among 
other topics. Preparing Director Tenet for a Small Group meeting in midNovember,
the Counterterrorist Center stressed,“At this point we cannot predict 
when or if a capture operation will be executed by our assets.”106 

U.S.counterterrorism officials also worried about possible domestic attacks. 
Several intelligence reports,some of dubious sourcing,mentioned Washington 
as a possible target. On October 26, Clarke’s CSG took the unusual step of 
holding a meeting dedicated to trying “to evaluate the threat of a terrorist attack 
in the United States by the Usama bin Ladin network.”107The CSG members 
were “urged to be as creative as possible in their thinking” about preventing a 
Bin Ladin attack on U.S. territory. Participants noted that while the FBI had</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Azerbaijan</Location>
    <Location>Uganda</Location>
    <Person>Abu Hajer</Person>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Location>Notification</Location>
    <Organization>Small Group</Organization>
    <Location>Tirana</Location>
    <Location>Britain</Location>
    <Location>Italy</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin–associated</Organization>
    <Misc>Albanian</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.embassy</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.During</Organization>
    <Person>Usama bin</Person>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

been given additional resources for such efforts,both it and the CIA were having 
problems exploiting leads by tracing U.S. telephone numbers and translating 
documents obtained in cell disruptions abroad. The Justice Department 
reported that the current guidelines from the Attorney General gave sufficient 
legal authority for domestic investigation and surveillance.108 

Though intelligence gave no clear indication of what might be afoot, some 
intelligence reports mentioned chemical weapons, pointing toward work at a 
camp in southern Afghanistan called Derunta.On November 4,1998,the U.S. 
Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York unsealed its indictment 
of Bin Ladin,charging him with conspiracy to attack U.S.defense installations.
The indictment also charged that al Qaeda had allied itself with Sudan, 
Iran, and Hezbollah.The original sealed indictment had added that al Qaeda 
had “reached an understanding with the government of Iraq that al Qaeda 
would not work against that government and that on particular projects,specifically 
including weapons development, al Qaeda would work cooperatively 
with the Government of Iraq.”109 This passage led Clarke, who for years had 
read intelligence reports on Iraqi-Sudanese cooperation on chemical weapons, 
to speculate to Berger that a large Iraqi presence at chemical facilities in Khartoum 
was “probably a direct result of the Iraq–Al Qida agreement.” Clarke 
added that VX precursor traces found near al Shifa were the “exact formula 
used by Iraq.”110This language about al Qaeda’s “understanding”with Iraq had 
been dropped, however, when a superseding indictment was filed in November 
1998.111 

On Friday, December 4, 1998, the CIA included an article in the Presidential 
Daily Brief describing intelligence, received from a friendly government, 
about a threatened hijacking in the United States.This article was declassified 
at our request. 

The same day, Clarke convened a meeting of his CSG to discuss both the 

The following is the text of an item from the Presidential Daily Brief received by 
President William J.Clinton on December 4,1998.Redacted material is indicated 
in brackets. 

SUBJECT: Bin Ladin Preparing to Hijack US Aircraft and Other 
Attacks 

1. Reporting [—] suggests Bin Ladin and his allies are preparing for 
attacks in the US, including an aircraft hijacking to obtain the release of 
Shaykh ‘Umar ‘Abd al-Rahman, Ramzi Yousef, and Muhammad Sadiq 
‘Awda.One source quoted a senior member of the Gama’at al-Islamiyya 
(IG) saying that, as of late October, the IG had completed planning for</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Southern District of New York</Organization>
    <Person>Ramzi Yousef</Person>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Location>Khartoum</Location>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Location>United States.This</Location>
    <Organization>U.S. Attorney’s Office</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Date>December 4, 1998</Date>
    <Misc>Gama’at</Misc>
    <Date>December 4,1998</Date>
    <Organization>IG</Organization>
    <Misc>Iraq.”109 This</Misc>
    <Misc>Iraqi-Sudanese</Misc>
    <Misc>Iraq–Al Qida</Misc>
    <Person>Shifa</Person>
    <Misc>Iraq.”110This</Misc>
    <Misc>Presidential Daily Brief</Misc>
    <Person>William J.Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>Hijack US Aircraft</Organization>
    <Organization>Other Attacks</Organization>
    <Location>Shaykh</Location>
    <Person>Muhammad Sadiq</Person>
    <Date>November 4,1998</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

an operation in the US on behalf of Bin Ladin, but that the operation 
was on hold.A senior Bin Ladin operative from Saudi Arabia was to visit 
IG counterparts in the US soon thereafter to discuss options—perhaps 
including an aircraft hijacking. 

• 
IG leader Islambuli in late September was planning to hijack a 
US airliner during the “next couple of weeks” to free ‘Abd al-
Rahman and the other prisoners, according to what may be a 
different source. 
• 
The same source late last month said that Bin Ladin might 
implement plans to hijack US aircraft before the beginning of 
Ramadan on 20 December and that two members of the operational 
team had evaded security checks during a recent trial 
run at an unidentified New York airport.[—] 
2. Some members of the Bin Ladin network have received hijack training,
according to various sources,but no group directly tied to Bin Ladin’s 
al-Qa’ida organization has ever carried out an aircraft hijacking.Bin Ladin 
could be weighing other types of operations against US aircraft.According 
to [—] the IG in October obtained SA-7 missiles and intended to 
move them from Yemen into Saudi Arabia to shoot down an Egyptian 
plane or, if unsuccessful, a US military or civilian aircraft. 
• 
A [—] in October told us that unspecified “extremist elements” 
in Yemen had acquired SA-7s.[—] 
3. [—] indicate the Bin Ladin organization or its allies are moving closer 
to implementing anti-US attacks at unspecified locations, but we do not 
know whether they are related to attacks on aircraft.A Bin Ladin associate 
in Sudan late last month told a colleague in Kandahar that he had 
shipped a group of containers to Afghanistan. Bin Ladin associates also 
talked about the movement of containers to Afghanistan before the East 
Africa bombings. 
• 
In other [—] Bin Ladin associates last month discussed picking 
up a package in Malaysia. One told his colleague in Malaysia 
that “they” were in the “ninth month [of pregnancy].” 
• 
An alleged Bin Ladin supporter in Yemen late last month 
remarked to his mother that he planned to work in “commerce” 
from abroad and said his impending “marriage,” which 
would take place soon,would be a “surprise.”“Commerce”and 
“marriage” often are codewords for terrorist attacks. [—]</docText>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Rahman</Person>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Egyptian</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Organization>IG</Organization>
    <Organization>Islambuli</Organization>
    <Person>Ramadan</Person>
    <Misc>SA-7s</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

hijacking concern and the antiaircraft missile threat.To address the hijacking 
warning, the group agreed that New York airports should go to maximum 
security starting that weekend.They agreed to boost security at other 
East coast airports.The CIA agreed to distribute versions of the report to 
the FBI and FAA to pass to the New York Police Department and the airlines. 
The FAA issued a security directive on December 8, with specific 
requirements for more intensive air carrier screening of passengers and more 
oversight of the screening process, at all three New York City area airports.112 

The intelligence community could learn little about the source of the information. 
Later in December and again in early January 1999, more information 
arrived from the same source, reporting that the planned hijacking had been 
stalled because two of the operatives, who were sketchily described, had been 
arrested near Washington,D.C.or New York.After investigation,the FBI could 
find no information to support the hijack threat; nor could it verify any arrests 
like those described in the report.The FAA alert at the New York area airports 
ended on January 31, 1999.113 

On December 17, the day after the United States and Britain began their 
Desert Fox bombing campaign against Iraq, the Small Group convened to discuss 
intelligence suggesting imminent Bin Ladin attacks on the U.S. embassies 
in Qatar and Ethiopia.The next day, Director Tenet sent a memo to the President, 
the cabinet, and senior officials throughout the government describing 
reports that Bin Ladin planned to attack U.S. targets very soon, possibly over 
the next few days, before Ramadan celebrations began. Tenet said he was 
“greatly concerned.”114 

With alarms sounding,members of the Small Group considered ideas about 
how to respond to or prevent such attacks. Generals Shelton and Zinni came 
up with military options. Special Operations Forces were later told that they 
might be ordered to attempt very high-risk in-and-out raids either in Khartoum, 
to capture a senior Bin Ladin operative known as Abu Hafs the Mauritanian—
who appeared to be engineering some of the plots—or in Kandahar, 
to capture Bin Ladin himself. Shelton told us that such operations are not risk 
free, invoking the memory of the 1993 “Black Hawk down” fiasco in 
Mogadishu.115 

The CIA reported on December 18 that Bin Ladin might be traveling to 
Kandahar and could be targeted there with cruise missiles. Vessels with Tomahawk 
cruise missiles were on station in the Arabian Sea, and could fire within 
a few hours of receiving target data.116 

On December 20,intelligence indicated Bin Ladin would be spending the 
night at the Haji Habash house, part of the governor’s residence in Kanda-
har.The chief of the Bin Ladin unit,“Mike,” told us that he promptly briefed 
Tenet and his deputy, John Gordon. From the field, the CIA’s Gary Schroen 
advised:“Hit him tonight—we may not get another chance.”An urgent teleconference 
of principals was arranged.117</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Qatar</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Person>Abu Hafs</Person>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Location>Khartoum</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>John Gordon</Person>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Organization>Small Group</Organization>
    <Misc>Ramadan</Misc>
    <Person>Gary Schroen</Person>
    <Location>Britain</Location>
    <Misc>Tomahawk</Misc>
    <Location>Arabian Sea</Location>
    <Location>East coast</Location>
    <Organization>D.C.or New</Organization>
    <Misc>Desert Fox</Misc>
    <Organization>Ethiopia.The</Organization>
    <Location>Mogadishu.115</Location>
    <Person>Haji Habash</Person>
    <Location>Kanda-</Location>
    <Date>January 31, 1999</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

The principals considered a cruise missile strike to try to kill Bin Ladin.One 
issue they discussed was the potential collateral damage—the number of innocent 
bystanders who would be killed or wounded. General Zinni predicted a 
number well over 200 and was concerned about damage to a nearby mosque. 
The senior intelligence officer on the Joint Staff apparently made a different 
calculation, estimating half as much collateral damage and not predicting damage 
to the mosque. By the end of the meeting, the principals decided against 
recommending to the President that he order a strike.A few weeks later,in January 
1999, Clarke wrote that the principals had thought the intelligence only 
half reliable and had worried about killing or injuring perhaps 300 people. 
Tenet said he remembered doubts about the reliability of the source and concern 
about hitting the nearby mosque.“Mike”remembered Tenet telling him 
that the military was concerned that a few hours had passed since the last sighting 
of Bin Ladin and that this persuaded everyone that the chance of failure 
was too great.118 

Some lower-level officials were angry.“Mike”reported to Schroen that he 
had been unable to sleep after this decision.“I’m sure we’ll regret not acting 
last night,” he wrote, criticizing the principals for “worrying that some stray 
shrapnel might hit the Habash mosque and ‘offend’ Muslims.” He commented 
that they had not shown comparable sensitivity when deciding to bomb Muslims 
in Iraq.The principals, he said, were “obsessed” with trying to get others—
Saudis,Pakistanis,Afghan tribals—to “do what we won’t do.”Schroen was 
disappointed too.“We should have done it last night,” he wrote.“We may well 
come to regret the decision not to go ahead.”119 The Joint Staff’s deputy director 
for operations agreed, even though he told us that later intelligence 
appeared to show that Bin Ladin had left his quarters before the strike would 
have occurred. Missing Bin Ladin, he said,“would have caused us a hell of a 
problem, but it was a shot we should have taken, and we would have had to 
pay the price.”120 

The principals began considering other, more aggressive covert alternatives 
using the tribals. CIA officers suggested that the tribals would prefer to try a 
raid rather than a roadside ambush because they would have better control, it 
would be less dangerous, and it played more to their skills and experience. But 
everyone knew that if the tribals were to conduct such a raid, guns would be 
blazing.The current Memorandum of Notification instructed the CIA to capture 
Bin Ladin and to use lethal force only in self-defense.Work now began on 
a new memorandum that would give the tribals more latitude.The intention 
was to say that they could use lethal force if the attempted capture seemed 
impossible to complete successfully.121 

Early drafts of this highly sensitive document emphasized that it authorized 
only a capture operation.The tribals were to be paid only if they captured Bin 
Ladin, not if they killed him. Officials throughout the government approved 
this draft. But on December 21, the day after principals decided not to launch</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistanis</Misc>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.One</Person>
    <Person>Habash</Person>
    <Misc>Muslims.” He</Misc>
    <Misc>Iraq.The</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the cruise missile strike against Kandahar, the CIA’s leaders urged strengthening 
the language to allow the tribals to be paid whether Bin Ladin was captured 
or killed. Berger and Tenet then worked together to take this line of 
thought even further.122 

They finally agreed, as Berger reported to President Clinton, that an 
extraordinary step was necessary. The new memorandum would allow the 
killing of Bin Ladin if the CIA and the tribals judged that capture was not feasible 
(a judgment it already seemed clear they had reached). The Justice 
Department lawyer who worked on the draft told us that what was envisioned 
was a group of tribals assaulting a location, leading to a shoot-out. Bin Ladin 
and others would be captured if possible, but probably would be killed.The 
administration’s position was that under the law of armed conflict, killing a 
person who posed an imminent threat to the United States would be an act 
of self-defense,not an assassination.On Christmas Eve 1998,Berger sent a final 
draft to President Clinton, with an explanatory memo. The President 
approved the document.123 

Because the White House considered this operation highly sensitive,only a 
tiny number of people knew about this Memorandum of Notification. Berger 
arranged for the NSC’s legal adviser to inform Albright, Cohen, Shelton, and 
Reno.None was allowed to keep a copy.Congressional leaders were briefed,as 
required by law. Attorney General Reno had sent a letter to the President 
expressing her concern: she warned of possible retaliation, including the targeting 
of U.S. officials. She did not pose any legal objection. A copy of the final 
document, along with the carefully crafted instructions that were to be sent to 
the tribals, was given to Tenet.124 

A message from Tenet to CIA field agents directed them to communicate 
to the tribals the instructions authorized by the President: the United States 
preferred that Bin Ladin and his lieutenants be captured,but if a successful capture 
operation was not feasible, the tribals were permitted to kill them.The 
instructions added that the tribals must avoid killing others unnecessarily and 
must not kill or abuse Bin Ladin or his lieutenants if they surrendered. Finally, 
the tribals would not be paid if this set of requirements was not met.125 

The field officer passed these instructions to the tribals word for word. But 
he prefaced the directions with a message:“From the American President down 
to the average man in the street,we want him [Bin Ladin] stopped.”If the tribals 
captured Bin Ladin, the officer assured them that he would receive a fair 
trial under U.S. law and be treated humanely.The CIA officer reported that 
the tribals said they “fully understand the contents, implications and the spirit 
of the message”and that that their response was,“We will try our best to capture 
Bin Ladin alive and will have no intention of killing or harming him on 
purpose.”The tribals explained that they wanted to prove that their standards 
of behavior were more civilized than those of Bin Ladin and his band of terrorists.
In an additional note addressed to Schroen,the tribals noted that if they 
were to adopt Bin Ladin’s ethics,“we would have finished the job long before,”</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Location>Reno</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Organization>Tenet</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Person>Cohen</Person>
    <Organization>Reno.None</Organization>
    <Misc>Tenet.124</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>14_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>PREFACE xvii 

all-consuming assignment.They have conducted the exacting investigative 
work upon which the Commission has built.They have given good advice, 
and faithfully carried out our guidance.They have been superb. 

We thank the Congress and the President. Executive branch agencies 
have searched records and produced a multitude of documents for us.We 
thank officials, past and present, who were generous with their time and 
provided us with insight. The PENTTBOM team at the FBI, the 
Director’s Review Group at the CIA, and Inspectors General at the 
Department of Justice and the CIA provided great assistance. We owe a 
huge debt to their investigative labors, painstaking attention to detail, and 
readiness to share what they have learned. We have built on the work of 
several previous Commissions, and we thank the Congressional Joint 
Inquiry, whose fine work helped us get started.We thank the City of New 
York for assistance with documents and witnesses, and the Government 
Printing Office and W.W. Norton &amp; Company for helping to get this 
report to the broad public. 

We conclude this list of thanks by coming full circle:We thank the families 
of 9/11, whose persistence and dedication helped create the 
Commission.They have been with us each step of the way, as partners and 
witnesses.They know better than any of us the importance of the work we 
have undertaken. 

We want to note what we have done, and not done.We have endeavored 
to provide the most complete account we can of the events of September 
11, what happened and why.This final report is only a summary of what we 
have done, citing only a fraction of the sources we have consulted. But in 
an event of this scale, touching so many issues and organizations, we are 
conscious of our limits.We have not interviewed every knowledgeable person 
or found every relevant piece of paper. New information inevitably will 
come to light. We present this report as a foundation for a better understanding 
of a landmark in the history of our nation. 

We have listened to scores of overwhelming personal tragedies and 
astounding acts of heroism and bravery. We have examined the staggering 
impact of the events of 9/11 on the American people and their amazing 
resilience and courage as they fought back.We have admired their determination 
to do their best to prevent another tragedy while preparing to 
respond if it becomes necessary. We emerge from this investigation with 
enormous sympathy for the victims and their loved ones, and with 
enhanced respect for the American people. We recognize the formidable 
challenges that lie ahead. 

We also approach the task of recommendations with humility.We have</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Justice</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Location>City of New York</Location>
    <Organization>Director’s Review Group</Organization>
    <Person>W.W. Norton</Person>
    <Organization>PENTTBOM</Organization>
    <Organization>Congressional Joint Inquiry</Organization>
    <Organization>Government Printing Office</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

but they had been limited by their abilities and “by our beliefs and laws we 
have to respect.”126 

Schroen and “Mike”were impressed by the tribals’reaction.Schroen cabled 
that the tribals were not in it for the money but as an investment in the future 
of Afghanistan. “Mike” agreed that the tribals’ reluctance to kill was not a 
“showstopper.” “From our view,” he wrote, “that seems in character and fair 
enough.”127 

Policymakers in the Clinton administration, including the President and his 
national security advisor, told us that the President’s intent regarding covert 
action against Bin Ladin was clear: he wanted him dead.This intent was never 
well communicated or understood within the CIA.Tenet told the Commission 
that except in one specific case (discussed later), the CIA was authorized 
to kill Bin Ladin only in the context of a capture operation. CIA senior managers,
operators,and lawyers confirmed this understanding.“We always talked 
about how much easier it would have been to kill him,” a former chief of the 
Bin Ladin unit said.128 

In February 1999,another draft Memorandum of Notification went to President 
Clinton. It asked him to allow the CIA to give exactly the same guidance 
to the Northern Alliance as had just been given to the tribals: they could kill 
Bin Ladin if a successful capture operation was not feasible. On this occasion, 
however, President Clinton crossed out key language he had approved in 
December and inserted more ambiguous language. No one we interviewed 
could shed light on why the President did this.President Clinton told the Commission 
that he had no recollection of why he rewrote the language.129 

Later in 1999, when legal authority was needed for enlisting still other collaborators 
and for covering a wider set of contingencies, the lawyers returned 
to the language used in August 1998, which authorized force only in the context 
of a capture operation. Given the closely held character of the document 
approved in December 1998,and the subsequent return to the earlier language, 
it is possible to understand how the former White House officials and the CIA 
officials might disagree as to whether the CIA was ever authorized by the President 
to kill Bin Ladin.130 

The dispute turned out to be somewhat academic, as the limits of available 
legal authority were not tested. Clarke commented to Berger that “despite 
‘expanded’ authority for CIA’s sources to engage in direct action, they have 
shown no inclination to do so.” He added that it was his impression that the 
CIA thought the tribals unlikely to act against Bin Ladin and hence relying on 
them was “unrealistic.”131 Events seemed to bear him out, since the tribals did 
not stage an attack on Bin Ladin or his associates during 1999. 

The tribals remained active collectors of intelligence, however, providing 
good but not predictive information about Bin Ladin’s whereabouts.The CIA 
also tried to improve its intelligence reporting on Bin Ladin by what Tenet’s 
assistant director for collection, the indefatigable Charles Allen, called an “allout, 
all-agency, seven-days-a-week” effort.132 The effort might have had an</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Charles Allen</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan.</Location>
    <Location>CIA.Tenet</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.130</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>151_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

effect. On January 12, 1999, Clarke wrote Berger that the CIA’s confidence in 
the tribals’ reporting had increased. It was now higher than it had been on 
December 20.133 

In February 1999,Allen proposed flying a U-2 mission over Afghanistan to 
build a baseline of intelligence outside the areas where the tribals had coverage.
Clarke was nervous about such a mission because he continued to fear that 
Bin Ladin might leave for someplace less accessible.He wrote Deputy National 
Security Advisor Donald Kerrick that one reliable source reported Bin Ladin’s 
having met with Iraqi officials, who “may have offered him asylum.” Other 
intelligence sources said that some Taliban leaders, though not Mullah Omar, 
had urged Bin Ladin to go to Iraq. If Bin Ladin actually moved to Iraq, wrote 
Clarke,his network would be at Saddam Hussein’s service,and it would be “virtually 
impossible” to find him. Better to get Bin Ladin in Afghanistan, Clarke 
declared.134 Berger suggested sending one U-2 flight,but Clarke opposed even 
this. It would require Pakistani approval, he wrote; and “Pak[istan’s] 
intel[ligence service] is in bed with” Bin Ladin and would warn him that the 
United States was getting ready for a bombing campaign: “Armed with that 
knowledge,old wily Usama will likely boogie to Baghdad.”135Though told also 
by Bruce Riedel of the NSC staff that Saddam Hussein wanted Bin Ladin in 
Baghdad,Berger conditionally authorized a single U-2 flight.Allen meanwhile 
had found other ways of getting the information he wanted. So the U-2 flight 
never occurred.136 

4.5 SEARCHING FOR FRESH OPTIONS 
“Boots on the Ground?” 

Starting on the day the August 1998 strikes were launched, General Shelton 
had issued a planning order to prepare follow-on strikes and think beyond just 
using cruise missiles.137 The initial strikes had been called Operation Infinite 
Reach. The follow-on plans were given the code name Operation Infinite 
Resolve. 

At the time, any actual military action in Afghanistan would have been carried 
out by General Zinni’s Central Command.This command was therefore 
the locus for most military planning. Zinni was even less enthusiastic than 
Cohen and Shelton about follow-on cruise missile strikes. He knew that the 
Tomahawks did not always hit their targets.After the August 20 strikes,President 
Clinton had had to call Pakistani Prime Minister Sharif to apologize for 
a wayward missile that had killed several people in a Pakistani village. Sharif 
had been understanding, while commenting on American “overkill.”138 

Zinni feared that Bin Ladin would in the future locate himself in cities, 
where U.S. missiles could kill thousands of Afghans. He worried also lest Pakistani 
authorities not get adequate warning,think the missiles came from India,</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Misc>Afghans</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Operation Infinite Reach</Organization>
    <Organization>Operation Infinite Resolve</Organization>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Allen</Person>
    <Person>Usama</Person>
    <Person>Sharif</Person>
    <Person>Cohen</Person>
    <Location>Baghdad</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Donald Kerrick</Organization>
    <Misc>U-2</Misc>
    <Location>Saddam Hussein’s</Location>
    <Organization>Baghdad.”135Though</Organization>
    <Person>Bruce Riedel</Person>
    <Organization>Saddam Hussein</Organization>
    <Person>Zinni’s Central Command.This</Person>
    <Date>January 12, 1999</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

and do something that everyone would later regret.Discussing potential repercussions 
in the region of his military responsibility,Zinni said,“It was easy to 
take the shot from Washington and walk away from it.We had to live there.”139 

Zinni’s distinct preference would have been to build up counterterrorism 
capabilities in neighboring countries such as Uzbekistan. But he told us that 
he could not drum up much interest in or money for such a purpose from 
Washington,partly,he thought,because these countries had dictatorial governments.
140 

After the decision—in which fear of collateral damage was an important factor—
not to use cruise missiles against Kandahar in December 1998, Shelton 
and officers in the Pentagon developed plans for using an AC-130 gunship 
instead of cruise missile strikes. Designed specifically for the special forces, the 
version of the AC-130 known as “Spooky”can fly in fast or from high altitude, 
undetected by radar; guided to its zone by extraordinarily complex electronics, 
it is capable of rapidly firing precision-guided 25, 40, and 105 mm projectiles. 
Because this system could target more precisely than a salvo of cruise 
missiles, it had a much lower risk of causing collateral damage. After giving 
Clarke a briefing and being encouraged to proceed, Shelton formally directed 
Zinni and General Peter Schoomaker, who headed the Special Operations 
Command, to develop plans for an AC-130 mission against Bin Ladin’s headquarters 
and infrastructure in Afghanistan.The Joint Staff prepared a decision 
paper for deployment of the Special Operations aircraft.141 

Though Berger and Clarke continued to indicate interest in this option,the 
AC-130s were never deployed. Clarke wrote at the time that Zinni opposed 
their use,and John Maher,the Joint Staff ’s deputy director of operations,agreed 
that this was Zinni’s position.Zinni himself does not recall blocking the option. 
He told us that he understood the Special Operations Command had never 
thought the intelligence good enough to justify actually moving AC-130s into 
position.Schoomaker says,on the contrary,that he thought the AC-130 option 
feasible.142 

The most likely explanation for the two generals’ differing recollections is 
that both of them thought serious preparation for any such operations would 
require a long-term redeployment of Special Operations forces to the Middle 
East or South Asia.The AC-130s would need bases because the aircraft’s unrefueled 
range was only a little over 2,000 miles.They needed search-and-rescue 
backup, which would have still less range.Thus an AC-130 deployment had to 
be embedded in a wider political and military concept involving Pakistan or 
other neighboring countries to address issues relating to basing and overflight. 
No one ever put such an initiative on the table.Zinni therefore cautioned about 
simply ordering up AC-130 deployments for a quick strike; Schoomaker 
planned for what he saw as a practical strike option; and the underlying issues 
were not fully engaged.The Joint Staff decision paper was never turned into 
an interagency policy paper.</docText>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Organization>Special Operations</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Location>Uzbekistan</Location>
    <Misc>AC-130</Misc>
    <Person>John Maher</Person>
    <Person>Peter Schoomaker</Person>
    <Organization>Special Operations Command</Organization>
    <Person>Schoomaker</Person>
    <Organization>Clarke</Organization>
    <Organization>Afghanistan.The Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Misc>AC-130s</Misc>
    <Misc>South Asia.The AC-130s</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>153_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

The same was true for the option of using ground units from the Special 
Operations Command. Within the command, some officers—such as 
Schoomaker—wanted the mission of “putting boots on the ground” to get at 
Bin Ladin and al Qaeda. At the time, Special Operations was designated as a 
“supporting command,” not a “supported command”: that is, it supported a 
theater commander and did not prepare its own plans for dealing with al 
Qaeda. Schoomaker proposed to Shelton and Cohen that Special Operations 
become a supported command, but the proposal was not adopted. Had it been 
accepted,he says,he would have taken on the al Qaeda mission instead of deferring 
to Zinni. Lieutenant General William Boykin, the current deputy under 
secretary of defense for intelligence and a founding member of Delta Force, 
told us that “opportunities were missed because of an unwillingness to take risks 
and a lack of vision and understanding.”143 

President Clinton relied on the advice of General Shelton, who informed 
him that without intelligence on Bin Ladin’s location, a commando raid’s 
chance of failure was high. Shelton told President Clinton he would go forward 
with “boots on the ground” if the President ordered him to do so; however, 
he had to ensure that the President was completely aware of the large 
logistical problems inherent in a military operation.144 

The Special Operations plans were apparently conceived as another quick 
strike option—an option to insert forces after the United States received 
actionable intelligence.President Clinton told the Commission that “if we had 
had really good intelligence about . . . where [Usama Bin Ladin] was, I would 
have done it.” Zinni and Schoomaker did make preparations for possible very 
high risk in-and-out operations to capture or kill terrorists. Cohen told the 
Commission that the notion of putting military personnel on the ground without 
some reasonable certitude that Bin Ladin was in a particular location would 
have resulted in the mission’s failure and the loss of life in a fruitless effort.145 
None of these officials was aware of the ambitious plan developed months earlier 
by lower-level Defense officials. 

In our interviews, some military officers repeatedly invoked the analogy of 
Desert One and the failed 1980 hostage rescue mission in Iran.146 They were 
dubious about a quick strike approach to using Special Operations Forces, 
which they thought complicated and risky. Such efforts would have required 
bases in the region,but all the options were unappealing.Pro-Taliban elements 
of Pakistan’s military might warn Bin Ladin or his associates of pending operations.
With nearby basing options limited, an alternative was to fly from ships 
in the Arabian Sea or from land bases in the Persian Gulf, as was done after 
9/11. Such operations would then have to be supported from long distances, 
overflying the airspace of nations that might not have been supportive or aware 
of U.S. efforts.147 

However, if these hurdles were addressed, and if the military could then 
operate regularly in the region for a long period,perhaps clandestinely,it might</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistan’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin’s</Misc>
    <Location>Persian Gulf</Location>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Organization>Special Operations</Organization>
    <Person>William Boykin</Person>
    <Person>Cohen</Person>
    <Organization>Special Operations Command</Organization>
    <Organization>Special Operations Forces</Organization>
    <Person>Schoomaker</Person>
    <Organization>Delta Force</Organization>
    <Misc>Desert One</Misc>
    <Location>Arabian Sea</Location>
  </document>
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    <docID>154_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

attempt to gather intelligence and wait for an opportunity. One Special Operations 
commander said his view of actionable intelligence was that if you “give 
me the action, I will give you the intelligence.”148 But this course would still 
be risky, in light both of the difficulties already mentioned and of the danger 
that U.S.operations might fail disastrously.We have found no evidence that such 
a long-term political-military approach for using Special Operations Forces in 
the region was proposed to or analyzed by the Small Group, even though such 
capability had been honed for at least a decade within the Defense Department. 


Therefore the debate looked to some like bold proposals from civilians 
meeting hypercaution from the military.Clarke saw it this way.Of the military, 
he said to us,“They were very,very,very reluctant.”149But from another perspective, 
poorly informed proposals for bold action were pitted against experienced 
professional judgment. That was how Secretary of Defense Cohen 
viewed it.He said to us:“I would have to place my judgment call in terms of, 
do I believe that the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, former commander of Special 
Forces command, is in a better position to make a judgment on the feasibility 
of this than, perhaps, Mr. Clarke?”150 

Beyond a large-scale political-military commitment to build up a covert or 
clandestine capability using American personnel on the ground,either military 
or CIA,there was a still larger option that could have been considered—invading 
Afghanistan itself. Every official we questioned about the possibility of an 
invasion of Afghanistan said that it was almost unthinkable, absent a provocation 
such as 9/11,because of poor prospects for cooperation from Pakistan and 
other nations and because they believed the public would not support it.Cruise 
missiles were and would remain the only military option on the table. 

The Desert Camp, February 1999 

Early in 1999, the CIA received reporting that Bin Ladin was spending much 
of his time at one of several camps in the Afghan desert south of Kandahar.At 
the beginning of February, Bin Ladin was reportedly located in the vicinity of 
the Sheikh Ali camp, a desert hunting camp being used by visitors from a Gulf 
state. Public sources have stated that these visitors were from the United Arab 
Emirates.151 

Reporting from the CIA’s assets provided a detailed description of the hunting 
camp, including its size, location, resources, and security, as well as of Bin 
Ladin’s smaller, adjacent camp.152 Because this was not in an urban area, missiles 
launched against it would have less risk of causing collateral damage. On 
February 8, the military began to ready itself for a possible strike.153 The next 
day, national technical intelligence confirmed the location and description of 
the larger camp and showed the nearby presence of an official aircraft of the 
United Arab Emirates. But the location of Bin Ladin’s quarters could not be 
pinned down so precisely.154The CIA did its best to answer a host of questions</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Gulf</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Special Operations</Organization>
    <Organization>Small Group</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Organization>Special Operations Forces</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense Cohen</Organization>
    <Organization>Special Forces</Organization>
    <Organization>Desert Camp</Organization>
    <Location>Kandahar.At</Location>
    <Person>Ali camp</Person>
    <Organization>United Arab Emirates.151 Reporting</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

about the larger camp and its residents and about Bin Ladin’s daily schedule 
and routines to support military contingency planning. According to reporting 
from the tribals, Bin Ladin regularly went from his adjacent camp to the 
larger camp where he visited the Emiratis;the tribals expected him to be at the 
hunting camp for such a visit at least until midmorning on February 11.155 
Clarke wrote to Berger’s deputy on February 10 that the military was then 
doing targeting work to hit the main camp with cruise missiles and should be 
in position to strike the following morning.156 Speaker of the House Dennis 
Hastert appears to have been briefed on the situation.157 

No strike was launched. By February 12 Bin Ladin had apparently moved 
on, and the immediate strike plans became moot.158 According to CIA and 
Defense officials, policymakers were concerned about the danger that a strike 
would kill an Emirati prince or other senior officials who might be with Bin 
Ladin or close by.Clarke told us the strike was called off after consultations with 
Director Tenet because the intelligence was dubious, and it seemed to Clarke 
as if the CIA was presenting an option to attack America’s best counterterrorism 
ally in the Gulf.The lead CIA official in the field, Gary Schroen, felt that 
the intelligence reporting in this case was very reliable;the Bin Ladin unit chief, 
“Mike,” agreed. Schroen believes today that this was a lost opportunity to kill 
Bin Ladin before 9/11.159 

Even after Bin Ladin’s departure from the area,CIA officers hoped he might 
return, seeing the camp as a magnet that could draw him for as long as it was 
still set up.The military maintained readiness for another strike opportunity.160 
On March 7, 1999, Clarke called a UAE official to express his concerns about 
possible associations between Emirati officials and Bin Ladin.Clarke later wrote 
in a memorandum of this conversation that the call had been approved at an 
interagency meeting and cleared with the CIA.161When the former Bin Ladin 
unit chief found out about Clarke’s call, he questioned CIA officials, who 
denied having given such a clearance.162 Imagery confirmed that less than a 
week after Clarke’s phone call the camp was hurriedly dismantled, and the site 
was deserted.163 CIA officers, including Deputy Director for Operations 
Pavitt,were irate.“Mike”thought the dismantling of the camp erased a possible 
site for targeting Bin Ladin.164 

The United Arab Emirates was becoming both a valued counterterrorism 
ally of the United States and a persistent counterterrorism problem.From 1999 
through early 2001,the United States,and President Clinton personally,pressed 
the UAE, one of the Taliban’s only travel and financial outlets to the outside 
world, to break off its ties and enforce sanctions, especially those relating to 
flights to and from Afghanistan.165 These efforts achieved little before 9/11. 

In July 1999, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hamdan bin Zayid 
threatened to break relations with the Taliban over Bin Ladin.166 The Taliban 
did not take him seriously, however. Bin Zayid later told an American diplo</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>House</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Defense</Organization>
    <Person>Zayid</Person>
    <Person>Gary Schroen</Person>
    <Person>Schroen</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Clarke’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Emirati</Misc>
    <Organization>UAE</Organization>
    <Misc>Berger’s</Misc>
    <Person>Dennis Hastert</Person>
    <Organization>Gulf.The</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.Clarke</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA.161When</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.164 The United Arab Emirates</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.165 These</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.166</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Zayid</Person>
    <Date>March 7, 1999</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

mat that the UAE valued its relations with the Taliban because the Afghan radicals 
offered a counterbalance to “Iranian dangers” in the region, but he also 
noted that the UAE did not want to upset the United States.167 

Looking for New Partners 

Although not all CIA officers had lost faith in the tribals’ capabilities—many 
judged them to be good reporters—few believed they would carry out an 
ambush of Bin Ladin.The chief of the Counterterrorist Center compared relying 
on the tribals to playing the lottery.168 He and his associates, supported by 
Clarke, pressed for developing a partnership with the Northern Alliance, even 
though doing so might bring the United States squarely behind one side in 
Afghanistan’s long-running civil war. 

The Northern Alliance was dominated by Tajiks and drew its strength 
mainly from the northern and eastern parts of Afghanistan. In contrast,Taliban 
members came principally from Afghanistan’s most numerous ethnic group,the 
Pashtuns, who are concentrated in the southern part of the country, extending 
into the North-West Frontier and Baluchistan provinces of Pakistan.169 

Because of the Taliban’s behavior and its association with Pakistan, the 
Northern Alliance had been able at various times to obtain assistance from 
Russia, Iran, and India.The alliance’s leader was Afghanistan’s most renowned 
military commander,Ahmed Shah Massoud.Reflective and charismatic,he had 
been one of the true heroes of the war against the Soviets. But his bands had 
been charged with more than one massacre, and the Northern Alliance was 
widely thought to finance itself in part through trade in heroin. Nor had Massoud 
shown much aptitude for governing except as a ruthless warlord. Nevertheless,
Tenet told us Massoud seemed the most interesting possible new ally 
against Bin Ladin.170 

In February 1999,Tenet sought President Clinton’s authorization to enlist 
Massoud and his forces as partners. In response to this request, the President 
signed the Memorandum of Notification whose language he personally 
altered.Tenet says he saw no significance in the President’s changes. So far as 
he was concerned, it was the language of August 1998, expressing a preference 
for capture but accepting the possibility that Bin Ladin could not be brought 
out alive.“We were plowing the same ground,”Tenet said.171 

CIA officers described Massoud’s reaction when he heard that the United 
States wanted him to capture and not kill Bin Ladin. One characterized Massoud’s 
body language as “a wince.”Schroen recalled Massoud’s response as “You 
guys are crazy—you haven’t changed a bit.” In Schroen’s opinion, the capture 
proviso inhibited Massoud and his forces from going after Bin Ladin but did 
not completely stop them.172 The idea, however, was a long shot. Bin Ladin’s 
usual base of activity was near Kandahar,far from the front lines of Taliban operations 
against the Northern Alliance.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Misc>Soviets</Misc>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Massoud</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton’s</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Baluchistan</Organization>
    <Organization>UAE</Organization>
    <Organization>United States.167 Looking for New Partners Although</Organization>
    <Person>Tajiks</Person>
    <Misc>Pashtuns</Misc>
    <Organization>North-West Frontier</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistan.169 Because</Misc>
    <Organization>India.The</Organization>
    <Person>Ahmed Shah Massoud.Reflective</Person>
    <Misc>Massoud’s</Misc>
    <Location>Schroen’s</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>157_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Kandahar, May 1999 

It was in Kandahar that perhaps the last, and most likely the best, opportunity 
arose for targeting Bin Ladin with cruise missiles before 9/11. In May 1999, 
CIA assets in Afghanistan reported on Bin Ladin’s location in and around Kandahar 
over the course of five days and nights.The reporting was very detailed 
and came from several sources. If this intelligence was not “actionable,” 
working-level officials said at the time and today,it was hard for them to imagine 
how any intelligence on Bin Ladin in Afghanistan would meet the standard.
Communications were good,and the cruise missiles were ready.“This was 
in our strike zone,” a senior military officer said. “It was a fat pitch, a home 
run.”He expected the missiles to fly.When the decision came back that they 
should stand down, not shoot, the officer said,“we all just slumped.” He told 
us he knew of no one at the Pentagon or the CIA who thought it was a bad 
gamble. Bin Ladin “should have been a dead man” that night, he said.173 

Working-level CIA officials agreed.While there was a conflicting intelligence 
report about Bin Ladin’s whereabouts,the experts discounted it.At the 
time, CIA working-level officials were told by their managers that the strikes 
were not ordered because the military doubted the intelligence and worried 
about collateral damage.Replying to a frustrated colleague in the field,the Bin 
Ladin unit chief wrote:“having a chance to get [Bin Ladin] three times in 36 
hours and foregoing the chance each time has made me a bit angry.... [T]he 
DCI finds himself alone at the table, with the other princip[als] basically saying 
‘we’ll go along with your decision Mr. Director,’ and implicitly saying that 
the Agency will hang alone if the attack doesn’t get Bin Ladin.”174 But the military 
officer quoted earlier recalled that the Pentagon had been willing to act. 
He told us that Clarke informed him and others that Tenet assessed the chance 
of the intelligence being accurate as 50–50.This officer believed that Tenet’s 
assessment was the key to the decision.175 

Tenet told us he does not remember any details about this episode, except 
that the intelligence came from a single uncorroborated source and that there 
was a risk of collateral damage. The story is further complicated by Tenet’s 
absence from the critical principals meeting on this strike (he was apparently 
out of town); his deputy, John Gordon, was representing the CIA. Gordon 
recalled having presented the intelligence in a positive light, with appropriate 
caveats, but stating that this intelligence was about as good as it could get.176 

Berger remembered only that in all such cases, the call had been Tenet’s. 
Berger felt sure that Tenet was eager to get Bin Ladin.In his view,Tenet did 
his job responsibly.“George would call and say,‘We just don’t have it,’” Berger 
said.177 

The decision not to strike in May 1999 may now seem hard to understand. 
In fairness, we note two points: First, in December 1998, the principals’ wariness 
about ordering a strike appears to have been vindicated: Bin Ladin left his 
room unexpectedly, and if a strike had been ordered he would not have been</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>John Gordon</Person>
    <Person>Gordon</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Misc>Tenet’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.In</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.”174</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>158_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

hit. Second, the administration, and the CIA in particular, was in the midst of 
intense scrutiny and criticism in May 1999 because faulty intelligence had just 
led the United States to mistakenly bomb the Chinese embassy in Belgrade 
during the NATO war against Serbia. This episode may have made officials 
more cautious than might otherwise have been the case.178 

From May 1999 until September 2001, policymakers did not again actively 
consider a missile strike against Bin Ladin.179The principals did give some further 
consideration in 1999 to more general strikes,reviving Clarke’s “Delenda” 
notion of hitting camps and infrastructure to disrupt al Qaeda’s organization. 
In the first months of 1999,the Joint Staff had developed broader target lists to 
undertake a “focused campaign” against the infrastructure of Bin Ladin’s network 
and to hit Taliban government sites as well. General Shelton told us that 
the Taliban targets were “easier” to hit and more substantial.180 

Part of the context for considering broader strikes in the summer of 1999 
was renewed worry about Bin Ladin’s ambitions to acquire weapons of mass 
destruction. In May and June, the U.S. government received a flurry of ominous 
reports, including more information about chemical weapons training or 
development at the Derunta camp and possible attempts to amass nuclear material 
at Herat.181 

By late June, U.S. and other intelligence services had concluded that al 
Qaeda was in pre-attack mode, perhaps again involving Abu Hafs the Mauritanian. 
On June 25, at Clarke’s request, Berger convened the Small Group in 
his office to discuss the alert, Bin Ladin’s WMD programs, and his location. 
“Should we pre-empt by attacking UBL facilities?”Clarke urged Berger to ask 
his colleagues.182 

In his handwritten notes on the meeting paper,Berger jotted down the presence 
of 7 to 11 families in the Tarnak Farms facility,which could mean 60–65 
casualties. Berger noted the possible “slight impact” on Bin Ladin and added, 
“if he responds, we’re blamed.”183 The NSC staff raised the option of waiting 
until after a terrorist attack, and then retaliating, including possible strikes on 
the Taliban. But Clarke observed that Bin Ladin would probably empty his 
camps after an attack.184 

The military route seemed to have reached a dead end. In December 1999, 
Clarke urged Berger to ask the principals to ask themselves:“Why have there 
been no real options lately for direct US military action?”185There are no notes 
recording whether the question was discussed or,if it was,how it was answered. 

Reports of possible attacks by Bin Ladin kept coming in throughout 1999. 
They included a threat to blow up the FBI building in Washington, D.C. In 
September, the CSG reviewed a possible threat to a flight out of Los Angeles 
or New York.186These warnings came amid dozens of others that flooded in. 

With military and diplomatic options practically exhausted by the summer 
of 1999, the U.S. government seemed to be back where it had been in 
the summer of 1998—relying on the CIA to find some other option.That</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Hafs</Person>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Location>Serbia</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Organization>NATO</Organization>
    <Location>Clarke’s</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Location>D.C.</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Small Group</Organization>
    <Location>Derunta</Location>
    <Misc>Chinese</Misc>
    <Location>Belgrade</Location>
    <Misc>Mauritanian</Misc>
    <Location>Tarnak Farms</Location>
    <Misc>Clarke’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.179The</Organization>
    <Location>Herat.181</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>159_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

picture also seemed discouraging. Several disruptions and renditions aimed 
against the broader al Qaeda network had succeeded.187 But covert action 
efforts in Afghanistan had not been fruitful. 

In mid-1999, new leaders arrived at the Counterterrorist Center and the 
Bin Ladin unit.The new director of CTC, replacing “Jeff,” was Cofer Black. 
The new head of the section that included the Bin Ladin unit was “Richard.” 
Black, “Richard,” and their colleagues began working on a new operational 
strategy for attacking al Qaeda; their starting point was to get better intelligence, 
relying more on the CIA’s own sources and less on the tribals.188 

In July 1999, President Clinton authorized the CIA to work with several 
governments to capture Bin Ladin, and extended the scope of efforts to Bin 
Ladin’s principal lieutenants.The President reportedly also authorized a covert 
action under carefully limited circumstances which, if successful, would have 
resulted in Bin Ladin’s death.189 Attorney General Reno again expressed concerns 
on policy grounds. She was worried about the danger of retaliation.The 
CIA also developed the short-lived effort to work with a Pakistani team that 
we discussed earlier, and an initiative to work with Uzbekistan.The Uzbeks 
needed basic equipment and training. No action could be expected before 
March 2000, at the earliest.190 

In fall 1999, DCI Tenet unveiled the CIA’s new Bin Ladin strategy. It was 
called, simply,“the Plan.”The Plan proposed continuing disruption and rendition 
operations worldwide.It announced a program for hiring and training better 
officers with counterterrorism skills, recruiting more assets, and trying to 
penetrate al Qaeda’s ranks.The Plan aimed to close gaps in technical intelligence 
collection (signal and imagery) as well. In addition, the CIA would 
increase contacts with the Northern Alliance rebels fighting the Taliban.191 

With a new operational strategy,the CIA evaluated its capture options.None 
scored high marks.The CIA had no confidence in the Pakistani effort. In the 
event that Bin Ladin traveled to the Kandahar region in southern Afghanistan, 
the tribal network there was unlikely to attack a heavily guarded Bin Ladin; the 
Counterterrorist Center rated the chance of success at less than 10 percent.To 
the northwest, the Uzbeks might be ready for a cross-border sortie in six 
months; their chance of success was also rated at less than 10 percent.192 

In the northeast were Massoud’s Northern Alliance forces—perhaps the 
CIA’s best option. In late October, a group of officers from the Counterterrorist 
Center flew into the Panjshir Valley to meet up with Massoud, a hazardous 
journey in rickety helicopters that would be repeated several times in 
the future. Massoud appeared committed to helping the United States collect 
intelligence on Bin Ladin’s activities and whereabouts and agreed to try to capture 
him if the opportunity arose. The Bin Ladin unit was satisfied that its 
reporting on Bin Ladin would now have a second source.But it also knew that 
Massoud would act against Bin Ladin only if his own interests and those of the</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Bin</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin’s</Misc>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Location>Reno</Location>
    <Person>Black</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Misc>Uzbeks</Misc>
    <Organization>Massoud</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda’s</Person>
    <Location>Panjshir Valley</Location>
    <Organization>Plan.”The Plan</Organization>
    <Misc>Taliban.191 With</Misc>
    <Organization>Massoud’s Northern Alliance</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>15_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>xviii PREFACE 

made a limited number of them.We decided consciously to focus on recommendations 
we believe to be most important, whose implementation 
can make the greatest difference. We came into this process with strong 
opinions about what would work. All of us have had to pause, reflect, and 
sometimes change our minds as we studied these problems and considered 
the views of others.We hope our report will encourage our fellow citizens 
to study, reflect—and act. 

Thomas H. Kean 

chair 

Lee H. Hamilton 

vice chair</docText>
    <Person>Lee H. Hamilton</Person>
    <Person>Thomas H. Kean</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>160_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 

United States intersected. By early December, the CIA rated this possibility at 
less than 15 percent.193 

Finally, the CIA considered the possibility of putting U.S. personnel on the 
ground in Afghanistan.The CIA had been discussing this option with Special 
Operations Command and found enthusiasm on the working level but reluctance 
at higher levels. CIA saw a 95 percent chance of Special Operations 
Command forces capturing Bin Ladin if deployed—but less than a 5 percent 
chance of such a deployment. Sending CIA officers into Afghanistan was to be 
considered “if the gain clearly outweighs the risk”—but at this time no such 
gains presented themselves to warrant the risk.194 

As mentioned earlier, such a protracted deployment of U.S. Special Operations 
Forces into Afghanistan,perhaps as part of a team joined to a deployment 
of the CIA’s own officers, would have required a major policy initiative (probably 
combined with efforts to secure the support of at least one or two neighboring 
countries) to make a long-term commitment, establish a durable 
presence on the ground, and be prepared to accept the associated risks and 
costs. Such a military plan was never developed for interagency consideration 
before 9/11.As 1999 came to a close,the CIA had a new strategic plan in place 
for capturing Bin Ladin,but no option was rated as having more than a 15 percent 
chance of achieving that objective.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Special Operations Command</Organization>
    <Organization>U.S. Special Operations Forces</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>161_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText></docText>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>162_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>5 


AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE 
AMERICAN HOMELAND 


5.1 TERRORIST ENTREPRENEURS 
By early 1999, al Qaeda was already a potent adversary of the United States. 
Bin Ladin and his chief of operations, Abu Hafs al Masri, also known as 
Mohammed Atef, occupied undisputed leadership positions atop al Qaeda’s 
organizational structure. Within this structure, al Qaeda’s worldwide terrorist 
operations relied heavily on the ideas and work of enterprising and strongwilled 
field commanders who enjoyed considerable autonomy.To understand 
how the organization actually worked and to introduce the origins of the 9/11 
plot,we briefly examine three of these subordinate commanders:Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed (KSM), Riduan Isamuddin (better known as Hambali), and Abd 
al Rahim al Nashiri. We will devote the most attention to Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed, the chief manager of the “planes operation.” 

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed 

No one exemplifies the model of the terrorist entrepreneur more clearly than 
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the principal architect of the 9/11 attacks. KSM 
followed a rather tortuous path to his eventual membership in al Qaeda.1 
Highly educated and equally comfortable in a government office or a terrorist 
safehouse, KSM applied his imagination, technical aptitude, and managerial 
skills to hatching and planning an extraordinary array of terrorist schemes. 
These ideas included conventional car bombing, political assassination, aircraft 
bombing, hijacking, reservoir poisoning, and, ultimately, the use of aircraft as 
missiles guided by suicide operatives. 

Like his nephew Ramzi Yousef (three years KSM’s junior), KSM grew up 
in Kuwait but traces his ethnic lineage to the Baluchistan region straddling Iran 
and Pakistan.Raised in a religious family,KSM claims to have joined the Muslim 
Brotherhood at age 16 and to have become enamored of violent jihad at 
youth camps in the desert. In 1983, following his graduation from secondary</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Ramzi Yousef</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Person>Mohammed Atef</Person>
    <Person>Abu Hafs</Person>
    <Person>Masri</Person>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Location>Kuwait</Location>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Person>Mohammed</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Rahim al Nashiri</Person>
    <Person>Riduan Isamuddin</Person>
    <Organization>Hambali</Organization>
    <Organization>Muslim Brotherhood</Organization>
    <Misc>Qaeda.1 Highly</Misc>
    <Location>Baluchistan</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>163_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Detainee Interrogation Reports 

Chapters 5 and 7 rely heavily on information obtained from captured al 
Qaeda members.A number of these “detainees” have firsthand knowledge 
of the 9/11 plot. 

Assessing the truth of statements by these witnesses—sworn enemies 
of the United States—is challenging. Our access to them has been 
limited to the review of intelligence reports based on communications 
received from the locations where the actual interrogations take place. 
We submitted questions for use in the interrogations, but had no control 
over whether, when, or how questions of particular interest would 
be asked. Nor were we allowed to talk to the interrogators so that we 
could better judge the credibility of the detainees and clarify ambiguities 
in the reporting.We were told that our requests might disrupt the 
sensitive interrogation process. 

We have nonetheless decided to include information from captured 
9/11 conspirators and al Qaeda members in our report.We have evaluated 
their statements carefully and have attempted to corroborate them 
with documents and statements of others. In this report, we indicate 
where such statements provide the foundation for our narrative.We have 
been authorized to identify by name only ten detainees whose custody 
has been confirmed officially by the U.S. government.2 

school, KSM left Kuwait to enroll at Chowan College, a small Baptist school 
in Murfreesboro,North Carolina.After a semester at Chowan,KSM transferred 
to North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, 
which he attended with Yousef’s brother,another future al Qaeda member. 
KSM earned a degree in mechanical engineering in December 1986.3 

Although he apparently did not attract attention for extreme Islamist beliefs 
or activities while in the United States, KSM plunged into the anti-Soviet 
Afghan jihad soon after graduating from college.Visiting Pakistan for the first 
time in early 1987,he traveled to Peshawar,where his brother Zahid introduced 
him to the famous Afghan mujahid Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, head of the Hizbul-
Ittihad El-Islami (Islamic Union Party).Sayyaf became KSM’s mentor and provided 
KSM with military training at Sayyaf ’s Sada camp.KSM claims he then 
fought the Soviets and remained at the front for three months before being 
summoned to perform administrative duties for Abdullah Azzam. KSM next 
took a job working for an electronics firm that catered to the communications 
needs of Afghan groups, where he learned about drills used to excavate caves 
in Afghanistan.4 

Between 1988 and 1992,KSM helped run a nongovernmental organization</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Kuwait</Location>
    <Misc>Soviets</Misc>
    <Person>Abdullah Azzam</Person>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Location>Greensboro</Location>
    <Person>Sayyaf</Person>
    <Location>North</Location>
    <Location>Peshawar</Location>
    <Organization>Interrogation Reports Chapters</Organization>
    <Misc>United States—is</Misc>
    <Organization>Chowan College</Organization>
    <Misc>Baptist</Misc>
    <Location>Murfreesboro</Location>
    <Organization>Chowan</Organization>
    <Location>North Carolina Agricultural</Location>
    <Organization>Technical State University</Organization>
    <Person>Zahid</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Rasul Sayyaf</Person>
    <Organization>Hizbul- Ittihad El-Islami</Organization>
    <Organization>Islamic Union Party</Organization>
    <Person>Sada</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.4 Between</Misc>
    <Date>1988 and 1992</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>164_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

(NGO) in Peshawar and Jalalabad; sponsored by Sayyaf, it was designed to aid 
young Afghan mujahideen. In 1992, KSM spent some time fighting alongside 
the mujahideen in Bosnia and supporting that effort with financial donations. 
After returning briefly to Pakistan, he moved his family to Qatar at the suggestion 
of the former minister of Islamic affairs of Qatar, Sheikh Abdallah bin 
Khalid bin Hamad al Thani.KSM took a position in Qatar as project engineer 
with the Qatari Ministry of Electricity and Water. Although he engaged in 
extensive international travel during his tenure at the ministry—much of it in 
furtherance of terrorist activity—KSM would hold his position there until early 
1996, when he fled to Pakistan to avoid capture by U.S. authorities.5 

KSM first came to the attention of U.S. law enforcement as a result of his 
cameo role in the first World Trade Center bombing. According to KSM, he 
learned of Ramzi Yousef’s intention to launch an attack inside the United States 
in 1991 or 1992,when Yousef was receiving explosives training in Afghanistan. 
During the fall of 1992,while Yousef was building the bomb he would use in 
that attack, KSM and Yousef had numerous telephone conversations during 
which Yousef discussed his progress and sought additional funding. On 
November 3, 1992, KSM wired $660 from Qatar to the bank account of 
Yousef ’s co-conspirator,Mohammed Salameh.KSM does not appear to have 
contributed any more substantially to this operation.6 

Yousef ’s instant notoriety as the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center 
bombing inspired KSM to become involved in planning attacks against the 
United States. By his own account, KSM’s animus toward the United States 
stemmed not from his experiences there as a student, but rather from his violent 
disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring Israel. In 1994, KSM 
accompanied Yousef to the Philippines, and the two of them began planning 
what is now known as the Manila air or “Bojinka” plot—the intended bombing 
of 12 U.S. commercial jumbo jets over the Pacific during a two-day span. 
This marked the first time KSM took part in the actual planning of a terrorist 
operation.While sharing an apartment in Manila during the summer of 1994, 
he and Yousef acquired chemicals and other materials necessary to construct 
bombs and timers.They also cased target flights to Hong Kong and Seoul that 
would have onward legs to the United States. During this same period, KSM 
and Yousef also developed plans to assassinate President Clinton during his 
November 1994 trip to Manila, and to bomb U.S.-bound cargo carriers by 
smuggling jackets containing nitrocellulose on board.7 

KSM left the Philippines in September 1994 and met up with Yousef in 
Karachi following their casing flights. There they enlisted Wali Khan Amin 
Shah, also known as Usama Asmurai, in the Manila air plot. During the fall of 
1994,Yousef returned to Manila and successfully tested the digital watch timer 
he had invented, bombing a movie theater and a Philippine Airlines flight en 
route to Tokyo.The plot unraveled after the Philippine authorities discovered 
Yousef ’s bomb-making operation in Manila;but by that time,KSM was safely</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Misc>World Trade Center</Misc>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Person>Yousef</Person>
    <Location>Philippines</Location>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Location>Qatar</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Jalalabad</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Date>1991 or 1992</Date>
    <Location>Pacific</Location>
    <Person>Usama Asmurai</Person>
    <Location>Bosnia</Location>
    <Organization>NGO</Organization>
    <Misc>Philippine</Misc>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Khalid</Person>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Location>Hong Kong</Location>
    <Organization>Philippine Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Sayyaf</Person>
    <Person>Abdallah</Person>
    <Location>Peshawar</Location>
    <Person>Hamad al Thani.KSM</Person>
    <Organization>Qatari Ministry of Electricity and Water</Organization>
    <Person>Ramzi Yousef’s</Person>
    <Person>Mohammed Salameh.KSM</Person>
    <Location>Seoul</Location>
    <Misc>U.S.-bound</Misc>
    <Person>Wali Khan Amin Shah</Person>
    <Date>November 3, 1992</Date>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 


Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, mastermind of the 9/11 plot, at the time of his 
capture in 2003 

back at his government job in Qatar.Yousef attempted to follow through on 
the cargo carriers plan, but he was arrested in Islamabad by Pakistani authorities 
on February 7, 1995, after an accomplice turned him in.8 

KSM continued to travel among the worldwide jihadist community after 
Yousef’s arrest,visiting the Sudan,Yemen,Malaysia,and Brazil in 1995.No clear 
evidence connects him to terrorist activities in those locations.While in Sudan, 
he reportedly failed in his attempt to meet with Bin Ladin. But KSM did see 
Atef, who gave him a contact in Brazil. In January 1996, well aware that U.S. 
authorities were chasing him, he left Qatar for good and fled to Afghanistan, 
where he renewed his relationship with Rasul Sayyaf.9 

Just as KSM was reestablishing himself in Afghanistan in mid-1996, Bin 
Ladin and his colleagues were also completing their migration from Sudan. 
Through Atef,KSM arranged a meeting with Bin Ladin in Tora Bora,a mountainous 
redoubt from the Afghan war days.At the meeting,KSM presented the 
al Qaeda leader with a menu of ideas for terrorist operations. According to 
KSM, this meeting was the first time he had seen Bin Ladin since 1989. 
Although they had fought together in 1987, Bin Ladin and KSM did not yet 
enjoy an especially close working relationship.Indeed,KSM has acknowledged</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Qatar</Location>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Location>Brazil</Location>
    <Location>Qatar.Yousef</Location>
    <Person>Rasul Sayyaf.9</Person>
    <Person>Tora Bora</Person>
    <Date>February 7, 1995</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

that Bin Ladin likely agreed to meet with him because of the renown of his 
nephew,Yousef.10 

At the meeting, KSM briefed Bin Ladin and Atef on the first World Trade 
Center bombing, the Manila air plot, the cargo carriers plan, and other activities 
pursued by KSM and his colleagues in the Philippines. KSM also presented 
a proposal for an operation that would involve training pilots who would crash 
planes into buildings in the United States. This proposal eventually would 
become the 9/11 operation.11 

KSM knew that the successful staging of such an attack would require personnel, 
money, and logistical support that only an extensive and well-funded 
organization like al Qaeda could provide. He thought the operation might 
appeal to Bin Ladin,who had a long record of denouncing the United States.12 

From KSM’s perspective, Bin Ladin was in the process of consolidating his 
new position in Afghanistan while hearing out others’ ideas, and had not yet 
settled on an agenda for future anti-U.S.operations.At the meeting,Bin Ladin 
listened to KSM’s ideas without much comment, but did ask KSM formally to 
join al Qaeda and move his family to Afghanistan.13 

KSM declined. He preferred to remain independent and retain the option 
of working with other mujahideen groups still operating in Afghanistan, 
including the group led by his old mentor, Sayyaf. Sayyaf was close to Ahmed 
Shah Massoud, the leader of the Northern Alliance.Therefore working with 
him might be a problem for KSM because Bin Ladin was building ties to the 
rival Taliban. 

After meeting with Bin Ladin, KSM says he journeyed onward to India, 
Indonesia,and Malaysia,where he met with Jemaah Islamiah’s Hambali.Hambali 
was an Indonesian veteran of the Afghan war looking to expand the jihad 
into Southeast Asia. In Iran, KSM rejoined his family and arranged to move 
them to Karachi; he claims to have relocated by January 1997.14 

After settling his family in Karachi, KSM tried to join the mujahid leader Ibn 
al Khattab in Chechnya. Unable to travel through Azerbaijan, KSM returned to 
Karachi and then to Afghanistan to renew contacts with Bin Ladin and his colleagues.
Though KSM may not have been a member of al Qaeda at this time, he 
admits traveling frequently between Pakistan and Afghanistan in 1997 and the first 
half of 1998, visiting Bin Ladin and cultivating relationships with his lieutenants, 
Atef and Sayf al Adl, by assisting them with computer and media projects.15 

According to KSM, the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi 
and Dar es Salaam marked a watershed in the evolution of the 9/11 plot. 
KSM claims these bombings convinced him that Bin Ladin was truly committed 
to attacking the United States. He continued to make himself useful, 
collecting news articles and helping other al Qaeda members with their outdated 
computer equipment. Bin Ladin, apparently at Atef ’s urging, finally 
decided to give KSM the green light for the 9/11 operation sometime in late 
1998 or early 1999.16</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Philippines</Location>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Dar es Salaam</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Location>Azerbaijan</Location>
    <Location>Indonesia</Location>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Misc>KSM’s</Misc>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Sayf al Adl</Person>
    <Organization>Atef</Organization>
    <Misc>Indonesian</Misc>
    <Person>Sayyaf</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed Shah Massoud</Person>
    <Misc>United States.12 From KSM’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance.Therefore</Organization>
    <Person>Jemaah Islamiah’s Hambali.Hambali</Person>
    <Person>Khattab</Person>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

KSM then accepted Bin Ladin’s standing invitation to move to Kandahar 
and work directly with al Qaeda. In addition to supervising the planning and 
preparations for the 9/11 operation, KSM worked with and eventually led al 
Qaeda’s media committee. But KSM states he refused to swear a formal oath 
of allegiance to Bin Ladin, thereby retaining a last vestige of his cherished 
autonomy.17 

At this point,late 1998 to early 1999,planning for the 9/11 operation began 
in earnest.Yet while the 9/11 project occupied the bulk of KSM’s attention, 
he continued to consider other possibilities for terrorist attacks. For example, 
he sent al Qaeda operative Issa al Britani to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to learn 
about the jihad in Southeast Asia from Hambali.Thereafter,KSM claims,at Bin 
Ladin’s direction in early 2001, he sent Britani to the United States to case 
potential economic and “Jewish”targets in New York City.Furthermore,during 
the summer of 2001, KSM approached Bin Ladin with the idea of recruiting 
a Saudi Arabian air force pilot to commandeer a Saudi fighter jet and attack 
the Israeli city of Eilat. Bin Ladin reportedly liked this proposal, but he 
instructed KSM to concentrate on the 9/11 operation first. Similarly, KSM’s 
proposals to Atef around this same time for attacks in Thailand, Singapore, 
Indonesia, and the Maldives were never executed, although Hambali’s Jemaah 
Islamiah operatives did some casing of possible targets.18 

KSM appears to have been popular among the al Qaeda rank and file. He 
was reportedly regarded as an effective leader, especially after the 9/11 attacks. 
Co-workers describe him as an intelligent, efficient, and even-tempered manager 
who approached his projects with a single-minded dedication that he 
expected his colleagues to share. Al Qaeda associate Abu Zubaydah has 
expressed more qualified admiration for KSM’s innate creativity, emphasizing 
instead his ability to incorporate the improvements suggested by others. 
Nashiri has been similarly measured, observing that although KSM floated 
many general ideas for attacks, he rarely conceived a specific operation himself.
19 Perhaps these estimates reflect a touch of jealousy; in any case, KSM 
was plainly a capable coordinator,having had years to hone his skills and build 
relationships. 

Hambali 

Al Qaeda’s success in fostering terrorism in Southeast Asia stems largely from 
its close relationship with Jemaah Islamiah (JI). In that relationship, Hambali 
became the key coordinator. Born and educated in Indonesia, Hambali moved 
to Malaysia in the early 1980s to find work.There he claims to have become 
a follower of the Islamist extremist teachings of various clerics, including one 
named Abdullah Sungkar. Sungkar first inspired Hambali to share the vision of 
establishing a radical Islamist regime in Southeast Asia, then furthered Hambali’s 
instruction in jihad by sending him to Afghanistan in 1986.After undergoing 
training at Rasul Sayyaf ’s Sada camp (where KSM would later train), 
Hambali fought against the Soviets;he eventually returned to Malaysia after 18</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Organization>JI</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Location>Thailand</Location>
    <Location>Indonesia</Location>
    <Location>Singapore</Location>
    <Misc>Soviets</Misc>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Misc>KSM’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi Arabian</Misc>
    <Person>Hambali</Person>
    <Person>Britani</Person>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Misc>Israeli</Misc>
    <Location>Maldives</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda’s</Person>
    <Organization>Hambali’s</Organization>
    <Person>Sungkar</Person>
    <Organization>Issa</Organization>
    <Location>Hambali.Thereafter</Location>
    <Location>Eilat</Location>
    <Organization>Jemaah Islamiah</Organization>
    <Person>Hambali Al</Person>
    <Person>Abdullah Sungkar</Person>
    <Person>Rasul Sayyaf</Person>
    <Person>Sada camp</Person>
  </document>
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    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

months in Afghanistan. By 1998, Hambali would assume responsibility for the 
Malaysia/Singapore region within Sungkar’s newly formed terrorist organization, 
the JI.20 

Also by 1998,Sungkar and JI spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir had accepted 
Bin Ladin’s offer to ally JI with al Qaeda in waging war against Christians and 
Jews.21 Hambali met with KSM in Karachi to arrange for JI members to receive 
training in Afghanistan at al Qaeda’s camps. In addition to his close working 
relationship with KSM, Hambali soon began dealing with Atef as well. Al 
Qaeda began funding JI’s increasingly ambitious terrorist plans,which Atef and 
KSM sought to expand. Under this arrangement, JI would perform the necessary 
casing activities and locate bomb-making materials and other supplies. 
Al Qaeda would underwrite operations, provide bomb-making expertise, and 
deliver suicide operatives.22 

The al Qaeda–JI partnership yielded a number of proposals that would marry 
al Qaeda’s financial and technical strengths with JI’s access to materials and local 
operatives. Here, Hambali played the critical role of coordinator, as he distributed 
al Qaeda funds earmarked for the joint operations.In one especially notable 
example,Atef turned to Hambali when al Qaeda needed a scientist to take over 
its biological weapons program. Hambali obliged by introducing a U.S.educated 
JI member,Yazid Sufaat, to Ayman al Zawahiri in Kandahar. In 2001, 
Sufaat would spend several months attempting to cultivate anthrax for al Qaeda 
in a laboratory he helped set up near the Kandahar airport.23 

Hambali did not originally orient JI’s operations toward attacking the 
United States, but his involvement with al Qaeda appears to have inspired him 
to pursue American targets. KSM, in his post-capture interrogations, has taken 
credit for this shift, claiming to have urged the JI operations chief to concentrate 
on attacks designed to hurt the U.S. economy.24 Hambali’s newfound 
interest in striking against the United States manifested itself in a spate of terrorist 
plans. Fortunately, none came to fruition. 

In addition to staging actual terrorist attacks in partnership with 
al Qaeda, Hambali and JI assisted al Qaeda operatives passing through Kuala 
Lumpur.One important occasion was in December 1999–January 2000.Hambali 
accommodated KSM’s requests to help several veterans whom KSM had 
just finished training in Karachi.They included Tawfiq bin Attash, also known 
as Khallad, who later would help bomb the USS Cole, and future 9/11 hijackers 
Nawaf al Hazmi and Khalid al Mihdhar.Hambali arranged lodging for them 
and helped them purchase airline tickets for their onward travel.Later that year, 
Hambali and his crew would provide accommodations and other assistance 
(including information on flight schools and help in acquiring ammonium 
nitrate) for Zacarias Moussaoui,an al Qaeda operative sent to Malaysia byAtef 
and KSM.25 

Hambali used Bin Ladin’s Afghan facilities as a training ground for JI 
recruits.Though he had a close relationship with Atef and KSM,he maintained 
JI’s institutional independence from al Qaeda. Hambali insists that he did not</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>JI</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>USS Cole</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Misc>Ayman</Misc>
    <Person>Hambali</Person>
    <Misc>Tawfiq</Misc>
    <Misc>Attash</Misc>
    <Person>Sufaat</Person>
    <Person>Yazid Sufaat</Person>
    <Organization>Khalid</Organization>
    <Misc>AMERICAN</Misc>
    <Misc>Malaysia/Singapore</Misc>
    <Misc>JI.20 Also</Misc>
    <Person>Sungkar</Person>
    <Person>Abu Bakar Bashir</Person>
    <Misc>Christians</Misc>
    <Person>Jews.21 Hambali</Person>
    <Misc>JI’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda–JI</Misc>
    <Misc>Zawahiri</Misc>
    <Misc>Kuala Lumpur.One</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar.Hambali</Person>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

discuss operations with Bin Ladin or swear allegiance to him, having already 
given such a pledge of loyalty to Bashir, Sungkar’s successor as JI leader.Thus, 
like any powerful bureaucrat defending his domain,Hambali objected when al 
Qaeda leadership tried to assign JI members to terrorist projects without notifying 
him.26 

Abd al Rahim al Nashiri 

KSM and Hambali both decided to join forces with al Qaeda because their 
terrorist aspirations required the money and manpower that only a robust 
organization like al Qaeda could supply.On the other hand,Abd al Rahim al 
Nashiri—the mastermind of the Cole bombing and the eventual head of al 
Qaeda operations in the Arabian Peninsula—appears to have originally been 
recruited to his career as a terrorist by Bin Ladin himself. 

Having already participated in the Afghan jihad, Nashiri accompanied a 
group of some 30 mujahideen in pursuit of jihad in Tajikistan in 1996.When 
serious fighting failed to materialize, the group traveled to Jalalabad and 
encountered Bin Ladin, who had recently returned from Sudan. Bin Ladin 
addressed them at length, urging the group to join him in a “jihad against the 
Americans.” Although all were urged to swear loyalty to Bin Ladin, many, 
including Nashiri, found the notion distasteful and refused.After several days 
of indoctrination that included a barrage of news clippings and television documentaries, 
Nashiri left Afghanistan, first returning to his native Saudi Arabia 
and then visiting his home in Yemen.There,he says,the idea for his first terrorist 
operation took shape as he noticed many U.S. and other foreign ships 
plying the waters along the southwest coast of Yemen.27 

Nashiri returned to Afghanistan,probably in 1997,primarily to check on relatives 
fighting there and also to learn about the Taliban. He again encountered 
Bin Ladin,still recruiting for “the coming battle with the United States.”Nashiri 
pursued a more conventional military jihad, joining the Taliban forces in their 
fight against Ahmed Massoud’s Northern Alliance and shuttling back and forth 
between the front and Kandahar,where he would see Bin Ladin and meet with 
other mujahideen. During this period, Nashiri also led a plot to smuggle four 
Russian-made antitank missiles into Saudi Arabia from Yemen in early 1998 and 
helped an embassy bombing operative obtain a Yemeni passport.28 

At some point, Nashiri joined al Qaeda. His cousin, Jihad Mohammad Ali 
al Makki, also known as Azzam, was a suicide bomber for the Nairobi attack. 
Nashiri traveled between Yemen and Afghanistan. In late 1998, Nashiri proposed 
mounting an attack against a U.S.vessel.Bin Ladin approved.He directed 
Nashiri to start the planning and send operatives to Yemen, and he later provided 
money.29 

Nashiri reported directly to Bin Ladin, the only other person who, according 
to Nashiri,knew all the details of the operation.When Nashiri had difficulty 
finding U.S.naval vessels to attack along the western coast of Yemen,Bin</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Organization>JI</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Jalalabad</Location>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Location>Tajikistan</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Person>Azzam</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Person>Hambali</Person>
    <Person>Rahim al Nashiri</Person>
    <Person>Nashiri</Person>
    <Person>Bashir</Person>
    <Person>Rahim al Nashiri—the</Person>
    <Location>Arabian Peninsula—appears</Location>
    <Misc>Americans.” Although</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen.There</Location>
    <Organization>Yemen.27 Nashiri</Organization>
    <Misc>United States.”Nashiri</Misc>
    <Person>Ahmed Massoud’s Northern Alliance</Person>
    <Misc>Russian-made</Misc>
    <Person>Mohammad Ali al Makki</Person>
    <Person>U.S.vessel.Bin Ladin</Person>
  </document>
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    <docID>16_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 
COMMISSION 
REPORT</docText>
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    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

Ladin reportedly instructed him to case the Port of Aden, on the southern 
coast, instead.30 The eventual result was an attempted attack on the USS The 
Sullivans in January 2000 and the successful attack, in October 2000, on the 
USS Cole. 

Nashiri’s success brought him instant status within al Qaeda. He later was 
recognized as the chief of al Qaeda operations in and around the Arabian 
Peninsula.While Nashiri continued to consult Bin Ladin on the planning of 
subsequent terrorist projects, he retained discretion in selecting operatives and 
devising attacks.In the two years between the Cole bombing and Nashiri’s capture, 
he would supervise several more proposed operations for al Qaeda.The 
October 6, 2002, bombing of the French tanker Limburg in the Gulf of Aden 
also was Nashiri’s handiwork.Although Bin Ladin urged Nashiri to continue 
plotting strikes against U.S.interests in the Persian Gulf,Nashiri maintains that 
he actually delayed one of these projects because of security concerns.31Those 
concerns, it seems, were well placed, as Nashiri’s November 2002 capture in 
the United Arab Emirates finally ended his career as a terrorist. 

5.2 THE “PLANES OPERATION” 
According to KSM, he started to think about attacking the United States after 
Yousef returned to Pakistan following the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. 
Like Yousef,KSM reasoned he could best influence U.S.policy by targeting the 
country’s economy.KSM and Yousef reportedly brainstormed together about 
what drove the U.S. economy. New York, which KSM considered the economic 
capital of the United States, therefore became the primary target. For 
similar reasons, California also became a target for KSM.32 

KSM claims that the earlier bombing of the World Trade Center taught him 
that bombs and explosives could be problematic, and that he needed to graduate 
to a more novel form of attack. He maintains that he and Yousef began 
thinking about using aircraft as weapons while working on the Manila 
air/Bojinka plot, and speculated about striking the World Trade Center and 
CIA headquarters as early as 1995.33 

Certainly KSM was not alone in contemplating new kinds of terrorist operations.
A study reportedly conducted byAtef,while he and Bin Ladin were still 
in Sudan, concluded that traditional terrorist hijacking operations did not fit 
the needs of al Qaeda, because such hijackings were used to negotiate the 
release of prisoners rather than to inflict mass casualties.The study is said to 
have considered the feasibility of hijacking planes and blowing them up in 
flight, paralleling the Bojinka concept. Such a study, if it actually existed, yields 
significant insight into the thinking of al Qaeda’s leaders: (1) they rejected 
hijackings aimed at gaining the release of imprisoned comrades as too complex, 
because al Qaeda had no friendly countries in which to land a plane and</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Person>Yousef</Person>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Gulf</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Aden</Location>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Location>Persian Gulf</Location>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Misc>Nashiri’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Location>Limburg</Location>
    <Location>Bojinka</Location>
    <Misc>Arabian</Misc>
    <Misc>French</Misc>
    <Misc>USS</Misc>
    <Organization>Port of Aden</Organization>
    <Misc>USS The</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.interests</Misc>
    <Date>October 6, 2002</Date>
  </document>
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then negotiate; (2) they considered the bombing of commercial flights in 
midair—as carried out against Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland— 
a promising means to inflict massive casualties; and (3) they did not yet consider 
using hijacked aircraft as weapons against other targets.34 

KSM has insisted to his interrogators that he always contemplated hijacking 
and crashing large commercial aircraft. Indeed, KSM describes a grandiose 
original plan: a total of ten aircraft to be hijacked, nine of which would crash 
into targets on both coasts—they included those eventually hit on September 
11 plus CIA and FBI headquarters, nuclear power plants, and the tallest buildings 
in California and the state of Washington. KSM himself was to land the 
tenth plane at a U.S.airport and,after killing all adult male passengers on board 
and alerting the media, deliver a speech excoriating U.S. support for Israel, the 
Philippines, and repressive governments in the Arab world. Beyond KSM’s 
rationalizations about targeting the U.S. economy, this vision gives a better 
glimpse of his true ambitions.This is theater, a spectacle of destruction with 
KSM as the self-cast star—the superterrorist.35 

KSM concedes that this proposal received a lukewarm response from al 
Qaeda leaders skeptical of its scale and complexity.Although Bin Ladin listened 
to KSM’s proposal, he was not convinced that it was practical. As mentioned 
earlier, Bin Ladin was receiving numerous ideas for potential operations— 
KSM’s proposal to attack U.S. targets with commercial airplanes was only one 
of many.36 

KSM presents himself as an entrepreneur seeking venture capital and people. 
He simply wanted al Qaeda to supply the money and operatives needed 
for the attack while retaining his independence. It is easy to question such a 
statement. Money is one thing; supplying a cadre of trained operatives willing 
to die is much more.Thus,although KSM contends he would have been just 
as likely to consider working with any comparable terrorist organization, he 
gives no indication of what other groups he thought could supply such exceptional 
commodities.37 

KSM acknowledges formally joining al Qaeda, in late 1998 or 1999, and 
states that soon afterward,Bin Ladin also made the decision to support his proposal 
to attack the United States using commercial airplanes as weapons. 
Though KSM speculates about how Bin Ladin came to share his preoccupation 
with attacking America, Bin Ladin in fact had long been an opponent of 
the United States. KSM thinks that Atef may have persuaded Bin Ladin to 
approve this specific proposal.Atef ’s role in the entire operation is unquestionably 
very significant but tends to fade into the background,in part because Atef 
himself is not available to describe it. He was killed in November 2001 by an 
American air strike in Afghanistan.38 

Bin Ladin summoned KSM to Kandahar in March or April 1999 to tell him 
that al Qaeda would support his proposal.The plot was now referred to within 
al Qaeda as the “planes operation.”39</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Lockerbie</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Philippines</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Organization>Pan Am Flight</Organization>
    <Location>Scotland—</Location>
    <Location>U.S.airport</Location>
    <Date>1998 or 1999</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>172_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

The Plan Evolves 

Bin Ladin reportedly discussed the planes operation with KSM and Atef in a 
series of meetings in the spring of 1999 at the al Matar complex near Kanda-
har.KSM’s original concept of using one of the hijacked planes to make a media 
statement was scrapped, but Bin Ladin considered the basic idea feasible. Bin 
Ladin, Atef, and KSM developed an initial list of targets. These included the 
White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, and the World Trade Center. 
According to KSM,Bin Ladin wanted to destroy the White House and the Pentagon, 
KSM wanted to strike the World Trade Center, and all of them wanted 
to hit the Capitol. No one else was involved in the initial selection of targets.40 

Bin Ladin also soon selected four individuals to serve as suicide operatives: 
Khalid al Mihdhar,Nawaf al Hazmi,Khallad,and Abu Bara al Yemeni.During 
the al Matar meetings, Bin Ladin told KSM that Mihdhar and Hazmi were so 
eager to participate in an operation against the United States that they had 
already obtained U.S.visas.KSM states that they had done so on their own after 
the suicide of their friend Azzam (Nashiri’s cousin) in carrying out the Nairobi 
bombing.KSM had not met them.His only guidance from Bin Ladin was that 
the two should eventually go to the United States for pilot training.41 

Hazmi and Mihdhar were Saudi nationals, born in Mecca. Like the others 
in this initial group of selectees, they were already experienced mujahideen. 
They had traveled together to fight in Bosnia in a group that journeyed to the 
Balkans in 1995. By the time Hazmi and Mihdhar were assigned to the planes 
operation in early 1999, they had visited Afghanistan on several occasions.42 

Khallad was another veteran mujahid,like much of his family.His father had 
been expelled from Yemen because of his extremist views.Khallad had grown 
up in Saudi Arabia, where his father knew Bin Ladin, Abdullah Azzam, and 
Omar Abdel Rahman (the “Blind Sheikh”). Khallad departed for Afghanistan 
in 1994 at the age of 15.Three years later, he lost his lower right leg in a battle 
with the Northern Alliance,a battle in which one of his brothers died.After 
this experience, he pledged allegiance to Bin Ladin—whom he had first met 
as a child in Jeddah—and volunteered to become a suicide operative.43 

When Khallad applied for a U.S. visa, however, his application was denied. 
Earlier in 1999, Bin Ladin had sent Khallad to Yemen to help Nashiri obtain 
explosives for the planned ship-bombing and to obtain a visa to visit the United 
States,so that he could participate in an operation there.Khallad applied under 
another name, using the cover story that he would be visiting a medical clinic 
to obtain a new prosthesis for his leg.Another al Qaeda operative gave Khallad 
the name of a person living in the United States whom Khallad could use 
as a point of contact on a visa application. Khallad contacted this individual to 
help him get an appointment at a U.S. clinic.While Khallad was waiting for 
the letter from the clinic confirming the appointment, however, he was 
arrested byYemeni authorities.The arrest resulted from mistaken identity:Khallad 
was driving the car of another conspirator in the ship-bombing plot who 
was wanted by the Yemeni authorities.44</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Balkans</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Bosnia</Location>
    <Person>Azzam</Person>
    <Person>Omar Abdel Rahman</Person>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Person>Abdullah Azzam</Person>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Capitol</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Location>U.S. Capitol</Location>
    <Location>Mecca</Location>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Organization>Khalid</Organization>
    <Misc>AMERICAN HOMELAND</Misc>
    <Misc>Plan Evolves</Misc>
    <Misc>Matar</Misc>
    <Misc>Kanda-</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.visas.KSM</Misc>
    <Location>Sheikh”</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin—whom</Person>
    <Location>Jeddah—and</Location>
  </document>
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    <docID>173_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Khallad was released sometime during the summer of 1999, after his father 
and Bin Ladin intervened on his behalf.Khallad learned later that the al Qaeda 
leader, apparently concerned that Khallad might reveal Nashiri’s operation 
while under interrogation, had contacted a Yemeni official to demand Khallad’s 
release,suggesting that Bin Ladin would not confront the Yemenis if they 
did not confront him.This account has been corroborated by others. Giving 
up on acquiring a U.S. visa and concerned that the United States might learn 
of his ties to al Qaeda, Khallad returned to Afghanistan.45 

Travel issues thus played a part in al Qaeda’s operational planning from the 
very start. During the spring and summer of 1999, KSM realized that Khallad 
and Abu Bara,both of whom wereYemenis,would not be able to obtain U.S. 
visas as easily as Saudi operatives like Mihdhar and Hazmi.Although Khallad 
had been unable to acquire a U.S. visa, KSM still wanted him and Abu Bara, as 
well as another Yemeni operative from Bin Ladin’s security detail, to participate 
in the planes operation.Yet because individuals with Saudi passports could 
travel much more easily than Yemeni, particularly to the United States, there 
were fewer martyrdom opportunities for Yemenis.To overcome this problem, 
KSM decided to split the planes operation into two components.46 

The first part of the planes operation—crashing hijacked aircraft into U.S. 
targets—would remain as planned,with Mihdhar and Hazmi playing key roles. 
The second part,however,would now embrace the idea of using suicide operatives 
to blow up planes, a refinement of KSM’s old Manila air plot.The operatives 
would hijack U.S.-flagged commercial planes flying Pacific routes across 
East Asia and destroy them in midair, possibly with shoe bombs, instead of flying 
them into targets. (An alternate scenario apparently involved flying planes 
into U.S. targets in Japan, Singapore, or Korea.) This part of the operation has 
been confirmed by Khallad, who said that they contemplated hijacking several 
planes, probably originating in Thailand, South Korea, Hong Kong, or 
Malaysia,and using Yemenis who would not need pilot training because they 
would simply down the planes.All the planes hijacked in the United States and 
East Asia were to be crashed or exploded at about the same time to maximize 
the attack’s psychological impact.47 

Training and Deployment to Kuala Lumpur 

In the fall of 1999,the four operatives selected by Bin Ladin for the planes operation 
were chosen to attend an elite training course at al Qaeda’s Mes Aynak 
camp in Afghanistan. Bin Ladin personally selected the veteran fighters who 
received this training, and several of them were destined for important operations. 
One example is Ibrahim al Thawar, or Nibras, who would participate in 
the October 12, 2000, suicide attack on the USS Cole.According to KSM, this 
training was not given specifically in preparation for the planes operation or 
any other particular al Qaeda venture. Although KSM claims not to have been 
involved with the training or to have met with the future 9/11 hijackers at Mes</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Pacific</Location>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Location>Thailand</Location>
    <Location>Singapore</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Location>East Asia</Location>
    <Location>South Korea</Location>
    <Location>Hong Kong</Location>
    <Misc>Yemenis</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Location>Korea</Location>
    <Location>KSM’s</Location>
    <Misc>Ibrahim</Misc>
    <Person>Thawar</Person>
    <Organization>Afghanistan.45 Travel</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi.Although Khallad</Person>
    <Misc>Yemenis.To</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.-flagged</Misc>
    <Location>Japan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s Mes</Misc>
    <Misc>Mes</Misc>
    <Date>October 12, 2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docID>174_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

Aynak, he says he did visit the camp while traveling from Kandahar to Kabul 
with Bin Ladin and others.48 

The Mes Aynak training camp was located in an abandoned Russian copper 
mine near Kabul.The camp opened in 1999, after the United States had 
destroyed the training camp near Khowst with cruise missiles in August 1998, 
and before the Taliban granted al Qaeda permission to open the al Faruq camp 
in Kandahar.Thus,for a brief period in 1999,Mes Aynak was the only al Qaeda 
camp operating in Afghanistan. It offered a full range of instruction, including 
an advanced commando course taught by senior al Qaeda member Sayf al Adl. 
Bin Ladin paid particular attention to the 1999 training session.When Salah al 
Din, the trainer for the session, complained about the number of trainees and 
said that no more than 20 could be handled at once, Bin Ladin insisted that 
everyone he had selected receive the training.49 

The special training session at Mes Aynak was rigorous and spared no 
expense.The course focused on physical fitness, firearms, close quarters combat, 
shooting from a motorcycle, and night operations.Although the subjects 
taught differed little from those offered at other camps, the course placed 
extraordinary physical and mental demands on its participants, who received 
the best food and other amenities to enhance their strength and morale.50 

Upon completing the advanced training at Mes Aynak,Hazmi,Khallad,and 
Abu Bara went to Karachi, Pakistan.There KSM instructed them on Western 
culture and travel. Much of his activity in mid-1999 had revolved around the 
collection of training and informational materials for the participants in the 
planes operation. For instance, he collected Western aviation magazines; telephone 
directories for American cities such as San Diego and Long Beach,California; 
brochures for schools; and airline timetables, and he conducted 
Internet searches on U.S.flight schools.He also purchased flight simulator software 
and a few movies depicting hijackings.To house his students,KSM rented 
a safehouse in Karachi with money provided by Bin Ladin.51 

In early December 1999, Khallad and Abu Bara arrived in Karachi. Hazmi 
joined them there a few days later. On his way to Karachi, Hazmi spent a night 
in Quetta at a safehouse where, according to KSM, an Egyptian named 
Mohamed Atta simultaneously stayed on his way to Afghanistan for jihad 
training.52 

Mihdhar did not attend the training in Karachi with the others. KSM says 
that he never met with Mihdhar in 1999 but assumed that Bin Ladin and Atef 
had briefed Mihdhar on the planes operation and had excused him from the 
Karachi training.53 

The course in Karachi apparently lasted about one or two weeks.According 
to KSM, he taught the three operatives basic English words and phrases. He 
showed them how to read phone books,interpret airline timetables,use the Internet, 
use code words in communications, make travel reservations, and rent an 
apartment. Khallad adds that the training involved using flight simulator com</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Egyptian</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Kabul</Location>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Misc>Western</Misc>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Misc>Russian</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Misc>Faruq</Misc>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Sayf al Adl</Person>
    <Person>KSM</Person>
    <Location>Long Beach</Location>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Location>Quetta</Location>
    <Location>Khowst</Location>
    <Misc>Internet</Misc>
    <Misc>AMERICAN</Misc>
    <Person>Aynak</Person>
    <Location>Mes Aynak</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar.Thus</Location>
    <Location>Salah al Din</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.51</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

puter games, viewing movies that featured hijackings, and reading flight schedules 
to determine which flights would be in the air at the same time in different 
parts of the world.They used the game software to increase their familiarity with 
aircraft models and functions, and to highlight gaps in cabin security.While in 
Karachi,they also discussed how to case flights in Southeast Asia.KSM told them 
to watch the cabin doors at takeoff and landing, to observe whether the captain 
went to the lavatory during the flight, and to note whether the flight attendants 
brought food into the cockpit.KSM,Khallad,and Hazmi also visited travel agencies 
to learn the visa requirements for Asian countries.54 

The four trainees traveled to Kuala Lumpur:Khallad,Abu Bara,and Hazmi 
came from Karachi;Mihdhar traveled from Yemen.As discussed in chapter 6, 

U.S. intelligence would analyze communications associated with Mihdhar, 
whom they identified during this travel, and Hazmi, whom they could have 
identified but did not.55 
According to KSM, the four operatives were aware that they had volunteered 
for a suicide operation, either in the United States or in Asia.With different 
roles, they had different tasks. Hazmi and Mihdhar were sent to Kuala 
Lumpur before proceeding to their final destination—the United States. 
According to KSM,they were to use Yemeni documents to fly to Malaysia,then 
proceed to the United States using their Saudi passports to conceal their prior 
travels to and from Pakistan. KSM had doctored Hazmi’s Saudi passport so it 
would appear as if Hazmi had traveled to Kuala Lumpur from Saudi Arabia via 
Dubai. Khallad and Abu Bara went to Kuala Lumpur to study airport security 
and conduct casing flights.According to Khallad,he and Abu Bara departed for 
Malaysia in mid-December 1999.Hazmi joined them about ten days later after 
briefly returning to Afghanistan to attend to some passport issues.56 

Khallad had originally scheduled his trip in order to receive a new prosthesis 
at a Kuala Lumpur clinic called Endolite, and Bin Ladin suggested that he 
use the opportunity to case flights as well.According to Khallad,Malaysia was 
an ideal destination because its government did not require citizens of Saudi 
Arabia or other Gulf states to have a visa. Malaysian security was reputed to be 
lax when it came to Islamist jihadists.Also,other mujahideen wounded in combat 
had reportedly received treatment at the Endolite clinic and successfully 
concealed the origins of their injuries. Khallad said he got the money for the 
prosthesis from his father, Bin Ladin, and another al Qaeda colleague.57 

According to Khallad,when he and Abu Bara arrived in Kuala Lumpur they 
contacted Hambali to let him know where they were staying, since he was to 
be kept informed of al Qaeda activities in Southeast Asia. Hambali picked up 
Khallad and Abu Bara and brought them to his home, enlisting the help of a 
colleague who spoke better Arabic. Hambali then took them to the clinic.58 

On December 31, Khallad flew from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok; the next 
day, he flew to Hong Kong aboard a U.S. airliner. He flew in first class, which 
he realized was a mistake because this seating assignment on that flight did not 
afford him a view of the cockpit.He claims to have done what he could to case</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>Malaysian</Misc>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Location>Dubai</Location>
    <Person>Hambali</Person>
    <Location>Hong Kong</Location>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Misc>Southeast Asia.KSM</Misc>
    <Misc>Asian</Misc>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur:Khallad</Location>
    <Misc>Yemen.As</Misc>
    <Organization>Endolite</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>176_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

the flight, testing security by carrying a box cutter in his toiletries kit onto the 
flight to Hong Kong. Khallad returned to Bangkok the following day. At the 
airport,the security officials searched his carry-on bag and even opened the toiletries 
kit,but just glanced at the contents and let him pass.On this flight,Khallad 
waited until most of the first-class passengers were dozing, then got up and 
removed the kit from his carry-on.None of the flight attendants took notice.59 

After completing his casing mission, Khallad returned to Kuala Lumpur. 
Hazmi arrived in Kuala Lumpur soon thereafter and may even have stayed 
briefly with Khallad and Abu Bara at Endolite. Mihdhar arrived on January 5, 
probably one day after Hazmi. All four operatives stayed at the apartment of 
Yazid Sufaat, the Malaysian JI member who made his home available at Hambali’s 
request.According to Khallad,he and Hazmi spoke about the possibility 
of hijacking planes and crashing them or holding passengers as hostages, but 
only speculatively. Khallad admits being aware at the time that Hazmi and 
Mihdhar were involved in an operation involving planes in the United States 
but denies knowing details of the plan.60 

While in Kuala Lumpur,Khallad wanted to go to Singapore to meet Nibras 
and Fahd al Quso, two of the operatives in Nashiri’s ship-bombing operation. 
An attempt to execute that plan by attacking the USS The Sullivans had failed 
just a few days earlier. Nibras and Quso were bringing Khallad money from 
Yemen,but were stopped in Bangkok because they lacked visas to continue on 
to Singapore. Also unable to enter Singapore, Khallad moved the meeting to 
Bangkok. Hazmi and Mihdhar decided to go there as well, reportedly because 
they thought it would enhance their cover as tourists to have passport stamps 
from a popular tourist destination such as Thailand.With Hambali’s help,the 
three obtained tickets for a flight to Bangkok and left Kuala Lumpur together. 
Abu Bara did not have a visa permitting him to return to Pakistan, so he traveled 
to Yemen instead.61 

In Bangkok, Khallad took Hazmi and Mihdhar to one hotel, then went to 
another hotel for his meeting on the maritime attack plan. Hazmi and Mihdhar 
soon moved to that same hotel,but Khallad insists that the two sets of operatives 
never met with each other or anyone else. After conferring with the 
ship-bombing operatives, Khallad returned to Karachi and then to Kandahar, 
where he reported on his casing mission to Bin Ladin.62 

Bin Ladin canceled the East Asia part of the planes operation in the spring 
of 2000.He evidently decided it would be too difficult to coordinate this attack 
with the operation in the United States.As for Hazmi and Mihdhar,they had 
left Bangkok a few days before Khallad and arrived in Los Angeles on January 
15, 2000.63 

Meanwhile, the next group of al Qaeda operatives destined for the planes 
operation had just surfaced in Afghanistan. As Hazmi and Mihdhar were 
deploying from Asia to the United States, al Qaeda’s leadership was recruiting 
and training four Western-educated men who had recently arrived in Kandahar.
Though they hailed from four different countries—Egypt,the United Arab</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Organization>JI</Organization>
    <Organization>al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Singapore</Location>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>Malaysian</Misc>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Location>East Asia</Location>
    <Person>al Quso</Person>
    <Person>Nibras</Person>
    <Person>Quso</Person>
    <Location>Hong Kong</Location>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Misc>Nashiri’s</Misc>
    <Person>Yazid Sufaat</Person>
    <Location>Asia</Location>
    <Location>Endolite</Location>
    <Organization>Hambali’s</Organization>
    <Misc>USS The Sullivans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.62 Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>United States.As</Location>
    <Misc>Western-educated</Misc>
    <Location>United Arab</Location>
    <Date>January 
15, 2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Emirates, Lebanon, and Yemen—they had formed a close-knit group as students 
in Hamburg, Germany.The new recruits had come to Afghanistan aspiring 
to wage jihad in Chechnya. But al Qaeda quickly recognized their 
potential and enlisted them in its anti-U.S. jihad. 

5.3 THE HAMBURG CONTINGENT 
Although Bin Ladin,Atef, and KSM initially contemplated using established al 
Qaeda members to execute the planes operation, the late 1999 arrival in Kandahar 
of four aspiring jihadists from Germany suddenly presented a more 
attractive alternative.The Hamburg group shared the anti-U.S. fervor of the 
other candidates for the operation, but added the enormous advantages of fluency 
in English and familiarity with life in the West, based on years that each 
member of the group had spent living in Germany. Not surprisingly, 
Mohamed Atta, Ramzi Binalshibh, Marwan al Shehhi, and Ziad Jarrah would 
all become key players in the 9/11 conspiracy. 

Mohamed Atta 

Mohamed Atta was born on September 1, 1968, in Kafr el Sheikh, Egypt, to a 
middle-class family headed by his father, an attorney. After graduating from 
Cairo University with a degree in architectural engineering in 1990, Atta 
worked as an urban planner in Cairo for a couple of years. In the fall of 1991, 
he asked a German family he had met in Cairo to help him continue his education 
in Germany.They suggested he come to Hamburg and invited him to 
live with them there,at least initially.After completing a course in German,Atta 
traveled to Germany for the first time in July 1992. He resided briefly in 
Stuttgart and then, in the fall of 1992, moved to Hamburg to live with his host 
family. After enrolling at the University of Hamburg, he promptly transferred 
into the city engineering and planning course at the Technical University of 
Hamburg-Harburg,where he would remain registered as a student until the fall 
of 1999.He appears to have applied himself fairly seriously to his studies (at least 
in comparison to his jihadist friends) and actually received his degree shortly 
before traveling to Afghanistan. In school, Atta came across as very intelligent 
and reasonably pleasant,with an excellent command of the German language.64 

When Atta arrived in Germany, he appeared religious, but not fanatically 
so.This would change, especially as his tendency to assert leadership became 
increasingly pronounced.According to Binalshibh,as early as 1995 Atta sought 
to organize a Muslim student association in Hamburg. In the fall of 1997, he 
joined a working group at the Quds mosque in Hamburg, a group designed 
to bridge the gap between Muslims and Christians.Atta proved a poor bridge, 
however, because of his abrasive and increasingly dogmatic personality. But</docText>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Egypt</Location>
    <Misc>Muslims</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Lebanon</Location>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Ziad Jarrah</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Organization>Atef</Organization>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Location>Cairo</Location>
    <Organization>University</Organization>
    <Misc>Marwan</Misc>
    <Misc>Shehhi</Misc>
    <Organization>Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg</Organization>
    <Misc>HAMBURG CONTINGENT</Misc>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Location>Kafr el Sheikh</Location>
    <Organization>Cairo University</Organization>
    <Location>Stuttgart</Location>
    <Location>Christians.Atta</Location>
    <Date>September 1, 1968</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>178_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

among those who shared his beliefs, Atta stood out as a decisionmaker.Atta’s 
friends during this period remember him as charismatic, intelligent, and persuasive, 
albeit intolerant of dissent.65 

In his interactions with other students,Atta voiced virulently anti-Semitic 
and anti-American opinions, ranging from condemnations of what he 
described as a global Jewish movement centered in New York City that supposedly 
controlled the financial world and the media, to polemics against governments 
of the Arab world.To him, Saddam Hussein was an American stooge 
set up to giveWashington an excuse to intervene in the Middle East.Within 
his circle,Atta advocated violent jihad.He reportedly asked one individual close 
to the group if he was “ready to fight for [his] belief ”and dismissed him as too 
weak for jihad when the person declined. On a visit home to Egypt in 1998, 
Atta met one of his college friends. According to this friend, Atta 
had changed a great deal, had grown a beard, and had “obviously adopted fundamentalism” 
by that time.66 

Ramzi Binalshibh 

Ramzi Binalshibh was born on May 1,1972,in Ghayl Bawazir,Yemen.There does 
not seem to be anything remarkable about his family or early background.A friend 
who knew Binalshibh in Yemen remembers him as “religious, but not too religious.” 
From 1987 to 1995, Binalshibh worked as a clerk for the International 
Bank ofYemen.He first attempted to leave Yemen in 1995,when he applied for 
a U.S. visa. After his application was rejected, he went to Germany and applied 
for asylum under the name Ramzi Omar,claiming to be a Sudanese citizen seeking 
asylum.While his asylum petition was pending, Binalshibh lived in Hamburg 
and associated with individuals from several mosques there. In 1997, after his 
asylum application was denied,Binalshibh went home to Yemen but returned to 
Germany shortly thereafter under his true name,this time registering as a student 
in Hamburg.Binalshibh continually had academic problems,failing tests and cutting 
classes; he was expelled from one school in September 1998.67 

According to Binalshibh, he and Atta first met at a mosque in Hamburg in 
1995. The two men became close friends and became identified with their 
shared extremist outlook. Like Atta, by the late 1990s Binalshibh was decrying 
what he perceived to be a “Jewish world conspiracy.” He proclaimed that the 
highest duty of every Muslim was to pursue jihad, and that the highest honor 
was to die during the jihad.Despite his rhetoric,however,Binalshibh presented 
a more amiable figure than the austere Atta, and was known within the community 
as being sociable, extroverted, polite, and adventuresome.68 

In 1998,Binalshibh and Atta began sharing an apartment in the Harburg section 
of Hamburg, together with a young student from the United Arab Emirates 
named Marwan al Shehhi.69</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>Egypt</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Person>Saddam Hussein</Person>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Person>Ramzi Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Marwan</Misc>
    <Misc>Jewish</Misc>
    <Misc>AMERICAN</Misc>
    <Location>Middle East.Within</Location>
    <Person>Ghayl Bawazir</Person>
    <Organization>Yemen.There</Organization>
    <Organization>International Bank</Organization>
    <Location>Hamburg.Binalshibh</Location>
    <Location>Harburg</Location>
    <Person>Shehhi.69</Person>
    <Date>May 1,1972</Date>
    <Date>1987 to 1995</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>179_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Marwan al Shehhi 

Marwan al Shehhi was born on May 9, 1978, in Ras al Khaimah, the United 
Arab Emirates. His father, who died in 1997, was a prayer leader at the local 
mosque.After graduating from high school in 1995,Shehhi joined the Emirati 
military and received half a year of basic training before gaining admission 
to a military scholarship program that would fund his continued study in 
Germany.70 

Shehhi first entered Germany in April 1996.After sharing an apartment in 
Bonn for two months with three other scholarship students, Shehhi moved in 
with a German family, with whom he resided for several months before moving 
into his own apartment. During this period, he came across as very religious, 
praying five times a day. Friends also remember him as convivial and “a 
regular guy,”wearing Western clothes and occasionally renting cars for trips to 
Berlin, France, and the Netherlands.71 

As a student, Shehhi was less than a success. Upon completing a course in 
German, he enrolled at the University of Bonn in a program for technical, 
mathematical,and scientific studies.In June 1997,he requested a leave from his 
studies, citing the need to attend to unspecified “problems” in his home country.
Although the university denied his request,Shehhi left anyway,and consequently 
was compelled to repeat the first semester of his studies. In addition to 
having academic difficulties at this time, Shehhi appeared to become more 
extreme in the practice of his faith; for example, he specifically avoided restaurants 
that cooked with or served alcohol. In late 1997, he applied for permission 
to complete his course work in Hamburg, a request apparently motivated 
by his desire to join Atta and Binalshibh. Just how and when the three of them 
first met remains unclear, although they seemed to know each other already 
when Shehhi relocated to Hamburg in early 1998.Atta and Binalshibh moved 
into his apartment in April.72 

The transfer to Hamburg did not help Shehhi’s academic progress; he was 
directed by the scholarship program administrators at the Emirati embassy to 
repeat his second semester starting in August 1998, but back in Bonn. Shehhi 
initially flouted this directive, however, and did not reenroll at the University 
of Bonn until the following January,barely passing his course there.By the end 
of July 1999, he had returned to Hamburg, applying to study shipbuilding at 
the Technical University and, more significantly, residing once again with Atta 
and Binalshibh, in an apartment at 54 Marienstrasse.73 

After Shehhi moved in with Atta and Binalshibh, his evolution toward 
Islamic fundamentalism became more pronounced. A fellow Emirati student 
who came to Hamburg to visit Shehhi noticed he no longer lived as comfortably 
as before. Shehhi now occupied an old apartment with a roommate, had 
no television, and wore inexpensive clothes.When asked why he was living so 
frugally, Shehhi responded that he was living the way the Prophet had lived.74 
Similarly, when someone asked why he and Atta never laughed, Shehhi 
retorted,“How can you laugh when people are dying in Palestine?”75</docText>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Misc>Western</Misc>
    <Location>Palestine</Location>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>Berlin</Location>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Location>France</Location>
    <Person>Shehhi Marwan</Person>
    <Location>Ras al Khaimah</Location>
    <Misc>Emirati</Misc>
    <Location>Bonn</Location>
    <Misc>Netherlands.71 As</Misc>
    <Organization>University of Bonn</Organization>
    <Location>April.72</Location>
    <Organization>Technical University</Organization>
    <Date>May 9, 1978</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>17_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText></docText>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>180_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

Ziad Jarrah 

Born on May 11, 1975, in Mazraa, Lebanon, Ziad Jarrah came from an affluent 
family and attended private, Christian schools. Like Atta, Binalshibh, and 
Shehhi, Jarrah aspired to pursue higher education in Germany. In April 1996, 
he and a cousin enrolled at a junior college in Greifswald,in northeastern Germany.
There Jarrah met and became intimate with Aysel Senguen, the daughter 
of Turkish immigrants, who was preparing to study dentistry.76 

Even with the benefit of hindsight, Jarrah hardly seems a likely candidate 
for becoming an Islamic extremist. Far from displaying radical beliefs when he 
first moved to Germany, he arrived with a reputation for knowing where to 
find the best discos and beaches in Beirut, and in Greifswald was known to 
enjoy student parties and drinking beer. Although he continued to share an 
apartment in Greifswald with his cousin, Jarrah was mostly at Senguen’s apartment.
Witnesses interviewed by German authorities after 9/11,however,recall 
that Jarrah started showing signs of radicalization as early as the end of 1996. 
After returning from a trip home to Lebanon,Jarrah started living more strictly 
according to the Koran. He read brochures in Arabic about jihad, held forth to 
friends on the subject of holy war, and professed disaffection with his previous 
life and a desire not to leave the world “in a natural way.”77 

In September 1997, Jarrah abruptly switched his intended course of study 
from dentistry to aircraft engineering—at the Technical University of 
Hamburg-Harburg. His motivation for this decision remains unclear. The 
rationale he expressed to Senguen—that he had been interested in aviation 
since playing with toy airplanes as a child—rings somewhat hollow. In any 
event, Jarrah appears already to have had Hamburg contacts by this time, some 
of whom may have played a role in steering him toward Islamic extremism.78 

Following his move to Hamburg that fall, he began visiting Senguen in 
Greifswald on weekends, until she moved to the German city of Bochum one 
year later to enroll in dental school.Around the same time,he began speaking 
increasingly about religion, and his visits to Senguen became less and less frequent. 
He began criticizing her for not being religious enough and for dressing 
too provocatively. He grew a full beard and started praying regularly. He 
refused to introduce her to his Hamburg friends because,he told her,they were 
religious Muslims and her refusal to become more observant embarrassed him. 
At some point in 1999, Jarrah told Senguen that he was planning to wage a 
jihad because there was no greater honor than to die for Allah.Although Jarrah’s 
transformation generated numerous quarrels, their breakups invariably 
were followed by reconciliation.79 

Forming a Cell 

In Hamburg, Jarrah had a succession of living accommodations, but he apparently 
never resided with his future co-conspirators. It is not clear how and 
when he became part of Atta’s circle. He became particularly friendly with 
Binalshibh after meeting him at the Quds mosque in Hamburg, which Jarrah</docText>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Misc>Muslims</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Lebanon</Location>
    <Misc>Christian</Misc>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Location>Beirut</Location>
    <Person>Ziad Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Misc>Shehhi</Misc>
    <Person>Aysel Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Bochum</Location>
    <Organization>Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg</Organization>
    <Misc>Turkish</Misc>
    <Person>Ziad Jarrah Born</Person>
    <Location>Mazraa</Location>
    <Location>Atta</Location>
    <Location>Greifswald</Location>
    <Location>Senguen’s</Location>
    <Misc>Koran</Misc>
    <Misc>Senguen—that</Misc>
    <Misc>Allah.Although Jarrah’s</Misc>
    <Date>May 11, 1975</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>181_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

began attending regularly in late 1997.The worshippers at this mosque featured 
an outspoken, flamboyant Islamist named Mohammed Haydar Zammar. A 
well-known figure in the Muslim community (and to German and U.S. intelligence 
agencies by the late 1990s),Zammar had fought in Afghanistan and relished 
any opportunity to extol the virtues of violent jihad. Indeed, a witness 
has reported hearing Zammar press Binalshibh to fulfill his duty to wage jihad. 
Moreover, after 9/11, Zammar reportedly took credit for influencing 
not just Binalshibh but the rest of the Hamburg group. In 1998, Zammar 
encouraged them to participate in jihad and even convinced them to go to 
Afghanistan.80 

Owing to Zammar’s persuasion or some other source of inspiration, Atta, 
Binalshibh,Shehhi,and Jarrah eventually prepared themselves to translate their 
extremist beliefs into action. By late 1999, they were ready to abandon their 
student lives in Germany in favor of violent jihad.This final stage in their evolution 
toward embracing Islamist extremism did not entirely escape the notice 
of the people around them.The foursome became core members of a group 
of radical Muslims, often hosting sessions at their Marienstrasse apartment that 
involved extremely anti-American discussions. Meeting three to four times a 
week, the group became something of a “sect” whose members, according to 
one participant in the meetings, tended to deal only with each other.81 Atta’s 
rent checks for the apartment provide evidence of the importance that the 
apartment assumed as a center for the group, as he would write on them the 
notation “Dar el Ansar,” or “house of the followers.”82 

In addition to Atta,Binalshibh,Shehhi,and Jarrah,the group included other 
extremists, some of whom also would attend al Qaeda training camps and, in 
some instances, would help the 9/11 hijackers as they executed the plot: 

• 
Said Bahaji, son of a Moroccan immigrant, was the only German citizen 
in the group.Educated in Morocco,Bahaji returned to Germany 
to study electrical engineering at the Technical University of 
Hamburg-Harburg. He spent five months in the German army 
before obtaining a medical discharge, and lived with Atta and Binalshibh 
at 54 Marienstrasse for eight months between November 1998 
and July 1999. Described as an insecure follower with no personality 
and with limited knowledge of Islam,Bahaji nonetheless professed his 
readiness to engage in violence.Atta and Binalshibh used Bahaji’s computer 
for Internet research, as evidenced by documents and diskettes 
seized by German authorities after 9/11.83 
• 
Zakariya Essabar, a Moroccan citizen, moved to Germany in February 
1997 and to Hamburg in 1998, where he studied medical technology. 
Soon after moving to Hamburg, Essabar met Binalshibh and 
the others through a Turkish mosque. Essabar turned extremist fairly 
suddenly, probably in 1999, and reportedly pressured one acquaintance 
with physical force to become more religious,grow a beard,and</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>Muslims</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Morocco</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Location>Islam</Location>
    <Person>Zakariya Essabar</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Essabar</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Said Bahaji</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Misc>Moroccan</Misc>
    <Person>Bahaji</Person>
    <Person>Zammar</Person>
    <Person>Ansar</Person>
    <Misc>Internet</Misc>
    <Person>Mohammed Haydar Zammar</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.80 Owing</Misc>
    <Misc>Marienstrasse</Misc>
    <Organization>Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg</Organization>
    <Misc>Turkish</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>182_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

compel his wife to convert to Islam.Essabar’s parents were said to have 
made repeated but unsuccessful efforts to sway him from this lifestyle. 
Shortly before the 9/11 attacks, he would travel to Afghanistan to 
communicate the date for the attacks to the al Qaeda leadership.84 

• 
Mounir el Motassadeq,another Moroccan,came to Germany in 1993, 
moving to Hamburg two years later to study electrical engineering at 
the Technical University.A witness has recalled Motassadeq saying that 
he would kill his entire family if his religious beliefs demanded it.One 
of Motassadeq’s roommates recalls him referring to Hitler as a “good 
man” and organizing film sessions that included speeches by Bin 
Ladin. Motassadeq would help conceal the Hamburg group’s trip to 
Afghanistan in late 1999.85 
• 
Abdelghani Mzoudi, also a Moroccan, arrived in Germany in the 
summer of 1993, after completing university courses in physics and 
chemistry. Mzoudi studied in Dortmund, Bochum, and Muenster 
before moving to Hamburg in 1995. Mzoudi described himself as a 
weak Muslim when he was home in Morocco,but much more devout 
when he was back in Hamburg. In April 1996, Mzoudi and Motassadeq 
witnessed the execution of Atta’s will.86 
During the course of 1999,Atta and his group became ever more extreme 
and secretive, speaking only in Arabic to conceal the content of their conversations.
87 When the four core members of the Hamburg cell left Germany to 
journey to Afghanistan late that year, it seems unlikely that they already knew 
about the planes operation;no evidence connects them to al Qaeda before that 
time. Witnesses have attested, however, that their pronouncements reflected 
ample predisposition toward taking some action against the United States.88 In 
short,they fit the bill for Bin Ladin,Atef,and KSM. 

Going to Afghanistan 

The available evidence indicates that in 1999,Atta,Binalshibh,Shehhi,and Jarrah 
decided to fight in Chechnya against the Russians. According to Binalshibh, 
a chance meeting on a train in Germany caused the group to travel to 
Afghanistan instead.An individual named Khalid al Masri approached Binalshibh 
and Shehhi (because they wereArabs with beards,Binalshibh thinks) and 
struck up a conversation about jihad in Chechnya.When they later called Masri 
and expressed interest in going to Chechnya, he told them to contact Abu 
Musab in Duisburg, Germany. Abu Musab turned out to be Mohamedou 
Ould Slahi, a significant al Qaeda operative who, even then, was well known 
to U.S.and German intelligence,though neither government apparently knew 
he was operating in Germany in late 1999.When telephoned by Binalshibh 
and Shehhi, Slahi reportedly invited these promising recruits to come see him 
in Duisburg.89 

Binalshibh, Shehhi, and Jarrah made the trip. When they arrived, Slahi</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Person>Masri</Person>
    <Location>Morocco</Location>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Misc>Russians</Misc>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Misc>Moroccan</Misc>
    <Person>Abdelghani Mzoudi</Person>
    <Person>Mzoudi</Person>
    <Person>Motassadeq</Person>
    <Person>Slahi</Person>
    <Person>Mohamedou Ould Slahi</Person>
    <Misc>Khalid</Misc>
    <Misc>Islam.Essabar’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Technical University.A</Misc>
    <Person>Hitler</Person>
    <Location>Dortmund</Location>
    <Location>Bochum</Location>
    <Location>Muenster</Location>
    <Location>United States.88</Location>
    <Misc>Chechnya.When</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Musab</Person>
    <Location>Duisburg</Location>
    <Misc>U.S.and German</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>183_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

explained that it was difficult to get to Chechnya at that time because many 
travelers were being detained in Georgia. He recommended they go to 
Afghanistan instead, where they could train for jihad before traveling onward 
to Chechnya. Slahi instructed them to obtain Pakistani visas and then return 
to him for further directions on how to reach Afghanistan.Although Atta did 
not attend the meeting,he joined in the plan with the other three.After obtaining 
the necessary visas, they received Slahi’s final instructions on how to travel 
to Karachi and then Quetta,where they were to contact someone named Umar 
al Masri at the Taliban office.90 

Following Slahi’s advice,Atta and Jarrah left Hamburg during the last week 
of November 1999, bound for Karachi. Shehhi left for Afghanistan around the 
same time;Binalshibh,about two weeks later.Binalshibh remembers that when 
he arrived at the Taliban office in Quetta, there was no one named Umar al 
Masri.The name, apparently, was simply a code; a group of Afghans from the 
office promptly escorted him to Kandahar.There Binalshibh rejoined Atta and 
Jarrah, who said they already had pledged loyalty to Bin Ladin and urged him 
to do the same.They also informed him that Shehhi had pledged as well and 
had already left for the United Arab Emirates to prepare for the mission.Binalshibh 
soon met privately with Bin Ladin, accepted the al Qaeda leader’s invitation 
to work under him, and added his own pledge to those of his Hamburg 
colleagues.By this time,Binalshibh claims,he assumed he was volunteering for 
a martyrdom operation.91 

Atta, Jarrah, and Binalshibh then met with Atef, who told them they were 
about to undertake a highly secret mission. As Binalshibh tells it, Atef 
instructed the three to return to Germany and enroll in flight training.Atta— 
whom Bin Ladin chose to lead the group—met with Bin Ladin several times 
to receive additional instructions, including a preliminary list of approved targets: 
the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and the U.S. Capitol.92 The new 
recruits also learned that an individual named Rabia al Makki (Nawaf al 
Hazmi) would be part of the operation.93 

In retrospect, the speed with which Atta, Shehhi, Jarrah, and Binalshibh 
became core members of the 9/11 plot—with Atta designated its operational 
leader—is remarkable.They had not yet met with KSM when all this occurred. 
It is clear, then, that Bin Ladin and Atef were very much in charge of the operation.
That these candidates were selected so quickly—before comprehensive 
testing in the training camps or in operations—demonstrates that Bin Ladin 
and Atef probably already understood the deficiencies of their initial team, 
Hazmi and Mihdhar.The new recruits from Germany possessed an ideal combination 
of technical skill and knowledge that the original 9/11 operatives,veteran 
fighters though they were, lacked. Bin Ladin and Atef wasted no time in 
assigning the Hamburg group to the most ambitious operation yet planned by 
al Qaeda. 

Bin Ladin and Atef also plainly judged that Atta was best suited to be the</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Person>Masri</Person>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin</Person>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Misc>Afghans</Misc>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>Georgia</Location>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Person>Slahi</Person>
    <Location>Quetta</Location>
    <Person>Afghanistan.Although Atta</Person>
    <Misc>Umar</Misc>
    <Person>Kandahar.There Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>Rabia</Misc>
    <Person>Makki</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>184_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

tactical commander of the operation.Such a quick and critical judgment invites 
speculation about whether they had already taken Atta’s measure at some earlier 
meeting.To be sure, some gaps do appear in the record of Atta’s known 
whereabouts during the preceding years. One such gap is February–March 
1998, a period for which there is no evidence of his presence in Germany and 
when he conceivably could have been in Afghanistan.94 Yet to date, neither 
KSM, Binalshibh, nor any other al Qaeda figure interrogated about the 9/11 
plot has claimed that Atta or any other member of the Hamburg group traveled 
to Afghanistan before the trip in late 1999. 

While the four core Hamburg cell members were in Afghanistan,their associates 
back in Hamburg handled their affairs so that their trip could be kept 
secret. Motassadeq appears to have done the most. He terminated Shehhi’s 
apartment lease, telling the landlord that Shehhi had returned to the UAE for 
family reasons, and used a power of attorney to pay bills from Shehhi’s bank 
account.95 Motassadeq also assisted Jarrah,offering to look after Aysel Senguen 
in Jarrah’s absence. Said Bahaji attended to similar routine matters for Atta and 
Binalshibh, thereby helping them remain abroad without drawing attention to 
their absence.96 

Preparing for the Operation 

In early 2000,Atta, Jarrah, and Binalshibh returned to Hamburg. Jarrah arrived 
first, on January 31, 2000.97 According to Binalshibh, he and Atta left Kandahar 
together and proceeded first to Karachi, where they met KSM and were 
instructed by him on security and on living in the United States.Shehhi apparently 
had already met with KSM before returning to the UAE.Atta returned 
to Hamburg in late February, and Binalshibh arrived shortly thereafter. Shehhi’s 
travels took him to the UAE (where he acquired a new passport and a 

U.S. visa), Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and one or more other destinations. Shehhi 
also returned to Germany, possibly sometime in March.98 
After leaving Afghanistan, the hijackers made clear efforts to avoid appearing 
radical. Once back in Hamburg, they distanced themselves from conspicuous 
extremists like Zammar, whom they knew attracted unwanted attention 
from the authorities.99They also changed their appearance and behavior.Atta 
wore Western clothing, shaved his beard, and no longer attended extremist 
mosques. Jarrah also no longer wore a full beard and, according to Senguen, 
acted much more the way he had when she first met him.And when Shehhi, 
while still in the UAE in January 2000, held a belated wedding celebration (he 
actually had been married in 1999), a friend of his was surprised to see that he 
had shaved off his beard and was acting like his old self again.100 

But Jarrah’s apparent efforts to appear less radical did not completely conceal 
his transformation from his Lebanese family,which grew increasingly concerned 
about his fanaticism. Soon after Jarrah returned to Germany, his father 
asked Jarrah’s cousin—a close companion from boyhood—to intercede.The</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Western</Misc>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Said Bahaji</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Location>Bahrain</Location>
    <Person>Motassadeq</Person>
    <Misc>Lebanese</Misc>
    <Person>Aysel Senguen</Person>
    <Organization>Atta’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.94</Misc>
    <Misc>Operation In</Misc>
    <Location>United States.Shehhi</Location>
    <Location>UAE.Atta</Location>
    <Misc>March.98 After</Misc>
    <Organization>Zammar</Organization>
    <Date>January 31, 2000</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>185_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

cousin’s ensuing effort to persuade Jarrah to depart from “the path he was taking” 
proved unavailing.101 Yet Jarrah clearly differed from the other hijackers 
in that he maintained much closer contact with his family and continued his 
intimate relationship with Senguen.These ties may well have caused him to 
harbor some doubts about going through with the plot,even as late as the summer 
of 2001, as discussed in chapter 7. 

After leaving Afghanistan, the four began researching flight schools and aviation 
training. In early January 2000, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali—a nephew of KSM 
living in the UAE who would become an important facilitator in the plot— 
used Shehhi’s credit card to order a Boeing 747-400 flight simulator program 
and a Boeing 767 flight deck video,together with attendant literature;Ali had 
all these items shipped to his employer’s address. Jarrah soon decided that the 
schools in Germany were not acceptable and that he would have to learn to 
fly in the United States. Binalshibh also researched flight schools in Europe, 
and in the Netherlands he met a flight school director who recommended 
flight schools in the United States because they were less expensive and 
required shorter training periods.102 

In March 2000,Atta emailed 31 different U.S.flight schools on behalf of a 
small group of men from various Arab countries studying in Germany who, 
while lacking prior training, were interested in learning to fly in the United 
States. Atta requested information about the cost of the training, potential 
financing, and accommodations.103 

Before seeking visas to enter the United States, Atta, Shehhi, and Jarrah 
obtained new passports, each claiming that his old passport had been lost. Presumably 
they were concerned that the Pakistani visas in their old passports 
would raise suspicions about possible travel to Afghanistan.Shehhi obtained his 
visa on January 18, 2000; Atta, on May 18; and Jarrah, on May 25.104 Binalshibh’s 
visa request was rejected, however, as were his three subsequent applications.
105 Binalshibh proved unable to obtain a visa, a victim of the 
generalized suspicion that visa applicants from Yemen—especially young men 
applying in another country (Binalshibh first applied in Berlin)—might join 
the ranks of undocumented aliens seeking work in the United States. Before 
9/11, security concerns were not a major factor in visa issuance unless the 
applicant already was on a terrorist watchlist, and none of these four men was. 
Concerns that Binalshibh intended to immigrate to the United States doomed 
his chances to participate firsthand in the 9/11 attacks. Although Binalshibh 
had to remain behind, he would provide critical assistance from abroad to his 
co-conspirators. 

Once again, the need for travel documents dictated al Qaeda’s plans. 

Travel 

It should by now be apparent how significant travel was in the planning undertaken 
by a terrorist organization as far-flung as al Qaeda.The story of the plot 
includes references to dozens of international trips.Operations required travel,</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Europe</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Ali</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Location>Berlin</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda.The</Person>
    <Person>Ali Abdul Aziz Ali—a</Person>
    <Misc>Boeing 747-400</Misc>
    <Misc>Boeing 767</Misc>
    <Location>Netherlands</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan.Shehhi</Location>
    <Date>January 18, 2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docID>186_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

as did basic communications and the movement of money.Where electronic 
communications were regarded as insecure, al Qaeda relied even more heavily 
on couriers. 

KSM and Abu Zubaydah each played key roles in facilitating travel for al 
Qaeda operatives. In addition, al Qaeda had an office of passports and host 
country issues under its security committee. The office was located at the 
Kandahar airport and was managed by Atef. The committee altered papers, 
including passports, visas, and identification cards.106 

Moreover, certain al Qaeda members were charged with organizing passport 
collection schemes to keep the pipeline of fraudulent documents flowing.
To this end, al Qaeda required jihadists to turn in their passports before 
going to the front lines in Afghanistan. If they were killed, their passports were 
recycled for use.107 The operational mission training course taught operatives 
how to forge documents.Certain passport alteration methods,which included 
substituting photos and erasing and adding travel cachets, were also taught. 
Manuals demonstrating the technique for “cleaning”visas were reportedly circulated 
among operatives. Mohamed Atta and Zakariya Essabar were reported 
to have been trained in passport alteration.108 

The purpose of all this training was twofold: to develop an institutional 
capacity for document forgery and to enable operatives to make necessary 
adjustments in the field. It was well-known, for example, that if a Saudi traveled 
to Afghanistan via Pakistan, then on his return to Saudi Arabia his passport, 
bearing a Pakistani stamp, would be confiscated. So operatives either 
erased the Pakistani visas from their passports or traveled through Iran, which 
did not stamp visas directly into passports.109 

5.4 A MONEY TRAIL? 
Bin Ladin and his aides did not need a very large sum to finance their planned 
attack on America. The 9/11 plotters eventually spent somewhere between 
$400,000 and $500,000 to plan and conduct their attack. Consistent with the 
importance of the project, al Qaeda funded the plotters. KSM provided his 
operatives with nearly all the money they needed to travel to the United States, 
train, and live. The plotters’ tradecraft was not especially sophisticated, but it 
was good enough.They moved,stored,and spent their money in ordinary ways, 
easily defeating the detection mechanisms in place at the time.110 The origin 
of the funds remains unknown, although we have a general idea of how al 
Qaeda financed itself during the period leading up to 9/11. 

General Financing 

As we explained in chapter 2, Bin Ladin did not fund al Qaeda through a 
personal fortune and a network of businesses in Sudan. Instead, al Qaeda 
relied primarily on a fund-raising network developed over time. The CIA</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Person>Zakariya Essabar</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
  </document>
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    <docID>187_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

now estimates that it cost al Qaeda about $30 million per year to sustain its 
activities before 9/11 and that this money was raised almost entirely through 
donations.111 

For many years, the United States thought Bin Ladin financed al Qaeda’s 
expenses through a vast personal inheritance. Bin Ladin purportedly inherited 
approximately $300 million when his father died,and was rumored to have had 
access to these funds to wage jihad while in Sudan and Afghanistan and to 
secure his leadership position in al Qaeda. In early 2000, the U.S. government 
discovered a different reality: roughly from 1970 through 1994, Bin Ladin 
received about $1 million per year—a significant sum, to be sure, but not a 
$300 million fortune that could be used to fund jihad.112 Then, as part of a 
Saudi government crackdown early in the 1990s, the Bin Ladin family was 
forced to find a buyer for Usama’s share of the family company in 1994.The 
Saudi government subsequently froze the proceeds of the sale.This action had 
the effect of divesting Bin Ladin of what otherwise might indeed have been a 
large fortune.113 

Nor were Bin Ladin’s assets in Sudan a source of money for al Qaeda.When 
Bin Ladin lived in Sudan from 1991 to 1996,he owned a number of businesses 
and other assets. These could not have provided significant income, as most 
were small or not economically viable.When Bin Ladin left in 1996, it appears 
that the Sudanese government expropriated all his assets: he left Sudan with 
practically nothing.When Bin Ladin arrived in Afghanistan, he relied on the 
Taliban until he was able to reinvigorate his fund-raising efforts by drawing on 
ties to wealthy Saudi individuals that he had established during the Afghan war 
in the 1980s.114 

Al Qaeda appears to have relied on a core group of financial facilitators 
who raised money from a variety of donors and other fund-raisers, primarily 
in the Gulf countries and particularly in Saudi Arabia.115 Some individual 
donors surely knew,and others did not,the ultimate destination of their donations.
Al Qaeda and its friends took advantage of Islam’s strong calls for charitable 
giving, zakat.These financial facilitators also appeared to rely heavily on 
certain imams at mosques who were willing to divert zakat donations to al 
Qaeda’s cause.116 

Al Qaeda also collected money from employees of corrupt charities.117 It 
took two approaches to using charities for fund-raising. One was to rely on al 
Qaeda sympathizers in specific foreign branch offices of large, international 
charities—particularly those with lax external oversight and ineffective internal 
controls, such as the Saudi-based al Haramain Islamic Foundation.118 
Smaller charities in various parts of the globe were funded by these large Gulf 
charities and had employees who would siphon the money to al Qaeda.119 

In addition,entire charities,such as the al Wafa organization,may have wittingly 
participated in funneling money to al Qaeda. In those cases, al Qaeda 
operatives controlled the entire organization, including access to bank</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Gulf</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Misc>Sudanese</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Misc>Islam’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Usama’s</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda.When Bin</Person>
    <Misc>Saudi-based</Misc>
    <Misc>Wafa</Misc>
    <Date>1970 through 1994</Date>
    <Date>1991 to 1996</Date>
  </document>
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    <docID>188_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

accounts.120 Charities were a source of money and also provided significant 
cover, which enabled operatives to travel undetected under the guise of working 
for a humanitarian organization. 

It does not appear that any government other than the Taliban financially 
supported al Qaeda before 9/11, although some governments may have contained 
al Qaeda sympathizers who turned a blind eye to al Qaeda’s fundraising 
activities.121 Saudi Arabia has long been considered the primary source 
of al Qaeda funding, but we have found no evidence that the Saudi government 
as an institution or senior Saudi officials individually funded the organization. 
(This conclusion does not exclude the likelihood that charities with 
significant Saudi government sponsorship diverted funds to al Qaeda.)122 

Still, al Qaeda found fertile fund-raising ground in Saudi Arabia, where 
extreme religious views are common and charitable giving was both essential 
to the culture and subject to very limited oversight.123 Al Qaeda also sought 
money from wealthy donors in other Gulf states. 

Al Qaeda frequently moved the money it raised by hawala, an informal and 
ancient trust-based system for transferring funds.124 In some ways,al Qaeda had 
no choice after its move to Afghanistan in 1996: first, the banking system there 
was antiquated and undependable; and second, formal banking was risky due 
to the scrutiny that al Qaeda received after the August 1998 East Africa embassy 
bombings, including UN resolutions against it and the Taliban.125 Bin Ladin 
relied on the established hawala networks operating in Pakistan, in Dubai, and 
throughout the Middle East to transfer funds efficiently. Hawaladars associated 
with al Qaeda may have used banks to move and store money, as did various 
al Qaeda fund-raisers and operatives outside of Afghanistan, but there is little 
evidence that Bin Ladin or core al Qaeda members used banks while in 
Afghanistan.126 

Before 9/11,al Qaeda spent funds as quickly as it received them.Actual terrorist 
operations represented a relatively small part of al Qaeda’s estimated $30 
million annual operating budget.Al Qaeda funded salaries for jihadists,training 
camps, airfields, vehicles, arms, and the development of training manuals. 
Bin Ladin provided approximately $10–$20 million per year to the Taliban in 
return for safe haven. Bin Ladin also may have used money to create alliances 
with other terrorist organizations, although it is unlikely that al Qaeda was 
funding an overall jihad program. Rather, Bin Ladin selectively provided startup 
funds to new groups or money for specific terrorist operations.127 

Al Qaeda has been alleged to have used a variety of illegitimate means, particularly 
drug trafficking and conflict diamonds,to finance itself.While the drug 
trade was a source of income for the Taliban,it did not serve the same purpose 
for al Qaeda, and there is no reliable evidence that Bin Ladin was involved in 
or made his money through drug trafficking.128 Similarly,we have seen no persuasive 
evidence that al Qaeda funded itself by trading in African conflict diamonds.
129 There also have been claims that al Qaeda financed itself through</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Gulf</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>African</Misc>
    <Organization>UN</Organization>
    <Location>Dubai</Location>
    <Person>QAEDA</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.126</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

manipulation of the stock market based on its advance knowledge of the 9/11 
attacks.Exhaustive investigations by the Securities and Exchange Commission, 
FBI,and other agencies have uncovered no evidence that anyone with advance 
knowledge of the attacks profited through securities transactions.130 

To date, the U.S. government has not been able to determine the origin of 
the money used for the 9/11 attacks. Ultimately the question is of little practical 
significance.Al Qaeda had many avenues of funding.If a particular funding 
source had dried up, al Qaeda could have easily tapped a different source 
or diverted funds from another project to fund an operation that cost 
$400,000–$500,000 over nearly two years. 

The Funding of the 9/11 Plot 

As noted above, the 9/11 plotters spent somewhere between $400,000 and 
$500,000 to plan and conduct their attack.The available evidence indicates that 
the 19 operatives were funded by al Qaeda, either through wire transfers or cash 
provided by KSM,which they carried into the United States or deposited in foreign 
accounts and accessed from this country. Our investigation has uncovered 
no credible evidence that any person in the United States gave the hijackers substantial 
financial assistance. Similarly, we have seen no evidence that any foreign 
government—or foreign government official—supplied any funding.131 

We have found no evidence that the Hamburg cell members (Atta, Shehhi, 
Jarrah, and Binalshibh) received funds from al Qaeda before late 1999. It 
appears they supported themselves. KSM, Binalshibh, and another plot facilitator,
Mustafa al Hawsawi,each received money,in some cases perhaps as much 
as $10,000, to perform their roles in the plot.132 

After the Hamburg recruits joined the 9/11 conspiracy,al Qaeda began giving 
them money.Our knowledge of the funding during this period,before the 
operatives entered the United States, remains murky. According to KSM, the 
Hamburg cell members each received $5,000 to pay for their return to Germany 
from Afghanistan after they had been selected to join the plot, and they 
received additional funds for travel from Germany to the United States.Financial 
transactions of the plotters are discussed in more detail in chapter 7. 

Requirements for a Successful Attack 

As some of the core operatives prepared to leave for the United States, al 
Qaeda’s leaders could have reflected on what they needed to be able to do in 
order to organize and conduct a complex international terrorist operation to 
inflict catastrophic harm.We believe such a list of requirements would have 
included 

• 
leaders able to evaluate,approve,and supervise the planning and direction 
of the operation; 
• 
communications sufficient to enable planning and direction of the 
operatives and those who would be helping them;</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Person>Mustafa</Person>
    <Organization>Securities and Exchange Commission</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>18_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>1 

“WE HAVE 
SOME PLANES” 

Tuesday, September 11, 2001, dawned temperate and nearly cloudless in 
the eastern United States. Millions of men and women readied themselves for 
work.Some made their way to the Twin Towers,the signature structures of the 
World Trade Center complex in New York City.Others went to Arlington,Virginia,
to the Pentagon.Across the Potomac River,the United States Congress 
was back in session. At the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, people began to 
line up for a White House tour.In Sarasota,Florida,President George W.Bush 
went for an early morning run. 

For those heading to an airport, weather conditions could not have been 
better for a safe and pleasant journey.Among the travelers were Mohamed Atta 
and Abdul Aziz al Omari, who arrived at the airport in Portland, Maine. 

1.1 INSIDE THE FOUR FLIGHTS 
Boarding the Flights 
Boston:American 11 and United 175.Atta and Omari boarded a 6:00 A.M. 
flight from Portland to Boston’s Logan International Airport.1 

When he checked in for his flight to Boston,Atta was selected by a computerized 
prescreening system known as CAPPS (Computer Assisted Passenger 
Prescreening System), created to identify passengers who should be 
subject to special security measures. Under security rules in place at the time, 
the only consequence of Atta’s selection by CAPPS was that his checked bags 
were held off the plane until it was confirmed that he had boarded the aircraft. 
This did not hinder Atta’s plans.2 

Atta and Omari arrived in Boston at 6:45.Seven minutes later,Atta apparently 
took a call from Marwan al Shehhi, a longtime colleague who was at 
another terminal at Logan Airport.They spoke for three minutes.3 It would be 
their final conversation.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Person>Marwan al Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Aziz al Omari</Person>
    <Date>September 11, 2001</Date>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>Arlington</Location>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Location>Pennsylvania Avenue</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Portland</Location>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Location>Sarasota</Location>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Location>Maine</Location>
    <Organization>CAPPS</Organization>
    <Location>Twin Towers</Location>
    <Person>George W.Bush</Person>
    <Misc>Pentagon.Across</Misc>
    <Location>Potomac River</Location>
    <Person>Logan International</Person>
    <Misc>Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System</Misc>
    <Location>Logan Airport.They</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 

• 
a personnel system that could recruit candidates, vet them, indoctrinate 
them, and give them necessary training; 
• 
an intelligence effort to gather required information and form assessments 
of enemy strengths and weaknesses; 
• 
the ability to move people; and 
• 
the ability to raise and move the necessary money. 
The information we have presented about the development of 
the planes operation shows how, by the spring and summer of 2000, al Qaeda 
was able to meet these requirements. 

By late May 2000, two operatives assigned to the planes operation were 
already in the United States.Three of the four Hamburg cell members would 
soon arrive.</docText>
    <Person>al Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>United States.Three</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>191_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>6 


FROM THREAT 
TO THREAT 


In chapters 3 and 4 we described how the U.S. government adjusted its 
existing agencies and capacities to address the emerging threat from Usama Bin 
Ladin and his associates. After the August 1998 bombings of the American 
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, President Bill Clinton and his chief aides 
explored ways of getting Bin Ladin expelled from Afghanistan or possibly capturing 
or even killing him.Although disruption efforts around the world had 
achieved some successes, the core of Bin Ladin’s organization remained intact. 

President Clinton was deeply concerned about Bin Ladin. He and his 
national security advisor, Samuel “Sandy” Berger, ensured they had a special 
daily pipeline of reports feeding them the latest updates on Bin Ladin’s 
reported location.1 In public, President Clinton spoke repeatedly about the 
threat of terrorism, referring to terrorist training camps but saying little about 
Bin Ladin and nothing about al Qaeda. He explained to us that this was deliberate—
intended to avoid enhancing Bin Ladin’s stature by giving him unnecessary 
publicity.His speeches focused especially on the danger of nonstate actors 
and of chemical and biological weapons.2 

As the millennium approached, the most publicized worries were not 
about terrorism but about computer breakdowns—the Y2K scare.Some government 
officials were concerned that terrorists would take advantage of such 
breakdowns.3 

6.1 THE MILLENNIUM CRISIS 
“Bodies Will Pile Up in Sacks” 

On November 30, 1999, Jordanian intelligence intercepted a telephone call 
between Abu Zubaydah,a longtime ally of Bin Ladin,and Khadr Abu Hoshar, 
a Palestinian extremist.Abu Zubaydah said,“The time for training is over.” 
Suspecting that this was a signal for Abu Hoshar to commence a terrorist</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bill Clinton</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kenya</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Misc>Palestinian</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Location>Tanzania</Location>
    <Person>Zubaydah</Person>
    <Person>Abu Hoshar</Person>
    <Person>Samuel “Sandy” Berger</Person>
    <Misc>Pile Up</Misc>
    <Misc>Sacks” On November</Misc>
    <Person>Khadr Abu Hoshar</Person>
    <Date>November 30, 1999</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>192_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

operation, Jordanian police arrested Abu Hoshar and 15 others and informed 
Washington.4 

One of the 16, Raed Hijazi, had been born in California to Palestinian 
parents; after spending his childhood in the Middle East, he had returned to 
northern California, taken refuge in extremist Islamist beliefs, and then made 
his way to Abu Zubaydah’s Khaldan camp in Afghanistan,where he learned the 
fundamentals of guerrilla warfare. He and his younger brother had been 
recruited by Abu Hoshar into a loosely knit plot to attack Jewish and American 
targets in Jordan.5 

After late 1996, when Abu Hoshar was arrested and jailed, Hijazi moved 
back to the United States, worked as a cabdriver in Boston, and sent money 
back to his fellow plotters.After Abu Hoshar’s release,Hijazi shuttled between 
Boston and Jordan gathering money and supplies. With Abu Hoshar, he 
recruited in Turkey and Syria as well as Jordan;with Abu Zubaydah’s assistance, 
Abu Hoshar sent these recruits to Afghanistan for training.6 

In late 1998,Hijazi and Abu Hoshar had settled on a plan.They would first 
attack four targets: the SAS Radisson Hotel in downtown Amman, the border 
crossings from Jordan into Israel, and two Christian holy sites, at a time when all 
these locations were likely to be thronged with American and other tourists. 
Next,they would target a local airport and other religious and cultural sites.Hijazi 
and Abu Hoshar cased the intended targets and sent reports to Abu Zubaydah, 
who approved their plan. Finally, back in Amman from Boston, Hijazi gradually 
accumulated bomb-making materials, including sulfuric acid and 5,200 pounds 
of nitric acid, which were then stored in an enormous subbasement dug by the 
plotters over a period of two months underneath a rented house.7 

In early 1999, Hijazi and Abu Hoshar contacted Khalil Deek, an American 
citizen and an associate of Abu Zubaydah who lived in Peshawar, Pakistan, and 
who, with Afghanistan-based extremists, had created an electronic version of a 
terrorist manual, the Encyclopedia of Jihad.They obtained a CD-ROM of this 
encyclopedia from Deek.8 In June,with help from Deek,Abu Hoshar arranged 
with Abu Zubaydah for Hijazi and three others to go to Afghanistan for added 
training in handling explosives.In late November 1999,Hijazi reportedly swore 
before Abu Zubaydah the bayat to Bin Ladin, committing himself to do anything 
Bin Ladin ordered. He then departed for Jordan and was at a waypoint 
in Syria when Abu Zubaydah sent Abu Hoshar the message that prompted Jordanian 
authorities to roll up the whole cell.9 

After the arrests of Abu Hoshar and 15 others, the Jordanians tracked Deek 
to Peshawar,persuaded Pakistan to extradite him,and added him to their catch. 
Searches in Amman found the rented house and,among other things,71 drums 
of acids, several forged Saudi passports, detonators, and Deek’s Encyclopedia. Six 
of the accomplices were sentenced to death. In custody, Hijazi’s younger 
brother said that the group’s motto had been “The season is coming, and bodies 
will pile up in sacks.”10</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Location>Syria</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Misc>Christian</Misc>
    <Misc>Palestinian</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>Turkey</Location>
    <Location>Amman</Location>
    <Person>Hijazi</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan-based</Misc>
    <Person>Khalil Deek</Person>
    <Person>Deek</Person>
    <Organization>Abu Zubaydah’s</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Hoshar</Person>
    <Misc>Washington.4 One of the 16</Misc>
    <Person>Raed Hijazi</Person>
    <Misc>Jewish</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Hoshar’s</Person>
    <Organization>SAS Radisson Hotel</Organization>
    <Person>Abu</Person>
    <Person>Hoshar</Person>
    <Location>Peshawar</Location>
    <Organization>Encyclopedia of Jihad.They</Organization>
    <Misc>Jordanians</Misc>
    <Organization>Deek’s Encyclopedia</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>193_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Diplomacy and Disruption 

On December 4, as news came in about the discoveries in Jordan, National 
Security Council (NSC) Counterterrorism Coordinator Richard Clarke 
wrote Berger,“If George’s [Tenet’s] story about a planned series of UBL attacks 
at the Millennium is true, we will need to make some decisions NOW.” He 
told us he held several conversations with President Clinton during the crisis. 
He suggested threatening reprisals against the Taliban in Afghanistan in the 
event of any attacks on U.S. interests, anywhere, by Bin Ladin. He further 
proposed to Berger that a strike be made during the last week of 1999 against 
al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan—a proposal not adopted.11 

Warned by the CIA that the disrupted Jordanian plot was probably part of 
a larger series of attacks intended for the millennium, some possibly involving 
chemical weapons, the Principals Committee met on the night of December 
8 and decided to task Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security Group (CSG) to 
develop plans to deter and disrupt al Qaeda plots.12 

Michael Sheehan, the State Department member of the CSG, communicated 
warnings to the Taliban that they would be held responsible for future 
al Qaeda attacks.“Mike was not diplomatic,”Clarke reported to Berger.With 
virtually no evidence of a Taliban response, a new approach was made to Pakistan.
13 General Anthony Zinni, the commander of Central Command 
(CENTCOM), was designated as the President’s special envoy and sent to ask 
General Musharraf to “take whatever action you deem necessary to resolve the 
Bin Laden problem at the earliest possible time.” But Zinni came back emptyhanded. 
As Ambassador William Milam reported from Islamabad, Musharraf 
was “unwilling to take the political heat at home.”14 

The CIA worked hard with foreign security services to detain or at least 
keep an eye on suspected Bin Ladin associates.Tenet spoke to 20 of his foreign 
counterparts.Disruption and arrest operations were mounted against terrorists 
in eight countries.15 In mid-December, President Clinton signed a Memorandum 
of Notification (MON) giving the CIA broader authority to use foreign 
proxies to detain Bin Ladin lieutenants,without having to transfer them to U.S. 
custody.The authority was to capture, not kill, though lethal force might be 
used if necessary.16Tenet would later send a message to all CIA personnel overseas,
saying,“The threat could not be more real....Do whatever is necessary 
to disrupt UBL’s plans. . . .The American people are counting on you and me 
to take every appropriate step to protect them during this period.”The State 
Department issued a worldwide threat advisory to its posts overseas.17 

Then, on December 14, an Algerian jihadist was caught bringing a load of 
explosives into the United States. 

Ressam’s Arrest 

Ahmed Ressam, 23, had illegally immigrated to Canada in 1994. Using a falsified 
passport and a bogus story about persecution in Algeria, Ressam entered</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Location>Algeria</Location>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Organization>Central Command</Organization>
    <Person>Musharraf</Person>
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    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
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    <Person>Zinni</Person>
    <Person>Anthony Zinni</Person>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
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    <Person>Berger</Person>
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    <Person>Michael Sheehan</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed Ressam</Person>
    <Person>Bin Laden</Person>
    <Person>William Milam</Person>
    <Organization>CENTCOM</Organization>
    <Organization>Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security Group</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorism Coordinator Richard Clarke</Organization>
    <Person>NOW.” He</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan—a</Location>
    <Misc>Berger.With</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>194_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

Montreal and claimed political asylum. For the next few years he supported 
himself with petty crime. Recruited by an alumnus of Abu Zubaydah’s Khaldan 
camp,Ressam trained in Afghanistan in 1998,learning,among other things, 
how to place cyanide near the air intake of a building to achieve maximum 
lethality at minimum personal risk. Having joined other Algerians in planning 
a possible attack on a U.S.airport or consulate,Ressam left Afghanistan in early 
1999 carrying precursor chemicals for explosives disguised in toiletry bottles, 
a notebook containing bomb assembly instructions, and $12,000. Back in 
Canada, he went about procuring weapons, chemicals, and false papers.18 

In early summer 1999, having learned that not all of his colleagues could get 
the travel documents to enter Canada, Ressam decided to carry out the plan 
alone. By the end of the summer he had chosen three Los Angeles–area airports 
as potential targets, ultimately fixing on Los Angeles International (LAX) as the 
largest and easiest to operate in surreptitiously.He bought or stole chemicals and 
equipment for his bomb, obtaining advice from three Algerian friends, all of 
whom were wanted by authorities in France for their roles in past terrorist attacks 
there. Ressam also acquired new confederates. He promised to help a New 
York–based partner,Abdelghani Meskini,get training in Afghanistan if Meskini 
would help him maneuver in the United States.19 

In December 1999, Ressam began his final preparations. He called an 
Afghanistan-based facilitator to inquire into whether Bin Ladin wanted to take 
credit for the attack,but he did not get a reply.He spent a week in Vancouver 
preparing the explosive components with a close friend.The chemicals were 
so caustic that the men kept their windows open, despite the freezing temperatures 
outside, and sucked on cough drops to soothe their irritated throats.20 
While in Vancouver,Ressam also rented a Chrysler sedan for his travel into the 
United States, and packed the explosives in the trunk’s spare tire well.21 

On December 14, 1999, Ressam drove his rental car onto the ferry from 
Victoria, Canada, to Port Angeles, Washington. Ressam planned to drive to 
Seattle and meet Meskini,with whom he would travel to Los Angeles and case 

A Case Study in Terrorist Travel 

Following a familiar terrorist pattern, Ressam and his associates used 
fraudulent passports and immigration fraud to travel.In Ressam’s case,this 
involved flying from France to Montreal using a photo-substituted 
French passport under a false name. Under questioning, Ressam admitted 
the passport was fraudulent and claimed political asylum. He was 
released pending a hearing, which he failed to attend. His political asylum 
claim was denied. He was arrested again, released again, and given 
another hearing date.Again,he did not show.He was arrested four times</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Misc>Algerian</Misc>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Location>France</Location>
    <Person>Meskini</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan-based</Misc>
    <Misc>French</Misc>
    <Location>Montreal</Location>
    <Misc>Algerians</Misc>
    <Person>Abdelghani Meskini</Person>
    <Location>Seattle</Location>
    <Location>Victoria</Location>
    <Location>Port Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>Abu Zubaydah’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Los Angeles–area</Misc>
    <Location>Los Angeles International</Location>
    <Misc>York–based</Misc>
    <Location>United States.19</Location>
    <Location>Vancouver</Location>
    <Organization>Chrysler</Organization>
    <Organization>Case Study in Terrorist Travel Following</Organization>
    <Date>December 14, 1999</Date>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

for thievery,usually from tourists,but was neither jailed nor deported.He 
also supported himself by selling stolen documents to a friend who was 
a document broker for Islamist terrorists.22 

Ressam eventually obtained a genuine Canadian passport through a 
document vendor who stole a blank baptismal certificate from a 
Catholic church.With this document he was able to obtain a Canadian 
passport under the name of Benni Antoine Noris.This enabled him to 
travel to Pakistan, and from there to Afghanistan for his training, and 
then return to Canada.Impressed,Abu Zubaydah asked Ressam to get 
more genuine Canadian passports and to send them to him for other 
terrorists to use.23 

Another conspirator, Abdelghani Meskini, used a stolen identity to 
travel to Seattle on December 11, 1999, at the request of Mokhtar 
Haouari,another conspirator.Haouari provided fraudulent passports and 
visas to assist Ressam and Meskini’s planned getaway from the United 
States to Algeria, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.24 One of Meskini’s associates,
Abdel Hakim Tizegha,also filed a claim for political asylum.He was 
released pending a hearing, which was adjourned and rescheduled five 
times. His claim was finally denied two years after his initial filing. His 
attorney appealed the decision,and Tizegha was allowed to remain in the 
country pending the appeal.Nine months later,his attorney notified the 
court that he could not locate his client.A warrant of deportation was 
issued.25 

LAX.They planned to detonate the bomb on or around January 1,2000.At 
the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) preinspection station in Victoria, 
Ressam presented officials with his genuine but fraudulently obtained 
Canadian passport, from which he had torn the Afghanistan entry and exit 
stamps.The INS agent on duty ran the passport through a variety of databases 
but, since it was not in Ressam’s name, he did not pick up the pending Canadian 
arrest warrants. After a cursory examination of Ressam’s car, the INS 
agents allowed Ressam to board the ferry.26 

Late in the afternoon of December 14, Ressam arrived in Port Angeles. He 
waited for all the other cars to depart the ferry, assuming (incorrectly) that the 
last car off would draw less scrutiny. Customs officers assigned to the port, 
noticing Ressam’s nervousness, referred him to secondary inspection. When 
asked for additional identification, Ressam handed the Customs agent a Price 
Costco membership card in the same false name as his passport.As that agent 
began an initial pat-down, Ressam panicked and tried to run away.27</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Organization>Immigration and Naturalization Service</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Algeria</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Misc>Canadian</Misc>
    <Person>Mokhtar Haouari</Person>
    <Misc>Ressam’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Catholic</Misc>
    <Person>Benni Antoine Noris.This</Person>
    <Misc>Canada.Impressed</Misc>
    <Person>Abdelghani Meskini</Person>
    <Location>Seattle</Location>
    <Misc>Meskini’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Afghanistan.24 One</Organization>
    <Person>Abdel Hakim Tizegha</Person>
    <Person>Tizegha</Person>
    <Location>Victoria</Location>
    <Location>Port Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>Price Costco</Organization>
    <Date>December 11, 1999</Date>
    <Date>January 1,2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

Inspectors examining Ressam’s rental car found the explosives concealed in 
the spare tire well, but at first they assumed the white powder and viscous liquid 
were drug-related—until an inspector pried apart and identified one of the 
four timing devices concealed within black boxes. Ressam was placed under 
arrest. Investigators guessed his target was in Seattle.They did not learn about 
the Los Angeles airport planning until they reexamined evidence seized in 
Montreal in 2000; they obtained further details when Ressam began cooperating 
in May 2001.28 

Emergency Cooperation 

After the disruption of the plot in Amman,it had not escaped notice in Washington 
that Hijazi had lived in California and driven a cab in Boston and that 
Deek was a naturalized U.S. citizen who, as Berger reminded President Clinton,
had been in touch with extremists in the United States as well as abroad.29 
Before Ressam’s arrest, Berger saw no need to raise a public alarm at home— 
although the FBI put all field offices on alert.30 

Now, following Ressam’s arrest, the FBI asked for an unprecedented number 
of special wiretaps.Both Berger and Tenet told us that their impression was 
that more Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) wiretap requests were 
processed during the millennium alert than ever before.31 

The next day, writing about Ressam’s arrest and links to a cell in Montreal, 
Berger informed the President that the FBI would advise police in the 
United States to step up activities but would still try to avoid undue public 
alarm by stressing that the government had no specific information about 
planned attacks.32 

At a December 22 meeting of the Small Group of principals, FBI Director 
Louis Freeh briefed officials from the NSC staff, CIA, and Justice on wiretaps 
and investigations inside the United States, including a Brooklyn entity tied to 
the Ressam arrest, a seemingly unreliable foreign report of possible attacks on 
seven U.S. cities, two Algerians detained on the Canadian border, and searches 
in Montreal related to a jihadist cell.The Justice Department released a statement 
on the alert the same day.33 

Clarke’s staff warned,“Foreign terrorist sleeper cells are present in the US and attacks 
in the US are likely.”34 Clarke asked Berger to try to make sure that the domestic 
agencies remained alert.“Is there a threat to civilian aircraft?”he wrote.Clarke 
also asked the principals in late December to discuss a foreign security service 
report about a Bin Ladin plan to put bombs on transatlantic flights.35 

The CSG met daily.Berger said that the principals met constantly.36 Later, 
when asked what made her decide to ask Ressam to step out of his vehicle, 
Diana Dean, a Customs inspector who referred Ressam to secondary inspection, 
testified that it was her “training and experience.”37 It appears that the 
heightened sense of alert at the national level played no role in Ressam’s 
detention.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>FISA</Organization>
    <Person>Louis Freeh</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Brooklyn</Location>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Misc>Canadian</Misc>
    <Person>Diana Dean</Person>
    <Location>Amman</Location>
    <Person>Hijazi</Person>
    <Misc>Ressam’s</Misc>
    <Location>Montreal</Location>
    <Person>Deek</Person>
    <Organization>Small Group of principals</Organization>
    <Misc>Algerians</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

There was a mounting sense of public alarm.The earlier Jordanian arrests 
had been covered in the press, and Ressam’s arrest was featured on network 
evening news broadcasts throughout the Christmas season.38 

The FBI was more communicative during the millennium crisis than it had 
ever been.The senior FBI official for counterterrorism,Dale Watson,was a regular 
member of the CSG, and Clarke had good relations both with him and with 
some of the FBI agents handling al Qaeda–related investigations, including John 
O’Neill in New York.As a rule,however,neither Watson nor these agents brought 
much information to the group.The FBI simply did not produce the kind of 
intelligence reports that other agencies routinely wrote and disseminated.As law 
enforcement officers,Bureau agents tended to write up only witness interviews. 
Written case analysis usually occurred only in memoranda to supervisors 
requesting authority to initiate or expand an investigation.39 

But during the millennium alert, with its direct links into the United States 
from Hijazi, Deek, and Ressam, FBI officials were briefing in person about 
ongoing investigations, not relying on the dissemination of written reports. 
Berger told us that it was hard for FBI officials to hold back information in 
front of a cabinet-rank group.After the alert, according to Berger and members 
of the NSC staff, the FBI returned to its normal practice of withholding 
written reports and saying little about investigations or witness interviews,taking 
the position that any information related to pending investigations might 
be presented to a grand jury and hence could not be disclosed under thenprevailing 
federal law.40 

The terrorist plots that were broken up at the end of 1999 display the variety 
of operations that might be attributed,however indirectly,to al Qaeda.The 
Jordanian cell was a loose affiliate; we now know that it sought approval and 
training from Afghanistan, and at least one key member swore loyalty to Bin 
Ladin. But the cell’s plans and preparations were autonomous. Ressam’s ties to 
al Qaeda were even looser.Though he had been recruited, trained, and prepared 
in a network affiliated with the organization and its allies, Ressam’s own 
plans were, nonetheless, essentially independent. 

Al Qaeda, and Bin Ladin himself, did have at least one operation of their 
very own in mind for the millennium period. In chapter 5 we introduced an 
al Qaeda operative named Nashiri.Working with Bin Ladin, he was developing 
a plan to attack a ship near Yemen.On January 3,an attempt was made to 
attack a U.S. warship in Aden, the USS The Sullivans.The attempt failed when 
the small boat, overloaded with explosives, sank.The operatives salvaged their 
equipment without the attempt becoming known, and they put off their plans 
for another day. 

Al Qaeda’s “planes operation” was also coming along. In January 2000, the 
United States caught a glimpse of its preparations.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>Bureau</Misc>
    <Person>Watson</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda’s</Organization>
    <Location>Aden</Location>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Dale Watson</Person>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>John O’Neill</Person>
    <Misc>Christmas</Misc>
    <Location>Hijazi</Location>
    <Location>Deek</Location>
    <Organization>USS The Sullivans.The</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

A Lost Trail in Southeast Asia 

In late 1999, the National Security Agency (NSA) analyzed communications 
associated with a suspected terrorist facility in the Middle East, indicating that 
several members of “an operational cadre” were planning to travel to Kuala 
Lumpur in early January 2000. Initially, only the first names of three were 
known—“Nawaf,”“Salem,”and “Khalid.”NSA analysts surmised correctly that 
Salem was Nawaf’s younger brother. Seeing links not only with al Qaeda but 
specifically with the 1998 embassy bombings, a CIA desk officer guessed that 
“something more nefarious [was] afoot.”41 

In chapter 5,we discussed the dispatch of two operatives to the United States 
for their part in the planes operation—Nawaf al Hazmi and Khalid al Mihd-
har.Two more, Khallad and Abu Bara, went to Southeast Asia to case flights for 
the part of the operation that was supposed to unfold there.42 All made their 
way to Southeast Asia from Afghanistan and Pakistan,except for Mihdhar,who 
traveled from Yemen.43 

Though Nawaf ’s trail was temporarily lost,the CIA soon identified “Khalid” 
as Khalid al Mihdhar.44 He was located leaving Yemen and tracked until he 
arrived in Kuala Lumpur on January 5,2000.45 Other Arabs,unidentified at the 
time, were watched as they gathered with him in the Malaysian capital.46 

On January 8, the surveillance teams reported that three of the Arabs had 
suddenly left Kuala Lumpur on a short flight to Bangkok.47 They identified 
one as Mihdhar. They later learned that one of his companions was named 
Alhazmi, although it was not yet known that he was “Nawaf.”The only identifier 
available for the third person was part of a name—Salahsae.48 In 
Bangkok,CIA officers received the information too late to track the three men 
as they came in, and the travelers disappeared into the streets of Bangkok.49 

The Counterterrorist Center (CTC) had briefed the CIA leadership on the 
gathering in Kuala Lumpur,and the information had been passed on to Berger 
and the NSC staff and to Director Freeh and others at the FBI (though the 
FBI noted that the CIA had the lead and would let the FBI know if a domestic 
angle arose).The head of the Bin Ladin unit kept providing updates,unaware 
at first even that the Arabs had left Kuala Lumpur, let alone that their trail had 
been lost in Bangkok.50When this bad news arrived,the names were put on a 
Thai watchlist so that Thai authorities could inform the United States if any 
of them departed from Thailand.51 

Several weeks later, CIA officers in Kuala Lumpur prodded colleagues in 
Bangkok for additional information regarding the three travelers.52 In early 
March 2000, Bangkok reported that Nawaf al Hazmi, now identified for the 
first time with his full name, had departed on January 15 on a United Airlines 
flight to Los Angeles. As for Khalid al Mihdhar, there was no report of his 
departure even though he had accompanied Hazmi on the United flight to Los 
Angeles.53 No one outside of the Counterterrorist Center was told any of this. 
The CIA did not try to register Mihdhar or Hazmi with the State Department’s</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Agency</Organization>
    <Person>Freeh</Person>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabs</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>State Department’s</Organization>
    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>Malaysian</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Location>Salem</Location>
    <Person>Nawaf</Person>
    <Misc>Thai</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Bara</Person>
    <Organization>Khalid</Organization>
    <Misc>Mihd-</Misc>
    <Misc>Yemen.43 Though</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar.44 He</Person>
    <Person>Alhazmi</Person>
    <Organization>Bangkok.49 The Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Misc>Thailand.51 Several</Misc>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.53</Misc>
    <Date>January 5,2000</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

TIPOFF watchlist—either in January,when word arrived of Mihdhar’s visa,or 
in March, when word came that Hazmi, too, had had a U.S. visa and a ticket 
to Los Angeles.54 

None of this information—about Mihdhar’s U.S. visa or Hazmi’s travel to 
the United States—went to the FBI, and nothing more was done to track any 
of the three until January 2001, when the investigation of another bombing, 
that of the USS Cole, reignited interest in Khallad.We will return to that story 
in chapter 8. 

6.2 POST-CRISIS REFLECTION:AGENDA FOR 2000 
After the millennium alert, elements of the U.S. government reviewed their 
performance.The CIA’s leadership was told that while a number of plots had 
been disrupted,the millennium might be only the “kick-off ”for a period of 
extended attacks.55 Clarke wrote Berger on January 11,2000,that the CIA,the 
FBI, Justice, and the NSC staff had come to two main conclusions. First, U.S. 
disruption efforts thus far had “not put too much of a dent”in Bin Ladin’s network. 
If the United States wanted to “roll back” the threat, disruption would 
have to proceed at “a markedly different tempo.” Second,“sleeper cells” and “a 
variety of terrorist groups” had turned up at home.56 As one of Clarke’s staff 
noted, only a “chance discovery” by U.S. Customs had prevented a possible 
attack.57 Berger gave his approval for the NSC staff to commence an “afteraction 
review,” anticipating new budget requests. He also asked DCI Tenet to 
review the CIA’s counterterrorism strategy and come up with a plan for “where 
we go from here.”58 

The NSC staff advised Berger that the United States had only been “nibbling 
at the edges” of Bin Ladin’s network and that more terror attacks were a 
question not of “if ”but rather of “when”and “where.”59The Principals Committee 
met on March 10, 2000, to review possible new moves.The principals 
ended up agreeing that the government should take three major steps. First, 
more money should go to the CIA to accelerate its efforts to “seriously attrit” 
al Qaeda. Second, there should be a crackdown on foreign terrorist organizations 
in the United States. Third, immigration law enforcement should be 
strengthened, and the INS should tighten controls on the Canadian border 
(including stepping up U.S.-Canada cooperation).The principals endorsed the 
proposed programs; some, like expanding the number of Joint Terrorism Task 
Forces, moved forward, and others, like creating a centralized translation unit 
for domestic intelligence intercepts in Arabic and other languages, did not.60 

Pressing Pakistan 

While this process moved along,diplomacy continued its rounds.Direct pressure 
on the Taliban had proved unsuccessful. As one NSC staff note put it,</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Justice</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
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    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>USS Cole</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Misc>Canadian</Misc>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Date>March 10, 2000</Date>
    <Misc>Mihdhar’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Joint Terrorism Task Forces</Organization>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.54</Misc>
    <Location>United States—went</Location>
    <Organization>U.S. Customs</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.-Canada</Misc>
    <Date>January 11,2000</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>19_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Between 6:45 and 7:40,Atta and Omari,along with Satam al Suqami,Wail 
al Shehri, and Waleed al Shehri, checked in and boarded American Airlines 
Flight 11, bound for Los Angeles.The flight was scheduled to depart at 7:45.4 

In another Logan terminal, Shehhi, joined by Fayez Banihammad, Mohand 
al Shehri, Ahmed al Ghamdi, and Hamza al Ghamdi, checked in for United 
Airlines Flight 175,also bound for Los Angeles.A couple of Shehhi’s colleagues 
were obviously unused to travel;according to the United ticket agent,they had 
trouble understanding the standard security questions, and she had to go over 
them slowly until they gave the routine, reassuring answers.5 Their flight was 
scheduled to depart at 8:00. 

The security checkpoints through which passengers, including Atta and his 
colleagues, gained access to the American 11 gate were operated by Globe 
Security under a contract with American Airlines. In a different terminal, the 
single checkpoint through which passengers for United 175 passed was controlled 
by United Airlines, which had contracted with Huntleigh USA to perform 
the screening.6 

In passing through these checkpoints,each of the hijackers would have been 
screened by a walk-through metal detector calibrated to detect items with at 
least the metal content of a .22-caliber handgun.Anyone who might have set 
off that detector would have been screened with a hand wand—a procedure 
requiring the screener to identify the metal item or items that caused the alarm. 
In addition, an X-ray machine would have screened the hijackers’ carry-on 
belongings.The screening was in place to identify and confiscate weapons and 
other items prohibited from being carried onto a commercial flight.7 None of 
the checkpoint supervisors recalled the hijackers or reported anything suspicious 
regarding their screening.8 

While Atta had been selected by CAPPS in Portland, three members of his 
hijacking team—Suqami,Wail al Shehri, and Waleed al Shehri—were selected 
in Boston.Their selection affected only the handling of their checked bags,not 
their screening at the checkpoint. All five men cleared the checkpoint and 
made their way to the gate for American 11. Atta, Omari, and Suqami took 
their seats in business class (seats 8D, 8G, and 10B, respectively). The Shehri 
brothers had adjacent seats in row 2 (Wail in 2A,Waleed in 2B), in the firstclass 
cabin. They boarded American 11 between 7:31 and 7:40. The aircraft 
pushed back from the gate at 7:40.9 

Shehhi and his team, none of whom had been selected by CAPPS, boarded 
United 175 between 7:23 and 7:28 (Banihammad in 2A, Shehri in 2B, Shehhi 
in 6C, Hamza al Ghamdi in 9C, and Ahmed al Ghamdi in 9D).Their aircraft 
pushed back from the gate just before 8:00.10 

Washington Dulles:American 77. Hundreds of miles southwest of Boston, 
at Dulles International Airport in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., 
five more men were preparing to take their early morning flight.At 7:15,a pair</docText>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
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    <Person>Hamza al Ghamdi</Person>
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    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
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    <Person>Omari</Person>
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    <Misc>Waleed</Misc>
    <Location>Dulles International Airport</Location>
    <Organization>CAPPS</Organization>
    <Misc>Mohand</Misc>
    <Person>Fayez Banihammad</Person>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.The</Misc>
    <Misc>Logan</Misc>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.A</Misc>
    <Organization>Globe Security</Organization>
    <Location>Huntleigh USA</Location>
    <Misc>Shehri—were</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>1_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 
COMMISSION 
REPORT</docText>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>200_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

“Under the Taliban,Afghanistan is not so much a state sponsor of terrorism 
as it is a state sponsored by terrorists.”61 In early 2000,the United States began 
a high-level effort to persuade Pakistan to use its influence over the Taliban. 

In January 2000, Assistant Secretary of State Karl Inderfurth and the State 
Department’s counterterrorism coordinator, Michael Sheehan, met with General 
Musharraf in Islamabad, dangling before him the possibility of a presidential 
visit in March as a reward for Pakistani cooperation. Such a visit was coveted by 
Musharraf,partly as a sign of his government’s legitimacy.He told the two envoys 
that he would meet with Mullah Omar and press him on Bin Ladin.They left, 
however, reporting to Washington that Pakistan was unlikely in fact to do anything,“
given what it sees as the benefits of Taliban control of Afghanistan.”62 

President Clinton was scheduled to travel to India.The State Department 
felt that he should not visit India without also visiting Pakistan.The Secret Service 
and the CIA,however,warned in the strongest terms that visiting Pakistan 
would risk the President’s life. Counterterrorism officials also argued that Pakistan 
had not done enough to merit a presidential visit. But President Clinton 
insisted on including Pakistan in the itinerary for his trip to South Asia.63 His 
one-day stopover on March 25, 2000, was the first time a U.S. president had 
been there since 1969. At his meeting with Musharraf and others, President 
Clinton concentrated on tensions between Pakistan and India and the dangers 
of nuclear proliferation,but also discussed Bin Ladin.President Clinton told us 
that when he pulled Musharraf aside for a brief, one-on-one meeting, he 
pleaded with the general for help regarding Bin Ladin.“I offered him the moon 
when I went to see him, in terms of better relations with the United States, if 
he’d help us get Bin Ladin and deal with another issue or two.”64 

The U.S. effort continued. Early in May, President Clinton urged Musharraf 
to carry through on his promise to visit Afghanistan and press Mullah Omar 
to expel Bin Ladin.65 At the end of the month, Under Secretary of State 
Thomas Pickering followed up with a trip to the region.66 In June,DCI Tenet 
traveled to Pakistan with the same general message.67 By September,the United 
States was becoming openly critical of Pakistan for supporting a Taliban military 
offensive aimed at completing the conquest of Afghanistan.68 

In December,taking a step proposed by the State Department some months 
earlier,the United States led a campaign for new UN sanctions,which resulted 
in UN Security Council Resolution 1333,again calling for Bin Ladin’s expulsion 
and forbidding any country to provide the Taliban with arms or military 
assistance.69 This, too, had little if any effect. The Taliban did not expel Bin 
Ladin. Pakistani arms continued to flow across the border. 

Secretary of State Madeleine Albright told us, “We did not have a strong 
hand to play with the Pakistanis. Because of the sanctions required by U.S. law, 
we had few carrots to offer.”70 Congress had blocked most economic and military 
aid to Pakistan because of that country’s nuclear arms program and 
Musharraf ’s coup. Sheehan was critical of Musharraf, telling us that the Pak


”71

istani leader “blew a chance to remake Pakistan.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.They</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>UN</Organization>
    <Person>Musharraf</Person>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Person>Sheehan</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistanis</Misc>
    <Organization>UN Security Council Resolution</Organization>
    <Person>Michael Sheehan</Person>
    <Person>Madeleine Albright</Person>
    <Date>March 25, 2000</Date>
    <Person>Karl Inderfurth</Person>
    <Organization>India.The State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Pakistan.The Secret Service</Organization>
    <Misc>South Asia.63</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.President</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin.“I</Organization>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin.65</Misc>
    <Person>Thomas Pickering</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Building New Capabilities:The CIA 

The after-action review had treated the CIA as the lead agency for any offensive 
against al Qaeda, and the principals, at their March 10 meeting, had 
endorsed strengthening the CIA’s capability for that role. To the CTC, that 
meant proceeding with “the Plan,” which it had put forward half a year 
earlier—hiring and training more case officers and building up the capabilities 
of foreign security services that provided intelligence via liaison. On occasion, 
as in Jordan in December 1999, these liaison services took direct action against 
al Qaeda cells.72 

In the CTC and higher up, the CIA’s managers believed that they desperately 
needed funds just to continue their current counterterrorism effort, for 
they reckoned that the millennium alert had already used up all of the Center’s 
funds for the current fiscal year; the Bin Ladin unit had spent 140 percent 
of its allocation.Tenet told us he met with Berger to discuss funding for counterterrorism 
just two days after the principals’ meeting.73 

While Clarke strongly favored giving the CIA more money for counterterrorism, 
he differed sharply with the CIA’s managers about where it should 
come from.They insisted that the CIA had been shortchanged ever since the 
end of the Cold War.Their ability to perform any mission,counterterrorism 
included, they argued, depended on preserving what they had, restoring what 
they had lost since the beginning of the 1990s, and building from there—with 
across-the-board recruitment and training of new case officers, and the 
reopening of closed stations.To finance the counterterrorism effort,Tenet had 
gone to congressional leaders after the 1998 embassy bombings and persuaded 
them to give the CIA a special supplemental appropriation. Now, in the aftermath 
of the millennium alert,Tenet wanted a boost in overall funds for the CIA 
and another supplemental appropriation specifically for counterterrorism.74 

To Clarke, this seemed evidence that the CIA’s leadership did not give sufficient 
priority to the battle against Bin Ladin and al Qaeda.He told us that James 
Pavitt, the head of the CIA’s Directorate of Operations, “said if there’s going 
to be money spent on going after Bin Ladin, it should be given to him. ...My 
view was that he had had a lot of money to do it and a long time to do it, and I 
didn’t want to put more good money after bad.”75The CIA had a very different 
attitude:Pavitt told us that while the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit did “extraordinary and 
commendable work,” his chief of station in London “was just as much part of 
the al Qaeda struggle as an officer sitting in [the Bin Ladin unit].”76 

The dispute had large managerial implications, for Clarke had found allies 
in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).They had supplied him with 
the figures he used to argue that CIA spending on counterterrorism from its 
baseline budget had shown almost no increase.77 

Berger met twice with Tenet in April to try to resolve the dispute. The 
Deputies Committee met later in the month to review fiscal year 2000 and 
2001 budget priorities and offsets for the CIA and other agencies. In the end,</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>Office of Management and Budget</Organization>
    <Organization>OMB</Organization>
    <Location>London</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>James Pavitt</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Deputies Committee</Organization>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Center’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Cold War.Their</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda.He</Person>
    <Organization>CIA’s Directorate of Operations</Organization>
    <Date>2000 and 
2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>202_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

Tenet obtained a modest supplemental appropriation, which funded counterterrorism 
without requiring much reprogramming of baseline funds. But the 
CIA still believed that it remained underfunded for counterterrorism.78 

Terrorist Financing 

The second major point on which the principals had agreed on March 10 was 
the need to crack down on terrorist organizations and curtail their fund-raising. 

The embassy bombings of 1998 had focused attention on al Qaeda’s 
finances. One result had been the creation of an NSC-led interagency committee 
on terrorist financing. On its recommendation, the President had designated 
Bin Ladin and al Qaeda as subject to sanctions under the International 
Emergency Economic PowersAct.This gave the Treasury Department’s Office 
of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) the ability to search for and freeze any Bin 
Ladin or al Qaeda assets that reached the U.S.financial system.But since OFAC 
had little information to go on, few funds were frozen.79 

In July 1999, the President applied the same designation to the Taliban for 
harboring Bin Ladin.Here,OFAC had more success.It blocked more than $34 
million in Taliban assets held in U.S.banks.Another $215 million in gold and 
$2 million in demand deposits, all belonging to the Afghan central bank and 
held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,were also frozen.80After October 
1999, when the State Department formally designated al Qaeda a “foreign 
terrorist organization,” it became the duty of U.S. banks to block its transactions 
and seize its funds.81 Neither this designation nor UN sanctions had much 
additional practical effect; the sanctions were easily circumvented, and there 
were no multilateral mechanisms to ensure that other countries’ financial systems 
were not used as conduits for terrorist funding.82 

Attacking the funds of an institution,even the Taliban,was easier than finding 
and seizing the funds of a clandestine worldwide organization like al Qaeda. 
Although the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit had originally been inspired by the idea of 
studying terrorist financial links, few personnel assigned to it had any experience 
in financial investigations. Any terrorist-financing intelligence appeared 
to have been collected collaterally, as a consequence of gathering other intelligence.
This attitude may have stemmed in large part from the chief of this unit, 
who did not believe that simply following the money from point A to point B 
revealed much about the terrorists’ plans and intentions. As a result, the CIA 
placed little emphasis on terrorist financing.83 

Nevertheless, the CIA obtained a general understanding of how al Qaeda 
raised money. It knew relatively early, for example, about the loose affiliation 
of financial institutions, businesses, and wealthy individuals who supported 
extremist Islamic activities.84 Much of the early reporting on al Qaeda’s financial 
situation and its structure came from Jamal Ahmed al Fadl, whom we have 
mentioned earlier in the report.85 After the 1998 embassy bombings, the U.S. 
government tried to develop a clearer picture of Bin Ladin’s finances.A U.S.</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Person>Jamal Ahmed</Person>
    <Person>Fadl</Person>
    <Organization>UN</Organization>
    <Organization>OFAC</Organization>
    <Misc>NSC-led</Misc>
    <Organization>Terrorist Financing The</Organization>
    <Organization>International Emergency Economic PowersAct.This</Organization>
    <Organization>Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.financial</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.Here</Person>
    <Location>U.S.banks.Another</Location>
    <Organization>Federal Reserve Bank of New York</Organization>
    <Location>U.S</Location>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

interagency group traveled to Saudi Arabia twice, in 1999 and 2000, to get 
information from the Saudis about their understanding of those finances.The 
group eventually concluded that the oft-repeated assertion that Bin Ladin was 
funding al Qaeda from his personal fortune was in fact not true. 

The officials developed a new theory: al Qaeda was getting its money elsewhere, 
and the United States needed to focus on other sources of funding, such 
as charities, wealthy donors, and financial facilitators. Ultimately, although the 
intelligence community devoted more resources to the issue and produced 
somewhat more intelligence,86 it remained difficult to distinguish al Qaeda’s 
financial transactions among the vast sums moving in the international financial 
system.The CIA was not able to find or disrupt al Qaeda’s money flows.87 

The NSC staff thought that one possible solution to these weaknesses in the 
intelligence community was to create an all-source terrorist-financing intelligence 
analysis center. Clarke pushed for the funding of such a center at Treasury, 
but neither Treasury nor the CIA was willing to commit the resources.88 

Within the United States, various FBI field offices gathered intelligence on 
organizations suspected of raising funds for al Qaeda or other terrorist groups. 
By 9/11, FBI agents understood that there were extremist organizations operating 
within the United States supporting a global jihadist movement and with 
substantial connections to al Qaeda.The FBI operated a web of informants, 
conducted electronic surveillance, and had opened significant investigations in 
a number of field offices, including New York, Chicago, Detroit, San Diego, 
and Minneapolis. On a national level, however, the FBI never used the information 
to gain a systematic or strategic understanding of the nature and extent 
of al Qaeda fundraising.89 

Treasury regulators, as well as U.S. financial institutions, were generally 
focused on finding and deterring or disrupting the vast flows of U.S. currency 
generated by drug trafficking and high-level international fraud. Large-scale 
scandals,such as the use of the Bank of New York by Russian money launderers 
to move millions of dollars out of Russia, captured the attention of the 
Department of the Treasury and of Congress.90 Before 9/11,Treasury did not 
consider terrorist financing important enough to mention in its national strategy 
for money laundering.91 

Border Security 

The third point on which the principals had agreed on March 10 was the need 
for attention to America’s porous borders and the weak enforcement of immigration 
laws. Drawing on ideas from government officials, Clarke’s working 
group developed a menu of proposals to bolster border security. Some 
reworked or reiterated previous presidential directives.92 They included 

• 
creating an interagency center to target illegal entry and human 
traffickers;</docText>
    <Organization>Treasury</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
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    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>Clarke’s</Organization>
    <Date>1999 and 2000</Date>
    <Organization>Department of the Treasury</Organization>
    <Location>Minneapolis</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Misc>America’s</Misc>
    <Location>Detroit</Location>
    <Organization>Bank of New York by Russian</Organization>
    <Misc>Congress.90</Misc>
    <Organization>Border Security</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>204_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

• 
imposing tighter controls on student visas;93 
• 
taking legal action to prevent terrorists from coming into the United 
States and to remove those already here, detaining them while awaiting 
removal proceedings;94 
• 
further increasing the number of immigration agents to FBI Joint Terrorism 
Task Forces to help investigate immigration charges against 
individuals suspected of terrorism;95 
• 
activating a special court to enable the use of classified evidence in 
immigration-related national security cases;96 and 
• 
both implementing new security measures for U.S. passports and 
working with the United Nations and foreign governments to raise 
global security standards for travel documents.97 
Clarke’s working group compiled new proposals as well, such as 

• 
undertaking a Joint Perimeter Defense program with Canada to establish 
cooperative intelligence and law enforcement programs, leading 
to joint operations based on shared visa and immigration data and 
joint border patrols; 
• 
staffing land border crossings 24/7 and equipping them with video 
cameras, physical barriers, and means to detect weapons of mass 
destruction (WMD); and 
• 
addressing the problem of migrants—possibly including terrorists— 
who destroy their travel documents so they cannot be returned to 
their countries of origin.98 
These proposals were praiseworthy in principle. In practice, however, they 
required action by weak,chronically underfunded executive agencies and powerful 
congressional committees, which were more responsive to well-organized 
interest groups than to executive branch interagency committees. The 
changes sought by the principals in March 2000 were only beginning to occur 
before 9/11. 

“Afghan Eyes” 

In early March 2000,when President Clinton received an update on U.S.covert 
action efforts against Bin Ladin,he wrote in the memo’s margin that the United 
States could surely do better.Military officers in the Joint Staff told us that they 
shared this sense of frustration. Clarke used the President’s comment to push 
the CSG to brainstorm new ideas, including aid to the Northern Alliance.99 

Back in December 1999, Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud 
had offered to stage a rocket attack against Bin Ladin’s Derunta training complex.
Officers at the CIA had worried that giving him a green light might cross 
the line into violation of the assassination ban. Hence, Massoud was told not</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Organization>United Nations</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Massoud</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Person>Ahmed Shah Massoud</Person>
    <Organization>FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces</Organization>
    <Organization>Joint Perimeter Defense</Organization>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance.99 Back</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

to take any such action without explicit U.S. authorization.100 In the spring of 
2000, after the CIA had sent out officers to explore possible closer relationships 
with both the Uzbeks and the Northern Alliance, discussions took place 
in Washington between U.S. officials and delegates sent by Massoud.101 

The Americans agreed that Massoud should get some modest technical help 
so he could work on U.S. priorities—collecting intelligence on and possibly 
acting against al Qaeda.But Massoud wanted the United States both to become 
his ally in trying to overthrow the Taliban and to recognize that they were fighting 
common enemies. Clarke and Cofer Black, the head of the Counterterrorist 
Center, wanted to take this next step. Proposals to help the Northern 
Alliance had been debated in the U.S.government since 1999 and,as we mentioned 
in chapter 4, the U.S. government as a whole had been wary of endorsing 
them, largely because of the Northern Alliance’s checkered history, its 
limited base of popular support in Afghanistan, and Pakistan’s objections.102 

CIA officials also began pressing proposals to use their ties with the 
Northern Alliance to get American agents on the ground in Afghanistan for 
an extended period, setting up their own base for covert intelligence collection 
and activity in the Panjshir Valley and lessening reliance on foreign 
proxies.“There’s no substitute for face-to-face,” one officer told us.103 But 
the CIA’s institutional capacity for such direct action was weak, especially if 
it was not working jointly with the U.S. military. The idea was turned down 
as too risky.104 

In the meantime, the CIA continued to work with its tribal assets in southern 
Afghanistan.In early August,the tribals reported an attempt to ambush Bin 
Ladin’s convoy as he traveled on the road between Kabul and Kandahar city— 
their first such reported interdiction attempt in more than a year and a half. 
But it was not a success. According to the tribals’ own account, when they 
approached one of the vehicles,they quickly determined that women and children 
were inside and called off the ambush. Conveying this information to the 
NSC staff, the CIA noted that they had no independent corroboration for this 
incident, but that the tribals had acted within the terms of the CIA’s authorities 
in Afghanistan.105 

In 2000, plans continued to be developed for potential military operations 
in Afghanistan. Navy vessels that could launch missiles into Afghanistan were 
still on call in the north Arabian Sea.106 In the summer, the military refined its 
list of strikes and Special Operations possibilities to a set of 13 options within 
the Operation Infinite Resolve plan.107 Yet planning efforts continued to be 
limited by the same operational and policy concerns encountered in 1998 and 
1999. Although the intelligence community sometimes knew where Bin Ladin 
was, it had been unable to provide intelligence considered sufficiently reliable 
to launch a strike.Above all,the United States did not haveAmerican eyes on 
the target.As one military officer put it,we had our hand on the door,but we 
couldn’t open the door and walk in.108</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Kabul</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Organization>Operation Infinite Resolve</Organization>
    <Person>Massoud</Person>
    <Location>Northern Alliance</Location>
    <Misc>Uzbeks</Misc>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Pakistan’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Massoud.101</Organization>
    <Misc>Northern Alliance’s</Misc>
    <Location>Panjshir Valley</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan.105</Location>
    <Misc>Arabian Sea.106</Misc>
    <Date>1998 and 
1999</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>206_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

At some point during this period, President Clinton expressed his frustration 
with the lack of military options to take out Bin Ladin and the al Qaeda 
leadership,remarking to General Hugh Shelton,“You know,it would scare the 
shit out of al-Qaeda if suddenly a bunch of black ninjas rappelled out of helicopters 
into the middle of their camp.”109 Although Shelton told the Commission 
he did not remember the statement,President Clinton recalled this remark 
as “one of the many things I said.” The President added, however, that he realized 
nothing would be accomplished if he lashed out in anger. Secretary of 
Defense William Cohen thought that the President might have been making 
a hypothetical statement.Regardless,he said,the question remained how to get 
the “ninjas” into and out of the theater of operations.110 As discussed in chapter 
4, plans of this kind were never carried out before 9/11. 

In late 1999 or early 2000,the Joint Staff ’s director of operations,Vice Admiral 
Scott Fry, directed his chief information operations officer, Brigadier General 
Scott Gration,to develop innovative ways to get better intelligence on Bin 
Ladin’s whereabouts. Gration and his team worked on a number of different 
ideas aimed at getting reliable American eyes on Bin Ladin in a way that would 
reduce the lag time between sighting and striking.111 

One option was to use a small,unmanned U.S.Air Force drone called the 
Predator,which could survey the territory below and send back video footage. 
Another option—eventually dismissed as impractical—was to place a powerful 
long-range telescope on a mountain within range of one of Bin Ladin’s 
training camps.Both proposals were discussed with General Shelton,the chairman 
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,and then briefed to Clarke’s office at the White 
House as the CSG was searching for new ideas. In the spring of 2000, Clarke 
brought in the CIA’s assistant director for collection, Charles Allen, to work 
together with Fry on a joint CIA-Pentagon effort that Clarke dubbed “Afghan 
Eyes.”112After much argument between the CIA and the Defense Department 
about who should pay for the program, the White House eventually imposed 
a cost-sharing agreement.The CIA agreed to pay for Predator operations as a 
60-day “proof of concept” trial run.113 

The Small Group backed Afghan Eyes at the end of June 2000.By mid-July, 
testing was completed and the equipment was ready, but legal issues were still 
being ironed out.114 By August 11, the principals had agreed to deploy the 
Predator.115 The NSC staff considered how to use the information the drones 
would be relaying from Afghanistan. Clarke’s deputy, Roger Cressey, wrote to 
Berger that emergency CSG and Principals Committee meetings might be 
needed to act on video coming in from the Predator if it proved able to lock 
in Bin Ladin’s location. In the memo’s margin, Berger wrote that before considering 
action,“I will want more than verified location: we will need, at least, 
data on pattern of movements to provide some assurance he will remain in 
place.” President Clinton was kept up to date.116 

On September 7,the Predator flew for the first time over Afghanistan.When</docText>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Organization>U.S.Air Force</Organization>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin’s</Misc>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Person>Charles Allen</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Hugh Shelton</Person>
    <Person>William Cohen</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Roger Cressey</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs of Staff</Organization>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Organization>Clarke’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Defense</Organization>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Person>Scott Gration</Person>
    <Organization>Small Group</Organization>
    <Person>Scott Fry</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.When</Misc>
    <Organization>Brigadier General</Organization>
    <Person>Gration</Person>
    <Person>Fry</Person>
    <Misc>CIA-Pentagon</Misc>
    <Misc>Predator.115</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docID>207_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Clarke saw video taken during the trial flight, he described the imagery to 
Berger as “truly astonishing,”and he argued immediately for more flights seeking 
to find Bin Ladin and target him for cruise missile or air attack.Even if Bin 
Ladin were not found, Clarke said, Predator missions might identify additional 
worthwhile targets,such as other al Qaeda leaders or stocks of chemical or biological 
weapons.117 

Clarke was not alone in his enthusiasm. He had backing from Cofer Black 
and Charles Allen at the CIA.Ten out of 15 trial missions of the Predator over 
Afghanistan were rated successful. On the first flight, a Predator saw a security 
detail around a tall man in a white robe at Bin Ladin’s Tarnak Farms compound 
outside Kandahar.After a second sighting of the “man in white” at the compound 
on September 28, intelligence community analysts determined that he 
was probably Bin Ladin.118 

During at least one trial mission,the Taliban spotted the Predator and scrambled 
MiG fighters to try, without success, to intercept it. Berger worried that a 
Predator might be shot down, and warned Clarke that a shootdown would be a 
“bonanza” for Bin Ladin and the Taliban.119 

Still, Clarke was optimistic about Predator—as well as progress with disruptions 
of al Qaeda cells elsewhere. Berger was more cautious, praising the 
NSC staff’s performance but observing that this was no time for complacency. 
“Unfortunately,” he wrote, “the light at the end of the tunnel is 

”120

another tunnel.

6.3 THE ATTACK ON THE USS COLE 
Early in chapter 5 we introduced, along with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, two 
other men who became operational coordinators for al Qaeda: Khallad and 
Nashiri.As we explained,both were involved during 1998 and 1999 in preparing 
to attack a ship off the coast of Yemen with a boatload of explosives.They 
had originally targeted a commercial vessel, specifically an oil tanker, but Bin 
Ladin urged them to look for a U.S.warship instead.In January 2000,their team 
had attempted to attack a warship in the port of Aden, but the attempt failed 
when the suicide boat sank.More than nine months later,on October 12,2000, 
al Qaeda operatives in a small boat laden with explosives attacked a U.S. Navy 
destroyer, the USS Cole.The blast ripped a hole in the side of the Cole, killing 
17 members of the ship’s crew and wounding at least 40.121 

The plot, we now know, was a full-fledged al Qaeda operation, supervised 
directly by Bin Ladin. He chose the target and location of the attack, selected 
the suicide operatives, and provided the money needed to purchase explosives 
and equipment. Nashiri was the field commander and managed the operation 
in Yemen.Khallad helped in Yemen until he was arrested in a case of mistaken</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Aden</Location>
    <Person>Charles Allen</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Location>Cole</Location>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Tarnak Farms</Organization>
    <Location>Bin</Location>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Misc>Predator</Misc>
    <Date>1998 and 1999</Date>
    <Misc>CIA.Ten</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.118</Person>
    <Location>Taliban.119 Still</Location>
    <Misc>COLE Early</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda: Khallad</Person>
    <Misc>Nashiri.As</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen.Khallad</Location>
    <Date>October 12,2000</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>208_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

identity and freed with Bin Ladin’s help, as we also mentioned earlier. Local 
al Qaeda coordinators included Jamal al Badawi and Fahd al Quso, who was 
supposed to film the attack from a nearby apartment.The two suicide operatives 
chosen were Hassan al Khamri and Ibrahim al Thawar, also known as 
Nibras.Nibras and Quso delivered money to Khallad in Bangkok during Khallad’s 
January 2000 trip to Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok.122 

In September 2000, Bin Ladin reportedly told Nashiri that he wanted to 
replace Khamri and Nibras. Nashiri was angry and disagreed, telling others he 
would go to Afghanistan and explain to Bin Ladin that the new operatives were 
already trained and ready to conduct the attack.Prior to departing,Nashiri gave 
Nibras and Khamri instructions to execute the attack on the next U.S.warship 
that entered the port of Aden.123 

While Nashiri was in Afghanistan, Nibras and Khamri saw their chance. 
They piloted the explosives-laden boat alongside the USS Cole, made friendly 
gestures to crew members,and detonated the bomb.Quso did not arrive at the 
apartment in time to film the attack.124 

Back in Afghanistan, Bin Ladin anticipated U.S. military retaliation. He 
ordered the evacuation of al Qaeda’s Kandahar airport compound and fled— 
first to the desert area near Kabul, then to Khowst and Jalalabad, and eventually 
back to Kandahar. In Kandahar, he rotated between five to six residences, 
spending one night at each residence. In addition, he sent his senior advisor, 
Mohammed Atef, to a different part of Kandahar and his deputy, Ayman al 
Zawahiri, to Kabul so that all three could not be killed in one attack.125 

There was no American strike. In February 2001, a source reported that an 
individual whom he identified as the big instructor (probably a reference to 
Bin Ladin) complained frequently that the United States had not yet attacked. 
According to the source, Bin Ladin wanted the United States to attack, and if 
it did not he would launch something bigger.126 

The attack on the USS Cole galvanized al Qaeda’s recruitment efforts. Following 
the attack, Bin Ladin instructed the media committee, then headed by 
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, to produce a propaganda video that included a 
reenactment of the attack along with images of the al Qaeda training camps 
and training methods; it also highlighted Muslim suffering in Palestine, Kashmir, 
Indonesia, and Chechnya. Al Qaeda’s image was very important to Bin 
Ladin, and the video was widely disseminated. Portions were aired on Al 
Jazeera, CNN, and other television outlets. It was also disseminated among 
many young men in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, and caused many extremists to 
travel to Afghanistan for training and jihad.Al Qaeda members considered the 
video an effective tool in their struggle for preeminence among other Islamist 
and jihadist movements.127</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Person>Mohammed Atef</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Kashmir</Location>
    <Location>Jalalabad</Location>
    <Location>Kabul</Location>
    <Organization>CNN</Organization>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Location>Indonesia</Location>
    <Person>Ayman al Zawahiri</Person>
    <Location>Palestine</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>USS Cole</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Person>Badawi</Person>
    <Person>Nibras</Person>
    <Person>Quso</Person>
    <Person>Al Jazeera</Person>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Organization>Khallad</Organization>
    <Location>Khowst</Location>
    <Misc>Jamal</Misc>
    <Person>Al Qaeda’s</Person>
    <Misc>Hassan</Misc>
    <Person>Khamri</Person>
    <Misc>Ibrahim</Misc>
    <Person>Thawar</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok.122</Location>
    <Misc>Aden.123 While</Misc>
    <Location>Qaeda’s Kandahar</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda’s</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>209_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Investigating the Attack 

Teams from the FBI, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and the CIA 
were immediately sent to Yemen to investigate the attack.With difficulty,Barbara 
Bodine,the U.S.ambassador to Yemen,tried to persuade the Yemeni government 
to accept these visitors and allow them to carry arms, though the 
Yemenis balked at letting Americans openly carry long guns (rifles, shotguns, 
automatic weapons). Meanwhile, Bodine and the leader of the FBI team, John 
O’Neill, clashed repeatedly—to the point that after O’Neill had been rotated 
out of Yemen but wanted to return, Bodine refused the request. Despite the 
initial tension,theYemeni and American investigations proceeded.Within a few 
weeks, the outline of the story began to emerge.128 

On the day of the Cole attack, a list of suspects was assembled that included 
al Qaeda’s affiliate Egyptian Islamic Jihad. U.S. counterterrorism officials told 
us they immediately assumed that al Qaeda was responsible.But as Deputy DCI 
John McLaughlin explained to us, it was not enough for the attack to smell, 
look, and taste like an al Qaeda operation.To make a case, the CIA needed not 
just a guess but a link to someone known to be an al Qaeda operative.129 

Within the first weeks after the attack,the Yemenis found and arrested both 
Badawi and Quso, but did not let the FBI team participate in the interrogations. 
The CIA described initial Yemeni support after the Cole as “slow and 
inadequate.” President Clinton, Secretary Albright, and DCI Tenet all intervened 
to help. Because the information was secondhand, the U.S. team could 
not make its own assessment of its reliability.130 

On November 11, the Yemenis provided the FBI with new information 
from the interrogations of Badawi and Quso, including descriptions of individuals 
from whom the detainees had received operational direction. One of 
them was Khallad, who was described as having lost his leg.The detainees 
said that Khallad helped direct the Cole operation from Afghanistan or Pakistan.
The Yemenis (correctly) judged that the man described as Khallad was 
Tawfiq bin Attash.131 

An FBI special agent recognized the name Khallad and connected this news 
with information from an important al Qaeda source who had been meeting 
regularly with CIA and FBI officers.The source had called Khallad Bin Ladin’s 
“run boy,” and described him as having lost one leg in an explosives accident 
at a training camp a few years earlier.To confirm the identification, the FBI 
agent asked the Yemenis for their photo of Khallad.The Yemenis provided the 
photo on November 22,reaffirming their view that Khallad had been an intermediary 
between the plotters and Bin Ladin. (In a meeting with U.S. officials 
a few weeks later, on December 16, the source identified Khallad from the 
Yemeni photograph.)132 

U.S. intelligence agencies had already connected Khallad to al Qaeda terrorist 
operations,including the 1998 embassy bombings.By this time the Yeme</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Organization>Egyptian Islamic Jihad</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Person>O’Neill</Person>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>Barbara Bodine</Person>
    <Person>Albright</Person>
    <Person>Badawi</Person>
    <Misc>Tawfiq</Misc>
    <Person>Quso</Person>
    <Misc>Yemenis</Misc>
    <Person>John O’Neill</Person>
    <Person>Bodine</Person>
    <Organization>Naval Criminal Investigative Service</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.ambassador</Location>
    <Person>DCI John McLaughlin</Person>
    <Person>Khallad.The Yemenis</Person>
    <Location>Yeme</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>20_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

of them, Khalid al Mihdhar and Majed Moqed, checked in at the American 
Airlines ticket counter for Flight 77,bound for Los Angeles.Within the next 
20 minutes,they would be followed by Hani Hanjour and two brothers,Nawaf 
al Hazmi and Salem al Hazmi.11 

Hani Hanjour, Khalid al Mihdhar, and Majed Moqed were flagged by 
CAPPS.The Hazmi brothers were also selected for extra scrutiny by the airline’s 
customer service representative at the check-in counter. He did so 
because one of the brothers did not have photo identification nor could he 
understand English, and because the agent found both of the passengers to 
be suspicious.The only consequence of their selection was that their checked 
bags were held off the plane until it was confirmed that they had boarded 
the aircraft.12 

All five hijackers passed through the Main Terminal’s west security screening 
checkpoint; United Airlines, which was the responsible air carrier, had 
contracted out the work to Argenbright Security.13 The checkpoint featured 
closed-circuit television that recorded all passengers, including the hijackers, 
as they were screened. At 7:18, Mihdhar and Moqed entered the security 
checkpoint. 

Mihdhar and Moqed placed their carry-on bags on the belt of the X-ray 
machine and proceeded through the first metal detector.Both set off the alarm, 
and they were directed to a second metal detector.Mihdhar did not trigger the 
alarm and was permitted through the checkpoint. After Moqed set it off, a 
screener wanded him. He passed this inspection.14 

About 20 minutes later, at 7:35, another passenger for Flight 77, Hani Hanjour, 
placed two carry-on bags on the X-ray belt in the Main Terminal’s west 
checkpoint,and proceeded,without alarm,through the metal detector.A short 
time later, Nawaf and Salem al Hazmi entered the same checkpoint. Salem al 
Hazmi cleared the metal detector and was permitted through;Nawaf al Hazmi 
set off the alarms for both the first and second metal detectors and was then 
hand-wanded before being passed.In addition,his over-the-shoulder carry-on 
bag was swiped by an explosive trace detector and then passed. The video 
footage indicates that he was carrying an unidentified item in his back pocket, 
clipped to its rim.15 

When the local civil aviation security office of the Federal Aviation Administration 
(FAA) later investigated these security screening operations, the 
screeners recalled nothing out of the ordinary.They could not recall that any 
of the passengers they screened were CAPPS selectees.We asked a screening 
expert to review the videotape of the hand-wanding, and he found the quality 
of the screener’s work to have been “marginal at best.”The screener should 
have “resolved” what set off the alarm; and in the case of both Moqed and 
Hazmi, it was clear that he did not.16 

At 7:50, Majed Moqed and Khalid al Mihdhar boarded the flight and were 
seated in 12A and 12B in coach. Hani Hanjour, assigned to seat 1B (first class),</docText>
    <Organization>Federal Aviation Administration</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Hani Hanjour</Person>
    <Person>Majed Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Nawaf</Person>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.Within</Misc>
    <Organization>Salem al Hazmi.11</Organization>
    <Person>CAPPS.The Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>Main Terminal’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Argenbright Security.13</Organization>
    <Organization>Salem al Hazmi</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>210_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

nis also had identified Nashiri, whose links to al Qaeda and the 1998 embassy 
bombings were even more well-known.133 

In other words,the Yemenis provided strong evidence connecting the Cole 
attack to al Qaeda during the second half of November, identifying individual 
operatives whom the United States knew were part of al Qaeda. During 
December the United States was able to corroborate this evidence. But the 
United States did not have evidence about Bin Ladin’s personal involvement 
in the attacks until Nashiri and Khallad were captured in 2002 and 2003. 

Considering a Response 

The Cole attack prompted renewed consideration of what could be done about 
al Qaeda.According to Clarke,Berger upbraided DCITenet so sharply after the 
Cole attack—repeatedly demanding to know why the United States had to put 
up with such attacks—that Tenet walked out of a meeting of the principals.134 

The CIA got some additional covert action authorities,adding several other 
individuals to the coverage of the July 1999 Memorandum of Notification that 
allowed the United States to develop capture operations against al Qaeda leaders 
in a variety of places and circumstances. Tenet developed additional 
options,such as strengthening relationships with the Northern Alliance and the 
Uzbeks and slowing recent al Qaeda–related activities in Lebanon.135 

On the diplomatic track,Berger agreed on October 30,2000,to let the State 
Department make another approach to Taliban Deputy Foreign Minister Abdul 
Jalil about expelling Bin Ladin.The national security advisor ordered that the 
U.S.message “be stern and foreboding.”This warning was similar to those issued 
in 1998 and 1999. Meanwhile, the administration was working with Russia on 
new UN sanctions against Mullah Omar’s regime.136 

President Clinton told us that before he could launch further attacks on al 
Qaeda in Afghanistan,or deliver an ultimatum to the Taliban threatening strikes 
if they did not immediately expel Bin Ladin,the CIA or the FBI had to be sure 
enough that they would “be willing to stand up in public and say, we believe 
that he [Bin Ladin] did this.” He said he was very frustrated that he could not 
get a definitive enough answer to do something about the Cole attack.137 Similarly, 
Berger recalled that to go to war, a president needs to be able to say that 
his senior intelligence and law enforcement officers have concluded who is 
responsible.He recalled that the intelligence agencies had strong suspicions,but 
had reached “no conclusion by the time we left office that it was al Qaeda.”138 

Our only sources for what intelligence officials thought at the time are 
what they said in informal briefings. Soon after the Cole attack and for the 
remainder of the Clinton administration, analysts stopped distributing written 
reports about who was responsible.The topic was obviously sensitive, and 
both Ambassador Bodine in Yemen and CIA analysts in Washington presumed 
that the government did not want reports circulating around the agencies that</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>UN</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Misc>Uzbeks</Misc>
    <Organization>Tenet</Organization>
    <Misc>Yemenis</Misc>
    <Organization>Nashiri</Organization>
    <Person>Mullah Omar’s</Person>
    <Date>2002 and 2003</Date>
    <Misc>Lebanon.135 On</Misc>
    <Person>Abdul Jalil</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.The</Person>
    <Person>Qaeda.”138 Our</Person>
    <Person>Bodine</Person>
    <Date>October 30,2000</Date>
    <Date>1998 and 1999</Date>
  </document>
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    <docID>211_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

might become public,impeding law enforcement actions or backing the President 
into a corner.139 

Instead the White House and other principals relied on informal updates as 
more evidence came in.Though Clarke worried that the CIA might be equivocating 
in assigning responsibility to al Qaeda, he wrote Berger on November 
7 that the analysts had described their case by saying that “it has web feet, flies, 
and quacks.” On November 10, CIA analysts briefed the Small Group of principals 
on their preliminary findings that the attack was carried out by a cell of 
Yemeni residents with some ties to the transnational mujahideen network. 
According to the briefing, these residents likely had some support from al 
Qaeda. But the information on outside sponsorship, support, and direction of 
the operation was inconclusive.The next day,Berger and Clarke told President 
Clinton that while the investigation was continuing, it was becoming increasingly 
clear that al Qaeda had planned and directed the bombing.140 

In mid-November, as the evidence of al Qaeda involvement mounted, 
Berger asked General Shelton to reevaluate military plans to act quickly against 
Bin Ladin. General Shelton tasked General Tommy Franks, the new commander 
of CENTCOM, to look again at the options. Shelton wanted to 
demonstrate that the military was imaginative and knowledgeable enough to 
move on an array of options, and to show the complexity of the operations. 
He briefed Berger on the “Infinite Resolve” strike options developed since 
1998, which the Joint Staff and CENTCOM had refined during the summer 
into a list of 13 possibilities or combinations. CENTCOM added a new 
“phased campaign”concept for wider-ranging strikes,including attacks against 
the Taliban. For the first time, these strikes envisioned an air campaign against 
Afghanistan of indefinite duration. Military planners did not include contingency 
planning for an invasion of Afghanistan. The concept was briefed to 
Deputy National Security Advisor Donald Kerrick on December 20, and to 
other officials.141 

On November 25, Berger and Clarke wrote President Clinton that 
although the FBI and CIA investigations had not reached a formal conclusion,
they believed the investigations would soon conclude that the attack had 
been carried out by a large cell whose senior members belonged to al Qaeda. 
Most of those involved had trained in Bin Ladin–operated camps in 
Afghanistan, Berger continued. So far, Bin Ladin had not been tied personally 
to the attack and nobody had heard him directly order it, but two intelligence 
reports suggested that he was involved. When discussing possible 
responses, though, Berger referred to the premise—al Qaeda responsibility— 
as an “unproven assumption.”142 

In the same November 25 memo,Berger informed President Clinton about 
a closely held idea: a last-chance ultimatum for the Taliban. Clarke was developing 
the idea with specific demands: immediate extradition of Bin Ladin and 
his lieutenants to a legitimate government for trial,observable closure of all ter</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>al Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Organization>Joint Staff</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Tommy Franks</Person>
    <Person>Shelton</Person>
    <Person>Berger</Person>
    <Organization>CENTCOM</Organization>
    <Organization>Small Group of</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Donald Kerrick</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin–operated</Person>
  </document>
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rorist facilities in Afghanistan, and expulsion of all terrorists from Afghanistan 
within 90 days.Noncompliance would mean U.S.“force directed at the Taliban 
itself”and U.S.efforts to ensure that the Taliban would never defeat the 
Northern Alliance. No such ultimatum was issued.143 

Nearly a month later,on December 21,the CIA made another presentation 
to the Small Group of principals on the investigative team’s findings.The CIA’s 
briefing slides said that their “preliminary judgment” was that Bin Ladin’s al 
Qaeda group “supported the attack” on the Cole, based on strong circumstantial 
evidence tying key perpetrators of the attack to al Qaeda.The CIA listed 
the key suspects, including Nashiri. In addition, the CIA detailed the timeline 
of the operation, from the mid-1999 preparations, to the failed attack on the 
USS The Sullivans on January 3, 2000, through a meeting held by the operatives 
the day before the attack.144 

The slides said that so far the CIA had “no definitive answer on [the] crucial 
question of outside direction of the attack—how and by whom.”The CIA 
noted that the Yemenis claimed that Khallad helped direct the operation from 
Afghanistan or Pakistan, possibly as Bin Ladin’s intermediary, but that it had 
not seen the Yemeni evidence. However, the CIA knew from both human 
sources and signals intelligence that Khallad was tied to al Qaeda.The prepared 
briefing concluded that while some reporting about al Qaeda’s role might have 
merit, those reports offered few specifics. Intelligence gave some ambiguous 
indicators of al Qaeda direction of the attack.145 

This, President Clinton and Berger told us, was not the conclusion they 
needed in order to go to war or deliver an ultimatum to the Taliban threatening 
war.The election and change of power was not the issue,President Clinton 
added.There was enough time.If the agencies had given him a definitive 
answer, he said, he would have sought a UN Security Council ultimatum and 
given the Taliban one, two, or three days before taking further action against 
both al Qaeda and the Taliban. But he did not think it would be responsible 
for a president to launch an invasion of another country just based on a “preliminary 
judgment.”146 

Other advisers have echoed this concern. Some of Secretary Albright’s 
advisers warned her at the time to be sure the evidence conclusively linked Bin 
Ladin to the Cole before considering any response, especially a military one, 
because such action might inflame the Islamic world and increase support for 
the Taliban. Defense Secretary Cohen told us it would not have been prudent 
to risk killing civilians based only on an assumption that al Qaeda was responsible. 
General Shelton added that there was an outstanding question as to who 
was responsible and what the targets were.147 

Clarke recalled that while the Pentagon and the State Department had reservations 
about retaliation, the issue never came to a head because the FBI and 
the CIA never reached a firm conclusion. He thought they were “holding 
back.” He said he did not know why, but his impression was that Tenet and</docText>
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Reno possibly thought the White House “didn’t really want to know,” since 
the principals’ discussions by November suggested that there was not much 
White House interest in conducting further military operations against 
Afghanistan in the administration’s last weeks. He thought that, instead, President 
Clinton, Berger, and Secretary Albright were concentrating on a lastminute 
push for a peace agreement between the Palestinians and the Israelis.148 

Some of Clarke’s fellow counterterrorism officials,such as the State Department’s 
Sheehan and the FBI’s Watson, shared his disappointment that no military 
response occurred at the time. Clarke recently recalled that an angry 
Sheehan asked rhetorically of Defense officials:“Does al Qaeda have to attack 
the Pentagon to get their attention?”149 

On the question of evidence,Tenet told us he was surprised to hear that the 
White House was awaiting a conclusion from him on responsibility for the Cole 
attack before taking action against al Qaeda. He did not recall Berger or anyone 
else telling him that they were waiting for the magic words from the CIA and the 
FBI. Nor did he remember having any discussions with Berger or the President 
about retaliation.Tenet told us he believed that it was up to him to present the 
case.Then it was up to the principals to decide if the case was good enough to 
justify using force. He believed he laid out what was knowable relatively early in 
the investigation, and that this evidence never really changed until after 9/11.150 

A CIA official told us that the CIA’s analysts chose the term “preliminary 
judgment” because of their notion of how an intelligence standard of proof 
differed from a legal standard. Because the attack was the subject of a criminal 
investigation, they told us, the term preliminary was used to avoid locking 
the government in with statements that might later be obtained by 
defense lawyers in a future court case. At the time, Clarke was aware of the 
problem of distinguishing between an intelligence case and a law enforcement 
case. Asking U.S. law enforcement officials to concur with an 
intelligence-based case before their investigation had been concluded “could 
give rise to charges that the administration had acted before final culpability 

”151

had been determined.

There was no interagency consideration of just what military action might 
have looked like in practice—either the Pentagon’s new “phased campaign” 
concept or a prolonged air campaign in Afghanistan. Defense officials, such as 
Under Secretary Walter Slocombe and Vice Admiral Fry, told us the military 
response options were still limited.Bin Ladin continued to be elusive.They felt, 
just as they had for the past two years, that hitting inexpensive and rudimentary 
training camps with costly missiles would not do much good and might 
even help al Qaeda if the strikes failed to kill Bin Ladin.152 

In late 2000, the CIA and the NSC staff began thinking about the counterterrorism 
policy agenda they would present to the new administration.The 
Counterterrorist Center put down its best ideas for the future, assuming it was 
free of any prior policy or financial constraints.The paper was therefore infor</docText>
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mally referred to as the “Blue Sky” memo; it was sent to Clarke on December 
29.The memo proposed 

• 
A major effort to support the Northern Alliance through intelligence 
sharing and increased funding so that it could stave off the Taliban 
army and tie down al Qaeda fighters.This effort was not intended to 
remove the Taliban from power,a goal that was judged impractical and 
too expensive for the CIA alone to attain. 
• 
Increased support to the Uzbeks to strengthen their ability to fight 
terrorism and assist the United States in doing so. 
• 
Assistance to anti-Taliban groups and proxies who might be encouraged 
to passively resist the Taliban. 
The CIA memo noted that there was “no single ‘silver bullet’ available to 
deal with the growing problems in Afghanistan.”A multifaceted strategy would 
be needed to produce change.153 

No action was taken on these ideas in the few remaining weeks of the Clinton 
administration. Berger did not recall seeing or being briefed on the Blue 
Sky memo. Nor was the memo discussed during the transition with incoming 
top Bush administration officials.Tenet and his deputy told us they pressed these 
ideas as options after the new team took office.154 

As the Clinton administration drew to a close, Clarke and his staff developed 
a policy paper of their own, the first such comprehensive effort since the 
Delenda plan of 1998.The resulting paper,entitled “Strategy for Eliminating 
the Threat from the Jihadist Networks of al Qida: Status and Prospects,” 
reviewed the threat and the record to date, incorporated the CIA’s new ideas 
from the Blue Sky memo, and posed several near-term policy options. 

Clarke and his staff proposed a goal to “roll back” al Qaeda over a period 
of three to five years. Over time, the policy should try to weaken and eliminate 
the network’s infrastructure in order to reduce it to a “rump group” like 
other formerly feared but now largely defunct terrorist organizations of the 
1980s. “Continued anti-al Qida operations at the current level will prevent 
some attacks,”Clarke’s office wrote,“but will not seriously attrit their ability 
to plan and conduct attacks.” The paper backed covert aid to the Northern 
Alliance, covert aid to Uzbekistan, and renewed Predator flights in March 
2001. A sentence called for military action to destroy al Qaeda command-andcontrol 
targets and infrastructure and Taliban military and command assets.The 
paper also expressed concern about the presence of al Qaeda operatives in the 
United States.155</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
    <Person>al Qaeda</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
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    <Organization>Jihadist Networks of al Qida: Status and Prospects</Organization>
    <Misc>Uzbeks</Misc>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan.”A</Location>
    <Organization>Blue Sky</Organization>
    <Location>Delenda</Location>
    <Location>United States.155</Location>
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6.4 CHANGE AND CONTINUITY 
On November 7,2000,American voters went to the polls in what turned out 
to be one of the closest presidential contests in U.S. history—an election campaign 
during which there was a notable absence of serious discussion of the 
al Qaeda threat or terrorism. Election night became a 36-day legal fight. Until 
the Supreme Court’s 5–4 ruling on December 12 and Vice President Al Gore’s 
concession, no one knew whether Gore or his Republican opponent,Texas 
Governor George W. Bush, would become president in 2001. 

The dispute over the election and the 36-day delay cut in half the normal 
transition period. Given that a presidential election in the United States brings 
wholesale change in personnel, this loss of time hampered the new administration 
in identifying, recruiting, clearing, and obtaining Senate confirmation 
of key appointees. 

From the Old to the New 

The principal figures on Bush’s White House staff would be National Security 
Advisor Condoleezza Rice, who had been a member of the NSC staff in the 
administration of George H.W. Bush; Rice’s deputy, Stephen Hadley, who had 
been an assistant secretary of defense under the first Bush; and Chief of Staff 
Andrew Card,who had served that same administration as deputy chief of staff, 
then secretary of transportation. For secretary of state, Bush chose General 
Colin Powell, who had been national security advisor for President Ronald 
Reagan and then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. For secretary of defense 
he selected Donald Rumsfeld, a former member of Congress,White House 
chief of staff, and, under President Gerald Ford, already once secretary of 
defense. Bush decided fairly soon to keep Tenet as Director of Central Intelligence. 
Louis Freeh, who had statutory ten-year tenure, would remain director 
of the FBI until his voluntary retirement in the summer of 2001. 

Bush and his principal advisers had all received briefings on terrorism, 
including Bin Ladin.In early September 2000,Acting Deputy Director of Central 
Intelligence John McLaughlin led a team to Bush’s ranch in Crawford, 
Texas, and gave him a wide-ranging, four-hour review of sensitive information. 
Ben Bonk, deputy chief of the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center, used one 
of the four hours to deal with terrorism.To highlight the danger of terrorists 
obtaining chemical,biological,radiological,or nuclear weapons,Bonk brought 
along a mock-up suitcase to evoke the way the Aum Shinrikyo doomsday 
cult had spread deadly sarin nerve agent on the Tokyo subway in 1995. Bonk 
told Bush that Americans would die from terrorism during the next four 
years.156 During the long contest after election day, the CIA set up an office in 
Crawford to pass intelligence to Bush and some of his key advisers.157 Tenet, 
accompanied by his deputy director for operations, James Pavitt, briefed 
President-elect Bush at Blair House during the transition. President Bush told</docText>
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    <Location>Crawford</Location>
    <Organization>Supreme Court’s</Organization>
    <Person>Al Gore’s</Person>
    <Misc>New The</Misc>
    <Person>Gerald Ford</Person>
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    <Organization>Central Intelligence John McLaughlin</Organization>
    <Organization>Aum Shinrikyo</Organization>
    <Location>Tokyo</Location>
    <Location>Blair House</Location>
    <Date>November 7,2000</Date>
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    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

us he asked Tenet whether the CIA could kill Bin Ladin,and Tenet replied that 
killing Bin Ladin would have an effect but would not end the threat. President 
Bush told us Tenet said to him that the CIA had all the authority it needed.158 

In December, Bush met with Clinton for a two-hour, one-on-one discussion 
of national security and foreign policy challenges. Clinton recalled saying 
to Bush,“I think you will find that by far your biggest threat is Bin Ladin and 
the al Qaeda.” Clinton told us that he also said,“One of the great regrets of my 
presidency is that I didn’t get him [Bin Ladin] for you, because I tried to.”159 
Bush told the Commission that he felt sure President Clinton had mentioned 
terrorism,but did not remember much being said about al Qaeda.Bush recalled 
that Clinton had emphasized other issues such as North Korea and the Israeli-
Palestinian peace process.160 

In early January, Clarke briefed Rice on terrorism. He gave similar presentations—
describing al Qaeda as both an adaptable global network of jihadist 
organizations and a lethal core terrorist organization—to Vice President–elect 
Cheney,Hadley,and Secretary of State–designate Powell.One line in the briefing 
slides said that al Qaeda had sleeper cells in more than 40 countries,including 
the United States.161 Berger told us that he made a point of dropping in 
on Clarke’s briefing of Rice to emphasize the importance of the issue. Later 
the same day, Berger met with Rice. He says that he told her the Bush administration 
would spend more time on terrorism in general and al Qaeda in particular 
than on anything else. Rice’s recollection was that Berger told her she 
would be surprised at how much more time she was going to spend on terrorism 
than she expected,but that the bulk of their conversation dealt with the 
faltering Middle East peace process and North Korea.Clarke said that the new 
team,having been out of government for eight years,had a steep learning curve 
to understand al Qaeda and the new transnational terrorist threat.162 

Organizing a New Administration 

During the short transition, Rice and Hadley concentrated on staffing and 
organizing the NSC.163Their policy priorities differed from those of the Clinton 
administration.Those priorities included China, missile defense, the collapse 
of the Middle East peace process,and the Persian Gulf.164 Generally aware 
that terrorism had changed since the first Bush administration, they paid particular 
attention to the question of how counterterrorism policy should be 
coordinated. Rice had asked University of Virginia history professor Philip 
Zelikow to advise her on the transition.165 Hadley and Zelikow asked Clarke 
and his deputy, Roger Cressey, for a special briefing on the terrorist threat and 
how Clarke’s Transnational Threats Directorate and Counterterrorism Security 
Group functioned.166 

In the NSC during the first Bush administration, many tough issues were 
addressed at the level of the Deputies Committee.Issues did not go to the principals 
unless the deputies had been unable to resolve them. Presidential Deci</docText>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

sion Directive 62 of the Clinton administration had said specifically that 
Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security Group should report through the Deputies 
Committee or, at Berger’s discretion, directly to the principals. Berger had in 
practice allowed Clarke’s group to function as a parallel deputies committee, 
reporting directly to those members of the Principals Committee who sat on 
the special Small Group.There, Clarke himself sat as a de facto principal. 

Rice decided to change the special structure that had been built to coordinate 
counterterrorism policy.It was important to sound policymaking,she felt, 
that Clarke’s interagency committee—like all others—report to the principals 
through the deputies.167 

Rice made an initial decision to hold over both Clarke and his entire counterterrorism 
staff, a decision that she called rare for a new administration. She 
decided also that Clarke should retain the title of national counterterrorism 
coordinator, although he would no longer be a de facto member of the Principals 
Committee on his issues.The decision to keep Clarke,Rice said,was “not 
uncontroversial,” since he was known as someone who “broke china,” but she 
and Hadley wanted an experienced crisis manager. No one else from Berger’s 
staff had Clarke’s detailed knowledge of the levers of government. 168 

Clarke was disappointed at what he perceived as a demotion. He also worried 
that reporting through the Deputies Committee would slow decisionmaking 
on counterterrorism.169 

The result, amid all the changes accompanying the transition, was significant 
continuity in counterterrorism policy. Clarke and his Counterterrorism 
Security Group would continue to manage coordination. Tenet remained 
Director of Central Intelligence and kept the same chief subordinates, including 
Black and his staff at the Counterterrorist Center. Shelton remained chairman 
of the Joint Chiefs, with the Joint Staff largely the same. At the FBI, 
Director Freeh and Assistant Director for Counterterrorism Dale Watson 
remained.Working-level counterterrorism officials at the State Department and 
the Pentagon stayed on,as is typically the case.The changes were at the cabinet 
and subcabinet level and in the CSG’s reporting arrangements.At the subcabinet 
level, there were significant delays in the confirmation of key officials, 
particularly at the Defense Department. 

The procedures of the Bush administration were to be at once more formal 
and less formal than its predecessor’s. President Clinton, a voracious reader, 
received his daily intelligence briefings in writing.He often scrawled questions 
and comments in the margins, eliciting written responses.The new president, 
by contrast,reinstated the practice of face-to-face briefings from the DCI.President 
Bush and Tenet met in the Oval Office at 8:00 A.M.,with Vice President 
Cheney, Rice, and Card usually also present.The President and the DCI both 
told us that these daily sessions provided a useful opportunity for exchanges on 
intelligence issues.170 

The President talked with Rice every day, and she in turn talked by phone 
at least daily with Powell and Rumsfeld.As a result,the President often felt less</docText>
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    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

need for formal meetings.If,however,he decided that an event or an issue called 
for action, Rice would typically call on Hadley to have the Deputies Committee 
develop and review options.The President said that this process often tried 
his patience but that he understood the necessity for coordination.171 

Early Decisions 

Within the first few days after Bush’s inauguration, Clarke approached Rice in 
an effort to get her—and the new President—to give terrorism very high priority 
and to act on the agenda that he had pushed during the last few months 
of the previous administration.After Rice requested that all senior staff identify 
desirable major policy reviews or initiatives, Clarke submitted an elaborate 
memorandum on January 25, 2001. He attached to it his 1998 Delenda Plan 
and the December 2000 strategy paper.“We urgently need . . . a Principals level 
review on the al Qida network,” Clarke wrote.172 

He wanted the Principals Committee to decide whether al Qaeda was “a 
first order threat” or a more modest worry being overblown by “chicken little”
alarmists.Alluding to the transition briefing that he had prepared for Rice, 
Clarke wrote that al Qaeda “is not some narrow, little terrorist issue that needs 
to be included in broader regional policy.”Two key decisions that had been 
deferred, he noted, concerned covert aid to keep the Northern Alliance alive 
when fighting began again in Afghanistan in the spring, and covert aid to the 
Uzbeks.Clarke also suggested that decisions should be made soon on messages 
to the Taliban and Pakistan over the al Qaeda sanctuary in Afghanistan,on possible 
new money for CIA operations, and on “when and how . . . to respond 

”173

to the attack on the USS Cole.

The national security advisor did not respond directly to Clarke’s memorandum. 
No Principals Committee meeting on al Qaeda was held until September 
4, 2001 (although the Principals Committee met frequently on other 
subjects, such as the Middle East peace process, Russia, and the Persian 
Gulf ).174 But Rice and Hadley began to address the issues Clarke had listed. 
What to do or say about the Cole had been an obvious question since inauguration 
day.When the attack occurred, 25 days before the election, candidate 
Bush had said to CNN,“I hope that we can gather enough intelligence to figure 
out who did the act and take the necessary action.There must be a consequence.”
175 Since the Clinton administration had not responded militarily, 
what was the Bush administration to do? 

On January 25,Tenet briefed the President on the Cole investigation.The written 
briefing repeated for top officials of the new administration what the CIA 
had told the Clinton White House in November.This included the “preliminary 
judgment” that al Qaeda was responsible, with the caveat that no evidence had 
yet been found that Bin Ladin himself ordered the attack.Tenet told us he had 
no recollection of a conversation with the President about this briefing.176 

In his January 25 memo, Clarke had advised Rice that the government 
should respond to the Cole attack,but “should take advantage of the policy that</docText>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

‘we will respond at a time, place and manner of our own choosing’ and not be 
forced into knee-jerk responses.”177 Before Vice President Cheney visited the 
CIA in mid-February, Clarke sent him a memo—outside the usual White 
House document-management system—suggesting that he ask CIA officials 
“what additional information is needed before CIA can definitively conclude 
that al-Qida was responsible” for the Cole.178 In March 2001, the CIA’s briefing 
slides for Rice were still describing the CIA’s “preliminary judgment” that 
a “strong circumstantial case” could be made against al Qaeda but noting that 
the CIA continued to lack “conclusive information on external command and 
control” of the attack.179 Clarke and his aides continued to provide Rice and 
Hadley with evidence reinforcing the case against al Qaeda and urging action.180 

The President explained to us that he had been concerned lest an ineffectual 
air strike just serve to give Bin Ladin a propaganda advantage. He said he 
had not been told about Clinton administration warnings to the Taliban.The 
President told us that he had concluded that the United States must use ground 
forces for a job like this.181 

Rice told us that there was never a formal, recorded decision not to retaliate 
specifically for the Cole attack. Exchanges with the President, between the 
President and Tenet, and between herself and Powell and Rumsfeld had produced 
a consensus that “tit-for-tat”responses were likely to be counterproductive. 
This had been the case, she thought, with the cruise missile strikes of 
August 1998.The new team at the Pentagon did not push for action.On the 
contrary,Rumsfeld thought that too much time had passed and his deputy,Paul 
Wolfowitz,thought that the Cole attack was “stale.”Hadley said that in the end, 
the administration’s real response to the Cole would be a new, more aggressive 
strategy against al Qaeda.182 

The administration decided to propose to Congress a substantial increase in 
counterterrorism funding for national security agencies,including the CIA and 
the FBI.This included a 27 percent increase in counterterrorism funding for 
the CIA.183 

Starting a Review 

In early March, the administration postponed action on proposals for increasing 
aid to the Northern Alliance and the Uzbeks. Rice noted at the time that 
a more wide-ranging examination of policy toward Afghanistan was needed 
first. She wanted the review very soon.184 

Rice and others recalled the President saying, “I’m tired of swatting at 
flies.”185The President reportedly also said,“I’m tired of playing defense.I want 
to play offense. I want to take the fight to the terrorists.”186 President Bush 
explained to us that he had become impatient. He apparently had heard proposals 
for rolling back al Qaeda but felt that catching terrorists one by one or even 
cell by cell was not an approach likely to succeed in the long run.At the same 
time,he said,he understood that policy had to be developed slowly so that diplomacy 
and financial and military measures could mesh with one another.187</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
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    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
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    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
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    <Misc>CIA.183 Starting a Review</Misc>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

soon followed.The Hazmi brothers,sitting in 5E and 5F, joined Hanjour in the 
first-class cabin.17 

Newark: United 93. Between 7:03 and 7:39, Saeed al Ghamdi, Ahmed al 
Nami,Ahmad al Haznawi, and Ziad Jarrah checked in at the United Airlines 
ticket counter for Flight 93, going to Los Angeles.Two checked bags; two did 
not.Haznawi was selected by CAPPS.His checked bag was screened for explosives 
and then loaded on the plane.18 

The four men passed through the security checkpoint, owned by United 
Airlines and operated under contract by Argenbright Security. Like the checkpoints 
in Boston, it lacked closed-circuit television surveillance so there is no 
documentary evidence to indicate when the hijackers passed through the 
checkpoint,what alarms may have been triggered,or what security procedures 
were administered.The FAA interviewed the screeners later;none recalled anything 
unusual or suspicious.19 

The four men boarded the plane between 7:39 and 7:48. All four had seats 
in the first-class cabin; their plane had no business-class section. Jarrah was in 
seat 1B, closest to the cockpit; Nami was in 3C, Ghamdi in 3D, and Haznawi 
in 6B.20 

The 19 men were aboard four transcontinental flights.21 They were planning 
to hijack these planes and turn them into large guided missiles, loaded 
with up to 11,400 gallons of jet fuel.By 8:00 A.M.on the morning of Tuesday, 
September 11,2001,they had defeated all the security layers that America’s civil 
aviation security system then had in place to prevent a hijacking. 

The Hijacking of American 11 

American Airlines Flight 11 provided nonstop service from Boston to Los 
Angeles. On September 11, Captain John Ogonowski and First Officer 
Thomas McGuinness piloted the Boeing 767.It carried its full capacity of nine 
flight attendants. Eighty-one passengers boarded the flight with them (including 
the five terrorists).22 

The plane took off at 7:59. Just before 8:14, it had climbed to 26,000 feet, 
not quite its initial assigned cruising altitude of 29,000 feet.All communications 
and flight profile data were normal.About this time the “Fasten Seatbelt”sign 
would usually have been turned off and the flight attendants would have begun 
preparing for cabin service.23 

At that same time, American 11 had its last routine communication with 
the ground when it acknowledged navigational instructions from the FAA’s 
air traffic control (ATC) center in Boston.Sixteen seconds after that transmission,
ATC instructed the aircraft’s pilots to climb to 35,000 feet.That message 
and all subsequent attempts to contact the flight were not acknowledged. 
From this and other evidence, we believe the hijacking began at 8:14 or 
shortly thereafter.24</docText>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Nami</Person>
    <Person>Ziad Jarrah</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
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    <Person>John Ogonowski</Person>
    <Person>Thomas McGuinness</Person>
    <Misc>Seatbelt”sign</Misc>
    <Misc>Boston.Sixteen</Misc>
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    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

Hadley convened an informal Deputies Committee meeting on March 7, 
when some of the deputies had not yet been confirmed. For the first time, 
Clarke’s various proposals—for aid to the Northern Alliance and the Uzbeks 
and for Predator missions—went before the group that, in the Bush NSC, 
would do most of the policy work.Though they made no decisions on these 
specific proposals, Hadley apparently concluded that there should be a presidential 
national security policy directive (NSPD) on terrorism.188 

Clarke would later express irritation about the deputies’ insistence that a 
strategy for coping with al Qaeda be framed within the context of a regional 
policy. He doubted that the benefits would compensate for the time lost.The 
administration had in fact proceeded with Principals Committee meetings on 
topics including Iraq and Sudan without prior contextual review, and Clarke 
favored moving ahead similarly with a narrow counterterrorism agenda.189 But 
the President’s senior advisers saw the al Qaeda problem as part of a puzzle that 
could not be assembled without filling in the pieces for Afghanistan and Pakistan. 
Rice deferred a Principals Committee meeting on al Qaeda until the 
deputies had developed a new policy for their consideration. 

The full Deputies Committee discussed al Qaeda on April 30. CIA briefing 
slides described al Qaeda as the “most dangerous group we face,” citing its 
“leadership, experience, resources, safe haven in Afghanistan, [and] focus on 
attacking U.S.”The slides warned,“There will be more attacks.”190 

At the meeting, the deputies endorsed covert aid to Uzbekistan. Regarding 
the Northern Alliance, they “agreed to make no major commitment at 
this time.” Washington would first consider options for aiding other anti-
Taliban groups.191 Meanwhile, the administration would “initiate a comprehensive 
review of U.S. policy on Pakistan” and explore policy options on 
Afghanistan, “including the option of supporting regime change.”192 
Working-level officials were also to consider new steps on terrorist financing 
and America’s perennially troubled public diplomacy efforts in the Muslim 
world, where NSC staff warned that “we have by and large ceded the court 
of public opinion” to al Qaeda. 

While Clarke remained concerned about the pace of the policy review, he 
now saw a greater possibility of persuading the deputies to recognize the 
changed nature of terrorism.193 The process of fleshing out that strategy was 
under way. 

6.5 THE NEW ADMINISTRATION’S APPROACH 
The Bush administration in its first months faced many problems other than 
terrorism.They included the collapse of the Middle East peace process and, in 
April,a crisis over a U.S.“spy plane”brought down in Chinese territory.The 
new administration also focused heavily on Russia, a new nuclear strategy that 
allowed missile defenses, Europe, Mexico, and the Persian Gulf.</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>Mexico</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Middle East</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Location>Europe</Location>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
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    <Misc>Chinese</Misc>
    <Misc>America’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bush NSC</Person>
    <Organization>NSPD</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.”The</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistan”</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.“spy</Misc>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

In the spring, reporting on terrorism surged dramatically. In chapter 8, we 
will explore this reporting and the ways agencies responded.These increasingly 
alarming reports, briefed to the President and top officials, became part of the 
context in which the new administration weighed its options for policy on 
al Qaeda. 

Except for a few reports that the CSG considered and apparently judged 
to be unreliable, none of these pointed specifically to possible al Qaeda 
action inside the United States—although the CSG continued to be concerned 
about the domestic threat. The mosaic of threat intelligence came 
from the Counterterrorist Center, which collected only abroad. Its reports 
were not supplemented by reports from the FBI. Clarke had expressed concern 
about an al Qaeda presence in the United States, and he worried about 
an attack on the White House by “Hizbollah, Hamas, al Qida and other terrorist 
organizations.”194 

In May,President Bush announced that Vice President Cheney would himself 
lead an effort looking at preparations for managing a possible attack by 
weapons of mass destruction and at more general problems of national preparedness.
The next few months were mainly spent organizing the effort and 
bringing an admiral from the Sixth Fleet back to Washington to manage it.The 
Vice President’s task force was just getting under way when the 9/11 attack 
occurred.195 

On May 29,at Tenet’s request,Rice and Tenet converted their usual weekly 
meeting into a broader discussion on al Qaeda; participants included Clarke, 
CTC chief Cofer Black, and “Richard,” a group chief with authority over the 
Bin Ladin unit. Rice asked about “taking the offensive” and whether any 
approach could be made to influence Bin Ladin or the Taliban. Clarke and 
Black replied that the CIA’s ongoing disruption activities were “taking the 
offensive” and that Bin Ladin could not be deterred. A wide-ranging discussion 
then ensued about “breaking the back” of Bin Ladin’s organization.196 

Tenet emphasized the ambitious plans for covert action that the CIA had 
developed in December 2000. In discussing the draft authorities for this program 
in March,CIA officials had pointed out that the spending level envisioned 
for these plans was larger than the CIA’s entire current budget for counterterrorism 
covert action. It would be a multiyear program, requiring such levels of 
spending for about five years.197 

The CIA official,“Richard,”told us that Rice “got it.”He said she agreed 
with his conclusions about what needed to be done, although he complained 
to us that the policy process did not follow through quickly enough.198 Clarke 
and Black were asked to develop a range of options for attacking Bin Ladin’s 
organization, from the least to most ambitious.199 

Rice and Hadley asked Clarke and his staff to draw up the new presidential 
directive. On June 7, Hadley circulated the first draft, describing it as “an 
admittedly ambitious” program for confronting al Qaeda.200 The draft 
NSPD’s goal was to “eliminate the al Qida network of terrorist groups as a</docText>
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    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Hamas</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Cheney</Person>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
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    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
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    <Misc>United States—although</Misc>
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    <Location>Tenet’s</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda.200</Misc>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

threat to the United States and to friendly governments.” It called for a multiyear 
effort involving diplomacy, covert action, economic measures, law 
enforcement, public diplomacy, and if necessary military efforts. The State 
Department was to work with other governments to end all al Qaeda sanctuaries, 
and also to work with the Treasury Department to disrupt terrorist 
financing.The CIA was to develop an expanded covert action program including 
significant additional funding and aid to anti-Taliban groups.The draft also 
tasked OMB with ensuring that sufficient funds to support this program were 
found in U.S. budgets from fiscal years 2002 to 2006.201 

Rice viewed this draft directive as the embodiment of a comprehensive new 
strategy employing all instruments of national power to eliminate the al Qaeda 
threat.Clarke,however,regarded the new draft as essentially similar to the proposal 
he had developed in December 2000 and put forward to the new administration 
in January 2001.202 In May or June, Clarke asked to be moved from 
his counterterrorism portfolio to a new set of responsibilities for cybersecurity. 
He told us that he was frustrated with his role and with an administration 
that he considered not “serious about al Qaeda.”203 If Clarke was frustrated,he 
never expressed it to her, Rice told us.204 

Diplomacy in Blind Alleys 
Afghanistan. The new administration had already begun exploring possible 
diplomatic options,retracing many of the paths traveled by its predecessors.U.S. 
envoys again pressed the Taliban to turn Bin Ladin “over to a country where 
he could face justice” and repeated, yet again, the warning that the Taliban 
would be held responsible for any al Qaeda attacks on U.S. interests.205 The 
Taliban’s representatives repeated their old arguments. Deputy Secretary of 
State Richard Armitage told us that while U.S.diplomats were becoming more 
active on Afghanistan through the spring and summer of 2001,“it would be 
wrong for anyone to characterize this as a dramatic shift from the previous 
administration.

”206 
In deputies meetings at the end of June,Tenet was tasked to assess the prospects 
for Taliban cooperation with the United States on al Qaeda.The NSC staff was 
tasked to flesh out options for dealing with the Taliban. Revisiting these issues 
tried the patience of some of the officials who felt they had already been down 
these roads and who found the NSC’s procedures slow.“We weren’t going fast 
enough,”Armitage told us.Clarke kept arguing that moves against the Taliban 
and al Qaeda should not have to wait months for a larger review of U.S. policy 
in South Asia.“For the government,”Hadley said to us,“we moved it along 
as fast as we could move it along.”207 
As all hope in moving the Taliban faded,debate revived about giving covert 
assistance to the regime’s opponents. Clarke and the CIA’s Cofer Black 
renewed the push to aid the Northern Alliance. Clarke suggested starting with 
modest aid, just enough to keep the Northern Alliance in the fight and tie 
down al Qaeda terrorists, without aiming to overthrow the Taliban.208</docText>
    <Organization>Treasury Department</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
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    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>OMB</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
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    <Misc>South Asia.“For</Misc>
    <Organization>CIA’s Cofer Black</Organization>
    <Misc>Taliban.208</Misc>
    <Date>2002 to 2006</Date>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Rice, Hadley, and the NSC staff member for Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, 
told us they opposed giving aid to the Northern Alliance alone.They argued that 
the program needed to have a big part for Pashtun opponents of the Taliban.They 
also thought the program should be conducted on a larger scale than had been 
suggested.Clarke concurred with the idea of a larger program,but he warned that 
delay risked the Northern Alliance’s final defeat at the hands of the Taliban.209 

During the spring, the CIA, at the NSC’s request, had developed draft legal 
authorities—a presidential finding—to undertake a large-scale program of 
covert assistance to the Taliban’s foes.The draft authorities expressly stated that 
the goal of the assistance was not to overthrow the Taliban. But even this program 
would be very costly.This was the context for earlier conversations,when 
in March Tenet stressed the need to consider the impact of such a large program 
on the political situation in the region and in May Tenet talked to Rice 
about the need for a multiyear financial commitment.210 

By July, the deputies were moving toward agreement that some last effort 
should be made to convince the Taliban to shift position and then,if that failed, 
the administration would move on the significantly enlarged covert action program.
As the draft presidential directive was circulated in July,the State Department 
sent the deputies a lengthy historical review of U.S. efforts to engage the 
Taliban about Bin Ladin from 1996 on.“These talks have been fruitless,” the 
State Department concluded.211 

Arguments in the summer brought to the surface the more fundamental 
issue of whether the U.S. covert action program should seek to overthrow the 
regime, intervening decisively in the civil war in order to change Afghanistan’s 
government. By the end of a deputies meeting on September 10, officials formally 
agreed on a three-phase strategy. First an envoy would give the Taliban a 
last chance. If this failed, continuing diplomatic pressure would be combined 
with the planned covert action program encouraging anti-Taliban Afghans of 
all major ethnic groups to stalemate the Taliban in the civil war and attack al 
Qaeda bases, while the United States developed an international coalition to 
undermine the regime.In phase three,if the Taliban’s policy still did not change, 
the deputies agreed that the United States would try covert action to topple 
the Taliban’s leadership from within.212 

The deputies agreed to revise the al Qaeda presidential directive,then being 
finalized for presidential approval,in order to add this strategy to it.Armitage 
explained to us that after months of continuing the previous administration’s 
policy, he and Powell were bringing the State Department to a policy of overthrowing 
the Taliban.From his point of view,once the United States made the 
commitment to arm the Northern Alliance, even covertly, it was taking action 
to initiate regime change, and it should give those opponents the strength to 
achieve complete victory.213 

Pakistan. The Bush administration immediately encountered the dilemmas 
that arose from the varied objectives the United States was trying to accom</docText>
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    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghans</Misc>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
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    <Location>Northern Alliance</Location>
    <Organization>Tenet</Organization>
    <Misc>Pashtun</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Location>Northern Alliance’s</Location>
    <Misc>Taliban.209 During</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban.From</Misc>
    <Misc>Bush</Misc>
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    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

plish in its relationship with Pakistan. In February 2001, President Bush wrote 
General Musharraf on a number of matters.He emphasized that Bin Ladin and 
al Qaeda were “a direct threat to the United States and its interests that must 
be addressed.” He urged Musharraf to use his influence with the Taliban on 
Bin Ladin and al Qaeda.214 Powell and Armitage reviewed the possibility of 
acquiring more carrots to dangle in front of Pakistan.Given the generally negative 
view of Pakistan on Capitol Hill, the idea of lifting sanctions may have 
seemed far-fetched, but perhaps no more so than the idea of persuading 
Musharraf to antagonize the Islamists in his own government and nation.215 

On June 18, Rice met with the visiting Pakistani foreign minister, Abdul 
Sattar. She “really let him have it” about al Qaeda, she told us.216 Other evidence 
corroborates her account. But, as she was upbraiding Sattar, Rice 
recalled thinking that the Pakistani diplomat seemed to have heard it all before. 
Sattar urged senior U.S. policymakers to engage the Taliban, arguing that such 
a course would take time but would produce results. In late June, the deputies 
agreed to review U.S.objectives.Clarke urged Hadley to split off all other issues 
in U.S.-Pakistani relations and just focus on demanding that Pakistan move vigorously 
against terrorism—to push the Pakistanis to do before an al Qaeda attack 
what Washington would demand that they do after. He had made similar 
requests in the Clinton administration;he had no more success with Rice than 
he had with Berger.217 

On August 4, President Bush wrote President Musharraf to request his support 
in dealing with terrorism and to urge Pakistan to engage actively against 
al Qaeda.The new administration was again registering its concerns, just as its 
predecessor had, but it was still searching for new incentives to open up diplomatic 
possibilities. For its part, Pakistan had done little. Assistant Secretary of 
State Christina Rocca described the administration’s plan to break this logjam 
as a move from “half engagement” to “enhanced engagement.”The administration 
was not ready to confront Islamabad and threaten to rupture relations. 
Deputy Secretary Armitage told us that before 9/11, the envisioned new 
approach to Pakistan had not yet been attempted.218 

Saudi Arabia. The Bush administration did not develop new diplomatic initiatives 
on al Qaeda with the Saudi government before 9/11.Vice President 
Cheney called Crown Prince Abdullah on July 5, 2001, to seek Saudi help in 
preventing threatened attacks on American facilities in the Kingdom. Secretary 
of State Powell met with the crown prince twice before 9/11.They discussed 
topics like Iraq,not al Qaeda.U.S.-Saudi relations in the summer of 2001 
were marked by sometimes heated disagreements about ongoing Israeli-
Palestinian violence, not about Bin Ladin.219 

Military Plans 

The confirmation of the Pentagon’s new leadership was a lengthy process. 
Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz was confirmed in March 2001 and Under Secre</docText>
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    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Clinton</Person>
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    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Islamists</Misc>
    <Location>Kingdom</Location>
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    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Person>Sattar</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Sattar</Person>
    <Person>Christina Rocca</Person>
    <Person>Prince Abdullah</Person>
    <Date>July 5, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>Armitage</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.-Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Pakistanis</Misc>
    <Location>Capitol Hill</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda.214 Powell</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistan.Given</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda.U.S.-Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Israeli- Palestinian</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.219 Military Plans</Person>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

tary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith in July. Though the new officials were 
briefed about terrorism and some of the earlier planning, including that for 
Operation Infinite Resolve, they were focused, as Secretary Rumsfeld told us, 
on creating a twenty-first-century military.220 

At the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Shelton did not recall much interest by 
the new administration in military options against al Qaeda in Afghanistan.He 
could not recall any specific guidance on the topic from the secretary. Brian 
Sheridan—the outgoing assistant secretary of defense for special operations and 
low-intensity conflict (SOLIC), the key counterterrorism policy office in the 
Pentagon—never briefed Rumsfeld. He departed on January 20; he had not 
been replaced by 9/11.221 

Rumsfeld noted to us his own interest in terrorism, which came up often 
in his regular meetings with Tenet. He thought that the Defense Department, 
before 9/11,was not organized adequately or prepared to deal with new threats 
like terrorism. But his time was consumed with getting new officials in place 
and working on the foundation documents of a new defense policy, the quadrennial 
defense review,the defense planning guidance,and the existing contingency 
plans. He did not recall any particular counterterrorism issue that 
engaged his attention before 9/11, other than the development of the Predator 
unmanned aircraft system.222 

The commander of Central Command, General Franks, told us that he did 
not regard the existing plans as serious.To him a real military plan to address 
al Qaeda would need to go all the way, following through the details of a full 
campaign (including the political-military issues of where operations would be 
based) and securing the rights to fly over neighboring countries.223 

The draft presidential directive circulated in June 2001 began its discussion 
of the military by reiterating the Defense Department’s lead role in protecting 
its forces abroad.The draft included a section directing Secretary Rumsfeld to 
“develop contingency plans” to attack both al Qaeda and Taliban targets in 
Afghanistan.The new section did not specifically order planning for the use of 
ground troops, or clarify how this guidance differed from the existing Infinite 
Resolve plans.224 

Hadley told us that by circulating this section,a draft Annex B to the directive,
the White House was putting the Pentagon on notice that it would need 
to produce new military plans to address this problem.225 “The military 
didn’t particularly want this mission,” Rice told us.226 

With this directive still awaiting President Bush’s signature, Secretary 
Rumsfeld did not order his subordinates to begin preparing any new military 
plans against either al Qaeda or the Taliban before 9/11. 

President Bush told us that before 9/11, he had not seen good options for 
special military operations against Bin Ladin. Suitable bases in neighboring 
countries were not available and, even if the U.S. forces were sent in, it was 
not clear where they would go to find Bin Ladin.227</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
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    <Person>Brian Sheridan—the</Person>
    <Organization>SOLIC</Organization>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>226_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

President Bush told us that before 9/11 there was an appetite in the government 
for killing Bin Ladin, not for war. Looking back in 2004, he equated 
the presidential directive with a readiness to invade Afghanistan.The problem, 
he said, would have been how to do that if there had not been another attack 
on America.To many people, he said, it would have seemed like an ultimate 
act of unilateralism. But he said that he was prepared to take that on.228 

Domestic Change and Continuity 

During the transition, Bush had chosen John Ashcroft, a former senator from 
Missouri, as his attorney general. On his arrival at the Justice Department, 
Ashcroft told us, he faced a number of problems spotlighting the need for 
reform at the FBI.229 

In February, Clarke briefed Attorney General Ashcroft on his directorate’s 
issues. He reported that at the time, the attorney general acknowledged a 
“steep learning curve,” and asked about the progress of the Cole investigation.
230 Neither Ashcroft nor his predecessors received the President’s Daily 
Brief. His office did receive the daily intelligence report for senior officials 
that, during the spring and summer of 2001, was carrying much of the same 
threat information. 

The FBI was struggling to build up its institutional capabilities to do more 
against terrorism, relying on a strategy called MAXCAP 05 that had been 
unveiled in the summer of 2000.The FBI’s assistant director for counterterrorism, 
Dale Watson, told us that he felt the new Justice Department leadership 
was not supportive of the strategy.Watson had the sense that the Justice Department 
wanted the FBI to get back to the investigative basics: guns, drugs, and 
civil rights.The new administration did seek an 8 percent increase in overall 
FBI funding in its initial budget proposal for fiscal year 2002, including the 
largest proposed percentage increase in the FBI’s counterterrorism program 
since fiscal year 1997.The additional funds included the FBI’s support of the 
2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah (a onetime increase), enhanced 
security at FBI facilities, and improvements to the FBI’s WMD incident 
response capability.231 

In May, the Justice Department began shaping plans for building a budget 
for fiscal year 2003, the process that would usually culminate in an administration 
proposal at the beginning of 2002. On May 9, the attorney general testified 
at a congressional hearing concerning federal efforts to combat terrorism. 
He said that “one of the nation’s most fundamental responsibilities is to protect 
its citizens . . . from terrorist attacks.” The budget guidance issued the next 
day, however, highlighted gun crimes, narcotics trafficking, and civil rights as 
priorities.Watson told us that he almost fell out of his chair when he saw this 
memo, because it did not mention counterterrorism. Longtime FBI Director 
Louis Freeh left in June 2001, after announcing the indictment in the Khobar 
Towers case that he had worked so long to obtain.Thomas Pickard was the act</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>MAXCAP</Organization>
    <Person>Louis Freeh</Person>
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    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
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    <Misc>America.To</Misc>
    <Location>Missouri</Location>
    <Location>FBI.229 In February</Location>
    <Location>Salt Lake City</Location>
    <Location>Utah</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>227_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

ing director during the summer. Freeh’s successor, Robert Mueller, took office 
just before 9/11.232 

The Justice Department prepared a draft fiscal year 2003 budget that maintained 
but did not increase the funding level for counterterrorism in its pending 
fiscal year 2002 proposal. Pickard appealed for more counterterrorism 
enhancements, an appeal the attorney general denied on September 10.233 

Ashcroft had also inherited an ongoing debate on whether and how to 
modify the 1995 procedures governing intelligence sharing between the FBI 
and the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.But in August 2001,Ashcroft’s 
deputy, Larry Thompson, issued a memorandum reaffirming the 1995 procedures 
with the clarification that evidence of “any federal felony” was to be 
immediately reported by the FBI to the Criminal Division.The 1995 procedures 
remained in effect until after 9/11.234 

Covert Action and the Predator 

In March 2001, Rice asked the CIA to prepare a new series of authorities 
for covert action in Afghanistan. Rice’s recollection was that the idea had 
come from Clarke and the NSC senior director for intelligence, Mary 
McCarthy, and had been linked to the proposal for aid to the Northern 
Alliance and the Uzbeks. Rice described the draft document as providing 
for “consolidation plus,” superseding the various Clinton administration 
documents. In fact, the CIA drafted two documents. One was a finding that 
did concern aid to opponents of the Taliban regime; the other was a draft 
Memorandum of Notification, which included more open-ended language 
authorizing possible lethal action in a variety of situations.Tenet delivered 
both to Hadley on March 28.The CIA’s notes for Tenet advised him that 
“in response to the NSC request for drafts that will help the policymakers 
review their options, each of the documents has been crafted to provide the 
Agency with the broadest possible discretion permissible under the law.” At 
the meeting,Tenet argued for deciding on a policy before deciding on the 
legal authorities to implement it. Hadley accepted this argument, and the 
draft MON was put on hold.235 

As the policy review moved forward, the planned covert action program 
for Afghanistan was included in the draft presidential directive, as part of an 
“Annex A” on intelligence activities to “eliminate the al Qaeda threat.”236 
The main debate during the summer of 2001 concentrated on the one new 
mechanism for a lethal attack on Bin Ladin—an armed version of the Predator 
drone. 

In the first months of the new administration, questions concerning the 
Predator became more and more a central focus of dispute. Clarke favored 
resuming Predator flights over Afghanistan as soon as weather permitted, hoping 
that they still might provide the elusive “actionable intelligence” to target 
Bin Ladin with cruise missiles. Learning that the Air Force was thinking of</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
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    <Person>Mary McCarthy</Person>
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    <Person>Bin Ladin—an</Person>
  </document>
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    <docID>228_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

equipping Predators with warheads, Clarke became even more enthusiastic 
about redeployment.237 

The CTC chief, Cofer Black, argued against deploying the Predator for 
reconnaissance purposes.He recalled that the Taliban had spotted a Predator in 
the fall of 2000 and scrambled their MiG fighters. Black wanted to wait until 
the armed version was ready.“I do not believe the possible recon value outweighs 
the risk of possible program termination when the stakes are raised by 
the Taliban parading a charred Predator in front of CNN,” he wrote. Military 
officers in the Joint Staff shared this concern.238 There is some dispute as to 
whether or not the Deputies Committee endorsed resuming reconnaissance 
flights at its April 30, 2001, meeting. In any event, Rice and Hadley ultimately 
went along with the CIA and the Pentagon, holding off on reconnaissance 
flights until the armed Predator was ready.239 

The CIA’s senior management saw problems with the armed Predator as 
well, problems that Clarke and even Black and Allen were inclined to minimize.
One (which also applied to reconnaissance flights) was money.A Predator 
cost about $3 million. If the CIA flew Predators for its own reconnaissance 
or covert action purposes,it might be able to borrow them from the Air Force, 
but it was not clear that the Air Force would bear the cost if a vehicle went 
down.Deputy Secretary of Defense Wolfowitz took the position that the CIA 
should have to pay for it; the CIA disagreed.240 

Second,Tenet in particular questioned whether he, as Director of Central 
Intelligence,should operate an armed Predator.“This was new ground,”he told 
us.Tenet ticked off key questions:What is the chain of command? Who takes 
the shot? Are America’s leaders comfortable with the CIA doing this, going 
outside of normal military command and control? Charlie Allen told us that 
when these questions were discussed at the CIA, he and the Agency’s executive 
director,A.B.“Buzzy”Krongard,had said that either one of them would 
be happy to pull the trigger,but Tenet was appalled,telling them that they had 
no authority to do it, nor did he.241 

Third, the Hellfire warhead carried by the Predator needed work. It had 
been built to hit tanks, not people. It needed to be designed to explode in a 
different way, and even then had to be targeted with extreme precision. In the 
configuration planned by the Air Force through mid-2001, the Predator’s missile 
would not be able to hit a moving vehicle.242 

White House officials had seen the Predator video of the “man in white.” 
On July 11, Hadley tried to hurry along preparation of the armed system. He 
directed McLaughlin, Wolfowitz, and Joint Chiefs Vice Chairman Richard 
Myers to deploy Predators capable of being armed no later than September 1. 
He also directed that they have cost-sharing arrangements in place by August 

1. Rice told us that this attempt by Hadley to dictate a solution had failed and 
that she eventually had to intervene herself.243 
On August 1, the Deputies Committee met again to discuss the armed</docText>
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    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
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    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
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    <Person>Richard Myers</Person>
    <Person>McLaughlin</Person>
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    <Person>Allen</Person>
    <Date>April 30, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Misc>America’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Predator</Misc>
    <Misc>Predators</Misc>
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    <Person>A.B.“Buzzy”Krongard</Person>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>229_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Predator.They concluded that it was legal for the CIA to kill Bin Ladin or one 
of his deputies with the Predator.Such strikes would be acts of self-defense that 
would not violate the ban on assassinations in Executive Order 12333.The big 
issues—who would pay for what,who would authorize strikes,and who would 
pull the trigger—were left for the principals to settle.The Defense Department 
representatives did not take positions on these issues.244 

The CIA’s McLaughlin had also been reticent.When Hadley circulated a 
memorandum attempting to prod the deputies to reach agreement,McLaughlin 
sent it back with a handwritten comment on the cost-sharing:“we question 
whether it is advisable to make such an investment before the decision is 
taken on flying an armed Predator.”For Clarke,this came close to being a final 
straw.He angrily asked Rice to call Tenet.“Either al Qida is a threat worth acting 
against or it is not,”Clarke wrote.“CIA leadership has to decide which it 
is and cease these bi-polar mood swings.”245 

These debates, though, had little impact in advancing or delaying efforts to 
make the Predator ready for combat.Those were in the hands of military officers 
and engineers. General John Jumper had commanded U.S. air forces in 
Europe and seen Predators used for reconnaissance in the Balkans. He started 
the program to develop an armed version and, after returning in 2000 to head 
the Air Combat Command, took direct charge of it. 

There were numerous technical problems, especially with the Hellfire missiles. 
The Air Force tests conducted during the spring were inadequate, so 
missile testing needed to continue and modifications needed to be made 
during the summer. Even then, Jumper told us, problems with the equipment 
persisted. Nevertheless, the Air Force was moving at an extraordinary pace.“In 
the modern era,since the 1980s,”Jumper said to us,“I would be shocked if you 
found anything that went faster than this.”246 

September 2001 

The Principals Committee had its first meeting on al Qaeda on September 4. 
On the day of the meeting,Clarke sent Rice an impassioned personal note.He 
criticized U.S. counterterrorism efforts past and present.The “real question” 
before the principals, he wrote, was “are we serious about dealing with the 
al Qida threat? ...Is al Qida a big deal? ... Decision makers should imagine themselves 
on a future day when the CSG has not succeeded in stopping al Qida attacks and 
hundreds of Americans lay dead in several countries, including the US,” Clarke wrote. 
“What would those decision makers wish that they had done earlier? That 
future day could happen at any time.”247 

Clarke then turned to the Cole.“The fact that the USS Cole was attacked during 
the last Administration does not absolve us of responding for the attack,” he wrote. 
“Many in al Qida and the Taliban may have drawn the wrong lesson from the 
Cole: that they can kill Americans without there being a US response, without 
there being a price.... One might have thought that with a $250m hole</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>22_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

Reports from two flight attendants in the coach cabin, Betty Ong and 
Madeline “Amy” Sweeney, tell us most of what we know about how the 
hijacking happened. As it began, some of the hijackers—most likely Wail al 
Shehri and Waleed al Shehri,who were seated in row 2 in first class—stabbed 
the two unarmed flight attendants who would have been preparing for cabin 
service.25 

We do not know exactly how the hijackers gained access to the cockpit; 
FAA rules required that the doors remain closed and locked during flight.Ong 
speculated that they had “jammed their way” in. Perhaps the terrorists stabbed 
the flight attendants to get a cockpit key,to force one of them to open the cockpit 
door, or to lure the captain or first officer out of the cockpit. Or the flight 
attendants may just have been in their way.26 

At the same time or shortly thereafter, Atta—the only terrorist on board 
trained to fly a jet—would have moved to the cockpit from his business-class 
seat,possibly accompanied by Omari.As this was happening,passenger Daniel 
Lewin, who was seated in the row just behind Atta and Omari, was stabbed by 
one of the hijackers—probably Satam al Suqami, who was seated directly 
behind Lewin. Lewin had served four years as an officer in the Israeli military. 
He may have made an attempt to stop the hijackers in front of him, not realizing 
that another was sitting behind him.27 

The hijackers quickly gained control and sprayed Mace, pepper spray, or 
some other irritant in the first-class cabin, in order to force the passengers and 
flight attendants toward the rear of the plane.They claimed they had a bomb.28 

About five minutes after the hijacking began, Betty Ong contacted the 
American Airlines Southeastern Reservations Office in Cary, North Carolina, 
via an AT&amp;T airphone to report an emergency aboard the flight.This was the 
first of several occasions on 9/11 when flight attendants took action outside 
the scope of their training, which emphasized that in a hijacking, they were to 
communicate with the cockpit crew.The emergency call lasted approximately 
25 minutes, as Ong calmly and professionally relayed information about events 
taking place aboard the airplane to authorities on the ground.29 

At 8:19, Ong reported:“The cockpit is not answering, somebody’s stabbed 
in business class—and I think there’s Mace—that we can’t breathe—I don’t 
know,I think we’re getting hijacked.”She then told of the stabbings of the two 
flight attendants.30 

At 8:21, one of the American employees receiving Ong’s call in North Carolina, 
Nydia Gonzalez, alerted the American Airlines operations center in Fort 
Worth,Texas, reaching Craig Marquis, the manager on duty. Marquis soon realized 
this was an emergency and instructed the airline’s dispatcher responsible 
for the flight to contact the cockpit. At 8:23, the dispatcher tried unsuccessfully 
to contact the aircraft.Six minutes later,the air traffic control specialist in American’s 
operations center contacted the FAA’s Boston Air Traffic Control Center 
about the flight.The center was already aware of the problem.31</docText>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>Texas</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
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    <Misc>Satam</Misc>
    <Person>Suqami</Person>
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    <Misc>AT&amp;T</Misc>
    <Misc>Ong’s</Misc>
    <Location>Fort Worth</Location>
    <Person>Marquis</Person>
    <Organization>FAA’s Boston Air Traffic Control Center</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>230_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>FROM THREAT TO THREAT 

in a destroyer and 17 dead sailors,the Pentagon might have wanted to respond. 
Instead, they have often talked about the fact that there is ‘nothing worth hitting 
in Afghanistan’and said ‘the cruise missiles cost more than the jungle gyms 
and mud huts’ at terrorist camps.” Clarke could not understand “why we continue 
to allow the existence of large scale al Qida bases where we know people are being 
trained to kill Americans.”248 

Turning to the CIA, Clarke warned that its bureaucracy, which was “masterful 
at passive aggressive behavior,” would resist funding the new national 
security presidential directive, leaving it a “hollow shell of words without 
deeds.”The CIA would insist its other priorities were more important. Invoking 
President Bush’s own language,Clarke wrote,“You are left with a modest effort 
to swat flies, to try to prevent specific al Qida attacks by using [intelligence] to 
detect them and friendly governments’ police and intelligence officers to stop 
them.You are left waiting for the big attack, with lots of casualties,after which some 
major US retaliation will be in order[.]”249 

Rice told us she took Clarke’s memo as a warning not to get dragged down 
by bureaucratic inertia.250 While his arguments have force, we also take 
Clarke’s jeremiad as something more. After nine years on the NSC staff and 
more than three years as the president’s national coordinator,he had often failed 
to persuade these agencies to adopt his views, or to persuade his superiors to 
set an agenda of the sort he wanted or that the whole government could support. 


Meanwhile, another counterterrorism veteran, Cofer Black, was preparing 
his boss for the principals meeting.He advised Tenet that the draft presidential 
directive envisioned an ambitious covert action program, but that the authorities 
for it had not yet been approved and the funding still had not been found. 
If the CIA was reluctant to use the Predator, Black did not mention it. He 
wanted “a timely decision from the Principals,” adding that the window for 
missions within 2001 was a short one.The principals would have to decide 
whether Rice,Tenet,Rumsfeld,or someone else would give the order to fire.251 

At the September 4 meeting, the principals approved the draft presidential 
directive with little discussion.252 Rice told us that she had, at some point, told 
President Bush that she and his other advisers thought it would take three years 
or so for their al Qaeda strategy to work.253 They then discussed the armed 
Predator. 

Hadley portrayed the Predator as a useful tool, although perhaps not for 
immediate use. Rice, who had been advised by her staff that the armed Predator 
was not ready for deployment, commented about the potential for using 
the armed Predator in the spring of 2002.254 

The State Department supported the armed Predator, although Secretary 
Powell was not convinced that Bin Ladin was as easy to target as had been suggested.
Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill was skittish,cautioning about the implications 
of trying to kill an individual.255</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
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    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
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    <Person>Paul O’Neill</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan’and</Location>
    <Misc>Americans.”248 Turning</Misc>
    <Misc>Predator</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

The Defense Department favored strong action. Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz 
questioned the United States’ability to deliver Bin Ladin and bring him 
to justice. He favored going after Bin Ladin as part of a larger air strike, similar 
to what had been done in the 1986 U.S.strike against Libya.General Myers 
emphasized the Predator’s value for surveillance, perhaps enabling broader air 
strikes that would go beyond Bin Ladin to attack al Qaeda’s training infrastructure.
256 

The principals also discussed which agency—CIA or Defense—should have 
the authority to fire a missile from the armed Predator.257 

At the end, Rice summarized the meeting’s conclusions.The armed Predator 
capability was needed but not ready.The Predator would be available for 
the military to consider along with its other options.The CIA should consider 
flying reconnaissance-only missions.The principals—including the previously 
reluctant Tenet—thought that such reconnaissance flights were a good idea, 
combined with other efforts to get actionable intelligence.Tenet deferred an 
answer on the additional reconnaissance flights, conferred with his staff after 
the meeting, and then directed the CIA to press ahead with them.258 

A few days later, a final version of the draft presidential directive was circulated, 
incorporating two minor changes made by the principals.259 

On September 9,dramatic news arrived from Afghanistan.The leader of the 
Northern Alliance,Ahmed Shah Massoud,had granted an interview in his bungalow 
near the Tajikistan border with two men whom the Northern Alliance 
leader had been told were Arab journalists.The supposed reporter and cameraman—
actually al Qaeda assassins—then set off a bomb,riddling Massoud’s chest 
with shrapnel. He died minutes later. 

On September 10, Hadley gathered the deputies to finalize their threephase,
multiyear plan to pressure and perhaps ultimately topple the Taliban leadership.
260 

That same day, Hadley instructed DCI Tenet to have the CIA prepare new 
draft legal authorities for the “broad covert action program” envisioned by the 
draft presidential directive.Hadley also directed Tenet to prepare a separate section 
“authorizing a broad range of other covert activities, including authority 
to capture or to use lethal force” against al Qaeda command-and-control elements. 
This section would supersede the Clinton-era documents. Hadley 
wanted the authorities to be flexible and broad enough “to cover any additional 
UBL-related covert actions contemplated.”261 

Funding still needed to be located. The military component remained 
unclear. Pakistan remained uncooperative. The domestic policy institutions 
were largely uninvolved.But the pieces were coming together for an integrated 
policy dealing with al Qaeda, the Taliban, and Pakistan.</docText>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
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    <Organization>Defense Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Tajikistan</Location>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Person>Myers</Person>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Person>Wolfowitz</Person>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.The</Misc>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Misc>Predator.257 At</Misc>
    <Person>Ahmed Shah Massoud</Person>
    <Misc>Clinton-era</Misc>
    <Misc>UBL-related</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>232_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>7 
THE ATTACK LOOMS 


7.1 FIRST ARRIVALS IN CALIFORNIA 
In chapter 5 we described the Southeast Asia travels of Nawaf al Hazmi,Khalid 
al Mihdhar, and others in January 2000 on the first part of the “planes operation.” 
In that chapter we also described how Mihdhar was spotted in Kuala 
Lumpur early in January 2000, along with associates who were not identified, 
and then was lost to sight when the group passed through Bangkok. On January 
15, Hazmi and Mihdhar arrived in Los Angeles.They spent about two 
weeks there before moving on to San Diego.1 

Two Weeks in Los Angeles 

Why Hazmi and Mihdhar came to California, we do not know for certain. 
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), the organizer of the planes operation, 
explains that California was a convenient point of entry from Asia and had the 
added benefit of being far away from the intended target area.2 

Hazmi and Mihdhar were ill-prepared for a mission in the United States. 
Their only qualifications for this plot were their devotion to Usama Bin Ladin, 
their veteran service, and their ability to get valid U.S. visas. Neither had spent 
any substantial time in the West, and neither spoke much, if any, English.3 

It would therefore be plausible that they or KSM would have tried to identify, 
in advance, a friendly contact for them in the United States. In detention, 
KSM denies that al Qaeda had any agents in Southern California.We do not 
credit this denial.4 We believe it is unlikely that Hazmi and Mihdhar—neither 
of whom, in contrast to the Hamburg group, had any prior exposure to life in 
the West—would have come to the United States without arranging to receive 
assistance from one or more individuals informed in advance of their arrival.5 

KSM says that though he told others involved in the conspiracy to stay away 
from mosques and to avoid establishing personal contacts, he made an exception 
in this case and instructed Hazmi and Mihdhar to pose as newly arrived</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>Asia</Location>
    <Location>CALIFORNIA</Location>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.They</Misc>
    <Misc>San Diego.1 Two Weeks</Misc>
    <Misc>English.3 It</Misc>
    <Misc>Southern California.We</Misc>
    <Misc>West—would</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>233_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Saudi students and seek assistance at local mosques.He counted on their breaking 
off any such relationships once they moved to the East Coast.6 Our inability 
to ascertain the activities of Hazmi and Mihdhar during their first two weeks 
in the United States may reflect al Qaeda tradecraft designed to protect the 
identity of anyone who may have assisted them during that period. 

Hazmi and Mihdhar were directed to enroll in English-language classes upon 
arriving in Southern California, so that they could begin pilot training as soon 
as possible. KSM claims to have steered the two to San Diego on the basis of his 
own research,which supposedly included thumbing through a San Diego phone 
book acquired at a Karachi flea market. Contradicting himself, he also says that, 
as instructed,they attempted to enroll in three language schools in Los Angeles.7 

After the pair cleared Immigration and Customs at Los Angeles International 
Airport,we do not know where they went.8They appear to have obtained assistance 
from the Muslim community,specifically the community surrounding the 
King Fahd mosque in Culver City, one of the most prominent mosques in 
Southern California. 

It is fairly certain that Hazmi and Mihdhar spent time at the King Fahd 
mosque and made some acquaintances there. One witness interviewed by the 
FBI after the September 11 attacks has said he first met the hijackers at the 
mosque in early 2000. Furthermore, one of the people who would befriend 
them—a man named Mohdar Abdullah—recalled a trip with Hazmi and 
Mihdhar to Los Angeles in June when, on their arrival, the three went to the 
King Fahd mosque. There Hazmi and Mihdhar greeted various individuals 
whom they appeared to have met previously, including a man named “Khallam.” 
In Abdullah’s telling, when Khallam visited the al Qaeda operatives at 
their motel that evening,Abdullah was asked to leave the room so that Hazmi, 
Mihdhar, and Khallam could meet in private.The identity of Khallam and his 
purpose in meeting with Hazmi and Mihdhar remain unknown.9 

To understand what Hazmi and Mihdhar did in their first weeks in the 
United States, evidently staying in Los Angeles, we have investigated whether 
anyone associated with the King Fahd mosque assisted them.This subject has 
received substantial attention in the media. Some have speculated that Fahad 
al Thumairy—an imam at the mosque and an accredited diplomat at the Saudi 
Arabian consulate from 1996 until 2003—may have played a role in helping 
the hijackers establish themselves on their arrival in Los Angeles.This speculation 
is based, at least in part, on Thumairy’s reported leadership of an extremist 
faction at the mosque.10 

A well-known figure at the King Fahd mosque and within the Los Angeles 
Muslim community,Thumairy was reputed to be an Islamic fundamentalist 
and a strict adherent to orthodox Wahhabi doctrine. Some Muslims 
concerned about his preaching have said he “injected non-Islamic themes into 
his guidance/prayers at the [King Fahd] Mosque” and had followers “supportive 
of the events of September 11, 2001.”11 Thumairy appears to have associ</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Date>September 11, 2001</Date>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi Arabian</Misc>
    <Misc>Fahad</Misc>
    <Misc>English-language</Misc>
    <Misc>Abdullah’s</Misc>
    <Location>King Fahd</Location>
    <Person>Thumairy</Person>
    <Location>Culver City</Location>
    <Person>Khallam</Person>
    <Location>East Coast.6</Location>
    <Location>Southern California</Location>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.7</Misc>
    <Location>International Airport</Location>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah—recalled</Person>
    <Misc>Thumairy—an</Misc>
    <Misc>Los Angeles.This</Misc>
    <Misc>Mosque”</Misc>
    <Date>1996 until 2003</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>234_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

ated with a particularly radical faction within the community of local worshippers,
and had a network of contacts in other cities in the United States.After 
9/11,Thumairy’s conduct was a subject of internal debate among some Saudi 
officials. He apparently lost his position at the King Fahd mosque, possibly 
because of his immoderate reputation. On May 6, 2003,Thumairy attempted 
to reenter the United States from Saudi Arabia but was refused entry, based on 
a determination by the State Department that he might be connected with terrorist 
activity.12 

When interviewed by both the FBI and the Commission staff,Thumairy 
has denied preaching anti-Western sermons,much less promoting violent jihad. 
More to the point,he claimed not to recognize either Hazmi or Mihdhar.Both 
denials are somewhat suspect. (He likewise denied knowing Omar al Bayoumi—
a man from San Diego we will discuss shortly—even though witnesses 
and telephone records establish that the two men had contact with each other. 
Similarly,Thumairy’s claim not to know Mohdar Abdullah is belied by Abdullah’s 
contrary assertion.) On the other hand,Thumairy undoubtedly met with 
and provided religious counseling to countless individuals during his tenure at 
the King Fahd mosque, so he might not remember two transients like Hazmi 
and Mihdhar several years later.13 

The circumstantial evidence makes Thumairy a logical person to consider 
as a possible contact for Hazmi and Mihdhar.Yet, after exploring the available 
leads, we have not found evidence that Thumairy provided assistance to the 
two operatives.14 

We do not pick up their trail until February 1, 2000, when they encountered 
Omar al Bayoumi and Caysan Bin Don at a halal food restaurant on 
Venice Boulevard in Culver City, a few blocks away from the King Fahd 
mosque.Bayoumi and Bin Don have both told us that they had driven up from 
San Diego earlier that day so that Bayoumi could address a visa issue and collect 
some papers from the Saudi consulate. Bayoumi heard Hazmi and Mihdhar 
speaking in what he recognized to be Gulf Arabic and struck up a 
conversation. Since Bin Don knew only a little Arabic, he had to rely heavily 
on Bayoumi to translate for him.15 

Mihdhar and Hazmi said they were students from Saudi Arabia who had 
just arrived in the United States to study English.They said they were living 
in an apartment near the restaurant but did not specify the address.They did 
not like Los Angeles and were having a hard time,especially because they did 
not know anyone.Bayoumi told them how pleasant San Diego was and offered 
to help them settle there.The two pairs then left the restaurant and went their 
separate ways.16 

Bayoumi and Bin Don have been interviewed many times about the February 
1, 2000, lunch. For the most part, their respective accounts corroborate 
each other. However, Bayoumi has said that he and Bin Don attempted to visit 
the King Fahd mosque after lunch but could not find it.Bin Don,on the other</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>Commission</Organization>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Bayoumi</Person>
    <Location>King Fahd</Location>
    <Person>Omar al Bayoumi</Person>
    <Person>Bin Don</Person>
    <Person>Don</Person>
    <Person>Thumairy</Person>
    <Date>February 1, 2000</Date>
    <Location>Culver City</Location>
    <Location>United States.After</Location>
    <Person>Omar al Bayoumi—</Person>
    <Organization>Abdullah’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Mihdhar.Yet</Misc>
    <Person>Caysan Bin Don</Person>
    <Location>Venice Boulevard</Location>
    <Misc>Gulf Arabic</Misc>
    <Date>May 6, 2003</Date>
    <Date>February 
1, 2000</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>235_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

hand, recalls visiting the mosque twice that day for prayers, both before and 
after the meal.Bin Don’s recollection is spotty and inconsistent.Bayoumi’s version 
can be challenged as well, since the mosque is close to the restaurant and 
Bayoumi had visited it,and the surrounding area,on multiple occasions,including 
twice within six weeks of February 1.We do not know whether the lunch 
encounter occurred by chance or design.We know about it because Bayoumi 
told law enforcement that it happened.17 

Bayoumi, then 42 years old, was in the United States as a business student, 
supported by a private contractor for the Saudi Civil Aviation Authority,where 
Bayoumi had worked for over 20 years.18 The object of considerable media 
speculation following 9/11, he lives now in Saudi Arabia, well aware of his 
notoriety. Both we and the FBI have interviewed him and investigated evidence 
about him. 

Bayoumi is a devout Muslim, obliging and gregarious. He spent much of 
his spare time involved in religious study and helping run a mosque in El 
Cajon, about 15 miles from San Diego. It is certainly possible that he has dissembled 
about some aspects of his story, perhaps to counter suspicion. On the 
other hand, we have seen no credible evidence that he believed in violent 
extremism or knowingly aided extremist groups.19 Our investigators who have 
dealt directly with him and studied his background find him to be an unlikely 
candidate for clandestine involvement with Islamist extremists. 

The Move to San Diego 

By February 4, Hazmi and Mihdhar had come to San Diego from Los Angeles,
possibly driven by Mohdar Abdullah.Abdullah,a Yemeni university student 
in his early 20s, is fluent in both Arabic and English, and was perfectly suited to 
assist the hijackers in pursuing their mission.20 

After 9/11,Abdullah was interviewed many times by the FBI.He admitted 
knowing of Hazmi and Mihdhar’s extremist leanings and Mihdhar’s involvement 
with the Islamic Army of Aden (a group with ties to al Qaeda) back in 
Yemen. Abdullah clearly was sympathetic to those extremist views. During a 
post-9/11 search of his possessions, the FBI found a notebook (belonging to 
someone else) with references to planes falling from the sky, mass killing, and 
hijacking. Further, when detained as a material witness following the 9/11 
attacks,Abdullah expressed hatred for the U.S.government and “stated that the 

U.S. brought ‘this’ on themselves.”21 
When interviewed by the FBI after 9/11,Abdullah denied having advance 
knowledge of attacks. In May 2004, however, we learned of reports about 
Abdullah bragging to fellow inmates at a California prison in September– 
October 2003 that he had known Hazmi and Mihdhar were planning a terrorist 
attack.The stories attributed to Abdullah are not entirely consistent with 
each other. Specifically, according to one inmate, Abdullah claimed an 
unnamed individual had notified him that Hazmi and Mihdhar would be arriv</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamist</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Bayoumi</Person>
    <Organization>Saudi Civil Aviation Authority</Organization>
    <Misc>Mihdhar’s</Misc>
    <Location>El Cajon</Location>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah.Abdullah</Person>
    <Organization>FBI.He</Organization>
    <Organization>Islamic Army of Aden</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>236_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

ing in Los Angeles with plans to carry out an attack. Abdullah allegedly told 
the same inmate that he had driven the two al Qaeda operatives from Los Angeles 
to San Diego, but did not say when this occurred.We have been unable to 
corroborate this account.22 

Another inmate has recalled Abdullah claiming he first heard about the 
hijackers’ terrorist plans after they arrived in San Diego, when they told him 
they planned to fly an airplane into a building and invited him to join them 
on the plane. According to this inmate, Abdullah also claimed to have found 
out about the 9/11 attacks three weeks in advance,a claim that appears to dovetail 
with evidence that Abdullah may have received a phone call from Hazmi 
around that time, that he stopped making calls from his telephone after August 
25, 2001, and that, according to his friends, he started acting strangely.23 

Although boasts among prison inmates often tend to be unreliable,this evidence 
is obviously important.To date, neither we nor the FBI have been able 
to verify Abdullah’s alleged jailhouse statements, despite investigative efforts. 

We thus do not know when or how Hazmi and Mihdhar first came to San 
Diego.We do know that on February 4, they went to the Islamic Center of 
San Diego to find Omar al Bayoumi and take him up on his offer of help. Bayoumi 
obliged by not only locating an apartment but also helping them fill out 
the lease application,co-signing the lease and,when the real estate agent refused 
to take cash for a deposit, helping them open a bank account (which they did 
with a $9,900 deposit); he then provided a certified check from his own 
account for which the al Qaeda operatives reimbursed him on the spot for the 
deposit. Neither then nor later did Bayoumi give money to either Hazmi or 
Mihdhar, who had received money from KSM.24 

Hazmi and Mihdhar moved in with no furniture and practically no possessions. 
Soon after the move, Bayoumi used their apartment for a party attended 
by some 20 male members of the Muslim community.At Bayoumi’s request, 
Bin Don videotaped the gathering with Bayoumi’s video camera. Hazmi and 
Mihdhar did not mingle with the other guests and reportedly spent most of 
the party by themselves off camera, in a back room.25 

Hazmi and Mihdhar immediately started looking for a different place to stay. 
Based on their comment to Bayoumi about the first apartment being expensive, 
one might infer that they wanted to save money.They may also have been 
reconsidering the wisdom of living so close to the video camera–wielding Bayoumi,
who Hazmi seemed to think was some sort of Saudi spy.Just over a week 
after moving in, Hazmi and Mihdhar filed a 30-day notice of intention to 
vacate.Bayoumi apparently loaned them his cell phone to help them check out 
possibilities for new accommodations.26 

Their initial effort to move turned out poorly. An acquaintance arranged 
with his landlord to have Mihdhar take over his apartment.Mihdhar put down 
a $650 deposit and signed a lease for the apartment effective March 1. Several 
weeks later, Mihdhar sought a refund of his deposit, claiming he no longer</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Omar</Person>
    <Person>Bayoumi</Person>
    <Misc>Abdullah’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Don</Person>
    <Misc>Bayoumi’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Islamic Center of San Diego</Organization>
    <Misc>San Diego.We</Misc>
    <Person>KSM.24 Hazmi</Person>
    <Date>August 
25, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>237_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

intended to move in because the apartment was too messy.When the landlord 
refused to refund the deposit, Mihdhar became belligerent. The landlord 
remembers him “ranting and raving” as if he were “psychotic.”27 

Hazmi and Mihdhar finally found a room to rent in the home of an individual 
they had met at a mosque in San Diego.According to the homeowner, 
the future hijackers moved in on May 10, 2000. Mihdhar moved out after only 
about a month.On June 9,he left San Diego to return to Yemen.Hazmi,on 
the other hand, stayed at this house for the rest of his time in California, until 
mid-December; he would then leave for Arizona with a newly arrived 9/11 
hijacker-pilot, Hani Hanjour.28 

While in San Diego,Hazmi and Mihdhar played the part of recently arrived 
foreign students.They continued to reach out to members of the Muslim community 
for help.At least initially,they found well-meaning new acquaintances 
at the Islamic Center of San Diego, which was only a stone’s throw from the 
apartment where they first lived.For example,when they purchased a used car 
(with cash), they bought it from a man who lived across the street from the 
Islamic Center and who let them use his address in registering the vehicle, an 
accommodation “to help a fellow Muslim brother.” Similarly, in April, when 
their cash supply may have been dwindling, Hazmi persuaded the administrator 
of the Islamic Center to let him use the administrator’s bank account to 
receive a $5,000 wire transfer from someone in Dubai,in the United Arab Emirates 
(this was KSM’s nephew,Ali Abdul Aziz Ali).29 

Hazmi and Mihdhar visited other mosques as well, mixing comfortably as 
devout worshippers. During the operatives’ critical first weeks in San Diego, 
Mohdar Abdullah helped them. Translating between English and Arabic, he 
assisted them in obtaining California driver’s licenses and with applying to language 
and flight schools.Abdullah also introduced them to his circle of friends; 
he shared an apartment with some of those friends near the Rabat mosque in 
La Mesa, a few miles from the hijackers’ residence.30 

Abdullah has emerged as a key associate of Hazmi and Mihdhar in San 
Diego. Detained after 9/11 (first as a material witness, then on immigration 
charges),he was deported to Yemen on May 21,2004,after the U.S.Attorney 
for the Southern District of California declined to prosecute him on charges 
arising out of his alleged jailhouse admissions concerning the 9/11 operatives. 
The Department of Justice declined to delay his removal pending further investigation 
of this new information.31 

Other friends of Abdullah also translated for Hazmi and Mihdhar and helped 
them adjust to life in San Diego. Some held extremist beliefs or were well 
acquainted with known extremists. For example, immediately after 9/11, 
Osama Awadallah, a Yemeni whose telephone number was found in Hazmi’s 
Toyota at Washington Dulles International Airport, was found to possess photos,
videos,and articles relating to Bin Ladin.Awadallah also had lived in a house 
where copies of Bin Ladin’s fatwas and other similar materials were distributed</docText>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Organization>Department of Justice</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Misc>Muslim</Misc>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Arizona</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Ali Abdul Aziz Ali</Person>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah</Person>
    <Location>Dubai</Location>
    <Location>La Mesa</Location>
    <Person>Osama Awadallah</Person>
    <Location>United Arab Emirates</Location>
    <Location>Washington Dulles International Airport</Location>
    <Location>Rabat</Location>
    <Organization>San Diego.According</Organization>
    <Location>Yemen.Hazmi</Location>
    <Person>Hani Hanjour.28 While</Person>
    <Organization>Islamic Center of San Diego</Organization>
    <Organization>Islamic Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Southern District of California</Organization>
    <Location>Hazmi’s Toyota</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.Awadallah</Person>
    <Date>May 10, 2000</Date>
    <Date>May 21,2004</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>238_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

to the residents. Omar Bakarbashat, a Saudi, also met Hazmi and Mihdhar at 
the Rabat mosque. He admitted helping Hazmi to learn English and taking 
over the operatives’ first apartment in San Diego after they moved out. Bakarbashat 
apparently had downloaded stridently anti-American Web pages to his 
computer’s hard drive.32 

Another potentially significant San Diego contact for Hazmi and Mihdhar 
was Anwar Aulaqi, an imam at the Rabat mosque. Born in New Mexico and 
thus a U.S.citizen,Aulaqi grew up in Yemen and studied in the United States 
on a Yemeni government scholarship.We do not know how or when Hazmi 
and Mihdhar first met Aulaqi.The operatives may even have met or at least 
talked to him the same day they first moved to San Diego. Hazmi and Mihdhar 
reportedly respected Aulaqi as a religious figure and developed a close relationship 
with him.33 

When interviewed after 9/11, Aulaqi said he did not recognize Hazmi’s 
name but did identify his picture. Although Aulaqi admitted meeting with 
Hazmi several times, he claimed not to remember any specifics of what they 
discussed. He described Hazmi as a soft-spoken Saudi student who used to 
appear at the mosque with a companion but who did not have a large circle 
of friends.34 

Aulaqi left San Diego in mid-2000,and by early 2001 had relocated to Virginia.
As we will discuss later,Hazmi eventually showed up at Aulaqi’s mosque 
in Virginia,an appearance that may not have been coincidental.We have been 
unable to learn enough about Aulaqi’s relationship with Hazmi and Mihdhar 
to reach a conclusion.35 

In sum, although the evidence is thin as to specific motivations, our overall 
impression is that soon after arriving in California,Hazmi and Mihdhar sought 
out and found a group of young and ideologically like-minded Muslims with 
roots in Yemen and Saudi Arabia, individuals mainly associated with Mohdar 
Abdullah and the Rabat mosque.The al Qaeda operatives lived openly in San 
Diego under their true names, listing Hazmi in the telephone directory.They 
managed to avoid attracting much attention. 

Flight Training Fails; Mihdhar Bails Out 

Hazmi and Mihdhar came to the United States to learn English, take flying 
lessons, and become pilots as quickly as possible.They turned out, however, to 
have no aptitude for English.Even with help and tutoring from Mohdar Abdullah 
and other bilingual friends, Hazmi and Mihdhar’s efforts to learn proved 
futile.This lack of language skills in turn became an insurmountable barrier to 
learning how to fly.36 

A pilot they consulted at one school, the Sorbi Flying Club in San Diego, 
spoke Arabic. He explained to them that their flight instruction would begin 
with small planes.Hazmi and Mihdhar emphasized their interest in learning to 
fly jets,Boeing aircraft in particular,and asked where they might enroll to train</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Misc>Muslims</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Anwar Aulaqi</Person>
    <Organization>Sorbi Flying Club</Organization>
    <Person>Bakarbashat</Person>
    <Person>Omar Bakarbashat</Person>
    <Person>Aulaqi</Person>
    <Location>Rabat</Location>
    <Location>New Mexico</Location>
    <Location>U.S.citizen</Location>
    <Location>Aulaqi’s</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar Bails</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>239_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

on jets right away.Convinced that the two were either joking or dreaming,the 
pilot responded that no such school existed. Other instructors who worked 
with Hazmi and Mihdhar remember them as poor students who focused on 
learning to control the aircraft in flight but took no interest in takeoffs or landings. 
By the end of May 2000, Hazmi and Mihdhar had given up on learning 
how to fly.37 

Mihdhar’s mind seems to have been with his family back in Yemen,as evidenced 
by calls he made from the apartment telephone.When news of the birth 
of his first child arrived,he could stand life in California no longer.In late May 
and early June of 2000, he closed his bank account, transferred the car registration 
to Hazmi,and arranged his return to Yemen.According to KSM,Mihdhar 
was bored in San Diego and foresaw no problem in coming back to the 
United States since he had not overstayed his visa. Hazmi and Mohdar Abdullah 
accompanied him to Los Angeles on June 9.After visiting the King Fahd 
mosque one last time with his friends, Mihdhar left the country the following 
day.38 

KSM kept in fairly close touch with his operatives, using a variety of methods. 
When Bin Ladin called KSM back from Pakistan to Afghanistan in the 
spring of 2000, KSM asked Khallad (whom we introduced in chapter 5) to 
maintain email contact with Hazmi in the United States. Mihdhar’s decision 
to strand Hazmi in San Diego enraged KSM, who had not authorized the 
departure and feared it would compromise the plan. KSM attempted to drop 
Mihdhar from the planes operation and would have done so, he says, had he 
not been overruled by Bin Ladin.39 

Following Mihdhar’s departure, Hazmi grew lonely and worried that he 
would have trouble managing by himself. He prayed with his housemate each 
morning at 5:00 A.M.and attended services at the Islamic Center.He borrowed 
his housemate’s computer for Internet access,following news coverage of fighting 
in Chechnya and Bosnia.With his housemate’s help,Hazmi also used the 
Internet to search for a wife (after obtaining KSM’s approval to marry).This 
search did not succeed. Although he developed a close relationship with his 
housemate, Hazmi preferred not to use the house telephone, continuing the 
practice he and Mihdhar had adopted of going outside to make phone calls.40 

After Mihdhar left, other students moved into the house. One of these, 
Yazeed al Salmi, stands out. In July 2000, Salmi purchased $4,000 in traveler’s 
checks at a bank in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. On September 5, Hazmi deposited 
$1,900 of the traveler’s checks into his bank account, after withdrawing the 
same amount in cash.It is possible that Hazmi was simply cashing the traveler’s 
checks for a friend.We do not know; Salmi claims not to remember the transaction.
After 9/11,Salmi reportedly confided to Mohdar Abdullah that he had 
previously known terrorist pilot Hani Hanjour.After living in the same house 
with Hazmi for about a month, Salmi moved to the La Mesa apartment shared 
by Abdullah and others.41</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>23_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Boston Center knew of a problem on the flight in part because just before 

8:25 the hijackers had attempted to communicate with the passengers. The 
microphone was keyed, and immediately one of the hijackers said,“Nobody 
move. Everything will be okay. If you try to make any moves, you’ll endanger 
yourself and the airplane.Just stay quiet.”Air traffic controllers heard the transmission;
Ong did not.The hijackers probably did not know how to operate the 
cockpit radio communication system correctly, and thus inadvertently broadcast 
their message over the air traffic control channel instead of the cabin 
public-address channel. Also at 8:25, and again at 8:29, Amy Sweeney got 
through to the American Flight Services Office in Boston but was cut off after 
she reported someone was hurt aboard the flight.Three minutes later,Sweeney 
was reconnected to the office and began relaying updates to the manager, 
Michael Woodward.32 
At 8:26,Ong reported that the plane was “flying erratically.”A minute later, 
Flight 11 turned south. American also began getting identifications of the 
hijackers, as Ong and then Sweeney passed on some of the seat numbers of 
those who had gained unauthorized access to the cockpit.33 

Sweeney calmly reported on her line that the plane had been hijacked; a 
man in first class had his throat slashed; two flight attendants had been 
stabbed—one was seriously hurt and was on oxygen while the other’s wounds 
seemed minor; a doctor had been requested; the flight attendants were unable 
to contact the cockpit; and there was a bomb in the cockpit. Sweeney told 
Woodward that she and Ong were trying to relay as much information as they 
could to people on the ground.34 

At 8:38, Ong told Gonzalez that the plane was flying erratically again. 
Around this time Sweeney told Woodward that the hijackers were Middle Easterners, 
naming three of their seat numbers. One spoke very little English and 
one spoke excellent English.The hijackers had gained entry to the cockpit,and 
she did not know how.The aircraft was in a rapid descent.35 

At 8:41, Sweeney told Woodward that passengers in coach were under the 
impression that there was a routine medical emergency in first class. Other 
flight attendants were busy at duties such as getting medical supplies while Ong 
and Sweeney were reporting the events.36 

At 8:41, in American’s operations center, a colleague told Marquis that the 
air traffic controllers declared Flight 11 a hijacking and “think he’s [American 
11] headed toward Kennedy [airport in New York City].They’re moving everybody 
out of the way.They seem to have him on a primary radar.They seem to 
think that he is descending.”37 

At 8:44, Gonzalez reported losing phone contact with Ong. About this 
same time Sweeney reported to Woodward,“Something is wrong.We are in a 
rapid descent . . . we are all over the place.”Woodward asked Sweeney to look 
out the window to see if she could determine where they were. Sweeney 
responded:“We are flying low.We are flying very,very low.We are flying way</docText>
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    <Location>Boston</Location>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>240_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

By the fall of 2000, Hazmi no longer even pretended to study English or 
take flying lessons.Aware that his co-conspirators in Afghanistan and Pakistan 
would be sending him a new colleague shortly, he bided his time and worked 
for a few weeks at a gas station in La Mesa where some of his friends, including 
Abdullah,were employed.On one occasion,Hazmi told a fellow employee 
that he was planning to find a better job,and let slip a prediction that he would 
become famous.42 

On December 8,2000,Hani Hanjour arrived in San Diego,having traveled 
from Dubai via Paris and Cincinnati. Hazmi likely picked up Hanjour at the 
airport.We do not know where Hanjour stayed; a few days later, both men left 
San Diego. Before departing, they visited the gas station in La Mesa, where 
Hazmi reportedly introduced Hanjour as a “long time friend from Saudi Arabia.” 
Hazmi told his housemate that he and his friend “Hani” were headed for 
San Jose to take flying lessons and told his friends that he would stay in touch. 
Hazmi promised to return to San Diego soon,and he and Hanjour drove off.43 

Hazmi did not sever all contact with his friends in San Diego.According to 
Abdullah,after Hazmi left San Diego in December 2000,he telephoned Abdullah 
twice: in December 2000 or January 2001, Hazmi said he was in San Francisco 
and would be attending flight school there;about two weeks later,he said 
he was attending flight school in Arizona. Some evidence, which we will discuss 
later, indicates that Hazmi contacted Abdullah again, in August 2001. In 
addition, during the month following Hazmi’s departure from San Diego, he 
emailed his housemate three times, including a January 2001 email that Hazmi 
signed “Smer,” an apparent attempt to conceal his identity that struck the 
housemate as strange at the time. Hazmi also telephoned his housemate that 
he and his friend had decided to take flight lessons in Arizona, and that Mihdhar 
was now back in Yemen.That was their last contact.When the housemate 
emailed Hazmi in February and March of 2001 to find out how he was faring, 
Hazmi did not reply. 44 

The housemate who rented the room to Hazmi and Mihdhar during 2000 
is an apparently law-abiding citizen with long-standing, friendly contacts 
among local police and FBI personnel.He did not see anything unusual enough 
in the behavior of Hazmi or Mihdhar to prompt him to report to his law 
enforcement contacts. Nor did those contacts ask him for information about 
his tenants/housemates. 

7.2 THE 9/11 PILOTS IN THE UNITED STATES 
The Hamburg Pilots Arrive in the United States 

In the early summer of 2000, the Hamburg group arrived in the United States 
to begin flight training.Marwan al Shehhi came on May 29,arriving in Newark 
on a flight from Brussels. He went to New York City and waited there for</docText>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>241_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Mohamed Atta to join him. On June 2, Atta traveled to the Czech Republic 
by bus from Germany and then flew from Prague to Newark the next day. 
According to Ramzi Binalshibh,Atta did not meet with anyone in Prague;he 
simply believed it would contribute to operational security to fly out of Prague 
rather than Hamburg, the departure point for much of his previous international 
travel.45 

Atta and Shehhi had not settled on where they would obtain their flight 
training. In contrast, Ziad Jarrah had already arranged to attend the Florida 
Flight Training Center (FFTC) in Venice,Florida.Jarrah arrived in Newark on 
June 27 and then flew to Venice.He immediately began the private pilot program 
at FFTC, intending to get a multi-engine license. Jarrah moved in with 
some of the flight instructors affiliated with his school and bought a car.46 

While Jarrah quickly settled into training in Florida,Atta and Shehhi kept 
searching for a flight school.After visiting the Airman Flight School in Norman, 
Oklahoma (where Zacarias Moussaoui would enroll several months later 
and where another al Qaeda operative, Ihab Ali, had taken lessons in the mid1990s), 
Atta started flight instruction at Huffman Aviation in Venice, Florida, 
and both Atta and Shehhi subsequently enrolled in the Accelerated Pilot Program 
at that school. By the end of July, both of them took solo flights, and by 
mid-August they passed the private pilot airman test.They trained through the 
summer at Huffman, while Jarrah continued his training at FFTC.47 

The Hamburg operatives paid for their flight training primarily with funds 
wired from Dubai by KSM’s nephew,Ali Abdul Aziz Ali.Between June 29 and 
September 17,2000,Ali sent Shehhi and Atta a total of $114,500 in five transfers 
ranging from $5,000 to $70,000.Ali relied on the unremarkable nature of 
his transactions, which were essentially invisible amid the billions of dollars 
flowing daily across the globe.48 Ali was not required to provide identification 
in sending this money and the aliases he used were not questioned.49 

In mid-September,Atta and Shehhi applied to change their immigration status 
from tourist to student, stating their intention to study at Huffman until 
September 1, 2001. In late September, they decided to enroll at Jones Aviation 
in Sarasota,Florida,about 20 miles north of Venice.According to the instructor 
at Jones, the two were aggressive, rude, and sometimes even fought with 
him to take over the controls during their training flights. In early October, 
they took the Stage I exam for instruments rating at Jones Aviation and failed. 
Very upset, they said they were in a hurry because jobs awaited them at home. 
Atta and Shehhi then returned to Huffman.50 

In the meantime, Jarrah obtained a single-engine private pilot certificate in 
early August. Having reached that milestone, he departed on the first of five 
foreign trips he would take after first entering the United States. In October, 
he flew back to Germany to visit his girlfriend,Aysel Senguen.The two traveled 
to Paris before Jarrah returned to Florida on October 29. His relationship 
with her remained close throughout his time in the United States. In addition</docText>
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    <Location>Oklahoma</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
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    <Location>Paris</Location>
    <Location>Sarasota</Location>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
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    <Person>Aysel Senguen.The</Person>
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    <Date>September 1, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>242_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

to his trips,Jarrah made hundreds of phone calls to her and communicated frequently 
by email.51 

Jarrah was supposed to be joined at FFTC by Ramzi Binalshibh, who even 
sent the school a deposit. But Binalshibh could not obtain a U.S. visa. His first 
applications in May and June 2000 were denied because he lacked established 
ties in Germany ensuring his return from a trip to the United States. In September,
he went home to Yemen to apply for a visa from there,but was denied 
on grounds that he also lacked sufficient ties to Yemen. In October, he tried 
one last time, in Berlin, applying for a student visa to attend “aviation language 
school,” but the prior denials were noted and this application was denied as 
well, as incomplete.52 

Unable to participate directly in the operation, Binalshibh instead took on 
the role of coordinating between KSM and the operatives in the United States. 
Apart from sending a total of about $10,000 in wire transfers to Atta and Shehhi 
during the summer of 2000, one of Binalshibh’s first tasks in his new role as 
plot coordinator was to assist another possible pilot, Zacarias Moussaoui.53 

In the fall of 2000, KSM had sent Moussaoui to Malaysia for flight training, 
but Moussaoui did not find a school he liked.He worked instead on other terrorist 
schemes, such as buying four tons of ammonium nitrate for bombs to be 
planted on cargo planes flying to the United States.When KSM found out, he 
recalled Moussaoui back to Pakistan and directed him to go to the United 
States for flight training. In early October, Moussaoui went to London.When 
Binalshibh visited London in December, he stayed at the same 16-room dormitory 
where Moussaoui was still residing. From London, Moussaoui sent 
inquiries to the Airman Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma.54 

Confronting training or travel problems with Hazmi, Mihdhar, Binalshibh, 
and Moussaoui, al Qaeda was looking for another possible pilot candidate. A 
new recruit with just the right background conveniently presented himself in 
Afghanistan. 

The Fourth Pilot: Hani Hanjour 

Hani Hanjour,from Ta’if,Saudi Arabia,first came to the United States in 1991 
to study at the Center for English as a Second Language at the University of 
Arizona.He seems to have been a rigorously observant Muslim.According to 
his older brother, Hani Hanjour went to Afghanistan for the first time in the 
late 1980s,as a teenager,to participate in the jihad and,because the Soviets had 
already withdrawn, worked for a relief agency there.55 

In 1996, Hanjour returned to the United States to pursue flight training, 
after being rejected by a Saudi flight school. He checked out flight schools in 
Florida, California, and Arizona; and he briefly started at a couple of them 
before returning to Saudi Arabia. In 1997, he returned to Florida and then, 
along with two friends,went back to Arizona and began his flight training there 
in earnest. After about three months, Hanjour was able to obtain his private</docText>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>243_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

pilot’s license. Several more months of training yielded him a commercial pilot 
certificate, issued by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in April 1999. 
He then returned to Saudi Arabia.56 

Hanjour reportedly applied to the civil aviation school in Jeddah after 
returning home, but was rejected. He stayed home for a while and then told 
his family he was going to the United Arab Emirates to work for an airline. 
Where Hanjour actually traveled during this time period is unknown.It is possible 
he went to the training camps in Afghanistan.57 

The fact that Hanjour spent so much time in Arizona may be significant.A 
number of important al Qaeda figures attended the University of Arizona in 
Tucson or lived in Tucson in the 1980s and early 1990s.58 Some of Hanjour’s 
known Arizona associates from the time of his flight training in the late 1990s 
have also raised suspicion.59 FBI investigators have speculated that al Qaeda may 
have directed other extremist Muslims in the Phoenix area to enroll in aviation 
training. It is clear that when Hanjour lived in Arizona in the 1990s, he 
associated with several individuals holding extremist beliefs who have been the 
subject of counterterrorism investigations. Some of them trained with Hanjour 
to be pilots.Others had apparent connections to al Qaeda,including training 
in Afghanistan.60 

By the spring of 2000,Hanjour was back in Afghanistan.According to KSM, 
Hanjour was sent to him in Karachi for inclusion in the plot after Hanjour was 
identified in al Qaeda’s al Faruq camp as a trained pilot, on the basis of background 
information he had provided. Hanjour had been at a camp in 
Afghanistan for a few weeks when Bin Ladin or Atef apparently realized that 
he was a trained pilot; he was told to report to KSM, who then trained Hanjour 
for a few days in the use of code words.61 

On June 20, Hanjour returned home to Saudi Arabia. He obtained a U.S. 
student visa on September 25 and told his family he was returning to his job 
in the UAE. Hanjour did go to the UAE, but to meet facilitator Ali Abdul 
Aziz Ali.62 

Ali opened a bank account in Dubai for Hanjour and providing the initial 
funds for his trip.On December 8,Hanjour traveled to San Diego.His supposed 
destination was an English as a second language program in Oakland, California, 
which he had scheduled before leaving Saudi Arabia but never attended. 
Instead, as mentioned earlier, he joined Nawaf al Hazmi in San Diego.63 

Hazmi and Hanjour left San Diego almost immediately and drove to Arizona.
Settling in Mesa,Hanjour began refresher training at his old school,Arizona 
Aviation. He wanted to train on multi-engine planes, but had difficulties 
because his English was not good enough.The instructor advised him to discontinue 
but Hanjour said he could not go home without completing the 
training. In early 2001, he started training on a Boeing 737 simulator at Pan 
Am International Flight Academy in Mesa.An instructor there found his work 
well below standard and discouraged him from continuing.Again,Hanjour per</docText>
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  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>244_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

severed; he completed the initial training by the end of March 2001. At that 
point, Hanjour and Hazmi vacated their apartment and started driving east, 
anticipating the arrival of the “muscle hijackers”—the operatives who would 
storm the cockpits and control the passengers. By as early as April 4, Hanjour 
and Hazmi had arrived in Falls Church,Virginia.64 

The three pilots in Florida continued with their training.Atta and Shehhi 
finished up at Huffman and earned their instrument certificates from the FAA 
in November.In mid-December 2000,they passed their commercial pilot tests 
and received their licenses.They then began training to fly large jets on a flight 
simulator. At about the same time, Jarrah began simulator training, also in 
Florida but at a different center. By the end of 2000, less than six months after 
their arrival, the three pilots on the East Coast were simulating flights on large 
jets.65 

Travels in Early 2001 

Jarrah, Atta, and Shehhi, having progressed in their training, all took foreign 
trips during the holiday period of 2000–2001. Jarrah flew through Germany 
to get home to Beirut.A few weeks later,he returned to Florida via Germany, 
with Aysel Senguen. She stayed with him in Florida for ten days, even accompanying 
him to a flight training session.We do not know whether Atta or al 
Qaeda leaders knew about Jarrah’s trips and Senguen’s visit.The other operatives 
had broken off regular contact with their families.At the end of January 
2001,Jarrah again flew to Beirut,to visit his sick father.After staying there for 
several weeks,Jarrah visited Senguen in Germany for a few days before returning 
to the United States at the end of February.66 

While Jarrah took his personal trips,Atta traveled to Germany in early January 
2001 for a progress meeting with Ramzi Binalshibh. Binalshibh says Atta 
told him to report to the al Qaeda leadership in Afghanistan that the three 
Hamburg pilots had completed their flight training and were awaiting orders. 
Atta also disclosed that a fourth pilot, Hanjour, had joined Hazmi. Upon 
returning to Florida,Atta wired Binalshibh travel money.Binalshibh proceeded 
to Afghanistan, made his report, and spent the next several months there and 
in Pakistan.67 

When Atta returned to Florida, Shehhi left for Morocco, traveling to 
Casablanca in mid-January. Shehhi’s family, concerned about not having heard 
from him,reported him missing to the UAE government.The UAE embassy 
in turn contacted the Hamburg police and a UAE representative tried to find 
him in Germany,visiting mosques and Shehhi’s last address in Hamburg.After 
learning that his family was looking for him, Shehhi telephoned them on January 
20 and said he was still living and studying in Hamburg.The UAE government 
then told the Hamburg police they could call off the search.68 

Atta and Shehhi both encountered some difficulty reentering the United 
States, on January 10 and January 18, respectively. Because neither presented a</docText>
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    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Senguen</Person>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Location>Huffman</Location>
    <Location>East Coast</Location>
    <Location>Falls Church</Location>
    <Person>Aysel Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Virginia.64</Location>
    <Organization>Beirut.A</Organization>
    <Misc>Senguen’s</Misc>
    <Misc>February.66 While</Misc>
    <Location>Casablanca</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg.After</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>245_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Atta’s Alleged Trip to Prague 

Mohamed Atta is known to have been in Prague on two occasions: in 
December 1994,when he stayed one night at a transit hotel,and in June 
2000, when he was en route to the United States. On the latter occasion, 
he arrived by bus from Germany, on June 2, and departed for 
Newark the following day.69 

The allegation that Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence officer in 
Prague in April 2001 originates from the reporting of a single source of 
the Czech intelligence service. Shortly after 9/11, the source reported 
having seen Atta meet with Ahmad Khalil Ibrahim Samir al Ani, an Iraqi 
diplomat, at the Iraqi Embassy in Prague on April 9, 2001, at 11:00 A.M. 
This information was passed to CIA headquarters. 

The U.S. legal attaché (“Legat”) in Prague, the representative of the 
FBI,met with the Czech service’s source.After the meeting,the assessment 
of the Legat and the Czech officers present was that they were 70 
percent sure that the source was sincere and believed his own story of 
the meeting.Subsequently,the Czech intelligence service publicly stated 
that there was a 70 percent probability that the meeting between Atta 
and Ani had taken place.The Czech Interior Minister also made several 
statements to the press about his belief that the meeting had occurred, 
and the story was widely reported. 

The FBI has gathered evidence indicating that Atta was in Virginia 
Beach on April 4 (as evidenced by a bank surveillance camera photo), 
and in Coral Springs, Florida on April 11, where he and Shehhi leased 
an apartment.On April 6,9,10,and 11,Atta’s cellular telephone was used 
numerous times to call various lodging establishments in Florida from 
cell sites within Florida.We cannot confirm that he placed those calls. 
But there are no U.S. records indicating that Atta departed the country 
during this period. Czech officials have reviewed their flight and border 
records as well for any indication that Atta was in the Czech Republic 
in April 2001, including records of anyone crossing the border who 
even looked Arab.They have also reviewed pictures from the area near 
the Iraqi embassy and have not discovered photos of anyone who looked 
like Atta. No evidence has been found that Atta was in the Czech 
Republic in April 2001. 

According to the Czech government,Ani,the Iraqi officer alleged to 
have met with Atta, was about 70 miles away from Prague on April 8–9 
and did not return until the afternoon of the ninth,while the source was 
firm that the sighting occurred at 11:00 A.M. When questioned about 
the reported April 2001 meeting,Ani—now in custody—has denied ever</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Virginia Beach</Location>
    <Location>Prague</Location>
    <Location>Czech Republic</Location>
    <Misc>Czech</Misc>
    <Location>Coral Springs</Location>
    <Location>Ani</Location>
    <Person>Ahmad Khalil Ibrahim Samir</Person>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Date>April 9, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>Embassy</Organization>
    <Misc>Legat</Misc>
    <Person>Ani—now</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>246_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

meeting or having any contact with Atta.Ani says that shortly after 9/11, 
he became concerned that press stories about the alleged meeting might 
hurt his career. Hoping to clear his name, Ani asked his superiors to 
approach the Czech government about refuting the allegation. He also 
denies knowing of any other Iraqi official having contact with Atta. 

These findings cannot absolutely rule out the possibility that Atta was 
in Prague on April 9, 2001. He could have used an alias to travel and a 
passport under that alias, but this would be an exception to his practice 
of using his true name while traveling (as he did in January and would 
in July when he took his next overseas trip). The FBI and CIA have 
uncovered no evidence that Atta held any fraudulent passports. 

KSM and Binalshibh both deny that an Atta-Ani meeting occurred. 
There was no reason for such a meeting, especially considering the risk 
it would pose to the operation. By April 2001, all four pilots had completed 
most of their training,and the muscle hijackers were about to begin 
entering the United States. 

The available evidence does not support the original Czech report of 
an Atta-Ani meeting.70 

student visa, both of them had to persuade INS inspectors that they should be 
admitted so that they could continue their flight training. Neither operative 
had any problem clearing Customs.71 

After returning to Florida from their trips,Atta and Shehhi visited Georgia, 
staying briefly in Norcross and Decatur, and renting a single-engine plane to 
fly with an instructor in Lawrenceville.By February 19,Atta and Shehhi were 
in Virginia.They rented a mailbox in Virginia Beach,cashed a check,and then 
promptly returned to Georgia, staying in Stone Mountain.We have found no 
explanation for these travels.In mid-March,Jarrah was in Georgia as well,staying 
in Decatur.There is no evidence that the three pilots met, although Jarrah 
and Atta apparently spoke on the phone.At the end of the month,Jarrah left 
the United States again and visited Senguen in Germany for two weeks. In 
early April, Atta and Shehhi returned to Virginia Beach and closed the mailbox 
they had opened in February.72 

By the time Atta and Shehhi returned to Virginia Beach from their travels 
in Georgia,Hazmi and Hanjour had also arrived in Virginia,in Falls Church. 
They made their way to a large mosque there, the Dar al Hijra mosque, sometime 
in early April.73 

As we mentioned earlier, one of the imams at this mosque was the same 
Anwar Aulaqi with whom Hazmi had spent time at the Rabat mosque in San 
Diego.Aulaqi had moved to Virginia in January 2001. He remembers Hazmi</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Misc>Iraqi</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>Norcross</Location>
    <Location>Decatur</Location>
    <Location>Georgia</Location>
    <Location>Virginia Beach</Location>
    <Person>Anwar Aulaqi</Person>
    <Location>Prague</Location>
    <Misc>Czech</Misc>
    <Person>Ani</Person>
    <Location>Rabat</Location>
    <Location>Falls Church</Location>
    <Location>Atta.Ani</Location>
    <Misc>Atta-Ani</Misc>
    <Location>Virginia.They</Location>
    <Location>Stone Mountain.We</Location>
    <Location>Decatur.There</Location>
    <Location>Senguen</Location>
    <Location>February.72</Location>
    <Organization>Hanjour</Organization>
    <Organization>Dar al Hijra</Organization>
    <Misc>April.73 As</Misc>
    <Location>San Diego.Aulaqi</Location>
    <Date>April 9, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>247_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

from San Diego but has denied having any contact with Hazmi or Hanjour in 
Virginia.74 

At the Dar al Hijra mosque, Hazmi and Hanjour met a Jordanian named 
Eyad al Rababah. Rababah says he had gone to the mosque to speak to the 
imam, Aulaqi, about finding work. At the conclusion of services, which normally 
had 400 to 500 attendees, Rababah says he happened to meet Hazmi 
and Hanjour.They were looking for an apartment; Rababah referred them to 
a friend who had one to rent. Hazmi and Hanjour moved into the apartment, 
which was in Alexandria.75 

Some FBI investigators doubt Rababah’s story. Some agents suspect that 
Aulaqi may have tasked Rababah to help Hazmi and Hanjour.We share that 
suspicion,given the remarkable coincidence of Aulaqi’s prior relationship with 
Hazmi. As noted above, the Commission was unable to locate and interview 
Aulaqi.Rababah has been deported to Jordan,having been convicted after 9/11 
in a fraudulent driver’s license scheme.76 

Rababah, who had lived in Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey, told 
investigators that he had recommended Paterson, New Jersey, as a place with 
an Arabic-speaking community where Hazmi and Hanjour might want to settle.
They asked for his help in getting them an apartment in Paterson. Rababah 
tried without success.He says he then suggested that Hazmi and Hanjour travel 
with him to Connecticut where they could look for a place to live.77 

On May 8,Rababah went to Hazmi and Hanjour’s apartment to pick them 
up for the trip to Connecticut.There he says he found them with new room-
mates—Ahmed al Ghamdi and Majed Moqed.These two men had been sent 
to America to serve as muscle hijackers and had arrived at Dulles Airport on 
May 2.Rababah drove Hanjour to Fairfield,Connecticut,followed by Hazmi, 
who had Moqed and Ghamdi in his car. After a short stay in Connecticut, 
where they apparently called area flight schools and real estate agents, 
Rababah drove the four to Paterson to have dinner and show them around. 
He says that they returned with him to Fairfield that night, and that he never 
saw them again.78 

Within a few weeks, Hanjour, Hazmi, and several other operatives moved 
to Paterson and rented a one-room apartment. When their landlord later 
paid a visit, he found six men living there—Nawaf al Hazmi, now joined by 
his younger brother Salem, Hanjour, Moqed, probably Ahmed al Ghamdi, 
and Abdul Aziz al Omari; Hazmi’s old friend Khalid al Mihdhar would soon 
join them.79 

Atta and Shehhi had already returned to Florida. On April 11, they moved 
into an apartment in Coral Springs.Atta stayed in Florida,awaiting the arrival 
of the first muscle hijackers.80 

Shehhi, on the other hand, bought a ticket to Cairo and flew there from 
Miami on April 18.We do not know much more about Shehhi’s reason for 
traveling to Egypt in April than we know about his January trip to Morocco.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Egypt</Location>
    <Location>Morocco</Location>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Aziz al Omari</Person>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Dulles Airport</Location>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Person>Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Ghamdi</Person>
    <Location>Miami</Location>
    <Location>Salem</Location>
    <Location>Paterson</Location>
    <Misc>Dar</Misc>
    <Location>Hijra</Location>
    <Location>Aulaqi</Location>
    <Person>Rababah</Person>
    <Location>Connecticut</Location>
    <Misc>Shehhi’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Hazmi’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic-speaking</Misc>
    <Location>Cairo</Location>
    <Location>Fairfield</Location>
    <Location>Virginia.74</Location>
    <Misc>Alexandria.75 Some</Misc>
    <Misc>Hanjour.We</Misc>
    <Organization>Connecticut.There</Organization>
    <Person>Majed Moqed.These</Person>
    <Location>Coral Springs.Atta</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>248_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

Shehhi did meet with Atta’s father, who stated in a post-9/11 interview that 
Shehhi just wanted to pick up Atta’s international driver’s license and some 
money.This story is not credible.Atta already had the license with him and presented 
it during a traffic stop on April 26 while Shehhi was still abroad. Shehhi 
spent about two weeks in Egypt,obviously more time than would have been 
needed just to meet with Atta’s father. Shehhi could have traveled elsewhere 
during this time, but no records indicating additional travel have been discovered.
81 

Shehhi returned to Miami on May 2. That day, Atta and Jarrah were 
together,about 30 miles to the north,visiting a Department of Motor Vehicles 
office in Lauderdale Lakes,Florida,to get Florida driver’s licenses.Back in Virginia, 
Hazmi and Hanjour were about to leave for Connecticut and New Jersey.
As the summer approached,the lead operatives were settled in Florida and 
New Jersey, waiting for the rest of their contingent to join them.82 

7.3 ASSEMBLING THE TEAMS 
During the summer and early autumn of 2000, Bin Ladin and senior al Qaeda 
leaders in Afghanistan started selecting the muscle hijackers—the operatives 
who would storm the cockpits and control the passengers. Despite the phrase 
widely used to describe them, the so-called muscle hijackers were not at all 
physically imposing; most were between 5' 5" and 5' 7" in height.83 

Recruitment and Selection for 9/11 

Twelve of the 13 muscle hijackers (excluding Nawaf al Hazmi and Mihdhar) 
came from Saudi Arabia: Satam al Suqami,Wail al Shehri,Waleed al Shehri, 
Abdul Aziz al Omari, Ahmed al Ghamdi, Hamza al Ghamdi, Mohand al 
Shehri,Majed Moqed,Salem al Hazmi,Saeed al Ghamdi,Ahmad al Haznawi, 
and Ahmed al Nami.The remaining recruit, Fayez Banihammad, came from 
the UAE. He appears to have played a unique role among the muscle hijackers 
because of his work with one of the plot’s financial facilitators, Mustafa al 
Hawsawi.84 

Saudi authorities interviewed the relatives of these men and have briefed us 
on what they found.The muscle hijackers came from a variety of educational 
and societal backgrounds. All were between 20 and 28 years old; most were 
unemployed with no more than a high school education and were unmarried.85 

Four of them—Ahmed al Ghamdi, Saeed al Ghamdi, Hamza al Ghamdi, 
and Ahmad al Haznawi—came from a cluster of three towns in the al Bahah 
region, an isolated and underdeveloped area of Saudi Arabia, and shared the 
same tribal affiliation. None had a university degree.Their travel patterns and 
information from family members suggest that the four may have been in contact 
with each other as early as the fall of 1999.86</docText>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Egypt</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Mohand</Person>
    <Person>Majed Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Misc>Salem</Misc>
    <Person>Suqami</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Person>Ghamdi</Person>
    <Location>Miami</Location>
    <Person>Haznawi</Person>
    <Person>Saeed</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Person>Ahmad</Person>
    <Person>Wail</Person>
    <Location>Connecticut</Location>
    <Organization>Mihdhar</Organization>
    <Person>Mustafa</Person>
    <Misc>Nawaf</Misc>
    <Person>Fayez Banihammad</Person>
    <Person>Waleed</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Aziz</Person>
    <Misc>Atta’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Department of Motor Vehicles</Organization>
    <Location>Lauderdale Lakes</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi Arabia:</Misc>
    <Person>Hamza al</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Nami.The</Person>
    <Location>Bahah</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>249_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Five more—Wail al Shehri,Waleed al Shehri,Abdul Aziz al Omari,Mohand 
al Shehri, and Ahmed al Nami—came from Asir Province, a poor region in 
southwestern Saudi Arabia that borders Yemen; this weakly policed area is 
sometimes called “the wild frontier.”Wail and Waleed al Shehri were brothers. 
All five in this group had begun university studies. Omari had graduated with 
honors from high school, had attained a degree from the Imam Muhammad 
Ibn Saud Islamic University, was married, and had a daughter.87 

The three remaining muscle hijackers from Saudi Arabia were Satam al 
Suqami, Majed Moqed, and Salem al Hazmi. Suqami came from Riyadh. 
Moqed hailed from a small town called Annakhil, west of Medina. Suqami had 
very little education, and Moqed had dropped out of university. Neither 
Suqami nor Moqed appears to have had ties to the other,or to any of the other 
operatives, before getting involved with extremists, probably by 1999.88 

Salem al Hazmi, a younger brother of Nawaf, was born in Mecca. Salem’s 
family recalled him as a quarrelsome teenager.His brother Nawaf probably recommended 
him for recruitment into al Qaeda. One al Qaeda member who 
knew them says that Nawaf pleaded with Bin Ladin to allow Salem to participate 
in the 9/11 operation.89 

Detainees have offered varying reasons for the use of so many Saudi operatives. 
Binalshibh argues that al Qaeda wanted to send a message to the government 
of Saudi Arabia about its relationship with the United States. Several 
other al Qaeda figures, however, have stated that ethnicity generally was not a 
factor in the selection of operatives unless it was important for security or operational 
reasons.90 

KSM,for instance,denies that Saudis were chosen for the 9/11 plot to drive 
a wedge between the United States and Saudi Arabia,and stresses practical reasons 
for considering ethnic background when selecting operatives.He says that 
so many were Saudi because Saudis comprised the largest portion of the pool 
of recruits in the al Qaeda training camps. KSM estimates that in any given 
camp,70 percent of the mujahideen were Saudi,20 percent wereYemeni,and 
10 percent were from elsewhere. Although Saudi and Yemeni trainees were 
most often willing to volunteer for suicide operations,prior to 9/11 it was easier 
for Saudi operatives to get into the United States.91 

Most of the Saudi muscle hijackers developed their ties to extremists two 
or three years before the attacks.Their families often did not consider these 
young men religious zealots. Some were perceived as devout, others as lacking 
in faith.For instance,although Ahmed al Ghamdi,Hamza al Ghamdi,and Saeed 
al Ghamdi attended prayer services regularly and Omari often served as an 
imam at his mosque in Saudi Arabia, Suqami and Salem al Hazmi appeared 
unconcerned with religion and, contrary to Islamic law, were known to drink 
alcohol.92 

Like many other al Qaeda operatives, the Saudis who eventually became 
the muscle hijackers were targeted for recruitment outside Afghanistan— 
probably in Saudi Arabia itself.Al Qaeda recruiters,certain clerics,and—in a</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Yemeni</Misc>
    <Location>Riyadh</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Majed Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Hamza al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Misc>Salem</Misc>
    <Misc>Satam</Misc>
    <Person>Suqami</Person>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Nawaf</Person>
    <Location>Mecca</Location>
    <Misc>Mohand</Misc>
    <Person>Abdul Aziz</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Nami—came</Person>
    <Organization>Asir Province</Organization>
    <Person>Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University</Person>
    <Location>Annakhil</Location>
    <Location>Medina</Location>
    <Location>United States.91 Most</Location>
    <Misc>Afghanistan—</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>24_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

too low.” Seconds later she said,“Oh my God we are way too low.” The phone 
call ended.38 

At 8:46:40,American 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade 
Center in New York City.39All on board,along with an unknown number of 
people in the tower, were killed instantly. 

The Hijacking of United 175 

United Airlines Flight 175 was scheduled to depart for Los Angeles at 8:00.Captain 
Victor Saracini and First Officer Michael Horrocks piloted the Boeing 767, 
which had seven flight attendants. Fifty-six passengers boarded the flight.40 

United 175 pushed back from its gate at 7:58 and departed Logan Airport 
at 8:14.By 8:33,it had reached its assigned cruising altitude of 31,000 feet.The 
flight attendants would have begun their cabin service.41 

The flight had taken off just as American 11 was being hijacked,and at 8:42 
the United 175 flight crew completed their report on a “suspicious transmission” 
overheard from another plane (which turned out to have been Flight 11) 
just after takeoff.This was United 175’s last communication with the ground.42 

The hijackers attacked sometime between 8:42 and 8:46.They used knives 
(as reported by two passengers and a flight attendant), Mace (reported by one 
passenger), and the threat of a bomb (reported by the same passenger).They 
stabbed members of the flight crew (reported by a flight attendant and one passenger).
Both pilots had been killed (reported by one flight attendant).The eyewitness 
accounts came from calls made from the rear of the plane, from 
passengers originally seated further forward in the cabin, a sign that passengers 
and perhaps crew had been moved to the back of the aircraft. Given similarities 
to American 11 in hijacker seating and in eyewitness reports of tactics and 
weapons,as well as the contact between the presumed team leaders,Atta and 
Shehhi, we believe the tactics were similar on both flights.43 

The first operational evidence that something was abnormal on United 
175 came at 8:47, when the aircraft changed beacon codes twice within a 
minute. At 8:51, the flight deviated from its assigned altitude, and a minute 
later New York air traffic controllers began repeatedly and unsuccessfully trying 
to contact it.44 

At 8:52, in Easton, Connecticut, a man named Lee Hanson received a 
phone call from his son Peter, a passenger on United 175. His son told him: 
“I think they’ve taken over the cockpit—An attendant has been stabbed— 
and someone else up front may have been killed. The plane is making 
strange moves.Call United Airlines—Tell them it’s Flight 175,Boston to LA.” 
Lee Hanson then called the Easton Police Department and relayed what he 
had heard.45 

Also at 8:52, a male flight attendant called a United office in San Francisco, 
reaching Marc Policastro.The flight attendant reported that the flight had been 
hijacked, both pilots had been killed, a flight attendant had been stabbed, and</docText>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Person>God</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines Flight</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Connecticut</Location>
    <Person>Lee Hanson</Person>
    <Location>San Francisco</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower of the World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Person>Victor Saracini</Person>
    <Person>Michael Horrocks</Person>
    <Location>Logan Airport</Location>
    <Person>Mace</Person>
    <Location>Easton</Location>
    <Person>Peter</Person>
    <Misc>LA.”</Misc>
    <Organization>Easton Police Department</Organization>
    <Person>Marc Policastro.The</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>250_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

few cases—family members probably all played a role in spotting potential 
candidates. Several of the muscle hijackers seem to have been recruited 
through contacts at local universities and mosques.93 

According to the head of one of the training camps in Afghanistan, some 
were chosen by unnamed Saudi sheikhs who had contacts with al Qaeda. 
Omari, for example, is believed to have been a student of a radical Saudi cleric 
named Sulayman al Alwan. His mosque, which is located in al Qassim 
Province,is known among more moderate clerics as a “terrorist factory.”The 
province is at the very heart of the strict Wahhabi movement in Saudi Arabia. 
Saeed al Ghamdi and Mohand al Shehri also spent time in al Qassim, both 
breaking with their families.According to his father, Mohand al Shehri’s frequent 
visits to this area resulted in his failing exams at his university in Riyadh. 
Saeed al Ghamdi transferred to a university in al Qassim, but he soon stopped 
talking to his family and dropped out of school without informing them.94 

The majority of these Saudi recruits began to break with their families in 
late 1999 and early 2000.According to relatives,some recruits began to make 
arrangements for extended absences. Others exhibited marked changes in 
behavior before disappearing. Salem al Hazmi’s father recounted that Salem— 
who had had problems with alcohol and petty theft—stopped drinking and 
started attending mosque regularly three months before he disappeared.95 

Several family members remembered that their relatives had expressed a 
desire to participate in jihad, particularly in Chechnya. None had mentioned 
going to Afghanistan.These statements might be true or cover stories.The four 
recruits from the al Ghamdi tribe, for example, all told their families that they 
were going to Chechnya. Only two—Ahmed al Ghamdi and Saeed al 
Ghamdi—had documentation suggesting travel to a Russian republic.96 

Some aspiring Saudi mujahideen, intending to go to Chechnya, encountered 
difficulties along the way and diverted to Afghanistan. In 1999, Ibn al 
Khattab—the primary commander of Arab nationals in Chechnya—reportedly 
had started turning away most foreign mujahideen because of their inexperience 
and inability to adjust to the local conditions. KSM states that several of 
the 9/11 muscle hijackers faced problems traveling to Chechnya and so went 
to Afghanistan, where they were drawn into al Qaeda.97 

Khallad has offered a more detailed story of how such diversions occurred. 
According to him, a number of Saudi mujahideen who tried to go to Chechnya 
in 1999 to fight the Russians were stopped at the Turkish-Georgian border.
Upon arriving in Turkey,they received phone calls at guesthouses in places 
such as Istanbul and Ankara, informing them that the route to Chechnya via 
Georgia had been closed.These Saudis then decided to travel to Afghanistan, 
where they could train and wait to make another attempt to enter Chechnya 
during the summer of 2000.While training at al Qaeda camps,a dozen of them 
heard Bin Ladin’s speeches, volunteered to become suicide operatives, and 
eventually were selected as muscle hijackers for the planes operation. Khallad 
says he met a number of them at the Kandahar airport, where they were help</docText>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghanistan.These</Misc>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Wahhabi</Misc>
    <Location>Riyadh</Location>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Misc>Russians</Misc>
    <Misc>Russian</Misc>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Misc>Salem</Misc>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Person>Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Mohand al Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Saeed</Person>
    <Location>Turkey</Location>
    <Location>Georgia</Location>
    <Misc>Sulayman</Misc>
    <Person>Alwan</Person>
    <Person>Qassim Province</Person>
    <Person>Qassim</Person>
    <Person>Mohand al Shehri’s</Person>
    <Misc>Salem—</Misc>
    <Person>Ghamdi—had</Person>
    <Misc>Chechnya—reportedly</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda.97 Khallad</Person>
    <Misc>Turkish-Georgian</Misc>
    <Location>Istanbul</Location>
    <Location>Ankara</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>251_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

ing to provide extra security. He encouraged Bin Ladin to use them. Khallad 
claims to have been closest with Saeed al Ghamdi, whom he convinced to 
become a martyr and whom he asked to recruit a friend,Ahmed al Ghamdi, 
to the same cause. Although Khallad claims not to recall everyone from this 
group who was later chosen for the 9/11 operation, he says they also included 
Suqami,Waleed and Wail al Shehri,Omari,Nami,Hamza al Ghamdi,Salem al 
Hazmi, and Moqed.98 

According to KSM, operatives volunteered for suicide operations and, for 
the most part, were not pressured to martyr themselves. Upon arriving in 
Afghanistan,a recruit would fill out an application with standard questions,such 
as,What brought you to Afghanistan? How did you travel here? How did you 
hear about us? What attracted you to the cause? What is your educational background? 
Where have you worked before? Applications were valuable for determining 
the potential of new arrivals, for filtering out potential spies from 
among them, and for identifying recruits with special skills. For instance, as 
pointed out earlier, Hani Hanjour noted his pilot training. Prospective operatives 
also were asked whether they were prepared to serve as suicide operatives; 
those who answered in the affirmative were interviewed by senior al Qaeda 
lieutenant Muhammad Atef.99 

KSM claims that the most important quality for any al Qaeda operative 
was willingness to martyr himself.Khallad agrees,and claims that this criterion 
had preeminence in selecting the planes operation participants. The second 
most important criterion was demonstrable patience,Khallad says,because the 
planning for such attacks could take years.100 

Khallad claims it did not matter whether the hijackers had fought in jihad 
previously, since he believes that U.S. authorities were not looking for such 
operatives before 9/11. But KSM asserts that young mujahideen with clean 
records were chosen to avoid raising alerts during travel.The al Qaeda training 
camp head mentioned above adds that operatives with no prior involvement 
in activities likely to be known to international security agencies were 
purposefully selected for the 9/11 attacks.101 

Most of the muscle hijackers first underwent basic training similar to that 
given other al Qaeda recruits. This included training in firearms, heavy 
weapons, explosives, and topography. Recruits learned discipline and military 
life.They were subjected to artificial stresses to measure their psychological fitness 
and commitment to jihad.At least seven of the Saudi muscle hijackers took 
this basic training regime at the al Faruq camp near Kandahar.This particular 
camp appears to have been the preferred location for vetting and training 
the potential muscle hijackers because of its proximity to Bin Ladin and 
senior al Qaeda leadership.Two others—Suqami and Moqed—trained at Khaldan,
another large basic training facility located near Kabul,where Mihdhar had 
trained in the mid-1990s.102 

By the time operatives for the planes operation were picked in mid-2000, 
some of them had been training in Afghanistan for months, others were just</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Kabul</Location>
    <Person>Hani Hanjour</Person>
    <Person>Hamza al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>Salem</Misc>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Person>Nami</Person>
    <Person>Faruq</Person>
    <Location>Suqami</Location>
    <Person>Waleed</Person>
    <Person>Wail al Shehri</Person>
    <Person>al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Moqed.98</Person>
    <Person>Muhammad Atef.99</Person>
    <Location>Kandahar.This</Location>
    <Location>Khaldan</Location>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

arriving for the first time, and still others may have been returning after prior 
visits to the camps. According to KSM, Bin Ladin would travel to the camps 
to deliver lectures and meet the trainees personally. If Bin Ladin believed a 
trainee held promise for a special operation, that trainee would be invited to 
the al Qaeda leader’s compound at Tarnak Farms for further meetings.103 

KSM claims that Bin Ladin could assess new trainees very quickly, in about 
ten minutes, and that many of the 9/11 hijackers were selected in this manner. 
Bin Ladin, assisted by Atef, personally chose all the future muscle hijackers for 
the planes operation, primarily between the summer of 2000 and April 2001. 
Upon choosing a trainee, Bin Ladin would ask him to swear loyalty for a suicide 
operation.After the selection and oath-swearing,the operative would be 
sent to KSM for training and the filming of a martyrdom video, a function 
KSM supervised as head of al Qaeda’s media committee.104 

KSM sent the muscle hijacker recruits on to Saudi Arabia to obtain U.S. 
visas.He gave them money (about $2,000 each) and instructed them to return 
to Afghanistan for more training after obtaining the visas.At this early stage, 
the operatives were not told details about the operation.The majority of the 
Saudi muscle hijackers obtained U.S. visas in Jeddah or Riyadh between September 
and November of 2000.105 

KSM told potential hijackers to acquire new “clean”passports in their home 
countries before applying for a U.S. visa.This was to avoid raising suspicion 
about previous travel to countries where al Qaeda operated. Fourteen of the 
19 hijackers, including nine Saudi muscle hijackers, obtained new passports. 
Some of these passports were then likely doctored by the al Qaeda passport 
division in Kandahar, which would add or erase entry and exit stamps to create 
“false trails” in the passports.106 

In addition to the operatives who eventually participated in the 9/11 attacks 
as muscle hijackers, Bin Ladin apparently selected at least nine other Saudis 
who, for various reasons, did not end up taking part in the operation: 
Mohamed Mani Ahmad al Kahtani,Khalid Saeed Ahmad al Zahrani,Ali Abd 
al Rahman al Faqasi al Ghamdi, Saeed al Baluchi, Qutaybah al Najdi, Zuhair 
al Thubaiti, Saeed Abdullah Saeed al Ghamdi, Saud al Rashid, and Mushabib 
al Hamlan. A tenth individual, a Tunisian with Canadian citizenship named 
Abderraouf Jdey, may have been a candidate to participate in 9/11, or he may 
have been a candidate for a later attack.These candidate hijackers either backed 
out,had trouble obtaining needed travel documents,or were removed from the 
operation by the al Qaeda leadership. Khallad believes KSM wanted between 
four and six operatives per plane. KSM states that al Qaeda had originally 
planned to use 25 or 26 hijackers but ended up with only the 19.107 

Final Training and Deployment to the United States 

Having acquired U.S. visas in Saudi Arabia, the muscle hijackers returned to 
Afghanistan for special training in late 2000 to early 2001.The training reportedly 
was conducted at the al Matar complex by Abu Turab al Jordani, one of</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>Riyadh</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Person>Jordani</Person>
    <Person>Abderraouf Jdey</Person>
    <Misc>Canadian</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Turab</Person>
    <Person>Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Saeed</Person>
    <Person>Zahrani</Person>
    <Person>Saeed Abdullah Saeed</Person>
    <Person>Rashid</Person>
    <Location>Jeddah</Location>
    <Person>Ali Abd al Rahman</Person>
    <Misc>Faqasi</Misc>
    <Person>Baluchi</Person>
    <Person>Najdi</Person>
    <Misc>Mushabib</Misc>
    <Location>Tarnak Farms</Location>
    <Person>Mohamed Mani Ahmad al Kahtani</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Saeed Ahmad</Person>
    <Person>Qutaybah</Person>
    <Person>Zuhair</Person>
    <Person>Thubaiti</Person>
    <Misc>Saud</Misc>
    <Misc>Hamlan</Misc>
    <Misc>Tunisian</Misc>
    <Person>Matar</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

only a handful of al Qaeda operatives who, according to KSM, was aware of 
the full details of the planned planes operation. Abu Turab taught the operatives 
how to conduct hijackings,disarm air marshals,and handle explosives.He 
also trained them in bodybuilding and provided them with a few basic English 
words and phrases.108 

According to KSM,Abu Turab even had the trainees butcher a sheep and a 
camel with a knife to prepare to use knives during the hijackings.The recruits 
learned to focus on storming the cockpit at the earliest opportunity when the 
doors first opened,and to worry about seizing control over the rest of the plane 
later.The operatives were taught about other kinds of attack as well, such as 
truck bombing, so that they would not be able to disclose the exact nature of 
their operation if they were caught. According to KSM, the muscle did not 
learn the full details—including the plan to hijack planes and fly them into 
buildings—before reaching the United States.109 

After training in Afghanistan,the operatives went to a safehouse maintained 
by KSM in Karachi and stayed there temporarily before being deployed to the 
United States via the UAE.The safehouse was run by al Qaeda operative Abd 
al Rahim Ghulum Rabbani, also known as Abu Rahmah, a close associate of 
KSM who assisted him for three years by finding apartments and lending logistical 
support to operatives KSM would send. 

According to an al Qaeda facilitator, operatives were brought to the safehouse 
by a trusted Pakistani al Qaeda courier named Abdullah Sindhi, who 
also worked for KSM.The future hijackers usually arrived in groups of two 
or three, staying at the safe house for as long as two weeks.The facilitator has 
identified each operative whom he assisted at KSM’s direction in the spring 
of 2001. Before the operatives left Pakistan, each of them received $10,000 
from KSM for future expenses.110 

From Pakistan, the operatives transited through the UAE en route to the 
United States. In the Emirates they were assisted primarily by al Qaeda operatives 
Ali Abdul Aziz Ali and Mustafa al Hawsawi.Ali apparently assisted nine 
future hijackers between April and June 2001 as they came through Dubai. He 
helped them with plane tickets,traveler’s checks,and hotel reservations;he also 
taught them about everyday aspects of life in the West, such as purchasing 
clothes and ordering food. Dubai, a modern city with easy access to a major 
airport, travel agencies, hotels, and Western commercial establishments, was an 
ideal transit point.111 

Ali reportedly assumed the operatives he was helping were involved in a big 
operation in the United States,he did not know the details.112When he asked 
KSM to send him an assistant,KSM dispatched Hawsawi,who had worked on 
al Qaeda’s media committee in Kandahar. Hawsawi helped send the last four 
operatives (other than Mihdhar) to the United States from the UAE. Hawsawi 
would consult with Atta about the hijackers’ travel schedules to the United 
States and later check with Atta to confirm that each had arrived.Hawsawi told</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Misc>Western</Misc>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Ali Abdul Aziz Ali</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Abu Turab</Person>
    <Location>Dubai</Location>
    <Person>Ali</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Person>Mustafa</Person>
    <Person>Abu Rahmah</Person>
    <Location>United States.109</Location>
    <Misc>UAE.The</Misc>
    <Person>Rahim Ghulum Rabbani</Person>
    <Person>Abdullah Sindhi</Person>
    <Misc>KSM.The</Misc>
    <Location>KSM’s</Location>
    <Location>Emirates</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi.Ali</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

the muscle hijackers that they would be met by Atta at the airport. Hawsawi 
also facilitated some of the operation’s financing.113 

The muscle hijackers began arriving in the United States in late April 2001. 
In most cases, they traveled in pairs on tourist visas and entered the United 
States in Orlando or Miami,Florida;Washington,D.C.;or New York.Those 
arriving in Florida were assisted by Atta and Shehhi, while Hazmi and Hanjour 
took care of the rest. By the end of June, 14 of the 15 muscle hijackers 
had crossed the Atlantic.114 

The muscle hijackers supplied an infusion of funds, which they carried as a 
mixture of cash and traveler’s checks purchased in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. 
Seven muscle hijackers are known to have purchased a total of nearly $50,000 
in traveler’s checks that were used in the United States. Moreover, substantial 
deposits into operatives’ U.S. bank accounts immediately followed the entry of 
other muscle hijackers, indicating that those newcomers brought money with 
them as well. In addition, muscle hijacker Banihammad came to the United 
States after opening bank accounts in the UAE into which were deposited the 
equivalent of approximately $30,000 on June 25,2001.After his June 27 arrival 
in the United States,Banihammad made Visa and ATM withdrawals from his 
UAE accounts.115 

The hijackers made extensive use of banks in the United States, choosing 
both branches of major international banks and smaller regional banks.All of 
the hijackers opened accounts in their own name,and used passports and other 
identification documents that appeared valid on their face.Contrary to numerous 
published reports, there is no evidence the hijackers ever used false Social 
Security numbers to open any bank accounts.While the hijackers were not 
experts on the use of the U.S. financial system, nothing they did would have 
led the banks to suspect criminal behavior, let alone a terrorist plot to commit 
mass murder.116 

The last muscle hijacker to arrive was Khalid al Mihdhar.As mentioned earlier, 
he had abandoned Hazmi in San Diego in June 2000 and returned to his 
family in Yemen.Mihdhar reportedly stayed in Yemen for about a month before 
Khallad persuaded him to return to Afghanistan. Mihdhar complained about 
life in the United States.He met with KSM,who remained annoyed at his decision 
to go AWOL. But KSM’s desire to drop him from the operation yielded 
to Bin Ladin’s insistence to keep him.117 

By late 2000, Mihdhar was in Mecca, staying with a cousin until February 
2001, when he went home to visit his family before returning to Afghanistan. 
In June 2001, Mihdhar returned once more to Mecca to stay with his cousin 
for another month. Mihdhar said that Bin Ladin was planning five attacks on 
the United States. Before leaving, Mihdhar asked his cousin to watch over his 
home and family because of a job he had to do.118 

On July 4, 2001, Mihdhar left Saudi Arabia to return to the United States, 
arriving at John F.Kennedy International Airport in New York.Mihdhar gave</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>D.C.</Location>
    <Location>Orlando</Location>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Miami</Location>
    <Person>Banihammad</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Location>Mecca</Location>
    <Organization>Khalid</Organization>
    <Date>July 4, 2001</Date>
    <Misc>Atlantic.114</Misc>
    <Organization>Visa</Organization>
    <Person>Mihdhar.As</Person>
    <Location>Yemen.Mihdhar</Location>
    <Location>United States.He</Location>
    <Person>John F.Kennedy International Airport</Person>
    <Date>June 25,2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>255_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 


American Airlines 
Flight 11 

Left to right, 
Mohamed Atta, pilot; 
Waleed al Shehri, 
Wail al Shehri, 
Satam al Suqami, 
Abdulaziz al Omari, 

hijackers 


United Airlines 
Flight 175 

Left to right, 

Marwan al Shehhi, 
pilot; Fayez Banihammad,
Ahmed al 
Ghamdi, Hamza al 
Ghamdi, Mohand al 
Shehri, hijackers</docText>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Hamza al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Marwan al Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Mohand al Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Satam al Suqami</Person>
    <Person>Mohamed Atta</Person>
    <Person>Waleed al Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Wail al</Person>
    <Person>Abdulaziz al Omari</Person>
    <Person>Fayez Banihammad</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>256_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 


American Airlines 
Flight 77 

Left to right, 
Hani Hanjour, pilot; 
Nawaf al Hazmi, 
Khalid al Mihdhar, 
Majed Moqed, Salem 
al Hazmi, hijackers 


United Airlines 
Flight 93 

Left to right, 
Ziad Jarrah pilot; 
Saeed al Ghamdi, 
Ahmad al Haznawi, 
Ahmed al Nami, 


hijackers</docText>
    <Organization>AL QAEDA</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Hani Hanjour</Person>
    <Person>Majed Moqed</Person>
    <Person>Saeed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Nami</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Ziad Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Salem al Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Haznawi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmad</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

his intended address as the Marriott Hotel, New York City, but instead spent 
one night at another New York hotel. He then joined the group of hijackers 
in Paterson,reuniting with Nawaf al Hazmi after more than a year.With two 
months remaining, all 19 hijackers were in the United States and ready to take 
the final steps toward carrying out the attacks.119 

Assistance from Hezbollah and Iran to al Qaeda 

As we mentioned in chapter 2, while in Sudan, senior managers in al Qaeda 
maintained contacts with Iran and the Iranian-supported worldwide terrorist 
organization Hezbollah, which is based mainly in southern Lebanon and 
Beirut.Al Qaeda members received advice and training from Hezbollah. 

Intelligence indicates the persistence of contacts between Iranian security 
officials and senior al Qaeda figures after Bin Ladin’s return to Afghanistan. 
Khallad has said that Iran made a concerted effort to strengthen relations with 
al Qaeda after the October 2000 attack on the USS Cole, but was rebuffed 
because Bin Ladin did not want to alienate his supporters in Saudi Arabia.Khallad 
and other detainees have described the willingness of Iranian officials to 
facilitate the travel of al Qaeda members through Iran,on their way to and from 
Afghanistan.For example,Iranian border inspectors would be told not to place 
telltale stamps in the passports of these travelers. Such arrangements were particularly 
beneficial to Saudi members of al Qaeda.120 

Our knowledge of the international travels of the al Qaeda operatives 
selected for the 9/11 operation remains fragmentary. But we now have evidence 
suggesting that 8 to 10 of the 14 Saudi “muscle” operatives traveled into 
or out of Iran between October 2000 and February 2001.121 

In October 2000, a senior operative of Hezbollah visited Saudi Arabia to 
coordinate activities there. He also planned to assist individuals in Saudi Arabia 
in traveling to Iran during November. A top Hezbollah commander and 
Saudi Hezbollah contacts were involved.122 

Also in October 2000, two future muscle hijackers, Mohand al Shehri and 
Hamza al Ghamdi,flew from Iran to Kuwait.In November,Ahmed al Ghamdi 
apparently flew to Beirut, traveling—perhaps by coincidence—on the same 
flight as a senior Hezbollah operative.Also in November,Salem al Hazmi apparently 
flew from Saudi Arabia to Beirut.123 

In mid-November, we believe, three of the future muscle hijackers,Wail al 
Shehri,Waleed al Shehri, and Ahmed al Nami, all of whom had obtained their 

U.S. visas in late October, traveled in a group from Saudi Arabia to Beirut and 
then onward to Iran.An associate of a senior Hezbollah operative was on the 
same flight that took the future hijackers to Iran. Hezbollah officials in Beirut 
and Iran were expecting the arrival of a group during the same time period. 
The travel of this group was important enough to merit the attention of senior 
figures in Hezbollah.124 
Later in November,two future muscle hijackers,Satam al Suqami and Majed</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Hezbollah</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Lebanon</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Iranian</Misc>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Location>Beirut</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Hamza al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Nami</Person>
    <Misc>Salem</Misc>
    <Misc>Satam</Misc>
    <Person>Suqami</Person>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Person>USS Cole</Person>
    <Location>Paterson</Location>
    <Misc>Mohand</Misc>
    <Organization>Marriott Hotel</Organization>
    <Misc>Nawaf</Misc>
    <Misc>Iranian-supported</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda.120 Our</Misc>
    <Location>Hezbollah.124 Later</Location>
    <Person>Majed</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

Moqed,flew into Iran from Bahrain.In February 2001,Khalid al Mihdhar may 
have taken a flight from Syria to Iran, and then traveled further within Iran to 
a point near the Afghan border.125 

KSM and Binalshibh have confirmed that several of the 9/11 hijackers (at 
least eight, according to Binalshibh) transited Iran on their way to or from 
Afghanistan, taking advantage of the Iranian practice of not stamping Saudi 
passports.They deny any other reason for the hijackers’travel to Iran.They also 
deny any relationship between the hijackers and Hezbollah.126 

In sum, there is strong evidence that Iran facilitated the transit of al Qaeda 
members into and out of Afghanistan before 9/11,and that some of these were 
future 9/11 hijackers.There also is circumstantial evidence that senior Hezbollah 
operatives were closely tracking the travel of some of these future muscle 
hijackers into Iran in November 2000. However, we cannot rule out the possibility 
of a remarkable coincidence—that is,that Hezbollah was actually focusing 
on some other group of individuals traveling from Saudi Arabia during this 
same time frame, rather than the future hijackers.127 

We have found no evidence that Iran or Hezbollah was aware of the planning 
for what later became the 9/11 attack.At the time of their travel through 
Iran, the al Qaeda operatives themselves were probably not aware of the specific 
details of their future operation. 

After 9/11, Iran and Hezbollah wished to conceal any past evidence of 
cooperation with Sunni terrorists associated with al Qaeda.A senior Hezbollah 
official disclaimed any Hezbollah involvement in 9/11.128 

We believe this topic requires further investigation by the U.S.government. 

7.4 FINAL STRATEGIES AND TACTICS 
Final Preparations in the United States 

During the early summer of 2001,Atta, assisted by Shehhi, was busy coordinating 
the arrival of most of the muscle hijackers in southern Florida—picking 
them up at the airport, finding them places to stay, and helping them settle 
in the United States.129 

The majority settled in Florida.Some opened bank accounts,acquired mailboxes, 
and rented cars. Several also joined local gyms, presumably to stay fit for 
the operation.Upon first arriving,most stayed in hotels and motels;but by mid-
June, they settled in shared apartments relatively close to one another and 
Atta.130 Though these muscle hijackers did not travel much after arriving in 
the United States, two of them,Waleed al Shehri and Satam al Suqami, took 
unusual trips. 

On May 19, Shehri and Suqami flew from Fort Lauderdale to Freeport, 
the Bahamas,where they had reservations at the Bahamas Princess Resort.The 
two were turned away by Bahamian officials on arrival,however,because they</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Hezbollah</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>Syria</Location>
    <Misc>Sunni</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Misc>Iranian</Misc>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>Satam</Misc>
    <Person>Suqami</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Misc>Hezbollah.126 In</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda.A</Person>
    <Misc>United States.129</Misc>
    <Location>Florida.Some</Location>
    <Misc>Atta.130 Though</Misc>
    <Location>Freeport</Location>
    <Location>Bahamas</Location>
    <Misc>Princess Resort.The</Misc>
    <Misc>Bahamian</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>259_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

lacked visas; they returned to Florida that same day. They likely took this trip 
to renew Suqami’s immigration status,as Suqami’s legal stay in the United States 
ended May 21.131 

On July 30, Shehri traveled alone from Fort Lauderdale to Boston. He flew 
to San Francisco the next day, where he stayed one night before returning via 
Las Vegas.While this travel may have been a casing flight—Shehri traveled in 
first class on the same type of aircraft he would help hijack on September 11 
(a Boeing 767) and the trip included a layover in Las Vegas—Shehri was neither 
a pilot nor a plot leader,as were the other hijackers who took surveillance 
flights.132 

The three Hamburg pilots—Atta,Shehhi,and Jarrah—took the first of their 
cross-country surveillance flights early in the summer. Shehhi flew from New 
York to Las Vegas via San Francisco in late May.Jarrah flew from Baltimore to 
Las Vegas via Los Angeles in early June.Atta flew from Boston to Las Vegas via 
San Francisco at the end of June.Each traveled in first class,on United Airlines. 
For the east-west transcontinental leg, each operative flew on the same type of 
aircraft he would pilot on September 11 (Atta and Shehhi, a Boeing 767; Jarrah, 
a Boeing 757).133 Hanjour and Hazmi, as noted below, took similar crosscountry 
surveillance flights in August. 

Jarrah and Hanjour also received additional training and practice flights in 
the early summer.A few days before departing on his cross-country test flight, 
Jarrah flew from Fort Lauderdale to Philadelphia, where he trained at Hortman 
Aviation and asked to fly the Hudson Corridor, a low-altitude “hallway” 
along the Hudson River that passes New York landmarks like the World Trade 
Center. Heavy traffic in the area can make the corridor a dangerous route for 
an inexperienced pilot. Because Hortman deemed Jarrah unfit to fly solo, he 
could fly this route only with an instructor.134 

Hanjour, too, requested to fly the Hudson Corridor about this same time, 
at Air Fleet Training Systems in Teterboro,New Jersey,where he started receiving 
ground instruction soon after settling in the area with Hazmi.Hanjour flew 
the Hudson Corridor, but his instructor declined a second request because of 
what he considered Hanjour’s poor piloting skills. Shortly thereafter, Hanjour 
switched to Caldwell Flight Academy in Fairfield,New Jersey,where he rented 
small aircraft on several occasions during June and July. In one such instance 
on July 20, Hanjour—likely accompanied by Hazmi—rented a plane from 
Caldwell and took a practice flight from Fairfield to Gaithersburg, Maryland, 
a route that would have allowed them to fly near Washington,D.C.Other evidence 
suggests that Hanjour may even have returned to Arizona for flight simulator 
training earlier in June.135 

There is no indication that Atta or Shehhi received any additional flight 
training in June. Both were likely too busy organizing the newly arrived muscle 
hijackers and taking their cross-country surveillance flights.Atta,moreover, 
needed to coordinate with his second-in-command, Nawaf al Hazmi.136</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Location>Arizona</Location>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>Maryland</Location>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>Las Vegas</Location>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Gaithersburg</Location>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>Baltimore</Location>
    <Location>San Francisco</Location>
    <Misc>Boeing</Misc>
    <Location>Hudson River</Location>
    <Misc>Suqami’s</Misc>
    <Location>Las Vegas.While</Location>
    <Location>Las Vegas—Shehri</Location>
    <Organization>Jarrah—took</Organization>
    <Person>May.Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>June.Atta</Location>
    <Organization>June.Each</Organization>
    <Location>Philadelphia</Location>
    <Location>Hortman Aviation</Location>
    <Location>Hudson Corridor</Location>
    <Misc>Hortman</Misc>
    <Organization>Air Fleet Training Systems</Organization>
    <Location>Teterboro</Location>
    <Organization>Hazmi.Hanjour</Organization>
    <Organization>Caldwell Flight Academy</Organization>
    <Location>Fairfield</Location>
    <Person>Hanjour—likely</Person>
    <Organization>Caldwell</Organization>
    <Misc>June.135 There</Misc>
    <Person>Nawaf al Hazmi.136</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>25_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the hijackers were probably flying the plane.The call lasted about two minutes, 
after which Policastro and a colleague tried unsuccessfully to contact the 
flight.46 

At 8:58,the flight took a heading toward New York City.47 

At 8:59, Flight 175 passenger Brian David Sweeney tried to call his wife, 
Julie. He left a message on their home answering machine that the plane had 
been hijacked. He then called his mother, Louise Sweeney, told her the flight 
had been hijacked, and added that the passengers were thinking about storming 
the cockpit to take control of the plane away from the hijackers.48 

At 9:00, Lee Hanson received a second call from his son Peter: 

It’s getting bad, Dad—A stewardess was stabbed—They seem to have 
knives and Mace—They said they have a bomb—It’s getting very bad 
on the plane—Passengers are throwing up and getting sick—The 
plane is making jerky movements—I don’t think the pilot is flying the 
plane—I think we are going down—I think they intend to go to 
Chicago or someplace and fly into a building—Don’t worry, Dad— 
If it happens, it’ll be very fast—My God, my God.49 

The call ended abruptly.Lee Hanson had heard a woman scream just before 
it cut off. He turned on a television, and in her home so did Louise Sweeney. 
Both then saw the second aircraft hit the World Trade Center.50 

At 9:03:11,United Airlines Flight 175 struck the South Tower of the World 
Trade Center.51 All on board, along with an unknown number of people in 
the tower, were killed instantly. 

The Hijacking of American 77 

American Airlines Flight 77 was scheduled to depart from Washington Dulles 
for Los Angeles at 8:10. The aircraft was a Boeing 757 piloted by Captain 
Charles F. Burlingame and First Officer David Charlebois. There were four 
flight attendants. On September 11, the flight carried 58 passengers.52 

American 77 pushed back from its gate at 8:09 and took off at 8:20.At 8:46, 
the flight reached its assigned cruising altitude of 35,000 feet. Cabin service 
would have begun.At 8:51,American 77 transmitted its last routine radio communication.
The hijacking began between 8:51 and 8:54.As on American 11 
and United 175, the hijackers used knives (reported by one passenger) and 
moved all the passengers (and possibly crew) to the rear of the aircraft (reported 
by one flight attendant and one passenger).Unlike the earlier flights,the Flight 
77 hijackers were reported by a passenger to have box cutters. Finally, a passenger 
reported that an announcement had been made by the “pilot” that the 
plane had been hijacked.Neither of the firsthand accounts mentioned any stabbings 
or the threat or use of either a bomb or Mace,though both witnesses began 
the flight in the first-class cabin.53</docText>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Chicago</Location>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>God</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Location>Washington Dulles</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines Flight</Organization>
    <Person>Lee Hanson</Person>
    <Person>Louise Sweeney</Person>
    <Location>Policastro</Location>
    <Person>Brian David Sweeney</Person>
    <Person>Julie</Person>
    <Person>Peter: It’s</Person>
    <Organization>Dad—A</Organization>
    <Person>Mace—They</Person>
    <Misc>Dad— If</Misc>
    <Misc>God.49</Misc>
    <Person>Hanson</Person>
    <Organization>World Trade Center.50 At</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower of the World Trade Center.51 All</Organization>
    <Person>Charles F. Burlingame</Person>
    <Person>David Charlebois</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>260_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

Although Atta and Hazmi appear to have been in Virginia at about the same 
time in early April,they probably did not meet then.Analysis of late April communications 
associated with KSM indicates that they had wanted to get 
together in April but could not coordinate the meeting.137 Atta and Hazmi 
probably first met in the United States only when Hazmi traveled round-trip 
from Newark to Miami between June 19 and June 25. 

After he returned to New Jersey, Hazmi’s behavior began to closely parallel 
that of the other hijackers. He and Hanjour, for instance, soon established 
new bank accounts, acquired a mailbox, rented cars, and started visiting a gym. 
So did the four other hijackers who evidently were staying with them in New 
Jersey. Several also obtained new photo identification, first in New Jersey and 
then at the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles,where Hazmi and Hanjour 
had obtained such documents months earlier, likely with help from their Jordanian 
friend, Rababah.138 

Atta probably met again with Hazmi in early July. Returning from his initial 
cross-country surveillance flight, Atta flew into New York. Rather than 
return immediately to Florida, he checked into a New Jersey hotel. He picked 
up tickets to travel to Spain at a travel agency in Paterson on July 4 before 
departing for Fort Lauderdale. Now that the muscle hijackers had arrived, he 
was ready to meet with Ramzi Binalshibh for the last time.139 

The Meeting in Spain 

After meeting with Atta in Berlin in January 2001, Binalshibh had spent much 
of the spring of 2001 in Afghanistan and Pakistan, helping move the muscle 
hijackers as they passed through Karachi. During the Berlin meeting, the two 
had agreed to meet later in the year in Kuala Lumpur to discuss the operation 
in person again. In late May, Binalshibh reported directly to Bin Ladin at an 
al Qaeda facility known as “Compound Six” near Kandahar.140 

Bin Ladin told Binalshibh to instruct Atta and the others to focus on their 
security and that of the operation,and to advise Atta to proceed as planned with 
the targets discussed before Atta left Afghanistan in early 2000—the World 
Trade Center, the Pentagon, the White House, and the Capitol. According 
to Binalshibh, Bin Ladin said he preferred the White House over the Capitol, 
asking Binalshibh to confirm that Atta understood this preference. Binalshibh 
says Bin Ladin had given the same message to Waleed al Shehri for conveyance 
to Atta earlier that spring. Binalshibh also received permission to meet Atta in 
Malaysia.Atef provided money for the trip,which KSM would help Binalshibh 
arrange in Karachi.141 

In early June,Binalshibh traveled by taxi from Kandahar to Quetta,Pakistan, 
where al Qaeda courier Abu Rahmah took him to KSM.According to Binalshibh, 
KSM provided a plane ticket to Malaysia and a fraudulent Saudi passport 
to use for the trip.KSM told him to ask Atta to select a date for the attacks. 
Binalshibh was to return to Germany and then inform KSM of the date. KSM</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Capitol</Location>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Location>Spain</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Location>Miami</Location>
    <Location>Paterson</Location>
    <Misc>Waleed</Misc>
    <Location>Berlin</Location>
    <Location>Quetta</Location>
    <Misc>Hazmi’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles</Organization>
    <Person>Rababah.138 Atta</Person>
    <Location>Karachi.141</Location>
    <Person>Abu Rahmah</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>261_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

also gave Binalshibh the email address of Zacarias Moussaoui for future contact. 
Binalshibh then left for Kuala Lumpur.142 

Binalshibh contacted Atta upon arriving in Malaysia and found a change in 
plan. Atta could not travel because he was too busy helping the new arrivals 
settle in the United States.After remaining in Malaysia for approximately three 
weeks, Binalshibh went to Bangkok for a few days before returning to Germany. 
He and Atta agreed to meet later at a location to be determined.143 

In early July,Atta called Binalshibh to suggest meeting in Madrid,for reasons 
Binalshibh claims not to know. He says he preferred Berlin, but that he 
and Atta knew too many people in Germany and feared being spotted 
together. Unable to buy a ticket to Madrid at the height of the tourist season, 
Binalshibh booked a seat on a flight to Reus, near Barcelona, the next day.Atta 
was already en route to Madrid, so Binalshibh phoned Shehhi in the United 
States to inform him of the change in itinerary.144 

Atta arrived in Madrid on July 8. He spent the night in a hotel and made 
three calls from his room, most likely to coordinate with Binalshibh.The next 
day,Atta rented a car and drove to Reus to pick up Binalshibh; the two then 
drove to the nearby town of Cambrils. Hotel records show Atta renting rooms 
in the same area until July 19, when he returned his rental car in Madrid and 
flew back to Fort Lauderdale. On July 16, Binalshibh returned to Hamburg, 
using a ticket Atta had purchased for him earlier that day.According to Binalshibh, 
they did not meet with anyone else while in Spain.145 

Binalshibh says he told Atta that Bin Ladin wanted the attacks carried out 
as soon as possible. Bin Ladin, Binalshibh conveyed, was worried about having 
so many operatives in the United States.Atta replied that he could not yet 
provide a date because he was too busy organizing the arriving hijackers and 
still needed to coordinate the timing of the flights so that the crashes would 
occur simultaneously.Atta said he required about five to six weeks before he 
could provide an attack date. Binalshibh advised Atta that Bin Ladin had 
directed that the other operatives not be informed of the date until the last 
minute.Atta was to provide Binalshibh with advance notice of at least a week 
or two so that Binalshibh could travel to Afghanistan and report the date personally 
to Bin Ladin.146 

As to targets, Atta understood Bin Ladin’s interest in striking the White 
House.Atta said he thought this target too difficult,but had tasked Hazmi and 
Hanjour to evaluate its feasibility and was awaiting their answer.Atta said that 
those two operatives had rented small aircraft and flown reconnaissance flights 
near the Pentagon.Atta explained that Hanjour was assigned to attack the Pentagon, 
Jarrah the Capitol, and that both Atta and Shehhi would hit the World 
Trade Center. If any pilot could not reach his intended target, he was to crash 
the plane.If Atta could not strike the World Trade Center,he planned to crash 
his aircraft directly into the streets of New York.Atta told Binalshibh that each 
pilot had volunteered for his assigned target,and that the assignments were subject 
to change.147</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Capitol</Organization>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Madrid</Location>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Location>Hamburg</Location>
    <Location>Berlin</Location>
    <Misc>Kuala Lumpur.142</Misc>
    <Location>United States.After</Location>
    <Location>Reus</Location>
    <Location>Barcelona</Location>
    <Organization>Binalshibh.The</Organization>
    <Location>Cambrils</Location>
    <Location>United States.Atta</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin.146</Person>
    <Person>White House.Atta</Person>
    <Location>Pentagon.Atta</Location>
    <Organization>Jarrah</Organization>
    <Person>New York.Atta</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>262_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

During the Spain meeting,Atta also mentioned that he had considered targeting 
a nuclear facility he had seen during familiarization flights near New 
York—a target they referred to as “electrical engineering.”According to Binalshibh,
the other pilots did not like the idea.They thought a nuclear target would 
be difficult because the airspace around it was restricted,making reconnaissance 
flights impossible and increasing the likelihood that any plane would be shot 
down before impact.Moreover,unlike the approved targets,this alternative had 
not been discussed with senior al Qaeda leaders and therefore did not have the 
requisite blessing. Nor would a nuclear facility have particular symbolic value. 
Atta did not ask Binalshibh to pass this idea on to Bin Ladin, Atef, or KSM, 
and Binalshibh says he did not mention it to them until after September 11.148 

Binalshibh claims that during their time in Spain, he and Atta also discussed 
how the hijackings would be executed. Atta said he, Shehhi, and Jarrah had 
encountered no problems carrying box cutters on cross-country surveillance 
flights.The best time to storm the cockpit would be about 10–15 minutes after 
takeoff,when the cockpit doors typically were opened for the first time.Atta 
did not believe they would need any other weapons. He had no firm contingency 
plan in case the cockpit door was locked.While he mentioned general 
ideas such as using a hostage or claiming to have a bomb, he was confident the 
cockpit doors would be opened and did not consider breaking them down a 
viable idea.Atta told Binalshibh he wanted to select planes departing on long 
flights because they would be full of fuel, and that he wanted to hijack Boeing 
aircraft because he believed them easier to fly than Airbus aircraft, which he 
understood had an autopilot feature that did not allow them to be crashed into 
the ground.149 

Finally,Atta confirmed that the muscle hijackers had arrived in the United 
States without incident.They would be divided into teams according to their 
English-speaking ability.That way they could assist each other before the operation 
and each team would be able to command the passengers in English. 
According to Binalshibh,Atta complained that some of the hijackers wanted to 
contact their families to say goodbye,something he had forbidden.Atta,moreover, 
was nervous about his future communications with Binalshibh, whom he 
instructed to obtain new telephones upon returning to Germany.Before Binalshibh 
left Spain, he gave Atta eight necklaces and eight bracelets that Atta had 
asked him to buy when he was recently in Bangkok,believing that if the hijackers 
were clean shaven and well dressed,others would think them wealthy Saudis 
and give them less notice.150 

As directed, upon returning from Spain, Binalshibh obtained two new 
phones, one to communicate with Atta and another to communicate with 
KSM and others,such as Zacarias Moussaoui.Binalshibh soon contacted KSM 
and, using code words, reported the results of his meeting with Atta. This 
important exchange occurred in mid-July.151 

The conversation covered various topics. For example, Jarrah was to send 
Binalshibh certain personal materials from the hijackers,including copies of their</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Spain</Location>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Organization>Airbus</Organization>
    <Misc>English-speaking</Misc>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui.Binalshibh</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>263_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

passports,which Binalshibh in turn would pass along to KSM,probably for subsequent 
use in al Qaeda propaganda.152 

The most significant part of the mid-July conversation concerned Jarrah’s 
troubled relationship with Atta. KSM and Binalshibh both acknowledge that 
Jarrah chafed under Atta’s authority over him.Binalshibh believes the disagreement 
arose in part from Jarrah’s family visits. Moreover, Jarrah had been on his 
own for most of his time in the United States because Binalshibh’s visa difficulty 
had prevented the two of them from training together. Jarrah thus felt 
excluded from the decisionmaking. Binalshibh had to act as a broker between 
Jarrah and Atta.153 

Concerned that Jarrah might withdraw from the operation at this late stage, 
KSM emphasized the importance of Atta and Jarrah’s resolving their differences.
Binalshibh claims that such concern was unwarranted,and in their mid-
July discussion reassured KSM that Atta and Jarrah would reconcile and be 
ready to move forward in about a month, after Jarrah visited his family. Noting 
his concern and the potential for delay,KSM at one point instructed Binalshibh 
to send “the skirts”to “Sally”—a coded instruction to Binalshibh to send 
funds to Zacarias Moussaoui.While Binalshibh admits KSM did direct him to 
send Moussaoui money during the mid-July conversation, he denies knowing 
exactly why he received this instruction—though he thought the money was 
being provided “within the framework” of the 9/11 operation.154 

KSM may have instructed Binalshibh to send money to Moussaoui in order 
to help prepare Moussaoui as a potential substitute pilot for Jarrah.On July 20, 
2001,Aysel Senguen,Jarrah’s girlfriend,purchased a one-way ticket for Jarrah 
from Miami to Dusseldorf. On Jarrah’s previous four trips from the United 
States to see Senguen and his family in Lebanon, he had always traveled with 
a round-trip ticket.When Jarrah departed Miami on July 25,Atta appears to 
have driven him to the airport, another unique circumstance.155 

Binalshibh picked up Jarrah at the airport in Dusseldorf on July 25. Jarrah 
wanted to see Senguen as soon as possible, so he and Binalshibh arranged to 
meet a few days later.When they did,they had an emotional conversation during 
which Binalshibh encouraged Jarrah to see the plan through.156 

While Jarrah was in Germany, Binalshibh and Moussaoui were in contact 
to arrange for the transfer of funds.Binalshibh received two wire transfers from 
Hawsawi in the UAE totaling $15,000 and, within days, relayed almost all of 
this money to Moussaoui in two installments.157 

Moussaoui had been taking flight lessons at the Airman Flight School in 
Norman,Oklahoma,since February but stopped in late May.Although at that 
point he had only about 50 hours of flight time and no solo flights to his credit, 
Moussaoui began making inquiries about flight materials and simulator training 
for Boeing 747s. On July 10, he put down a $1,500 deposit for flight simulator 
training at Pan Am International Flight Academy in Eagan, Minnesota, 
and by the end of the month,he had received a simulator schedule to train from</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Oklahoma</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Location>Lebanon</Location>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Date>July 20, 
2001</Date>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Miami</Location>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Organization>Pan Am International Flight Academy</Organization>
    <Location>Norman</Location>
    <Location>Minnesota</Location>
    <Misc>Boeing</Misc>
    <Organization>Airman Flight School</Organization>
    <Location>Eagan</Location>
    <Person>Jarrah’s</Person>
    <Misc>Binalshibh’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Atta.153 Concerned</Organization>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui.While</Person>
    <Person>Aysel Senguen</Person>
    <Location>Dusseldorf</Location>
    <Location>Hawsawi</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>264_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

August 13 through August 20. Moussaoui also purchased two knives and 
inquired of two manufacturers of GPS equipment whether their products 
could be converted for aeronautical use—activities that closely resembled those 
of the 9/11 hijackers during their final preparations for the attacks.158 

On August 10, shortly after getting the money from Binalshibh, Moussaoui 
left Oklahoma with a friend and drove to Minnesota.Three days later, Moussaoui 
paid the $6,800 balance owed for his flight simulator training at Pan Am 
in cash and began his training. His conduct, however, raised the suspicions of 
his flight instructor. It was unusual for a student with so little training to be 
learning to fly large jets without any intention of obtaining a pilot’s license 
or other goal. On August 16, once the instructor reported his suspicion to the 
authorities, Moussaoui was arrested by the INS on immigration charges.159 

KSM denies ever considering Moussaoui for the planes operation. Instead 
he claims that Moussaoui was slated to participate in a “second wave”of attacks. 
KSM also states that Moussaoui had no contact with Atta, and we are unaware 
of evidence contradicting this assertion.160 

Yet KSM has also stated that by the summer of 2001, he was too busy with 
the planes operation to continue planning for any second-wave attacks. Moreover, 
he admits that only three potential pilots were ever recruited for the 
alleged second wave, Moussaoui plus two others who, by midsummer of 2001, 
had backed out of the plot.161 We therefore believe that the effort to push 
Moussaoui forward in August 2001 lends credence to the suspicion that he was 
being primed as a possible pilot in the immediate planes operation. 

Binalshibh says he assumed Moussaoui was to take his place as another pilot 
in the 9/11 operation. Recounting a post-9/11 discussion with KSM in Kandahar,
Binalshibh claims KSM mentioned Moussaoui as being part of the 9/11 
operation. Although KSM never referred to Moussaoui by name, Binalshibh 
understood he was speaking of the operative to whom Binalshibh had wired 
money. Binalshibh says KSM did not approve of Moussaoui but believes KSM 
did not remove him from the operation only because Moussaoui had been 
selected and assigned by Bin Ladin himself.162 

KSM did not hear about Moussaoui’s arrest until after September 11. 
According to Binalshibh, had Bin Ladin and KSM learned prior to 9/11 that 
Moussaoui had been detained, they might have canceled the operation.When 
Binalshibh discussed Moussaoui’s arrest with KSM after September 11, KSM 
congratulated himself on not having Moussaoui contact the other operatives, 
which would have compromised the operation. Moussaoui had been in contact 
with Binalshibh, of course, but this was not discovered until after 9/11.163 

As it turned out, Moussaoui was not needed to replace Jarrah. By the time 
Moussaoui was arrested in mid-August, Jarrah had returned to the United 
States from his final trip to Germany, his disagreement with Atta apparently 
resolved.The operatives began their final preparations for the attacks.164</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Location>Oklahoma</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Kandahar</Location>
    <Location>Germany</Location>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Misc>Minnesota.Three</Misc>
    <Location>Pan Am</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>265_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Readying the Attacks 

A week after he returned from meeting Binalshibh in Spain, Atta traveled to 
Newark, probably to coordinate with Hazmi and give him additional funds. 
Atta spent a few days in the area before returning to Florida on July 30.The 
month of August was busy, as revealed by a set of contemporaneous Atta-
Binalshibh communications that were recovered after September 11.165 

On August 3, for example, Atta and Binalshibh discussed several matters, 
such as the best way for the operatives to purchase plane tickets and the assignment 
of muscle hijackers to individual teams. Atta and Binalshibh also revisited 
the question of whether to target the White House.They discussed targets 
in coded language, pretending to be students discussing various fields of study: 
“architecture”referred to the World Trade Center,“arts”the Pentagon,“law” 
the Capitol, and “politics” the White House.166 

Binalshibh reminded Atta that Bin Ladin wanted to target the White House. 
Atta again cautioned that this would be difficult.When Binalshibh persisted, 
Atta agreed to include the White House but suggested they keep the Capitol 
as an alternate target in case the White House proved too difficult. Atta also 
suggested that the attacks would not happen until after the first week in September, 
when Congress reconvened.167 

Atta and Binalshibh also discussed “the friend who is coming as a tourist”— 
a cryptic reference to candidate hijacker Mohamed al Kahtani (mentioned 
above), whom Hawsawi was sending the next day as “the last one” to “complete 
the group.”On August 4,Atta drove to the Orlando airport to meet Kah-
tani.Upon arrival,however,Kahtani was denied entry by immigration officials 
because he had a one-way ticket and little money,could not speak English,and 
could not adequately explain what he intended to do in the United States. He 
was sent back to Dubai. Hawsawi contacted KSM, who told him to help Kahtani 
return to Pakistan.168 

On August 7,Atta flew from Fort Lauderdale to Newark, probably to coordinate 
with Hazmi.Two days later,Ahmed al Ghamdi and Abdul Aziz al Omari, 
who had been living in New Jersey with Hazmi and Hanjour, flew to 
Miami—probably signifying that the four hijacking teams had finally been 
assigned.While Atta was in New Jersey, he, Hazmi, and Hanjour all purchased 
tickets for another set of surveillance flights. Like Shehhi, Jarrah, Atta, and 
Waleed al Shehri before them, Hazmi and Hanjour each flew in first class on 
the same type of aircraft they would hijack on 9/11 (a Boeing 757), and on 
transcontinental flights that connected to Las Vegas.This time,however,Atta 
himself also flew directly to Las Vegas,where all three stayed on August 13–14. 
Beyond Las Vegas’s reputation for welcoming tourists,we have seen no credible 
evidence explaining why, on this occasion and others, the operatives flew 
to or met in Las Vegas.169 

Through August, the hijackers kept busy with their gym training and the 
pilots took frequent practice flights on small rented aircraft.The operatives also</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>World Trade Center</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Capitol</Location>
    <Person>Shehri</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed al Ghamdi</Person>
    <Person>Kahtani</Person>
    <Person>Abdul Aziz al Omari</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Location>Orlando</Location>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Spain</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>Las Vegas</Location>
    <Person>Hanjour</Person>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Location>Dubai</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Misc>Waleed</Misc>
    <Person>Mohamed al Kahtani</Person>
    <Person>House.166 Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>Kah-</Misc>
    <Misc>Hazmi.Two</Misc>
    <Misc>Shehhi</Misc>
    <Misc>Las Vegas.This</Misc>
    <Misc>Las Vegas’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Las Vegas.169</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>266_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

began to make purchases suggesting that the planning was coming to an end. 
In mid-August, for example, they bought small knives that may actually have 
been used in the attacks. On August 22, moreover, Jarrah attempted to purchase 
four GPS units from a pilot shop in Miami.He was able to buy only one 
unit, which he picked up a few days later when he also purchased three aeronautical 
charts.170 

Perhaps most significant,however,was the purchase of plane tickets for September 
11.On August 23,Atta again flew to Newark,probably to meet with 
Hazmi and select flights. All 19 tickets were booked and purchased between 
August 25 and September 5.171 

It therefore appears that the attack date was selected by the third week of 
August.This timing is confirmed by Binalshibh, who claims Atta called him 
with the date in mid-August. According to Binalshibh, Atta used a riddle to 
convey the date in code—a message of two branches, a slash, and a lollipop (to 
non-Americans, 11/9 would be interpreted as September 11). Binalshibh says 
he called Atta back to confirm the date before passing it to KSM.172 

KSM apparently received the date from Binalshibh in a message sent 
through Binalshibh’s old Hamburg associate,Zakariya Essabar.Both Binalshibh 
and KSM claim that Essabar was not privy to the meaning of the message and 
had no foreknowledge of the attacks.According to Binalshibh,shortly after the 
date was chosen, he advised Essabar and another Hamburg associate, Said 
Bahaji, that if they wanted to go to Afghanistan, now was the time because it 
would soon become more difficult. Essabar made reservations on August 22 
and departed Hamburg for Karachi on August 30; Bahaji purchased his tickets 
on August 20 and departed Hamburg for Karachi on September 3.173 

Binalshibh also made arrangements to leave for Pakistan during early September, 
before the attacks, as did Ali and Hawsawi, the plot facilitators in the 
UAE. During these final days, Binalshibh and Atta kept in contact by phone, 
email,and instant messaging.Although Atta had forbidden the hijackers to contact 
their families, he apparently placed one last call to his own father on September 
9. Atta also asked Binalshibh to contact the family of one hijacker, pass 
along goodbyes from others, and give regards to KSM. Jarrah alone appears to 
have left a written farewell—a sentimental letter to Aysel Senguen.174 

Hazmi, however, may not have been so discreet. He may have telephoned 
his former San Diego companion,Mohdar Abdullah,in late August.Several bits 
of evidence indicate that others in Abdullah’s circle may have received word 
that something big would soon happen.As noted earlier,Abdullah’s behavior 
reportedly changed noticeably. Prior to September 11, both he and Yazeed 
al Salmi suddenly became intent on proceeding with their planned marriages. 
One witness quotes Salmi as commenting after the 9/11 attacks,“I knew they 
were going to do something,that is why I got married.”Moreover,as of August 
2001, Iyad Kreiwesh and other employees at the Texaco station where Hazmi 
had worked suddenly were anticipating attention from law enforcement</docText>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>San Diego</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Essabar</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Person>Mohdar Abdullah</Person>
    <Location>Abdullah’s</Location>
    <Location>Karachi</Location>
    <Person>Said Bahaji</Person>
    <Person>Salmi</Person>
    <Person>Ali</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Misc>Yazeed</Misc>
    <Person>Iyad Kreiwesh</Person>
    <Person>Bahaji</Person>
    <Location>Miami.He</Location>
    <Misc>August.This</Misc>
    <Organization>Binalshibh’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Hamburg</Organization>
    <Person>Zakariya Essabar.Both Binalshibh</Person>
    <Location>Texaco</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>267_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

authorities in the near future. Finally, according to an uncorroborated witness 
account,early on the morning of September 10,Abdullah,Osama Awadallah, 
Omar Bakarbashat,and others behaved suspiciously at the gas station.According 
to the witness, after the group met, Awadallah said “it is finally going to 
happen” as the others celebrated by giving each other high fives.175 

Dissent within the al Qaeda Leadership 

While tactical preparations for the attack were nearing completion, the entire 
operation was being questioned at the top, as al Qaeda and the Taliban argued 
over strategy for 2001. Our focus has naturally been on the specifics of the 
planes operation. But from the perspective of Bin Ladin and Atef, this operation 
was only one,admittedly key,element of their unfolding plans for the year. 
Living in Afghanistan, interacting constantly with the Taliban, the al Qaeda 
leaders would never lose sight of the situation in that country. 

Bin Ladin’s consistent priority was to launch a major attack directly against 
the United States. He wanted the planes operation to proceed as soon as possible. 
Mihdhar reportedly told his cousin during the summer of 2001 that Bin 
Ladin was reputed to have remarked,“I will make it happen even if I do it by 
myself.”176 

According to KSM, Bin Ladin had been urging him to advance the date of 
the attacks. In 2000, for instance, KSM remembers Bin Ladin pushing him to 
launch the attacks amid the controversy after then-Israeli opposition party 
leader Ariel Sharon’s visit to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.KSM claims Bin 
Ladin told him it would be enough for the hijackers simply to down planes 
rather than crash them into specific targets.KSM says he resisted the pressure.177 

KSM claims to have faced similar pressure twice more in 2001.According 
to him, Bin Ladin wanted the operation carried out on May 12, 2001, seven 
months to the day after the Cole bombing.KSM adds that the 9/11 attacks had 
originally been envisioned for May 2001.The second time he was urged to 
launch the attacks early was in June or July 2001, supposedly after Bin Ladin 
learned from the media that Sharon would be visiting the White House. On 
both occasions KSM resisted,asserting that the hijacking teams were not ready. 
Bin Ladin pressed particularly strongly for the latter date in two letters stressing 
the need to attack early.The second letter reportedly was delivered by Bin 
Ladin’s son-in-law,Aws al Madani.178 

Other evidence corroborates KSM’s account. For instance, Mihdhar told 
his cousin that the attacks were to happen in May, but were postponed twice, 
first to July, then to September. Moreover, one candidate hijacker remembers 
a general warning being issued in the al Qaeda camps in July or early August, 
just like the warnings issued two weeks before the Cole bombing and ten days 
before the eventual 9/11 attacks. During the midsummer alert, al Qaeda 
members dispersed with their families, security was increased, and Bin Ladin 
disappeared for about 30 days, until the alert was canceled.179 

While the details of the operation were strictly compartmented,by the time</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Organization>al Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Person>Awadallah</Person>
    <Person>Osama Awadallah</Person>
    <Person>Omar Bakarbashat</Person>
    <Person>Cole</Person>
    <Organization>al Qaeda Leadership While</Organization>
    <Person>Ariel Sharon’s</Person>
    <Location>Temple Mount</Location>
    <Location>Jerusalem.KSM</Location>
    <Organization>Sharon</Organization>
    <Date>May 12, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>268_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

of the alert, word had begun to spread that an attack against the United States 
was coming. KSM notes that it was generally well known by the summer of 
2001 that he was planning some kind of operation against the United States. 
Many were even aware that he had been preparing operatives to go to the 
United States, leading some to conclude that al Qaeda was planning a nearterm 
attack on U.S. soil. Moreover, Bin Ladin had made several remarks that 
summer hinting at an upcoming attack and generating rumors throughout the 
worldwide jihadist community. Bin Ladin routinely told important visitors to 
expect significant attacks against U.S. interests soon and, during a speech at the 
al Faruq camp, exhorted trainees to pray for the success of an attack involving 
20 martyrs.Others have confirmed hearing indications of an impending attack 
and have verified that such news, albeit without specific details, had spread 
across al Qaeda.180 

Although Bin Ladin’s top priority apparently was to attack the United 
States, others had a different view.The Taliban leaders put their main emphasis 
on the year’s military offensive against the Northern Alliance, an offensive 
that ordinarily would begin in the late spring or summer.They certainly hoped 
that this year’s offensive would finally finish off their old enemies,driving them 
from Afghanistan. From the Taliban’s perspective, an attack against the United 
States might be counterproductive. It might draw the Americans into the war 
against them, just when final victory seemed within their grasp.181 

There is evidence that Mullah Omar initially opposed a major al Qaeda 
operation directly against the United States in 2001.Furthermore,by July,with 
word spreading of a coming attack, a schism emerged among the senior leadership 
of al Qaeda. Several senior members reportedly agreed with Mullah 
Omar.Those who reportedly sided with Bin Ladin included Atef, Sulayman 
Abu Ghayth, and KSM. But those said to have opposed him were weighty figures 
in the organization—including Abu Hafs the Mauritanian, Sheikh Saeed 
al Masri, and Sayf al Adl. One senior al Qaeda operative claims to recall Bin 
Ladin arguing that attacks against the United States needed to be carried out 
immediately to support insurgency in the Israeli-occupied territories and 
protest the presence of U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia. Beyond these rhetorical 
appeals, Bin Ladin also reportedly thought an attack against the United States 
would benefit al Qaeda by attracting more suicide operatives, eliciting greater 
donations,and increasing the number of sympathizers willing to provide logistical 
assistance.182 

Mullah Omar is reported to have opposed this course of action for ideological 
reasons rather than out of fear of U.S.retaliation.He is said to have preferred 
for al Qaeda to attack Jews, not necessarily the United States. KSM 
contends that Omar faced pressure from the Pakistani government to keep 
al Qaeda from engaging in operations outside Afghanistan. Al Qaeda’s chief 
financial manager,Sheikh Saeed,argued that al Qaeda should defer to the Taliban’s 
wishes. Another source says that Sheikh Saeed opposed the operation, 
both out of deference to Omar and because he feared the U.S. response to an</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Jews</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Person>Abu Hafs</Person>
    <Person>Masri</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Taliban</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>Atef</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Omar</Person>
    <Misc>Faruq</Misc>
    <Person>Saeed</Person>
    <Person>Sayf al Adl</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Misc>Mauritanian</Misc>
    <Misc>Taliban’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda.180 Although</Misc>
    <Person>Mullah Omar.Those</Person>
    <Person>Sulayman Abu Ghayth</Person>
    <Misc>Israeli-occupied</Misc>
    <Location>U.S.retaliation.He</Location>
    <Person>Al Qaeda’s</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>269_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

attack.Abu Hafs the Mauritanian reportedly even wrote Bin Ladin a message 
basing opposition to the attacks on the Qur’an.183 

According to KSM, in late August, when the operation was fully planned, 
Bin Ladin formally notified the al Qaeda Shura Council that a major attack 
against the United States would take place in the coming weeks.When some 
council members objected, Bin Ladin countered that Mullah Omar lacked 
authority to prevent al Qaeda from conducting jihad outside Afghanistan. 
Though most of the Shura Council reportedly disagreed,Bin Ladin persisted. 
The attacks went forward.184 

The story of dissension within al Qaeda regarding the 9/11 attacks is probably 
incomplete.The information on which the account is based comes from 
sources who were not privy to the full scope of al Qaeda and Taliban planning. 
Bin Ladin and Atef, however, probably would have known, at least, that 

• 
The general Taliban offensive against the Northern Alliance would 
rely on al Qaeda military support. 
• 
Another significant al Qaeda operation was making progress during 
the summer—a plot to assassinate the Northern Alliance leader, 
Ahmed Shah Massoud.The operatives, disguised as journalists, were 
in Massoud’s camp and prepared to kill him sometime in August.Their 
appointment to see him was delayed.185 
But on September 9,the Massoud assassination took place.The delayed Taliban 
offensive against the Northern Alliance was apparently coordinated to 
begin as soon as he was killed, and it got under way on September 10.186 

As they deliberated earlier in the year, Bin Ladin and Atef would likely have 
remembered that Mullah Omar was dependent on them for the Massoud assassination 
and for vital support in the Taliban military operations.KSM remembers 
Atef telling him that al Qaeda had an agreement with the Taliban to 
eliminate Massoud, after which the Taliban would begin an offensive to take 
over Afghanistan.Atef hoped Massoud’s death would also appease the Taliban 
when the 9/11 attacks happened.There are also some scant indications that 
Omar may have been reconciled to the 9/11 attacks by the time they 
occurred.187 

Moving to Departure Positions 

In the days just before 9/11, the hijackers returned leftover funds to al Qaeda 
and assembled in their departure cities.They sent the excess funds by wire transfer 
to Hawsawi in the UAE, about $26,000 altogether.188 

The hijackers targeting American Airlines Flight 77, to depart from Dulles, 
migrated from New Jersey to Laurel,Maryland,about 20 miles from Washington, 
D.C.They stayed in a motel during the first week in September and spent</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Person>Mullah Omar</Person>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>Maryland</Location>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Person>Atef</Person>
    <Person>Omar</Person>
    <Location>UAE</Location>
    <Person>Hawsawi</Person>
    <Organization>Northern Alliance</Organization>
    <Organization>Massoud</Organization>
    <Location>Dulles</Location>
    <Misc>Mauritanian</Misc>
    <Misc>Qur’an.183 According</Misc>
    <Organization>al Qaeda Shura Council</Organization>
    <Organization>Shura Council</Organization>
    <Person>Ahmed Shah Massoud.The</Person>
    <Location>Massoud’s</Location>
    <Location>Laurel</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>26_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

At 8:54, the aircraft deviated from its assigned course, turning south.Two 
minutes later the transponder was turned off and even primary radar contact 
with the aircraft was lost.The Indianapolis Air Traffic Control Center repeatedly 
tried and failed to contact the aircraft.American Airlines dispatchers also 
tried, without success.54 

At 9:00,American Airlines ExecutiveVice President Gerard Arpey learned 
that communications had been lost with American 77.This was now the second 
American aircraft in trouble. He ordered all American Airlines flights in 
the Northeast that had not taken off to remain on the ground. Shortly before 
9:10, suspecting that American 77 had been hijacked, American headquarters 
concluded that the second aircraft to hit the World Trade Center might have 
been Flight 77.After learning that United Airlines was missing a plane,American 
Airlines headquarters extended the ground stop nationwide.55 

At 9:12,Renee May called her mother,Nancy May,in Las Vegas. She said 
her flight was being hijacked by six individuals who had moved them to the 
rear of the plane. She asked her mother to alert American Airlines. Nancy May 
and her husband promptly did so.56 

At some point between 9:16 and 9:26, Barbara Olson called her husband, 
Ted Olson, the solicitor general of the United States. She reported that the 
flight had been hijacked,and the hijackers had knives and box cutters.She further 
indicated that the hijackers were not aware of her phone call,and that they 
had put all the passengers in the back of the plane. About a minute into the 
conversation, the call was cut off. Solicitor General Olson tried unsuccessfully 
to reach Attorney General John Ashcroft.57 

Shortly after the first call, Barbara Olson reached her husband again. She 
reported that the pilot had announced that the flight had been hijacked, and 
she asked her husband what she should tell the captain to do.Ted Olson asked 
for her location and she replied that the aircraft was then flying over houses. 
Another passenger told her they were traveling northeast.The Solicitor General 
then informed his wife of the two previous hijackings and crashes.She did 
not display signs of panic and did not indicate any awareness of an impending 
crash.At that point,the second call was cut off.58 

At 9:29, the autopilot on American 77 was disengaged; the aircraft was at 
7,000 feet and approximately 38 miles west of the Pentagon.59 At 9:32, controllers 
at the Dulles Terminal Radar Approach Control “observed a primary 
radar target tracking eastbound at a high rate of speed.” This was later determined 
to have been Flight 77. 

At 9:34,Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport advised the Secret Service 
of an unknown aircraft heading in the direction of the White House.American 
77 was then 5 miles west-southwest of the Pentagon and began a 
330-degree turn.At the end of the turn,it was descending through 2,200 feet, 
pointed toward the Pentagon and downtown Washington.The hijacker pilot then 
advanced the throttles to maximum power and dove toward the Pentagon.60</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Las Vegas</Location>
    <Person>Nancy May</Person>
    <Person>Ted Olson</Person>
    <Person>Barbara Olson</Person>
    <Organization>Airlines</Organization>
    <Person>Renee May</Person>
    <Organization>Indianapolis Air Traffic Control Center</Organization>
    <Misc>PLANES” At</Misc>
    <Person>Gerard Arpey</Person>
    <Location>Northeast</Location>
    <Person>Olson</Person>
    <Person>John Ashcroft.57 Shortly</Person>
    <Misc>Pentagon.59</Misc>
    <Location>Dulles Terminal Radar Approach Control</Location>
    <Person>Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport</Person>
    <Organization>White House.American</Organization>
    <Misc>Washington.The</Misc>
    <Location>Pentagon.60</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>270_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE ATTACK LOOMS 

time working out at a gym. On the final night before the attacks, they lodged 
at a hotel in Herndon,Virginia, close to the airport.189 

Further north, the hijackers targeting United Airlines Flight 93, to depart 
from Newark, gathered in that city from their base in Florida on September 7. 
Just after midnight on September 8–9,Jarrah received a speeding ticket in Maryland 
as he headed north on I-95.He joined the rest of his team at their hotel.190 

Atta was still busy coordinating the teams. On September 7, he flew from 
Fort Lauderdale to Baltimore, presumably to meet with the Flight 77 team in 
Laurel. On September 9, he flew from Baltimore to Boston. By then, Shehhi 
had arrived there,and Atta was seen with him at his hotel.The next day,Atta 
picked up Omari at another hotel, and the two drove to Portland, Maine, for 
reasons that remain unknown. In the early morning hours of September 11, 
they boarded a commuter flight to Boston to connect to American Airlines 
Flight 11.The two spent their last night pursuing ordinary activities: making 
ATM withdrawals, eating pizza, and shopping at a convenience store. Their 
three fellow hijackers for Flight 11 stayed together in a hotel in Newton,Massachusetts, 
just outside of Boston.191 

Shehhi and his team targeting United Airlines Flight 175 from Logan Airport 
spent their last hours at two Boston hotels.192 The plan that started with 
a proposal by KSM in 1996 had evolved to overcome numerous obstacles. 
Now 19 men waited in nondescript hotel rooms to board four flights the next 
morning.</docText>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Location>Maryland</Location>
    <Person>Shehhi</Person>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Location>Florida</Location>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Misc>ATM</Misc>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Location>Portland</Location>
    <Person>Omari</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Location>Fort Lauderdale</Location>
    <Location>Baltimore</Location>
    <Location>Maine</Location>
    <Location>Herndon</Location>
    <Location>Massachusetts</Location>
    <Person>Laurel</Person>
    <Location>Newton</Location>
    <Person>Boston.191 Shehhi</Person>
    <Person>Logan Airport</Person>
  </document>
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    <docID>271_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>8 

“THE SYSTEM WAS 
BLINKING RED” 

8.1 THE SUMMER OF THREAT 
As 2001 began,counterterrorism officials were receiving frequent but fragmentary 
reports about threats. Indeed, there appeared to be possible threats almost 
everywhere the United States had interests—including at home. 

To understand how the escalation in threat reporting was handled in the 
summer of 2001, it is useful to understand how threat information in general 
is collected and conveyed. Information is collected through several methods, 
including signals intelligence and interviews of human sources, and gathered 
into intelligence reports. Depending on the source and nature of the reporting, 
these reports may be highly classified—and therefore tightly held—or less 
sensitive and widely disseminated to state and local law enforcement agencies. 
Threat reporting must be disseminated, either through individual reports or 
through threat advisories. Such advisories, intended to alert their recipients, 
may address a specific threat or be a general warning. 

Because the amount of reporting is so voluminous,only a select fraction can 
be chosen for briefing the president and senior officials. During 2001, Director 
of Central Intelligence George Tenet was briefed regularly regarding threats 
and other operational information relating to Usama Bin Ladin.1 He in turn 
met daily with President Bush, who was briefed by the CIA through what is 
known as the President’s Daily Brief (PDB). Each PDB consists of a series of 
six to eight relatively short articles or briefs covering a broad array of topics; 
CIA staff decides which subjects are the most important on any given day. 
There were more than 40 intelligence articles in the PDBs from January 20 
to September 10, 2001, that related to Bin Ladin. The PDB is considered 
highly sensitive and is distributed to only a handful of high-level officials.2 

The Senior Executive Intelligence Brief (SEIB), distributed to a broader 
group of officials, has a similar format and generally covers the same subjects 
as the PDB. It usually contains less information so as to protect sources and</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence</Organization>
    <Person>George Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>Senior Executive Intelligence Brief</Organization>
    <Organization>PDB</Organization>
    <Organization>SEIB</Organization>
    <Date>September 10, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>President’s Daily Brief</Organization>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin.1</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

methods. Like their predecessors, the Attorney General, the FBI Director, and 
Richard Clarke,the National Security Council (NSC) counterterrorism coordinator, 
all received the SEIB, not the PDB.3 Clarke and his staff had extensive 
access to terrorism reporting, but they did not have access to internal, nondisseminated 
information at the National Security Agency (NSA), CIA, or FBI. 

The Drumbeat Begins 

In the spring of 2001, the level of reporting on terrorist threats and planned 
attacks increased dramatically to its highest level since the millennium alert.At 
the end of March, the intelligence community disseminated a terrorist threat 
advisory, indicating a heightened threat of Sunni extremist terrorist attacks 
against U.S. facilities, personnel, and other interests.4 

On March 23, in connection with discussions about possibly reopening 
Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House, Clarke warned National 
Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice that domestic or foreign terrorists might 
use a truck bomb—their “weapon of choice”—on Pennsylvania Avenue.That 
would result,he said, in the destruction of the West Wing and parts of the residence.
5 He also told her that he thought there were terrorist cells within the 
United States, including al Qaeda. 

The next week, Rice was briefed on the activities of Abu Zubaydah and on 
CIA efforts to locate him.As pointed out in chapter 6,Abu Zubaydah had been 
a major figure in the millennium plots.Over the next few weeks,the CIA repeatedly 
issued warnings—including calls from DCI Tenet to Clarke—that Abu 
Zubaydah was planning an operation in the near future.One report cited a source 
indicating that Abu Zubaydah was planning an attack in a country that CIA analysts 
thought might be Israel, or perhaps Saudi Arabia or India. Clarke relayed 
these reports to Rice.6 

In response to these threats, the FBI sent a message to all its field offices on 
April 13, summarizing reporting to date. It asked the offices to task all 
resources, including human sources and electronic databases, for any information 
pertaining to “current operational activities relating to Sunni extremism.” 
It did not suggest that there was a domestic threat.7 

The interagency Counterterrorism Security Group (CSG) that Clarke 
chaired discussed the Abu Zubaydah reports on April 19.The next day,a briefing 
to top officials reported “Bin Ladin planning multiple operations.” When 
the deputies discussed al Qaeda policy on April 30, they began with a briefing 
on the threat.8 

In May 2001, the drumbeat of reporting grew louder with reports to top 
officials that “Bin Ladin public profile may presage attack”and “Bin Ladin network’s 
plans advancing.” In early May, a walk-in to the FBI claimed there was 
a plan to launch attacks on London,Boston,and New York.Attorney General 
John Ashcroft was briefed by the CIA on May 15 regarding al Qaeda generally 
and the current threat reporting specifically. The next day brought a report</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Agency</Organization>
    <Location>London</Location>
    <Misc>Sunni</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>India</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Location>Pennsylvania</Location>
    <Person>Sunni</Person>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Richard Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>John Ashcroft</Person>
    <Organization>Rice</Organization>
    <Organization>SEIB</Organization>
    <Location>Pennsylvania Avenue</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice</Organization>
    <Person>PDB.3 Clarke</Person>
    <Misc>Drumbeat Begins</Misc>
    <Misc>Avenue.That</Misc>
    <Organization>West Wing</Organization>
    <Organization>interagency Counterterrorism Security Group</Organization>
    <Organization>New York.Attorney</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

that a phone call to a U.S.embassy had warned that Bin Ladin supporters were 
planning an attack in the United States using “high explosives.” On May 17, 
based on the previous day’s report, the first item on the CSG’s agenda was 
“UBL: Operation Planned in U.S.”9 The anonymous caller’s tip could not be 
corroborated. 

Late May brought reports of a possible hostage plot against Americans abroad 
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 operatives might opt 
to hijack an aircraft or storm a U.S. embassy. This report led to a Federal Aviation 
Administration (FAA) information circular to airlines noting the potential 
for “an airline hijacking to free terrorists incarcerated in the United States.” 
Other reporting mentioned that Abu Zubaydah was planning an attack, possibly 
against Israel, and expected to carry out several more if things went well. 
On May 24 alone,counterterrorism officials grappled with reports alleging plots 
in Yemen and Italy, as well as a report about a cell in Canada that an anonymous 
caller had claimed might be planning an attack against the United States.10 

Reports similar to many of these were made available to President Bush in 
morning intelligence briefings with DCI Tenet,usually attended by Vice President 
Dick Cheney and National Security Advisor Rice.While these briefings 
discussed general threats to attack America and American interests, the specific 
threats mentioned in these briefings were all overseas. 

On May 29, Clarke suggested that Rice ask DCI Tenet what more the 
United States could do to stop Abu Zubaydah from launching “a series of major 
terrorist attacks,” probably on Israeli targets, but possibly on U.S. facilities. 
Clarke wrote to Rice and her deputy, Stephen Hadley, “When these attacks 
occur, as they likely will, we will wonder what more we could have done to 
stop them.” In May, CIA Counterterrorist Center (CTC) Chief Cofer Black 
told Rice that the current threat level was a 7 on a scale of 1 to 10, as compared 
to an 8 during the millennium.11 

High Probability of Near-Term “Spectacular” Attacks 

Threat reports surged in June and July,reaching an even higher peak of urgency. 
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.A June 12 CIA report 
passing along biographical background information on several terrorists mentioned, 
in commenting on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, that he was recruiting 
people to travel to the United States to meet with colleagues already there so 
that they might conduct terrorist attacks on Bin Ladin’s behalf. On June 22, 
the CIA notified all its station chiefs about intelligence suggesting a possible 
al Qaeda suicide attack on a U.S.target over the next few days.DCI Tenet asked 
that all U.S. ambassadors be briefed.12</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Federal Aviation Administration</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Misc>Americans</Misc>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Location>Kuwait</Location>
    <Person>Omar Abdel Rahman</Person>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Rome</Location>
    <Organization>CTC</Organization>
    <Misc>G-8</Misc>
    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Stephen Hadley</Person>
    <Location>Bahrain</Location>
    <Person>Dick Cheney</Person>
    <Organization>Tenet</Organization>
    <Misc>Israeli</Misc>
    <Organization>DCI Tenet</Organization>
    <Location>Italy</Location>
    <Misc>CSG’s</Misc>
    <Organization>“UBL: Operation Planned</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.”9</Location>
    <Location>United States.” Other</Location>
    <Organization>United States.10 Reports similar</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Rice.While</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Misc>Near-Term</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

That same day, the State Department notified all embassies of the terrorist 
threat and updated its worldwide public warning. In June, the State Department 
initiated the Visa Express program in Saudi Arabia as a security measure, 
in order to keep long lines of foreigners away from vulnerable embassy spaces. 
The program permitted visa applications to be made through travel agencies, 
instead of directly at the embassy or consulate.13 

A terrorist threat advisory distributed in late June indicated a high probability 
of near-term “spectacular” terrorist attacks resulting in numerous casualties.
Other reports’titles warned,“Bin Ladin Attacks May be Imminent”and 
“Bin Ladin and Associates Making Near-Term Threats.” The latter reported 
multiple attacks planned over the coming days, including a “severe blow” 
against U.S. and Israeli “interests” during the next two weeks.14 

On June 21,near the height of the threat reporting,U.S.Central Command 
raised the force protection condition level for U.S. troops in six countries to 
the highest possible level,Delta.The U.S.Fifth Fleet moved out of its port in 
Bahrain,and a U.S.Marine Corps exercise in Jordan was halted.U.S.embassies 
in the Persian Gulf conducted an emergency security review, and the embassy 
in Yemen was closed.The CSG had foreign emergency response teams, known 
as FESTs, ready to move on four hours’ notice and kept up the terrorism alert 
posture on a “rolling 24 hour basis.”15 

On June 25, Clarke warned Rice and Hadley that six separate intelligence 
reports showed al Qaeda personnel warning of a pending attack.An Arabic television 
station reported Bin Ladin’s pleasure with al Qaeda leaders who were 
saying that the next weeks “will witness important surprises” and that U.S. and 
Israeli interests will be targeted.Al Qaeda also released a new recruitment and 
fund-raising tape. Clarke wrote that this was all too sophisticated to be merely 
a psychological operation to keep the United States on edge, and the CIA 
agreed.The intelligence reporting consistently described the upcoming attacks 
as occurring on a calamitous level, indicating that they would cause the world 
to be in turmoil and that they would consist of possible multiple—but not necessarily 
simultaneous—attacks.16 

On June 28, Clarke wrote Rice that the pattern of al Qaeda activity indicating 
attack planning over the past six weeks “had reached a crescendo.”“A 
series of new reports continue to convince me and analysts at State, CIA, DIA 
[Defense Intelligence Agency], and NSA that a major terrorist attack or series 
of attacks is likely in July,” he noted. One al Qaeda intelligence report warned 
that something “very, very, very, very” big was about to happen, and most of 
Bin Ladin’s network was reportedly anticipating the attack. In late June, the 
CIA ordered all its station chiefs to share information on al Qaeda with their 
host governments and to push for immediate disruptions of cells.17 

The headline of a June 30 briefing to top officials was stark:“Bin Ladin Planning 
High-Profile Attacks.” The report stated that Bin Ladin operatives 
expected near-term attacks to have dramatic consequences of catastrophic pro</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Misc>Arabic</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Misc>Bin Ladin’s</Misc>
    <Location>Persian Gulf</Location>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Organization>Defense Intelligence Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>DIA</Organization>
    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>State</Organization>
    <Location>Bahrain</Location>
    <Misc>Israeli</Misc>
    <Organization>Visa Express</Organization>
    <Person>Near-Term Threats.”</Person>
    <Organization>U.S.Central Command</Organization>
    <Organization>U.S.Marine Corps</Organization>
    <Person>Ladin Planning High-Profile</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

portions.That same day,Saudi Arabia declared its highest level of terror alert. 
Despite evidence of delays possibly caused by heightened U.S. security, the 
planning for attacks was continuing.18 

On July 2, the FBI Counterterrorism Division sent a message to federal 
agencies and state and local law enforcement agencies summarizing information 
regarding threats from Bin Ladin. It warned 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.” 
Despite the general warnings, the message further stated, “The 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 recipients to “exercise extreme vigilance” 
and “report suspicious activities” to the FBI. It did not suggest specific actions 
that they should take to prevent attacks.19 

Disruption operations against al Qaeda–affiliated cells were launched 
involving 20 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. Clarke and others told us 
of a particular concern about possible attacks on the Fourth of July. After it 
passed uneventfully, the CSG decided to maintain the alert.20 

To enlist more international help,Vice President Cheney contacted Saudi 
Crown Prince Abdullah on July 5. Hadley apparently called European counterparts, 
while Clarke worked with senior officials in the Gulf. In late July, 
because of threats, Italy closed the airspace over Genoa and mounted antiaircraft 
batteries at the Genoa airport during the G-8 summit, which President 
Bush attended.21 

At home, the CSG arranged for the CIA to brief intelligence and security 
officials from several domestic agencies. On July 5, representatives from the 
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the FAA, the Coast Guard, the 
Secret Service, Customs, the CIA, and the FBI met with Clarke to discuss the 
current threat. Attendees report that they were told not to disseminate the 
threat information they received at the meeting.They interpreted this direction 
to mean that although they could brief their superiors,they could not send 
out advisories to the field.An NSC official recalls a somewhat different emphasis,
saying that attendees were asked to take the information back to their home 
agencies and “do what you can” with it, subject to classification and distribution 
restrictions. A representative from the INS asked for a summary of the 
information that she could share with field offices. She never received one.22 

That same day, the CIA briefed Attorney General Ashcroft on the al Qaeda 
threat, warning that a significant terrorist attack was imminent. Ashcroft was 
told that preparations for multiple attacks were in late stages or already com</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Immigration and Naturalization Service</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Gulf</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Saudi Arabia</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Person>Cheney</Person>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Misc>G-8</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
    <Person>Abdullah</Person>
    <Organization>Coast Guard</Organization>
    <Misc>European</Misc>
    <Organization>FBI Counterterrorism Division</Organization>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin.”</Person>
    <Location>United States.”</Location>
    <Location>Italy</Location>
    <Organization>Saudi Crown</Organization>
    <Organization>Genoa</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

plete and that little additional warning could be expected. The briefing 
addressed only threats outside the United States.23 

The next day, the CIA representative told the CSG that al Qaeda members 
believed the upcoming attack would be “spectacular,” qualitatively different 
from anything they had done to date.24 

Apparently as a result of the July 5 meeting with Clarke, the interagency 
committee on federal building security was tasked to examine security meas-
ures.This committee met on July 9, when 37 officials from 27 agencies and 
organizations were briefed on the “current threat level” in the United States. 
They were told that not only the threat reports from abroad but also the recent 
convictions in the East Africa bombings trial, the conviction of Ahmed 
Ressam,and the just-returned Khobar Towers indictments reinforced the need 
to “exercise extreme vigilance.” Attendees were expected to determine 
whether their respective agencies needed enhanced security measures.25 

On July 18, 2001, the State Department provided a warning to the public 
regarding possible terrorist attacks in the Arabian Peninsula.26 

Acting FBI Director Thomas Pickard told us he had one of his periodic conference 
calls with all special agents in charge on July 19. He said one of the 
items he mentioned was the need,in light of increased threat reporting,to have 
evidence response teams ready to move at a moment’s notice, in case of an 
attack.27 He did not task field offices to try to determine whether any plots 
were being considered within the United States or to take any action to disrupt 
any such plots. 

In mid-July, reporting started to indicate that Bin Ladin’s plans had been 
delayed, maybe for as long as two months, but not abandoned. On July 23, the 
lead item for CSG discussion was still the al Qaeda threat,and it included mention 
of suspected terrorist travel to the United States.28 

On July 31, an FAA circular appeared alerting the aviation community to 
“reports of possible near-term terrorist operations . . . particularly on the Arabian 
Peninsula and/or Israel.” It stated that the FAA had no credible evidence 
of specific plans to attack U.S. civil aviation, though it noted that some of the 
“currently active” terrorist groups were known to “plan and train for hijackings”
and were able to build and conceal sophisticated explosive devices in luggage 
and consumer products.29 

Tenet told us that in his world “the system was blinking red.” By late July, 
Tenet said, it could not “get any worse.”30 Not everyone was convinced. Some 
asked whether all these threats might just be deception. On June 30, the SEIB 
contained an article titled “Bin Ladin Threats Are Real.” Yet Hadley told Tenet 
in July that Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz questioned the reporting. 
Perhaps Bin Ladin was trying to study U.S. reactions.Tenet replied that he 
had already addressed the Defense Department’s questions on this point; the 
reporting was convincing.To give a sense of his anxiety at the time, one senior</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Bin Ladin’s</Person>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Khobar Towers</Location>
    <Location>Arabian Peninsula</Location>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Thomas Pickard</Person>
    <Organization>SEIB</Organization>
    <Person>Paul Wolfowitz</Person>
    <Person>Ahmed Ressam</Person>
    <Misc>Arabian</Misc>
    <Misc>United States.23</Misc>
    <Misc>United States.28 On</Misc>
    <Location>Israel.” It</Location>
    <Misc>Real.” Yet Hadley</Misc>
    <Date>July 18, 2001</Date>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

official in the Counterterrorist Center told us that he and a colleague were considering 
resigning in order to go public with their concerns.31 

The Calm Before the Storm 

On July 27, Clarke informed Rice and Hadley that the spike in intelligence 
about a near-term al Qaeda 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 “but will still happen.”32 

On August 1, the FBI issued an advisory that in light of the increased volume 
of threat reporting and the upcoming anniversary of the East Africa 
embassy bombings, increased attention should be paid to security planning. It 
noted that although most of the reporting indicated a potential for attacks on 

U.S. interests abroad, the possibility of an attack in the United States could not 
be discounted.33 
On August 3, the intelligence community issued an advisory concluding 
that the threat of impending al Qaeda attacks would likely continue indefinitely. 
Citing threats in the Arabian Peninsula, Jordan, Israel, and Europe, the 
advisory suggested that al Qaeda was lying in wait and searching for gaps in 
security before moving forward with the planned attacks.34 

During the spring and summer of 2001,President Bush had on several occasions 
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.Two CIA analysts involved in preparing 
this briefing article believed it represented an opportunity to communicate 
their view that the threat of a Bin Ladin attack in the United States remained 
both current and serious.35The result was an article in the August 6 Presidential 
Daily Brief titled “Bin Ladin Determined to Strike in US.” It was the 36th 
PDB item briefed so far that year that related to Bin Ladin or al Qaeda, and 
the first devoted to the possibility of an attack in the United States. 

The President told us the August 6 report was historical in nature.President 
Bush said the article told him that al Qaeda was dangerous, which he said he 
had known since he had become President. The President said Bin Ladin had 
long been talking about his desire to attack America. He recalled some operational 
data on the FBI, and remembered thinking it was heartening that 70 
investigations were under way.As best he could recollect, Rice had mentioned 
that the Yemenis’ surveillance of a federal building in New York had been 
looked into in May and June, but there was no actionable intelligence. 

He did not recall discussing the August 6 report with the Attorney General 
or whether Rice had done so. He said that if his advisers had told him there 
was a cell in the United States, they would have moved to take care of it. That 
never happened.36 

Although the following day’s SEIB repeated the title of this PDB, it did not 
contain the reference to hijackings, the alert in New York, the alleged casing</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Europe</Location>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Jordan</Location>
    <Location>Israel</Location>
    <Location>Arabian Peninsula</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Organization>PDB</Organization>
    <Misc>Calm Before the Storm On</Misc>
    <Location>US.”</Location>
    <Misc>Yemenis’</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>278_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

The following is the text of an item from the Presidential Daily Brief received by 
President George W.Bush on August 6,2001.37 Redacted material is indicated 
by brackets. 

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,accord


ing to a [—] service. 

An Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) operative told an [—] service 

at the same time that Bin Ladin was planning to exploit the oper


ative’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 some 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-Qua’ da members found</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Ramzi Yousef</Person>
    <Location>Nairobi</Location>
    <Location>Dar es Salaam</Location>
    <Misc>Egyptian</Misc>
    <Misc>Islamic Jihad</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>Kenya</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin’s</Organization>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Date>August 6,2001</Date>
    <Person>Ahmed Ressam</Person>
    <Location>Tanzania</Location>
    <Location>Al-Qa’ida</Location>
    <Organization>EIJ</Organization>
    <Organization>Presidential Daily Brief</Organization>
    <Person>George W.Bush</Person>
    <Misc>America.”</Misc>
    <Date>1997 and 1998</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>279_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

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 [—] service in 1998 saying that Bin Ladin 
wanted to hijack a US aircraft to gain the release of “Blind Shaykh” 
‘Umar ‘Abd al-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 of Bin Ladin supporters was in the US planning 
attacks with explosives. 

of buildings in New York,the threat phoned in to the embassy,or the fact that 
the FBI had approximately 70 ongoing bin Ladin–related investigations.38 No 
CSG or other NSC meeting was held to discuss the possible threat of a strike 
in the United States as a result of this report. 

Late in the month, a foreign service reported that Abu Zubaydah was considering 
mounting terrorist attacks in the United States, after postponing possible 
operations in Europe. No targets, timing, or method of attack were 
provided.39 

We have found no indication of any further discussion before September 
11 among the President and his top advisers of the possibility of a threat of an 
al Qaeda attack in the United States. DCI Tenet visited President Bush in 
Crawford,Texas, on August 17 and participated in PDB briefings of the President 
between August 31 (after the President had returned to Washington) and 
September 10. But Tenet does not recall any discussions with the President of 
the domestic threat during this period.40 

Most of the intelligence community recognized in the summer of 2001 that 
the number and severity of threat reports were unprecedented. Many officials 
told us that they knew something terrible was planned, and they were desperate 
to stop it. Despite their large number, the threats received contained few</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Texas</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Location>Europe</Location>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Organization>Tenet</Organization>
    <Misc>Muslim-American</Misc>
    <Organization>EIJ</Organization>
    <Person>Shaykh”</Person>
    <Misc>US-held</Misc>
    <Person>Bin Ladin-related</Person>
    <Location>Crawford</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>27_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

At 9:37:46,American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon,traveling 
at approximately 530 miles per hour.61 All on board, as well as many civilian 
and military personnel in the building, were killed. 

The Battle for United 93 

At 8:42, United Airlines Flight 93 took off from Newark (New Jersey) Liberty 
International Airport bound for San Francisco.The aircraft was piloted by Captain 
Jason Dahl and First Officer Leroy Homer,and there were five flight attendants. 
Thirty-seven passengers, including the hijackers, boarded the plane. 
Scheduled to depart the gate at 8:00, the Boeing 757’s takeoff was delayed 
because of the airport’s typically heavy morning traffic.62 

The hijackers had planned to take flights scheduled to depart at 7:45 (American 
11), 8:00 (United 175 and United 93), and 8:10 (American 77). Three of 
the flights had actually taken off within 10 to 15 minutes of their planned 
departure times. United 93 would ordinarily have taken off about 15 minutes 
after pulling away from the gate.When it left the ground at 8:42, the flight was 
running more than 25 minutes late.63 

As United 93 left Newark, the flight’s crew members were unaware of the 
hijacking of American 11.Around 9:00,the FAA,American,and United were 
facing the staggering realization of apparent multiple hijackings. At 9:03, they 
would see another aircraft strike the World Trade Center. Crisis managers at 
the FAA and the airlines did not yet act to warn other aircraft.64 At the same 
time,Boston Center realized that a message transmitted just before 8:25 by the 
hijacker pilot of American 11 included the phrase,“We have some planes.”65 

No one at the FAA or the airlines that day had ever dealt with multiple 
hijackings.Such a plot had not been carried out anywhere in the world in more 
than 30 years,and never in the United States.As news of the hijackings filtered 
through the FAA and the airlines, it does not seem to have occurred to their 
leadership that they needed to alert other aircraft in the air that they too might 
be at risk.66 

United 175 was hijacked between 8:42 and 8:46, and awareness of that 
hijacking began to spread after 8:51. American 77 was hijacked between 8:51 
and 8:54. By 9:00, FAA and airline officials began to comprehend that attackers 
were going after multiple aircraft. American Airlines’ nationwide ground 
stop between 9:05 and 9:10 was followed by a United Airlines ground stop. 
FAA controllers at Boston Center, which had tracked the first two hijackings, 
requested at 9:07 that Herndon Command Center “get messages to airborne 
aircraft to increase security for the cockpit.”There is no evidence that Herndon 
took such action. Boston Center immediately began speculating about 
other aircraft that might be in danger,leading them to worry about a transcontinental 
flight—Delta 1989—that in fact was not hijacked.At 9:19,the FAA’s 
New England regional office called Herndon and asked that Cleveland Center 
advise Delta 1989 to use extra cockpit security.67</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Organization>Herndon Command Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Boston Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Cleveland Center</Organization>
    <Person>Leroy Homer</Person>
    <Organization>Herndon</Organization>
    <Person>Jason Dahl</Person>
    <Organization>Battle for United</Organization>
    <Organization>Liberty International Airport</Organization>
    <Misc>San Francisco.The</Misc>
    <Organization>FAA’s New England</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>280_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

specifics regarding time, place, method, or target. Most suggested that attacks 
were planned against targets overseas; others indicated threats against unspecified 
“U.S. interests.” We cannot say for certain whether these reports, as dramatic 
as they were, related to the 9/11 attacks. 

Government Response to the Threats 

National Security Advisor Rice told us that the CSG was the “nerve center” 
for running the crisis, although other senior officials were involved over the 
course of the summer. In addition to his daily meetings with President Bush, 
and weekly meetings to go over other issues with Rice,Tenet was speaking regularly 
with Secretary of State Colin Powell and Secretary of Defense Donald 
Rumsfeld. The foreign policy principals routinely talked on the telephone 
every day on a variety of topics.41 

Hadley told us that before 9/11, he and Rice did not feel they had the job 
of coordinating domestic agencies.They felt that Clarke and the CSG (part of 
the NSC) were the NSC’s bridge between foreign and domestic threats.42 

There was a clear disparity in the levels of response to foreign versus domestic 
threats. Numerous actions were taken overseas to disrupt possible attacks— 
enlisting foreign partners to upset terrorist plans, closing embassies, moving 
military assets out of the way of possible harm.Far less was done domestically— 
in part, surely, because to the extent that specifics did exist, they pertained to 
threats overseas.As noted earlier,a threat against the embassy in Yemen quickly 
resulted in its closing.Possible domestic threats were more vague.When reports 
did not specify where the attacks were to take place,officials presumed that they 
would again be overseas, though they did not rule out a target in the United 
States. Each of the FBI threat advisories made this point.43 

Clarke mentioned to National Security Advisor Rice at least twice that al 
Qaeda sleeper cells were likely in the United States. In January 2001, Clarke 
forwarded a strategy paper to Rice warning that al Qaeda had a presence in 
the United States. He noted that two key al Qaeda members in the Jordanian 
cell involved in the millennium plot were naturalized U.S.citizens and that one 
jihadist suspected in the East Africa bombings had “informed the FBI that an 
extensive network of al Qida ‘sleeper agents’ currently exists in the US.” He 
added that Ressam’s abortive December 1999 attack revealed al Qaeda supporters 
in the United States.44 His analysis, however, was based not on new 
threat reporting but on past experience. 

The September 11 attacks fell into the void between the foreign and domestic 
threats.The foreign intelligence agencies were watching overseas, alert to 
foreign threats to U.S. interests there.The domestic agencies were waiting for 
evidence of a domestic threat from sleeper cells within the United States. No 
one was looking for a foreign threat to domestic targets.The threat that was 
coming was not from sleeper cells. It was foreign—but from foreigners who 
had infiltrated into the United States.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Location>East Africa</Location>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Person>Hadley</Person>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Donald Rumsfeld</Person>
    <Misc>Jordanian</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Colin Powell</Person>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Rice</Organization>
    <Misc>NSC’s</Misc>
    <Misc>U.S.citizens</Misc>
    <Person>Qida</Person>
    <Misc>US.” He</Misc>
    <Location>United States.44 His</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>281_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

A second cause of this disparity in response is that domestic agencies did 
not know what to do,and no one gave them direction.Cressey told us that the 
CSG did not tell the agencies how to respond to the threats.He noted that the 
agencies that were operating overseas did not need direction on how to 
respond; they had experience with such threats and had a “playbook.” In contrast,
the domestic agencies did not have a game plan.Neither the NSC (including 
the CSG) nor anyone else instructed them to create one.45 

This lack of direction was evident in the July 5 meeting with representatives 
from the domestic agencies.The briefing focused on overseas threats.The 
domestic agencies were not questioned about how they planned to address the 
threat and were not told what was expected of them. Indeed, as noted earlier, 
they were specifically told they could not issue advisories based on the brief-
ing.46The domestic agencies’limited response indicates that they did not perceive 
a call to action. 

Clarke reflected a different perspective in an email to Rice on September 
15, 2001. He summarized the steps taken by the CSG to alert domestic agencies 
to the possibility of an attack in the United States. Clarke concluded that 
domestic agencies, including the FAA, knew that the CSG believed a major al 
Qaeda attack was coming and could be in the United States. 

Although the FAA had authority to issue security directives mandating new 
security procedures, none of the few that were released during the summer of 
2001 increased security at checkpoints or on board aircraft.The information 
circulars mostly urged air carriers to “exercise prudence” and be alert. Prior to 
9/11, the FAA did present a CD-ROM to air carriers and airport authorities 
describing the increased threat to civil aviation.The presentation mentioned 
the possibility of suicide hijackings but said that “fortunately, we have no indication 
that any group is currently thinking in that direction.”47The FAA conducted 
27 special security briefings for specific air carriers between May 1, 
2001,and September 11,2001.Two of these briefings discussed the hijacking 
threat overseas. None discussed the possibility of suicide hijackings or the use 
of aircraft as weapons. No new security measures were instituted.48 

Rice told us she understood that 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 staff document at 
the time describes such a tasking as having occurred in late June but does not 
indicate whether it was generated by the NSC or the FBI. Other than the previously 
described April 13 communication sent to all FBI field offices, however,
the FBI could not find any record of having received such a directive.The 
April 13 document asking field offices to gather information on Sunni 
extremism did not mention any possible threat within the United States and 
did not order surveillance of suspected operatives.The NSC did not specify 
what the FBI’s directives should contain and did not review what had been 
issued earlier.49</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Misc>Sunni</Misc>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Organization>CSG</Organization>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Date>September 11,2001</Date>
    <Date>September 
15, 2001</Date>
    <Date>May 1, 
2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>282_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

Acting FBI Director Pickard told us that in addition to his July 19 conference 
call, he mentioned the heightened terrorist threat in individual calls with 
the special agents in charge of field offices during their annual performance 
review discussions. In speaking with agents around the country, we found little 
evidence that any such concerns had reached FBI personnel beyond the 
New York Field Office.50 

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 

”51

Usama Bin Ladin threat information instead of two.

Attorney General Ashcroft was briefed by the CIA in May and by Pickard 
in early July about the danger. Pickard said he met with Ashcroft once a week 
in late June, through July, and twice in August. There is a dispute regarding 
Ashcroft’s interest in Pickard’s briefings about the terrorist threat situation. 
Pickard told us that after two such briefings Ashcroft told him that he did not 
want to hear about the threats anymore. Ashcroft denies Pickard’s charge. 
Pickard says he continued to present terrorism information during further 
briefings that summer, but nothing further on the “chatter” the U.S. government 
was receiving.52 

The Attorney General told us he asked Pickard whether there was intelligence 
about attacks in the United States and that Pickard said no. 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 the FBI was doing what it needed to 
do. He acknowledged that in retrospect, this was a dangerous assumption. He 
did not ask the FBI what it was doing in response to the threats and did not 
task it to take any specific action. He also did not direct the INS, then still part 
of the Department of Justice, to take any specific action.53 

In sum, the domestic agencies never mobilized in response to the threat. 
They did not have direction, and did not have a plan to institute.The borders 
were not hardened.Transportation systems were not fortified. Electronic surveillance 
was not targeted against a domestic threat.54 State and local law 
enforcement were not marshaled to augment the FBI’s efforts.The public was 
not warned. 

The terrorists exploited deep institutional failings within our government. 
The question is whether extra vigilance might have turned up an opportunity 
to disrupt the plot. As seen in chapter 7, al Qaeda’s operatives made mistakes.
At least two such mistakes created opportunities during 2001,especially 
in late August.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Justice</Organization>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Qaeda’s</Misc>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
    <Person>Dale Watson</Person>
    <Person>Pickard</Person>
    <Location>New York Field</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>283_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

8.2 LATE LEADS—MIHDHAR,MOUSSAOUI,AND KSM 
In chapter 6 we discussed how intelligence agencies successfully detected some 
of the early travel in the planes operation, picking up the movements of Khalid 
al Mihdhar and identifying him, and seeing his travel converge with someone 
they perhaps could have identified but did not—Nawaf al Hazmi—as well as with 
less easily identifiable people such as Khallad and Abu Bara.These observations 
occurred in December 1999 and January 2000.The trail had been lost in January 
2000 without a clear realization that it had been lost,and without much effort 
to pick it up again.Nor had the CIA placed Mihdhar on the State Department’s 
watchlist for suspected terrorists, so that either an embassy or a port of entry 
might take note if Mihdhar showed up again. 

On four occasions in 2001, the CIA, the FBI, or both had apparent opportunities 
to refocus on the significance of Hazmi and Mihdhar and reinvigorate 
the search for them. After reviewing those episodes we will turn to the handling 
of the Moussaoui case and some late leads regarding Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed. 

January 2001: Identification of Khallad 

Almost one year after the original trail had been lost in Bangkok, the FBI and 
the CIA were working on the investigation of the Cole bombing.They learned 
of the link between a captured conspirator and a person called “Khallad.”They 
also learned that Khallad was a senior security official for Bin Ladin who had 
helped direct the bombing (we introduced Khallad in chapter 5, and returned 
to his role in the Cole bombing in chapter 6).55 

One of the members of the FBI’s investigative team in Yemen realized that 
he had heard of Khallad before, from a joint FBI/CIA source four months earlier.
The FBI agent obtained from a foreign government a photo of the person 
believed to have directed the Cole bombing. It was shown to the source, and 
he confirmed that the man in that photograph was the same Khallad he had 
described.56 

In December 2000, on the basis of some links associated with Khalid al 
Mihdhar,the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit speculated that Khallad and Khalid al Mihdhar 
might be one and the same.57 

The CIA asked that a Kuala Lumpur surveillance photo of Mihdhar be 
shown to the joint source who had identified Khallad. In early January 2001, 
two photographs from the Kuala Lumpur meeting were shown to the source. 
One was a known photograph of Mihdhar, the other a photograph of a then 
unknown subject.The source did not recognize Mihdhar. But he indicated he 
was 90 percent certain that the other individual was Khallad.58 

This meant that Khallad and Mihdhar were two different people. It also 
meant that there was a link between Khallad and Mihdhar, making Mihdhar 
seem even more suspicious.59Yet we found no effort by the CIA to renew the 
long-abandoned search for Mihdhar or his travel companions.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Location>Yemen</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Organization>State Department’s</Organization>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Khalid al Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Organization>CIA’s Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Person>MOUSSAOUI</Person>
    <Person>Abu Bara.These</Person>
    <Location>Moussaoui</Location>
    <Misc>Khallad Almost</Misc>
    <Location>FBI/CIA</Location>
    <Person>Khallad.58 This</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>284_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

In addition, we found that the CIA did not notify the FBI of this identification.
DCI Tenet and Cofer Black testified before Congress’s Joint Inquiry into 
9/11 that the FBI had access to this identification from the beginning. But 
drawing on an extensive record, including documents that were not available 
to the CIA personnel who drafted that testimony, we conclude this was not 
the case.The FBI’s primary Cole investigators had no knowledge that Khallad 
had been in Kuala Lumpur with Mihdhar and others until after the September 
11 attacks. Because the FBI had not been informed in January 2000 about 
Mihdhar’s possession of a U.S. visa, it had not then started looking for him in 
the United States. Because it did not know of the links between Khallad and 
Mihdhar, it did not start looking for him in January 2001.60 

This incident is an example of how day-to-day gaps in information sharing 
can emerge even when there is mutual goodwill.The information was from a 
joint FBI/CIA source who spoke essentially no English and whose languages 
were not understood by the FBI agent on the scene overseas. Issues of travel 
and security necessarily kept short the amount of time spent with the source. 
As a result,the CIA officer usually did not translate either questions or answers 
for his FBI colleague and friend.61 

For interviews without simultaneous translation,the FBI agent on the scene 
received copies of the reports that the CIA disseminated to other agencies 
regarding the interviews. But he was not given access to the CIA’s internal 
operational reports, which contained more detail. It was there—in reporting 
to which FBI investigators did not have access—that information regarding the 
January 2001 identification of Khallad appeared.The CIA officer does not recall 
this particular identification and thus cannot say why it was not shared with 
his FBI colleague. He might not have understood the possible significance of 
the new identification.62 

In June 2000,Mihdhar left California and returned to Yemen.It is possible 
that if, in January 2001, the CIA had resumed its search for him, placed him 
on the State Department’s TIPOFF watchlist, or provided the FBI with the 
information, he might have been found—either before or at the time he 
applied for a new visa in June 2001, or when he returned to the United States 
on July 4. 

Spring 2001: Looking Again at Kuala Lumpur 

By mid-May 2001, as the threat reports were surging, a CIA official detailed 
to the International Terrorism Operations Section at the FBI wondered where 
the attacks might occur.We will call him “John.” Recalling the episode about 
the Kuala Lumpur travel of Mihdhar and his associates, “John” searched the 
CIA’s databases for information regarding the travel. On May 15, he and an 
official at the 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, 2000.63 

The CIA official who reviewed the cables took no action regarding them.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Misc>English</Misc>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Cofer Black</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Location>California</Location>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Khallad</Person>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Date>January 15, 2000</Date>
    <Organization>International Terrorism Operations Section</Organization>
    <Organization>Congress’s Joint Inquiry</Organization>
    <Misc>FBI/CIA</Misc>
    <Organization>State Department’s TIPOFF</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

“John,” however, began a lengthy exchange with a CIA analyst, whom we will 
call “Dave,” to figure out what these cables meant.“John” was aware of how 
dangerous Khallad was—at one point calling him a “major league killer.” He 
concluded that “something bad was definitely up.” Despite the U.S. links evident 
in this traffic,“John” made no effort to determine whether any of these 
individuals was in the United States. He did not raise that possibility with his 
FBI counterpart. He was focused on Malaysia.64 

“John”described the CIA as an agency that tended to play a “zone defense.” 
He was worrying solely about Southeast Asia, not the United States. In contrast, 
he told us, the FBI tends to play “man-to-man.”65 

Desk officers at the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit did not have “cases” in the same 
sense as an FBI agent who works an investigation from 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 no longer responsible for follow-up.While several individuals 
at the Bin Ladin unit opened the cable when it arrived in March 2000, no 
action was taken.66 

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 productive. 

June 2001:The Meeting in New York 

“John’s” review of the Kuala Lumpur meeting did set off some more sharing 
of information, getting the attention of an FBI analyst whom we will call 
“Jane.” “Jane” was assigned to the FBI’s Cole investigation. She knew that 
another terrorist involved in that operation, Fahd al Quso, had traveled to 
Bangkok in January 2000 to give money to Khallad.67 

“Jane” and the CIA analyst, “Dave,” had been working together on Colerelated 
issues. Chasing Quso’s trail, “Dave” suggested showing some photographs 
to FBI agents in New York who were working on the Cole case and had 
interviewed Quso.68 

“John” gave three Kuala Lumpur surveillance pictures to “Jane” to show to 
the New York agents. She was told that one of the individuals in the photographs 
was someone named Khalid al Mihdhar. She did not know why the 
photographs had been taken or why the Kuala Lumpur travel might be significant, 
and she was not told that someone had identified Khallad in the photographs.
When “Jane” did some research in a database for intelligence reports, 
Intelink, she found the original NSA reports on the planning for the meeting. 
Because the CIA had not disseminated reports on its tracking of Mihdhar, 
“Jane”did not pull up any information about Mihdhar’s U.S.visa or about travel 
to the United States by Hazmi or Mihdhar.69 

“Jane,”“Dave,”and an FBI analyst who was on detail to the CIA’s Bin Ladin</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>Southeast Asia</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>Cole</Organization>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Location>Bangkok</Location>
    <Misc>CIA’s</Misc>
    <Location>Bin</Location>
    <Person>al Quso</Person>
    <Misc>Khallad</Misc>
    <Organization>Desk</Organization>
    <Location>CIA’s Bin</Location>
    <Organization>Khallad.67</Organization>
    <Person>Quso.68</Person>
    <Misc>Khalid</Misc>
    <Person>Intelink</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar’s U.S.visa</Person>
    <Misc>Hazmi</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>286_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

unit went to New York on June 11 to meet with the agents about the Cole case. 
“Jane” brought the surveillance pictures. At some point in the meeting she 
showed the photographs to the agents and asked whether they recognized 
Quso in any of them. The agents asked questions about the photographs— 
Why were they taken? Why were these people being followed? Where are the 
rest of the photographs?70 

The only information “Jane” had about the meeting—other than the photographs—
were the NSA reports that she had found on Intelink.These reports, 
however, contained caveats that their contents could not be shared with criminal 
investigators without the permission of the Justice Department’s Office of 
Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR).Therefore “Jane” concluded that she 
could not pass on information from those reports to the agents.This decision 
was potentially significant, because the signals intelligence she did not share 
linked Mihdhar to a suspected terrorist facility in the Middle East.The agents 
would have established a link to the suspected facility from their work on the 
embassy bombings case.This link would have made them very interested in 
learning more about Mihdhar.71 The sad irony is that the agents who found 
the source were being kept from obtaining the fruits of their own work. 

“Dave,” the CIA analyst, knew more about the Kuala Lumpur meeting. He 
knew that Mihdhar possessed a U.S.visa,that his visa application indicated that 
he intended to travel to New York, that Hazmi had traveled to Los Angeles, 
and that a source had put Mihdhar in the company of Khallad. No one at the 
meeting asked him what he knew; he did not volunteer anything. He told 
investigators that as a CIA analyst, he was not authorized to answer FBI questions 
regarding CIA information.“Jane” said she assumed that if “Dave” knew 
the answers to questions, he would have volunteered them. The New York 
agents left the meeting without obtaining information that might have started 
them looking for Mihdhar.72 

Mihdhar had been a weak link in al Qaeda’s operational planning. He had 
left the United States in June 2000, a mistake KSM realized could endanger 
the entire plan—for to continue with the operation, Mihdhar would have to 
travel to the United States again.And unlike other operatives,Mihdhar was not 
“clean”: he had jihadist connections. It was just such connections that had 
brought him to the attention of U.S. officials. 

Nevertheless, in this case KSM’s fears were not realized. Mihdhar received 
a new U.S. visa two days after the CIA-FBI meeting in New York. He flew 
to New York City on July 4.No one was looking for him. 

August 2001:The Search for Mihdhar and Hazmi Begins and Fails 

During the summer of 2001 “John,” following a good instinct but not as part 
of any formal assignment, asked “Mary,” an FBI analyst detailed to the CIA’s 
Bin Ladin unit, to review all the Kuala Lumpur materials one more time. She 
had been at the New York meeting with “Jane” and “Dave” but had not</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>OIPR</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>Cole</Location>
    <Location>Khallad</Location>
    <Location>Kuala Lumpur</Location>
    <Person>Quso</Person>
    <Organization>Justice Department’s Office of Intelligence Policy and Review</Organization>
    <Location>Middle East.The</Location>
    <Misc>Mihdhar.71</Misc>
    <Location>U.S.visa</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar.72 Mihdhar</Person>
    <Misc>CIA-FBI</Misc>
    <Person>Hazmi Begins</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>287_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

looked into the issues yet herself.“John”asked her to do the research in her 
free time.73 

“Mary” 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 immediately grasped the significance of 
this information.74 

“Mary” and “Jane” promptly met with an INS representative at FBI headquarters. 
On August 22, the 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 the country 
since January 2000, and they assumed he had left with Mihdhar in June 
2000. They decided that if Mihdhar was in the United States, he should be 
found.75 

They divided up the work.“Mary” asked the Bin Ladin unit to draft a cable 
requesting that Mihdhar and Hazmi be put on the TIPOFF watchlist. Both 
Hazmi and Mihdhar were added to this watchlist on August 24.76 

“Jane”took responsibility for the search effort inside the United States.As 
the information indicated that Mihdhar had last arrived in New York,she began 
drafting what is known as a lead for the FBI’s New York Field Office. A lead 
relays information from one part of the FBI to another and requests that a particular 
action be taken.She called an agent in New York to give him a “headsup” 
on the matter, but her draft lead was not sent until August 28. Her email 
told the New York agent that she wanted him to get started as soon as possible, 
but she labeled the lead as “Routine”—a designation that informs the 
receiving office that it has 30 days to respond.77 

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—an agent who thus was behind “the wall” keeping FBI 
intelligence information from being shared with criminal prosecutors. 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.78 

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. She had also checked with the acting head 
of the FBI’s Bin Ladin unit. The discussion seems to have been limited to 
whether the search should be classified as an intelligence investigation or as a 
criminal one. It appears that no one informed higher levels of management in 
either the FBI or CIA about the case.79 There is no evidence that the lead, or 
the search for these terrorist suspects, was substantively discussed at any level</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Location>Malaysia</Location>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>Cole</Location>
    <Organization>FBI’s New York Field Office</Organization>
    <Misc>Mihdhar’s</Misc>
    <Date>January 15, 2000</Date>
    <Organization>United States.A</Organization>
    <Misc>TIPOFF</Misc>
    <Organization>United States.As</Organization>
    <Organization>Khalid: Khalid Sheikh Mohammad.78</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI’s Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Date>July 4, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>288_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

above deputy chief of a section within the Counterterrorism Division at FBI 
headquarters. 

One of the Cole case agents read the lead with interest,and contacted “Jane” 
to obtain more information.“Jane”argued,however,that because the agent was 
designated a “criminal” FBI agent, not an intelligence FBI 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 NSA information from reports 
that included caveats ordering that the information not be shared without 
OIPR’s permission.The agent asked “Jane” to get an opinion from the FBI’s 
National Security Law Unit (NSLU) on whether he could open a criminal 
case on Mihdhar.80 

“Jane” sent an email to the Cole case agent explaining that according to the 
NSLU, the case could be opened only as an intelligence matter, and that if 
Mihdhar was found,only designated intelligence agents could conduct or even 
be present at any interview. She appears to have misunderstood the complex 
rules that could apply to this situation.81 

The FBI agent angrily responded: 

Whatever has happened to this—someday someone will die—and wall 

or not—the public will not understand why we were not more effective 

and throwing every resource we had at certain “problems.” 

Let’s hope the National Security Law Unit will stand behind their 

decisions then, especially since the biggest threat to us now, UBL, is get


ting the most “protection.” 

“Jane” replied that she was not making up the rules; she claimed that they 
were in the relevant manual and “ordered by the [FISA] Court and every office 
of the FBI is required to follow them including FBI NY.”82 

It is now clear that everyone involved was confused about the rules governing 
the sharing and use of information gathered in intelligence channels. 
Because Mihdhar was being sought for his possible connection to or knowledge 
of the Cole bombing,he could be investigated or tracked under the existing 
Cole criminal case.No new criminal case was needed for the criminal agent 
to begin searching for Mihdhar. And as NSA had approved the passage of its 
information to the criminal agent, he could have conducted a search using all 
available information. As a result of this confusion, the criminal agents who 
were knowledgeable about al Qaeda and experienced with criminal investigative 
techniques, including finding suspects and possible criminal charges, were 
thus excluded from the search.83 

The search was assigned to one FBI agent, and it was his very first counterterrorism 
lead.Because the lead was “routine,”he was given 30 days to open 
an intelligence case and make some unspecified efforts to locate Mihdhar. He 
started the process a few days later.He checked local New York databases for</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Organization>NSA</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorism Division</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Location>Cole</Location>
    <Organization>NSLU</Organization>
    <Organization>National Security Law Unit</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI’s National Security Law Unit</Organization>
    <Organization>FISA ] Court</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>289_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

criminal record and driver’s license information and checked the hotel listed 
on Mihdhar’s U.S. entry form. Finally, on September 11, the agent sent a lead 
to Los Angeles, because Mihdhar had initially arrived in Los Angeles in January 
2000.84 

We believe that if more resources had been applied and a significantly different 
approach taken, Mihdhar and Hazmi might have been found.They had 
used their true names in the United States. Still, the investigators would have 
needed luck as well as skill to find them prior to September 11 even if such 
searches had begun as early as August 23, when the lead was first drafted.85 

Many FBI 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 them,and investigation of their travel and 
financial activities, could have yielded evidence of connections to other participants 
in the 9/11 plot.The simple fact of their detention could have derailed 
the plan. In any case, the opportunity did not arise. 

Phoenix Memo 

The Phoenix memo was investigated thoroughly by the Joint Inquiry and the 
Department of Justice Inspector General.86We 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.87 

The agent made four recommendations to FBI headquarters: to compile a 
list of civil aviation schools, establish liaison with those schools, discuss his theories 
about Bin Ladin with the intelligence community, and seek authority to 
obtain visa information on persons applying to flight schools. His recommendations 
were not acted on. 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 they did not even see the memo until after 
September 11. No managers at headquarters saw the memo before September 
11,and the New York Field Office took no action.88 

As its author told investigators, the Phoenix memo was not an alert about 
suicide pilots. His worry was more about a Pan Am Flight 103 scenario in 
which explosives were placed on an aircraft.The memo’s references to aviation 
training were broad,including aeronautical engineering.89 If the memo had been 
distributed in a timely fashion and its recommendations acted on promptly, we 
do not believe it would have uncovered the plot. It might well, however, have 
sensitized the FBI so that it might have taken the Moussaoui matter more seriously 
the next month.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>Los Angeles</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Location>New York Field Office</Location>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Inquiry</Organization>
    <Location>Cole</Location>
    <Location>Phoenix</Location>
    <Misc>Moussaoui</Misc>
    <Person>Usama Bin Ladin”</Person>
    <Organization>Department of Justice Inspector General.86We</Organization>
    <Misc>Arizona.87</Misc>
    <Organization>Radical Fundamentalist</Organization>
    <Organization>Pan Am Flight</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>28_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

Several FAA air traffic control officials told us it was the air carriers’ responsibility 
to notify their planes of security problems. One senior FAA air traffic 
control manager said that it was simply not the FAA’s place to order the airlines 
what to tell their pilots.68 We believe such statements do not reflect an 
adequate appreciation of the FAA’s responsibility for the safety and security of 
civil aviation. 

The airlines bore responsibility, too.They were facing an escalating number 
of conflicting and, for the most part, erroneous reports about other flights, as 
well as a continuing lack of vital information from the FAA about the hijacked 
flights.We found no evidence, however, that American Airlines sent any cockpit 
warnings to its aircraft on 9/11. United’s first decisive action to notify its 
airborne aircraft to take defensive action did not come until 9:19, when a 
United flight dispatcher, Ed Ballinger, took the initiative to begin transmitting 
warnings to his 16 transcontinental flights: “Beware any cockpit intrusion— 
Two a/c [aircraft] hit World Trade Center.” One of the flights that received 
the warning was United 93. Because Ballinger was still responsible for his 
other flights as well as Flight 175, his warning message was not transmitted to 
Flight 93 until 9:23.69 

By all accounts, the first 46 minutes of Flight 93’s cross-country trip proceeded 
routinely. Radio communications from the plane were normal. Heading, 
speed, and altitude ran according to plan. At 9:24, Ballinger’s warning to 
United 93 was received in the cockpit.Within two minutes, at 9:26, the pilot, 
Jason Dahl, responded with a note of puzzlement: “Ed, confirm latest mssg 
plz—Jason.”70 

The hijackers attacked at 9:28.While traveling 35,000 feet above eastern 
Ohio, United 93 suddenly dropped 700 feet. Eleven seconds into the descent, 
the FAA’s air traffic control center in Cleveland received the first of two radio 
transmissions from the aircraft. During the first broadcast, the captain or first 
officer could be heard declaring “Mayday”amid the sounds of a physical struggle 
in the cockpit.The second radio transmission, 35 seconds later, indicated 
that the fight was continuing.The captain or first officer could be heard shout-
ing:“Hey get out of here—get out of here—get out of here.”71 

On the morning of 9/11, there were only 37 passengers on United 93—33 
in addition to the 4 hijackers.This was below the norm for Tuesday mornings 
during the summer of 2001. But there is no evidence that the hijackers manipulated 
passenger levels or purchased additional seats to facilitate their operation.72 

The terrorists who hijacked three other commercial flights on 9/11 operated 
in five-man teams.They initiated their cockpit takeover within 30 minutes 
of takeoff.On Flight 93,however,the takeover took place 46 minutes after 
takeoff and there were only four hijackers.The operative likely intended to 
round out the team for this flight,Mohamed al Kahtani,had been refused entry 
by a suspicious immigration inspector at Florida’s Orlando International Airport 
in August.73</docText>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
    <Misc>FAA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Mohamed al Kahtani</Person>
    <Person>Ballinger</Person>
    <Person>Ed Ballinger</Person>
    <Location>Ohio</Location>
    <Location>Cleveland</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center.” One</Organization>
    <Person>Jason Dahl</Person>
    <Organization>Florida’s Orlando International Airport</Organization>
    <Location>August.73</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>290_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

Zacarias Moussaoui 

On August 15,2001,the Minneapolis FBI Field Office initiated an intelligence 
investigation on Zacarias Moussaoui.As mentioned in chapter 7,he had entered 
the United States in February 2001, and had begun flight lessons at Airman 
Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma. He resumed his training at the Pan Am 
International Flight Academy in Eagan, Minnesota, starting on August 13. He 
had none of the usual qualifications for flight training on Pan Am’s Boeing 747 
flight simulators. He said he did not intend to become a commercial pilot but 
wanted the training as an “ego boosting thing.” Moussaoui stood out because, 
with little knowledge of flying, he wanted to learn how to “take off and land” 
a Boeing 747.90 

The agent in Minneapolis quickly learned that Moussaoui possessed jihadist 
beliefs. Moreover, Moussaoui had $32,000 in a bank account but did not provide 
a plausible explanation for this sum of money.He had traveled to Pakistan 
but became agitated when asked if he had traveled to nearby countries while 
in Pakistan (Pakistan was the customary route to the training camps in 
Afghanistan). He planned to receive martial arts training, and intended to purchase 
a global positioning receiver. The agent also noted that Moussaoui 
became extremely agitated whenever he was questioned regarding his religious 
beliefs.The agent concluded that Moussaoui was “an Islamic extremist preparing 
for some future act in furtherance of radical fundamentalist goals.” He also 
believed Moussaoui’s plan was related to his flight training.91 

Moussaoui can be seen as an al Qaeda mistake and a missed opportunity. 
An apparently unreliable operative, he had fallen into the hands of the FBI. As 
discussed in chapter 7, Moussaoui had been in contact with and received 
money from Ramzi Binalshibh. If Moussaoui had been connected to al 
Qaeda, questions should instantly have arisen about a possible al Qaeda plot 
that involved piloting airliners, a possibility that had never been seriously analyzed 
by the intelligence community. 

The FBI agent who handled the case in conjunction with the INS representative 
on the Minneapolis Joint Terrorism Task Force suspected that Moussaoui 
might be planning to hijack a plane. Minneapolis and FBI headquarters 
debated whether Moussaoui should be arrested immediately or surveilled to 
obtain additional information. Because it was not clear whether Moussaoui 
could be imprisoned,the FBI case agent decided the most important thing was 
to prevent Moussaoui from obtaining any further training that he could use to 
carry out a potential attack.92 

As a French national who had overstayed his visa, Moussaoui could be 
detained immediately. The INS arrested Moussaoui on the immigration violation.
A deportation order was signed on August 17,2001.93 

The agents in Minnesota were concerned that the U.S.Attorney’s Office in 
Minneapolis would find insufficient probable cause of a crime to obtain a criminal 
warrant to search Moussaoui’s laptop computer.94Agents at FBI headquarters 
believed there was insufficient probable cause. Minneapolis therefore</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Oklahoma</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Misc>Islamic</Misc>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>U.S.Attorney’s Office</Organization>
    <Location>Minneapolis</Location>
    <Organization>Pan Am International Flight Academy</Organization>
    <Location>Norman</Location>
    <Location>Minnesota</Location>
    <Misc>French</Misc>
    <Organization>FBI Field Office</Organization>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui.As</Person>
    <Organization>Airman Flight School</Organization>
    <Location>Eagan</Location>
    <Organization>Pan Am’s Boeing</Organization>
    <Organization>Minneapolis Joint Terrorism Task Force</Organization>
    <Date>August 15,2001</Date>
    <Date>August 17,2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>291_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

sought a special warrant under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to 
conduct the search (we introduced FISA in chapter 3). 

To do so, however, the FBI needed to demonstrate probable cause that 
Moussaoui was an agent of a foreign power, a demonstration that was not 
required to obtain a criminal warrant but was a statutory requirement for a 
FISA warrant.95The case agent did not have sufficient information to connect 
Moussaoui to a “foreign power,”so he reached out for help,in the United States 
and overseas. 

The FBI agent’s August 18 message requested assistance from the FBI legal 
attaché in Paris. Moussaoui had lived in London, so the Minneapolis agent 
sought assistance from the legal attaché there as well. By August 24, the Minneapolis 
agent had also contacted an FBI detailee and a CIA desk officer at the 
Counterterrorist Center about the case.96 

The FBI legal attaché’s office in Paris first contacted the French government 
on August 16 or 17, shortly after speaking to the Minneapolis case agent on 
the telephone. On August 22 and 27, the French provided information that 
made a connection between Moussaoui and a rebel leader in Chechnya, Ibn al 
Khattab.This set off a spirited debate between the Minneapolis Field Office, 
FBI headquarters, and the CIA as to whether the Chechen rebels and Khattab 
were sufficiently associated with a terrorist organization to constitute a “foreign 
power”for purposes of the FISA statute.FBI headquarters did not believe 
this was good enough, and its National Security Law Unit declined to submit 
a FISA application.97 

After receiving the written request for assistance, the legal attaché in London 
had promptly forwarded it to his counterparts in the British government, 
hand-delivering the request on August 21. On August 24, the CIA also sent a 
cable to London and Paris regarding “subjects involved in suspicious 747 flight 
training” that described Moussaoui as a possible “suicide hijacker.” On August 
28, the CIA sent a request for information to a different service of the British 
government; this communication warned that Moussaoui might be expelled 
to Britain by the end of August.The FBI office in London raised the matter 
briefly with British officials as an aside, after a meeting about a more urgent 
matter on September 3, and sent the British service a written update on September 
5.The case was not handled by the British as a priority amid a large 
number of other terrorist-related inquiries.98 

On September 4,the FBI sent a teletype to the CIA,the FAA,the Customs 
Service, the State Department, the INS, and the Secret Service summarizing 
the known facts regarding Moussaoui. It did not report the case agent’s personal 
assessment that Moussaoui planned to hijack an airplane. It did contain 
the FAA’s comment that it was not unusual for Middle Easterners to attend 
flight training schools in the United States.99 

Although the Minneapolis agents wanted to tell the FAA from the beginning 
about Moussaoui, FBI headquarters instructed Minneapolis that it could</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Organization>Customs Service</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>INS</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>FISA</Organization>
    <Location>London</Location>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Misc>British</Misc>
    <Location>Chechnya</Location>
    <Misc>FAA’s</Misc>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Location>Minneapolis</Location>
    <Organization>Minneapolis Field Office</Organization>
    <Location>Paris</Location>
    <Location>Britain</Location>
    <Misc>French</Misc>
    <Person>Khattab.This</Person>
    <Misc>Chechen</Misc>
    <Misc>Khattab</Misc>
    <Organization>National Security Law Unit</Organization>
    <Location>Middle Easterners</Location>
    <Misc>United States.99 Although</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

not share the more complete report the case agent had prepared for the FAA. 
The Minneapolis supervisor sent the case agent in person to the local FAA 
office to fill in what he thought were gaps in the FBI headquarters teletype.100 
No FAA actions seem to have been taken in response. 

There was substantial disagreement between Minneapolis agents and FBI 
headquarters as to what Moussaoui was planning to do. In one conversation 
between a Minneapolis supervisor and a headquarters agent, the latter complained 
that Minneapolis’s FISA request was couched in a manner intended to 
get people “spun up.”The supervisor replied that was precisely his intent.He 
said he was “trying to keep someone from taking a plane and crashing into the 
World Trade Center.” The headquarters agent replied that this was not going 
to happen and that they did not know if Moussaoui was a terrorist.101 

There is no evidence that either FBI Acting Director Pickard or Assistant 
Director for Counterterrorism Dale Watson was briefed on the Moussaoui case 
prior to 9/11.Michael Rolince,the FBI assistant director heading the Bureau’s 
International Terrorism Operations Section (ITOS),recalled being told about 
Moussaoui in two passing hallway conversations but only in the context that 
he might be receiving telephone calls from Minneapolis complaining about 
how headquarters was handling the matter. He never received such a call. 
Although the acting special agent in charge of Minneapolis called the ITOS 
supervisors to discuss the Moussaoui case on August 27, he declined to go up 
the chain of command at FBI headquarters and call Rolince.102 

On August 23,DCI Tenet was briefed about the Moussaoui case in a briefing 
titled “Islamic Extremist Learns to Fly.”103 Tenet was also told that Moussaoui 
wanted to learn to fly a 747, paid for his training in cash, was interested 
to learn the doors do not open in flight, and wanted to fly a simulated flight 
from London to New York.He was told that the FBI had arrested Moussaoui 
because of a visa overstay and that the CIA was working the case with the FBI. 
Tenet told us that no connection to al Qaeda was apparent to him at the time. 
Seeing it as an FBI case,he did not discuss the matter with anyone at the White 
House or the FBI.No connection was made between Moussaoui’s presence in 
the United States and the threat reporting during the summer of 2001.104 

On September 11,after the attacks,the FBI office in London renewed their 
appeal for information about Moussaoui. In response to U.S. requests, the 
British government supplied some basic biographical information about 
Moussaoui.The British government informed us that it also immediately tasked 
intelligence collection facilities for information about Moussaoui.On September 
13, the British government received new, sensitive intelligence that Moussaoui 
had attended an al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan. It passed this 
intelligence to the United States on the same day. Had this information been 
available in late August 2001, the Moussaoui case would almost certainly have 
received intense, high-level attention.105 

The FBI also learned after 9/11 that the millennium terrorist Ressam, who</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>FISA</Organization>
    <Misc>Counterterrorism</Misc>
    <Location>London</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>British</Misc>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Dale Watson</Person>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Location>Minneapolis</Location>
    <Person>Pickard</Person>
    <Misc>Moussaoui’s</Misc>
    <Misc>World Trade Center.”</Misc>
    <Organization>FBI Acting</Organization>
    <Organization>Bureau’s International Terrorism Operations Section</Organization>
    <Organization>ITOS</Organization>
    <Person>Fly.”103 Tenet</Person>
    <Misc>FBI.No</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docID>293_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

by 2001 was cooperating with investigators, recognized Moussaoui as someone 
who had been in the Afghan camps.106 As mentioned above, before 9/11 
the FBI agents in Minneapolis had failed to persuade supervisors at headquarters 
that there was enough evidence to seek a FISA warrant to search Moussaoui’s 
computer hard drive and belongings. Either the British information or 
the Ressam identification would have broken the logjam. 

A maximum U.S. effort to investigate Moussaoui conceivably could have 
unearthed his connections to Binalshibh. Those connections might have 
brought investigators to the core of the 9/11 plot.The Binalshibh connection 
was recognized shortly after 9/11, though it was not an easy trail to find. Discovering 
it would have required quick and very substantial cooperation from 
the German government, which might well have been difficult to obtain. 

However, publicity about Moussaoui’s arrest and a possible hijacking threat 
might have derailed the plot.107With time,the search for Mihdhar and Hazmi 
and the investigation of Moussaoui might also have led to a breakthrough that 
would have disrupted the plot. 

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed 

Another late opportunity was presented by a confluence of information 
regarding Khalid Sheikh Mohammed received by the intelligence community 
in the summer of 2001.The possible links between KSM,Moussaoui,and an 
individual only later identified as Ramzi Binalshibh would remain undiscovered, 
however. 

Although we readily equate KSM with al Qaeda today,this was not the case 
before 9/11. KSM, who had been indicted in January 1996 for his role in the 
Manila air plot, was seen primarily as another freelance terrorist, associated 
with Ramzi Yousef. Because the links between KSM and Bin Ladin or al 
Qaeda were not recognized at the time, responsibility for KSM remained in 
the small Islamic Extremist Branch of the Counterterrorist Center, not in the 
Bin Ladin unit. 

Moreover, because KSM had already been indicted, he became targeted 
for arrest. In 1997, the Counterterrorist Center added a Renditions Branch 
to help find wanted fugitives. Responsibility for KSM was transferred to this 
branch, which gave the CIA a “man-to-man” focus but was not an analytical 
unit.When subsequent information came,more critical for analysis than 
for tracking, no unit had the job of following up on what the information 
might mean.108 

For example, in September 2000, a source had reported that an individual 
named Khalid al-Shaykh al-Ballushi was a key lieutenant in al Qaeda. Al-
Ballushi means “from Baluchistan,” and KSM is from Baluchistan. Recognizing 
the possible significance of this information, the Bin Ladin unit sought 
more information.When no information was forthcoming, the Bin Ladin unit</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Organization>FISA</Organization>
    <Organization>Counterterrorist Center</Organization>
    <Person>Ramzi Yousef</Person>
    <Location>Manila</Location>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Misc>British</Misc>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <Organization>Bin Ladin</Organization>
    <Person>Hazmi</Person>
    <Person>Mihdhar</Person>
    <Person>Ramzi Binalshibh</Person>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Person>Ressam</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Location>Minneapolis</Location>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Person>Khalid</Person>
    <Misc>Moussaoui’s</Misc>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed Another</Person>
    <Organization>Islamic Extremist Branch</Organization>
    <Misc>Renditions Branch</Misc>
    <Person>Al- Ballushi</Person>
    <Organization>Baluchistan</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“THE SYSTEM WAS BLINKING RED” 

dropped the matter.109 When additional pieces of the puzzle arrived in the 
spring and summer of 2001, they were not put together. 

The first piece of the puzzle concerned some intriguing information associated 
with a person known as “Mukhtar” that the CIA had begun analyzing 
in April 2001.The CIA did not know who Mukhtar was at the time—only 
that he associated with al Qaeda lieutenant Abu Zubaydah and that, based on 
the nature of the information, he was evidently involved in planning possible 
terrorist activities.110 

The second piece of the puzzle was some alarming information regarding 
KSM. On June 12, 2001, a CIA report said that “Khaled” was actively recruiting 
people to travel outside Afghanistan, including to the United States where colleagues 
were reportedly already in the country to meet them, to carry out 
terrorist-related activities for Bin Ladin. CIA headquarters presumed from the 
details of the reporting that this person was Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. In July, 
the same source was shown a series of photographs and identified a photograph 
of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed as the Khaled he had previously discussed.111 

The final piece of the puzzle arrived at the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit on August 
28 in a cable reporting that KSM’s nickname was Mukhtar. No one made the 
connection to the reports about Mukhtar that had been circulated in the 
spring.This connection might also have underscored concern about the June 
reporting that KSM was recruiting terrorists to travel,including to the United 
States. Only after 9/11 would it be discovered that Muhktar/KSM had communicated 
with a phone that was used by Binalshibh, and that Binalshibh had 
used the same phone to communicate with Moussaoui, as discussed in chapter 
7.As in the Moussaoui situation already described,the links to Binalshibh 
might not have been an easy trail to find and would have required substantial 
cooperation from the German government. But time was short, and running 
out.112 

Time Runs Out 

As Tenet told us,“the system was blinking red”during the summer of 2001. 
Officials were alerted across the world. Many were doing everything they possibly 
could to respond to the threats. 

Yet no one working on these late leads in the summer of 2001 connected 
the case in his or her in-box to the threat reports agitating senior officials and 
being briefed to the President. Thus, these individual cases did not become 
national priorities.As the CIA supervisor “John”told us,no one looked at the 
bigger picture; no analytic work foresaw the lightning that could connect the 
thundercloud to the ground.113 

We see little evidence that the progress of the plot was disturbed by any government 
action. The U.S. government was unable to capitalize on mistakes 
made by al Qaeda.Time ran out.</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>Khalid Sheikh Mohammed</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Misc>Qaeda</Misc>
    <Misc>Khaled</Misc>
    <Person>Abu Zubaydah</Person>
    <Person>Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>KSM</Organization>
    <Date>June 12, 2001</Date>
    <Person>Binalshibh</Person>
    <Misc>German</Misc>
    <Misc>Tenet</Misc>
    <Person>Mukhtar</Person>
    <Misc>Muhktar/KSM</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>9 


HEROISM AND 
HORROR 


9.1 PREPAREDNESS AS OF SEPTEMBER 11 
Emergency response is a product of preparedness.On the morning of September 
11, 2001, the last best hope for the community of people working in or 
visiting the World Trade Center rested not with national policymakers but with 
private firms and local public servants,especially the first responders:fire,police, 
emergency medical service, and building safety professionals. 

Building Preparedness 
The World Trade Center. The World Trade Center (WTC) complex was 
built for the PortAuthority of New York and New Jersey.Construction began 
in 1966,and tenants began to occupy its space in 1970.The Twin Towers came 
to occupy a unique and symbolic place in the culture of New York City and 
America. 

The WTC actually consisted of seven buildings,including one hotel,spread 
across 16 acres of land.The buildings were connected by an underground mall 
(the concourse).The Twin Towers (1 WTC, or the North Tower, and 2 WTC, 
or the South Tower) were the signature structures, containing 10.4 million 
square feet of office space. Both towers had 110 stories, were about 1,350 feet 
high, and were square; each wall measured 208 feet in length. On any given 
workday, up to 50,000 office workers occupied the towers, and 40,000 people 
passed through the complex.1 

Each tower contained three central stairwells,which ran essentially from top 
to bottom, and 99 elevators. Generally, elevators originating in the lobby ran 
to “sky lobbies”on higher floors,where additional elevators carried passengers 
to the tops of the buildings.2 

Stairwells A and C ran from the 110th floor to the raised mezzanine level 
of the lobby. Stairwell B ran from the 107th floor to level B6, six floors below 
ground, and was accessible from the West Street lobby level, which was one</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Date>September 
11, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>Twin Towers</Misc>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey.Construction</Location>
    <Misc>Stairwells A</Misc>
    <Person>Stairwell B</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 


The World Trade Center Complex as of 9/11 

Rendering by Marco Crupi 

floor below the mezzanine. All three stairwells ran essentially straight up and 
down, except for two deviations in stairwells A and C where the staircase jutted 
out toward the perimeter of the building. On the upper and lower boundaries 
of these deviations were transfer hallways contained within the stairwell 
proper.Each hallway contained smoke doors to prevent smoke from rising from 
lower to upper portions of the building; they were kept closed but not locked. 
Doors leading from tenant space into the stairwells were never kept locked; 
reentry from the stairwells was generally possible on at least every fourth floor.3 

Doors leading to the roof were locked.There was no rooftop evacuation 
plan.The roofs of both the North Tower and the South Tower were sloped 
and cluttered surfaces with radiation hazards,making them impractical for helicopter 
landings and as staging areas for civilians.Although the South Tower 
roof had a helipad, it did not meet 1994 Federal Aviation Administration 
guidelines.4 

The 1993 Terrorist Bombing of the WTC and the Port Authority’s 
Response. Unlike most of America,New York City and specifically the World</docText>
    <Organization>Federal Aviation Administration</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Person>Marco Crupi</Person>
    <Organization>World Trade Center Complex</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority’s Response</Organization>
    <Organization>World</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Trade Center had been the target of terrorist attacks before 9/11.At 12:18 P.M. 
on February 26, 1993, a 1,500-pound bomb stashed in a rental van was detonated 
on a parking garage ramp beneath the Twin Towers.The explosion killed 
six people,injured about 1,000 more,and exposed vulnerabilities in the World 
Trade Center’s and the city’s emergency preparedness.5 

The towers lost power and communications capability. Generators had to 
be shut down to ensure safety, and elevators stopped.The public-address system 
and emergency lighting systems failed. The unlit stairwells filled with 
smoke and were so dark as to be impassable.Rescue efforts by the Fire Department 
of New York (FDNY) were hampered by the inability of its radios to 
function in buildings as large as the Twin Towers.The 911 emergency call system 
was overwhelmed.The general evacuation of the towers’occupants via the 
stairwells took more than four hours.6 

Several small groups of people who were physically unable to descend the 
stairs were evacuated from the roof of the South Tower by New York Police 
Department (NYPD) helicopters. At least one person was lifted from the 
North Tower roof by the NYPD in a dangerous helicopter rappel operation— 
15 hours after the bombing. General knowledge that these air rescues had 
occurred appears to have left a number of civilians who worked in the Twin 
Towers with the false impression that helicopter rescues were part of the WTC 
evacuation plan and that rescue from the roof was a viable,if not favored,option 
for those who worked on upper floors. Although they were considered after 
1993, helicopter evacuations in fact were not incorporated into the WTC fire 
safety plan.7 

To address the problems encountered during the response to the 1993 
bombing, the Port Authority spent an initial $100 million to make physical, 
structural,and technological improvements to the WTC,as well as to enhance 
its fire safety plan and reorganize and bolster its fire safety and security staffs.8 

Substantial enhancements were made to power sources and exits. Fluorescent 
signs and markings were added in and near stairwells.The Port Authority 
also installed a sophisticated computerized fire alarm system with redundant 
electronics and control panels,and state-of-the-art fire command stations were 
placed in the lobby of each tower.9 

To manage fire emergency preparedness and operations, the Port Authority 
created the dedicated position of fire safety director.The director supervised a 
team of deputy fire safety directors, one of whom was on duty at the fire command 
station in the lobby of each tower at all times.He or she would be responsible 
for communicating with building occupants during an emergency.10 

The Port Authority also sought to prepare civilians better for future emergencies. 
Deputy fire safety directors conducted fire drills at least twice a year, 
with advance notice to tenants.“Fire safety teams”were selected from among 
civilian employees on each floor and consisted of a fire warden,deputy fire wardens,
and searchers.The standard procedure for fire drills was for fire wardens</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Fire Department</Organization>
    <Location>Twin Towers</Location>
    <Misc>Twin Towers.The</Misc>
    <Organization>New York Police Department</Organization>
    <Organization>New York</Organization>
    <Misc>World Trade Center’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Twin Towers.The 911</Misc>
    <Date>February 26, 1993</Date>
  </document>
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    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

to lead co-workers in their respective areas to the center of the floor, where 
they would use the emergency intercom phone to obtain specific information 
on how to proceed. Some civilians have told us that their evacuation on September 
11 was greatly aided by changes and training implemented by the Port 
Authority in response to the 1993 bombing.11 

But during these drills,civilians were not directed into the stairwells,or provided 
with information about their configuration and about the existence of 
transfer hallways and smoke doors. Neither full nor partial evacuation drills 
were held. Moreover, participation in drills that were held varied greatly from 
tenant to tenant.In general,civilians were never told not to evacuate up.The 
standard fire drill announcement advised participants that in the event of an 
actual emergency, they would be directed to descend to at least three floors 
below the fire. Most civilians recall simply being taught to await the instructions 
that would be provided at the time of an emergency. Civilians were not 
informed that rooftop evacuations were not part of the evacuation plan,or that 
doors to the roof were kept locked.The Port Authority acknowledges that it 
had no protocol for rescuing people trapped above a fire in the towers.12 

Six weeks before the September 11 attacks, control of the WTC was transferred 
by net lease to a private developer, Silverstein Properties. Select Port 
Authority employees were designated to assist with the transition. Others 
remained on-site but were no longer part of the official chain of command. 
However, on September 11, most Port Authority World Trade Department 
employees—including those not on the designated “transition team”— 
reported to their regular stations to provide assistance throughout the morning.
Although Silverstein Properties was in charge of the WTC on September 
11, the WTC fire safety plan remained essentially the same.13 

Preparedness of First Responders 

On 9/11,the principal first responders were from the Fire Department of New 
York,the New York Police Department,the PortAuthority Police Department 
(PAPD), and the Mayor’s Office of Emergency Management (OEM). 

Port Authority Police Department. On September 11, 2001, the Port 
Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department consisted of 1,331 
officers, many of whom were trained in fire suppression methods as well as in 
law enforcement.The PAPD was led by a superintendent.There was a separate 
PAPD command for each of the Port Authority’s nine facilities, including 
the World Trade Center.14 

Most Port Authority police commands used ultra-high-frequency radios. 
Although all the radios were capable of using more than one channel, most 
PAPD officers used one local channel.The local channels were low-wattage 
and worked only in the immediate vicinity of that command.The PAPD also 
had an agencywide channel, but not all commands could access it.15</docText>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Date>September 11, 2001</Date>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>OEM</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority Police Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Fire Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Mayor’s Office of Emergency Management</Organization>
    <Organization>New York Police Department</Organization>
    <Person>Silverstein Properties</Person>
    <Organization>Port Authority World Trade Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Preparedness of First Responders On</Organization>
    <Organization>PortAuthority Police Department</Organization>
    <Location>New Jersey Police Department</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center.14 Most</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

As of September 11, the Port Authority lacked any standard operating procedures 
to govern how officers from multiple commands would respond to and 
then be staged and utilized at a major incident at the WTC.In particular,there 
were no standard operating procedures covering how different commands 
should communicate via radio during such an incident. 

The New York Police Department. The 40,000-officer NYPD was 
headed by a police commissioner,whose duties were not primarily operational 
but who retained operational authority. Much of the NYPD’s operational 
activities were run by the chief of department. In the event of a major emergency, 
a leading role would be played by the Special Operations Division.This 
division included the Aviation Unit,which provided helicopters for surveys and 
rescues,and the Emergency Service Unit (ESU),which carried out specialized 
rescue missions.The NYPD had specific and detailed standard operating procedures 
for the dispatch of officers to an incident, depending on the incident’s 
magnitude.16 

The NYPD precincts were divided into 35 different radio zones,with a central 
radio dispatcher assigned to each.In addition,there were several radio channels 
for citywide operations. Officers had portable radios with 20 or more 
available channels, so that the user could respond outside his or her precinct. 
ESU teams also had these channels but at an operation would use a separate 
point-to-point channel (which was not monitored by a dispatcher).17 

The NYPD also supervised the city’s 911 emergency call system. Its 
approximately 1,200 operators, radio dispatchers, and supervisors were civilian 
employees of the NYPD. They were trained in the rudiments of emergency 
response.When a 911 call concerned a fire,it was transferred to FDNY 
dispatch.18 

The Fire Department of New York. The 11,000-member FDNY was 
headed by a fire commissioner who, unlike the police commissioner, lacked 
operational authority. Operations were headed by the chief of department— 
the sole five-star chief.19 

The FDNY was organized in nine separate geographic divisions.Each division 
was further divided into between four to seven battalions. Each battalion 
contained typically between three and four engine companies and two to four 
ladder companies.In total,the FDNY had 205 engine companies and 133 ladder 
companies. On-duty ladder companies consisted of a captain or lieutenant 
and five firefighters; on-duty engine companies consisted of a captain or lieutenant 
and normally four firefighters.Ladder companies’primary function was 
to conduct rescues; engine companies focused on extinguishing fires.20 

The FDNY’s Specialized Operations Command (SOC) contained a limited 
number of units that were of particular importance in responding to a 
terrorist attack or other major incident.The department’s five rescue companies 
and seven squad companies performed specialized and highly risky rescue 
operations.21</docText>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Organization>SOC</Organization>
    <Organization>Fire Department</Organization>
    <Misc>WTC.In</Misc>
    <Organization>New York Police Department</Organization>
    <Misc>NYPD’s</Misc>
    <Organization>Special Operations Division.This</Organization>
    <Organization>Aviation Unit</Organization>
    <Organization>Emergency Service Unit</Organization>
    <Organization>New York</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY’s Specialized Operations Command</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>29_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Because several passengers on United 93 described three hijackers on the 
plane, not four, some have wondered whether one of the hijackers had been 
able to use the cockpit jump seat from the outset of the flight. FAA rules allow 
use of this seat by documented and approved individuals, usually air carrier or 
FAA personnel.We have found no evidence indicating that one of the hijackers, 
or anyone else, sat there on this flight. All the hijackers had assigned seats 
in first class, and they seem to have used them.We believe it is more likely that 
Jarrah, the crucial pilot-trained member of their team, remained seated and 
inconspicuous until after the cockpit was seized;and once inside,he would not 
have been visible to the passengers.74 

At 9:32, a hijacker, probably Jarrah, made or attempted to make the following 
announcement to the passengers of Flight 93:“Ladies and Gentlemen:Here 
the captain, please sit down keep remaining sitting.We have a bomb on board. 
So, sit.” The flight data recorder (also recovered) indicates that Jarrah then 
instructed the plane’s autopilot to turn the aircraft around and head east.75 

The cockpit voice recorder data indicate that a woman, most likely a flight 
attendant, was being held captive in the cockpit. She struggled with one of the 
hijackers who killed or otherwise silenced her.76 

Shortly thereafter,the passengers and flight crew began a series of calls from 
GTE airphones and cellular phones.These calls between family, friends, and 
colleagues took place until the end of the flight and provided those on the 
ground with firsthand accounts.They enabled the passengers to gain critical 
information,including the news that two aircraft had slammed into the World 
Trade Center.77 

At 9:39, the FAA’s Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center overheard 
a second announcement indicating that there was a bomb on board, that the 
plane was returning to the airport,and that they should remain seated.78While 
it apparently was not heard by the passengers, this announcement, like those on 
Flight 11 and Flight 77, was intended to deceive them. Jarrah, like Atta earlier, 
may have inadvertently broadcast the message because he did not know how 
to operate the radio and the intercom.To our knowledge none of them had 
ever flown an actual airliner before. 

At least two callers from the flight reported that the hijackers knew that passengers 
were making calls but did not seem to care. It is quite possible Jarrah 
knew of the success of the assault on the World Trade Center. He could have 
learned of this from messages being sent by United Airlines to the cockpits of 
its transcontinental flights, including Flight 93, warning of cockpit intrusion 
and telling of the New York attacks. But even without them, he would certainly 
have understood that the attacks on the World Trade Center would 
already have unfolded, given Flight 93’s tardy departure from Newark. If Jarrah 
did know that the passengers were making calls,it might not have occurred 
to him that they were certain to learn what had happened in New York,thereby 
defeating his attempts at deception.79</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United</Organization>
    <Location>Newark</Location>
    <Person>Atta</Person>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Organization>Gentlemen:Here</Organization>
    <Organization>GTE</Organization>
    <Organization>World Trade Center.77 At</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA’s Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>2_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>CONTENTS 


List of Illustrations and Tables ix 
Member List xi 
Staff List xiii–xiv 
Preface xv 

1. “WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 1 

1.1 Inside the Four Flights 1 

1.2 Improvising a Homeland Defense 14 

1.3 National Crisis Management 35 

2. THE FOUNDATION OF THE NEW TERRORISM 47 

2.1 A Declaration of War 47 

2.2 Bin Ladin’s Appeal in the Islamic World 48 

2.3 The Rise of Bin Ladin and al Qaeda (1988–1992) 55 

2.4 
Building an Organization, Declaring 
War on the United States (1992–1996) 59 


2.5 Al Qaeda’s Renewal in Afghanistan (1996–1998) 63 

3. COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES 71 

3.1 
From the Old Terrorism to the New: 
The First World Trade Center Bombing 71 


3.2 
Adaptation—and Nonadaptation— 
in the Law Enforcement Community 73 


3.3 . . . and in the Federal Aviation Administration 82 

3.4 . . . and in the Intelligence Community 86</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Federal Aviation Administration</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Person>al Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Intelligence Community</Organization>
    <Organization>Homeland Defense</Organization>
    <Misc>Tables</Misc>
    <Organization>Four Flights</Organization>
    <Organization>National Crisis Management</Organization>
    <Organization>TERRORISM</Organization>
    <Organization>A Declaration of War</Organization>
    <Misc>Islamic World 48</Misc>
    <Organization>Declaring War</Organization>
    <Organization>Al Qaeda’s Renewal</Organization>
    <Organization>COUNTERTERRORISM EVOLVES</Organization>
    <Organization>Old Terrorism</Organization>
    <Misc>New: The First World Trade Center</Misc>
    <Person>Adaptation—and Nonadaptation—</Person>
    <Organization>Law Enforcement Community</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>300_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

The logistics of fire operations were directed by Fire Dispatch Operations 
Division,which had a center in each of the five boroughs.All 911 calls concerning 
fire emergencies were transferred to FDNY dispatch.22 

As of September 11,FDNY companies and chiefs responding to a fire used 
analog,point-to-point radios that had six normal operating channels.Typically, 
the companies would operate on the same tactical channel, which chiefs on 
the scene would monitor and use to communicate with the firefighters.Chiefs 
at a fire operation also would use a separate command channel. Because these 
point-to-point radios had weak signal strength, communications on them 
could be heard only by other FDNY personnel in the immediate vicinity. In 
addition, the FDNY had a dispatch frequency for each of the five boroughs; 
these were not point-to-point channels and could be monitored from around 
the city.23 

The FDNY’s radios performed poorly during the 1993 WTC bombing for 
two reasons. First, the radios signals often did not succeed in penetrating the 
numerous steel and concrete floors that separated companies attempting to 
communicate;and second,so many different companies were attempting to use 
the same point-to-point channel that communications became unintelligible.24 

The Port Authority installed, at its own expense, a repeater system in 1994 
to greatly enhance FDNY radio communications in the difficult high-rise 
environment of the Twin Towers.The Port Authority recommended leaving 
the repeater system on at all times.The FDNY requested, however, that the 
repeater be turned on only when it was actually needed because the channel 
could cause interference with other FDNY operations in Lower Manhattan. 
The repeater system was installed at the PortAuthority police desk in 5 WTC, 
to be activated by members of the PortAuthority police when the FDNY units 
responding to the WTC complex so requested.However,in the spring of 2000 
the FDNY asked that an activation console for the repeater system be placed 
instead in the lobby fire safety desk of each of the towers, making FDNY personnel 
entirely responsible for its activation.The Port Authority complied.25 

Between 1998 and 2000, fewer people died from fires in New York City 
than in any three-year period since accurate measurements began in 1946.Firefighter 
deaths—a total of 22 during the 1990s—compared favorably with the 
most tranquil periods in the department’s history.26 

Office of Emergency Management and Interagency Preparedness. In 
1996,Mayor Rudolph Giuliani created the Mayor’s Office of Emergency Management,
which had three basic functions.First,OEM’s Watch Command was 
to monitor the city’s key communications channels—including radio frequencies 
of FDNY dispatch and the NYPD—and other data.A second purpose of 
the OEM was to improve New York City’s response to major incidents,including 
terrorist attacks,by planning and conducting exercises and drills that would 
involve multiple city agencies, particularly the NYPD and FDNY.Third, the 
OEM would play a crucial role in managing the city’s overall response to an</docText>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Location>Lower Manhattan</Location>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Person>Rudolph Giuliani</Person>
    <Misc>OEM</Misc>
    <Organization>OEM’s Watch Command</Organization>
    <Misc>PortAuthority</Misc>
    <Organization>Fire Dispatch Operations Division</Organization>
    <Misc>Twin Towers.The</Misc>
    <Organization>history.26 Office of Emergency Management</Organization>
    <Organization>Interagency Preparedness</Organization>
    <Organization>Mayor’s Office of Emergency Management</Organization>
    <Misc>NYPD—and</Misc>
    <Date>1998 and 2000</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>301_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 


The World Trade Center Radio Repeater System 

Rendering by Marco Crupi 

incident.After OEM’s Emergency Operations Center was activated,designated 
liaisons from relevant agencies, as well as the mayor and his or her senior staff, 
would respond there. In addition, an OEM field responder would be sent to 
the scene to ensure that the response was coordinated.27 

The OEM’s headquarters was located at 7 WTC.Some questioned locating 
it both so close to a previous terrorist target and on the 23rd floor of a building 
(difficult to access should elevators become inoperable). There was no 
backup site.28 

In July 2001, Mayor Giuliani updated a directive titled “Direction and 
Control of Emergencies in the City of New York.”Its purpose was to eliminate 
“potential conflict among responding agencies which may have areas</docText>
    <Person>Giuliani</Person>
    <Location>City</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center Radio Repeater System</Organization>
    <Person>Marco Crupi</Person>
    <Organization>OEM’s Emergency Operations Center</Organization>
    <Organization>OEM’s</Organization>
    <Location>New York.”Its</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>302_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

of overlapping expertise and responsibility.”The directive sought to accomplish 
this objective by designating, for different types of emergencies, an 
appropriate agency as “Incident Commander.” This Incident Commander 
would be “responsible for the management of the City’s response to the 
emergency,” while the OEM was “designated the ‘On Scene Interagency 
Coordinator.’”29 

Nevertheless, the FDNY and NYPD each considered itself operationally 
autonomous.As of September 11,they were not prepared to comprehensively 
coordinate their efforts in responding to a major incident.The OEM had not 
overcome this problem. 

9.2 SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 
As we turn to the events of September 11, we are mindful of the unfair perspective 
afforded by hindsight. Nevertheless, we will try to describe what happened 
in the following 102 minutes: 

• 
the 17 minutes from the crash of the hijacked American Airlines Flight 
11 into 1 World Trade Center (the North Tower) at 8:46 until the 
South Tower was hit 
• 
the 56 minutes from the crash of the hijacked United Airlines Flight 
175 into 2 World Trade Center (the South Tower) at 9:03 until the 
collapse of the South Tower 
• 
the 29 minutes from the collapse of the South Tower at 9:59 until the 
collapse of the North Tower at 10:28 
From 8:46 until 9:03 A.M. 

At 8:46:40, the hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 flew into the upper portion 
of the North Tower, cutting through floors 93 to 99. Evidence suggests 
that all three of the building’s stairwells became impassable from the 92nd floor 
up. Hundreds of civilians were killed instantly by the impact. Hundreds more 
remained alive but trapped.30 

Civilians, Fire Safety Personnel, and 911 Calls 
North Tower. A jet fuel fireball erupted upon impact and shot down at least 
one bank of elevators.The fireball exploded onto numerous lower floors,including 
the 77th and 22nd; the West Street lobby level; and the B4 level, four stories 
below ground.The burning jet fuel immediately created thick, black smoke that 
enveloped the upper floors and roof of the North Tower.The roof of the South 
Tower was also engulfed in smoke because of prevailing light winds from the 
northwest.31 

Within minutes, New York City’s 911 system was flooded with eyewit</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>OEM</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Misc>Commander.”</Misc>
    <Organization>Scene Interagency Coordinator.’”29 Nevertheless</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower.The</Location>
    <Organization>New York City’s</Organization>
    <Date>SEPTEMBER 11, 2001</Date>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>303_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

ness accounts of the event. Most callers correctly identified the target of the 
attack. Some identified the plane as a commercial airliner.32 

The first response came from private firms and individuals—the people and 
companies in the building. Everything that would happen to them during the 
next few minutes would turn on their circumstances and their preparedness, 
assisted by building personnel on-site. 

Hundreds of civilians trapped on or above the 92nd floor gathered in large 
and small groups,primarily between the 103rd and 106th floors.A large group 
was reported on the 92nd floor, technically below the impact but unable to 
descend. Civilians were also trapped in elevators. Other civilians below the 
impact zone—mostly on floors in the 70s and 80s, but also on at least the 47th 
and 22nd floors—were either trapped or waiting for assistance.33 

It is unclear when the first full building evacuation order was attempted over 
the public-address system.The deputy fire safety director in the lobby, while 
immediately aware that a major incident had occurred, did not know for 
approximately ten minutes that a commercial jet had directly hit the building. 
Following protocol, he initially gave announcements to those floors that had 
generated computerized alarms, advising those tenants to descend to points of 
safety—at least two floors below the smoke or fire—and to wait there for further 
instructions. The deputy fire safety director has told us that he began 
instructing a full evacuation within about ten minutes of the explosion. But 
the first FDNY chiefs to arrive in the lobby were advised by the Port Authority 
fire safety director—who had reported to the lobby although he was no 
longer the designated fire safety director—that the full building evacuation 
announcement had been made within one minute of the building being hit.34 

Because of damage to building systems caused by the impact of the plane, 
public-address announcements were not heard in many locations.For the same 
reason, many civilians may have been unable to use the emergency intercom 
phones, as they had been advised to do in fire drills. Many called 911.35 

The 911 system was not equipped to handle the enormous volume of calls 
it received. Some callers were unable to connect with 911 operators, receiving 
an “all circuits busy” message. Standard operating procedure was for calls relating 
to fire emergencies to be transferred from 911 operators to FDNY dispatch 
operators in the appropriate borough (in this case, Manhattan).Transfers were 
often plagued by delays and were in some cases unsuccessful. Many calls were 
also prematurely disconnected.36 

The 911 operators and FDNY dispatchers had no information about either 
the location or the magnitude of the impact zone and were therefore unable 
to provide information as fundamental as whether callers were above or below 
the fire. Because the operators were not informed of NYPD Aviation’s determination 
of the impossibility of rooftop rescues from the Twin Towers on that 
day, they could not knowledgeably answer when callers asked whether to go 
up or down. In most instances, therefore, the operators and the FDNY dispatchers 
relied on standard operating procedures for high-rise fires—that civil</docText>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Location>Standard</Location>
    <Location>Twin Towers</Location>
    <Location>Manhattan</Location>
    <Organization>NYPD Aviation’s</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>304_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

ians should stay low, remain where they are, and wait for emergency personnel 
to reach them.This advice was given to callers from the North Tower for 
locations both above and below the impact zone. Fire chiefs told us that the 
evacuation of tens of thousands of people from skyscrapers can create many 
new problems, especially for individuals who are disabled or in poor health. 
Many of the injuries after the 1993 bombing occurred during the evacuation.37 

Although the guidance to stay in place may seem understandable in cases 
of conventional high-rise fires,FDNY chiefs in the North Tower lobby determined 
at once that all building occupants should attempt to evacuate immediately. 
By 8:57, FDNY chiefs had instructed the PAPD and building 
personnel to evacuate the South Tower as well, because of the magnitude of 
the damage caused by the first plane’s impact.38 

These critical decisions were not conveyed to 911 operators or to FDNY 
dispatchers. Departing from protocol, a number of operators told callers that 
they could break windows, and several operators advised callers to evacuate if 
they could.39 Civilians who called the Port Authority police desk located at 5 
WTC were advised to leave if they could.40 

Most civilians who were not obstructed from proceeding began evacuating 
without waiting for instructions over the intercom system. Some remained to 
wait for help,as advised by 911 operators.Others simply continued to work or 
delayed to collect personal items,but in many cases were urged to leave by others. 
Some Port Authority civilian employees remained on various upper floors 
to help civilians who were trapped and to assist in the evacuation.41 

While evacuating, some civilians had trouble reaching the exits because of 
damage caused by the impact.Some were confused by deviations in the increasingly 
crowded stairwells, and impeded by doors that appeared to be locked but 
actually were jammed by debris or shifting that resulted from the impact of the 
plane.Despite these obstacles,the evacuation was relatively calm and orderly.42 

Within ten minutes of impact, smoke was beginning to rise to the upper 
floors in debilitating volumes and isolated fires were reported, although there 
were some pockets of refuge. Faced with insufferable heat, smoke, and fire, and 
with no prospect for relief, some jumped or fell from the building.43 

South Tower. Many civilians in the South Tower were initially unaware of 
what had happened in the other tower. Some believed an incident had 
occurred in their building; others were aware that a major explosion had 
occurred on the upper floors of the North Tower. Many people decided to 
leave, and some were advised to do so by fire wardens. In addition, Morgan 
Stanley,which occupied more than 20 floors of the South Tower,evacuated its 
employees by the decision of company security officials.44 

Consistent with protocol, at 8:49 the deputy fire safety director in the South 
Tower told his counterpart in the North Tower that he would wait to hear from 
“the boss from the Fire Department or somebody” before ordering an evacuation.
45 At about this time, an announcement over the public-address system in</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Morgan Stanley</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>305_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 


The World Trade Center North Tower Stairwell with Deviation 

Rendering by Marco Crupi 

the South Tower stated that the incident had occurred in the other building and 
advised tenants,generally,that their building was safe and that they should remain 
on or return to their offices or floors. A statement from the deputy fire safety 
director informing tenants that the incident had occurred in the other building 
was consistent with protocol; the expanded advice did not correspond to any 
existing written protocol,and did not reflect any instruction known to have been 
given to the deputy fire safety director that day.We do not know the reason for 
the announcement, as both the deputy fire safety director believed to have made 
it and the director of fire safety for the WTC complex perished in the South 
Tower’s collapse. Clearly, however, the prospect of another plane hitting the second 
building was beyond the contemplation of anyone giving advice.According</docText>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower’s</Misc>
    <Organization>World Trade Center North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Deviation Rendering</Organization>
    <Organization>Marco Crupi the South Tower</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>306_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

to one of the first fire chiefs to arrive,such a scenario was unimaginable,“beyond 
our consciousness.”As a result of the announcement,many civilians remained on 
their floors. Others reversed their evacuation and went back up.46 

Similar advice was given in person by security officials in both the groundfloor 
lobby—where a group of 20 that had descended by the elevators was personally 
instructed to go back upstairs—and in the upper sky lobby,where many 
waited for express elevators to take them down.Security officials who gave this 
advice were not part of the fire safety staff.47 

Several South Tower occupants called the Port Authority police desk in 5 
WTC. Some were advised to stand by for further instructions; others were 
strongly advised to leave.48 

It is not known whether the order by the FDNY to evacuate the South 
Tower was received by the deputy fire safety director making announcements 
there. However, at approximately 9:02—less than a minute before the building 
was hit—an instruction over the South Tower’s public-address system advised 
civilians, generally, that they could begin an orderly evacuation if conditions 
warranted. Like the earlier advice to remain in place, it did not correspond to 
any prewritten emergency instruction.49 

FDNY Initial Response 
Mobilization. The FDNY response began within five seconds of the crash. 
By 9:00,many senior FDNY leaders,including 7 of the 11 most highly ranked 
chiefs in the department,as well as the Commissioner and many of his deputies 
and assistants, had begun responding from headquarters in Brooklyn.While en 
route over the Brooklyn Bridge, the Chief of Department and the Chief of 
Operations had a clear view of the situation on the upper floors of the North 
Tower.They determined that because of the fire’s magnitude and location near 
the top of the building, their mission would be primarily one of rescue.They 
called for a fifth alarm, which would bring additional engine and ladder companies, 
as well as for two more elite rescue units.The Chief of Department 
arrived at about 9:00; general FDNY Incident Command was transferred to 
his location on the West Side Highway. In all, 22 of the 32 senior chiefs and 
commissioners arrived at the WTC before 10:00.50 

As of 9:00, the units that were dispatched (including senior chiefs responding 
to headquarters) included approximately 235 firefighters.These units consisted 
of 21 engine companies,nine ladder companies,four of the department’s 
elite rescue teams, the department’s single Hazmat team, two of the city’s elite 
squad companies, and support staff. In addition, at 8:53 nine Brooklyn units 
were staged on the Brooklyn side of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel to await possible 
dispatch orders.51 

Operations. A battalion chief and two ladder and two engine companies 
arrived at the North Tower at approximately 8:52.As they entered the lobby, 
they encountered badly burned civilians who had been caught in the path of</docText>
    <Location>Brooklyn</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower’s</Misc>
    <Organization>North Tower.They</Organization>
    <Organization>Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel</Organization>
    <Location>Brooklyn.While</Location>
    <Location>Brooklyn Bridge</Location>
    <Organization>FDNY Incident Command</Organization>
    <Organization>West Side Highway</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>307_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the fireball. Floor-to-ceiling windows in the northwest corner of the West 
Street level of the lobby had been blown out; some large marble tiles had been 
dislodged from the walls; one entire elevator bank was destroyed by the fireball. 
Lights were functioning, however, and the air was clear of smoke.52 

As the highest-ranking officer on the scene, the battalion chief initially was 
the FDNY incident commander. Minutes later, the on-duty division chief for 
Lower Manhattan arrived and took over.Both chiefs immediately began speaking 
with the former fire safety director and other building personnel to learn 
whether building systems were working.They were advised that all 99 elevators 
in the North Tower appeared to be out,and there were no assurances that 
sprinklers or standpipes were working on upper floors. Chiefs also spoke with 
Port Authority police personnel and an OEM representative.53 

After conferring with the chiefs in the lobby, one engine and one ladder 
company began climbing stairwell C at about 8:57, with the goal of approaching 
the impact zone as scouting units and reporting back to the chiefs in the 
lobby.The radio channel they used was tactical 1. Following FDNY high-rise 
fire protocols, other units did not begin climbing immediately, as the chiefs 
worked to formulate a plan before sending them up. Units began mobilizing 
in the lobby, lining up and awaiting their marching orders.54 

Also by approximately 8:57, FDNY chiefs had asked both building personnel 
and a Port Authority police officer to evacuate the South Tower, because 
in their judgment the impact of the plane into the North Tower made the entire 
complex unsafe—not because of concerns about a possible second plane.55 

The FDNY chiefs in the increasingly crowded North Tower lobby were 
confronting critical choices with little to no information.They had ordered units 
up the stairs to report back on conditions, but did not know what the impact 
floors were;they did not know if any stairwells into the impact zone were clear; 
and they did not know whether water for firefighting would be available on 
the upper floors.They also did not know what the fire and impact zone looked 
like from the outside.56 

They did know that the explosion had been large enough to send down a 
fireball that blew out elevators and windows in the lobby and that conditions 
were so dire that some civilians on upper floors were jumping or falling from 
the building.They also knew from building personnel that some civilians were 
trapped in elevators and on specific floors. According to Division Chief for 
Lower Manhattan Peter Hayden,“We had a very strong sense we would lose 
firefighters and that we were in deep trouble, but we had estimates of 25,000 
to 50,000 civilians, and we had to try to rescue them.”57 

The chiefs concluded that this would be a rescue operation, not a firefighting 
operation. One of the chiefs present explained: 

We realized that, because of the impact of the plane, that there was some 
structural damage to the building, and most likely that the fire suppres</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Location>Lower Manhattan</Location>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Person>Peter Hayden</Person>
    <Misc>OEM</Misc>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>308_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

sion systems within the building were probably damaged and possibly 
inoperable....We knew that at the height of the day there were as many 
as 50,000 people in this building.We had a large volume of fire on the 
upper floors. Each floor was approximately an acre in size. Several floors 
of fire would have been beyond the fire-extinguishing capability of the 
forces that we had on hand. So we determined, very early on, that this 
was going to be strictly a rescue mission.We were going to vacate the 
building, get everybody out, and then we were going to get out.58 

The specifics of the mission were harder to determine, as they had almost 
no information about the situation 80 or more stories above them.They also 
received advice from senior FDNY chiefs that while the building might eventually 
suffer a partial collapse on upper floors, such structural failure was not 
imminent. No one anticipated the possibility of a total collapse.59 

Emergency medical services (EMS) personnel were directed to one of four 
triage areas being set up around the perimeter of the WTC. Some entered the 
lobby to respond to specific casualty reports.In addition,many ambulance paramedics 
from private hospitals were rushing to the WTC complex.60 

NYPD Initial Response 

Numerous NYPD officers saw the plane strike the North Tower and immediately 
reported it to NYPD communications dispatchers.61 

At 8:58, while en route, the NYPD Chief of Department raised the 
NYPD’s mobilization to level 4, thereby sending to the WTC approximately 
22 lieutenants,100 sergeants,and 800 police officers from all over the city.The 
Chief of Department arrived at Church and Vesey at 9:00.62 

At 9:01,the NYPD patrol mobilization point was moved to West and Vesey 
in order to handle the greater number of patrol officers dispatched in the 
higher-level mobilization. These officers would be stationed around the 
perimeter of the complex to direct the evacuation of civilians. Many were 
diverted on the way to the scene by intervening emergencies related to the 
attack.63 

At 8:50, the Aviation Unit of the NYPD dispatched two helicopters to the 
WTC to report on conditions and assess the feasibility of a rooftop landing or 
of special rescue operations.En route,the two helicopters communicated with 
air traffic controllers at the area’s three major airports and informed them of 
the commercial airplane crash at the World Trade Center.The air traffic controllers 
had been unaware of the incident.64 

At 8:56, an NYPD ESU team asked to be picked up at the Wall Street heliport 
to initiate rooftop rescues. At 8:58, however, after assessing the North 
Tower roof, a helicopter pilot advised the ESU team that they could not land 
on the roof,because “it is too engulfed in flames and heavy smoke condition.”65 

By 9:00, a third NYPD helicopter was responding to the WTC complex.</docText>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>EMS</Organization>
    <Person>Vesey</Person>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Misc>World Trade Center.The</Misc>
    <Location>Wall Street</Location>
    <Organization>NYPD Initial Response Numerous NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Aviation Unit of the NYPD</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>309_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

NYPD helicopters and ESU officers remained on the scene throughout the 
morning, prepared to commence rescue operations on the roof if conditions 
improved. Both FDNY and NYPD protocols called for FDNY personnel to 
be placed in NYPD helicopters in the event of an attempted rooftop rescue at 
a high-rise fire. No FDNY personnel were placed in NYPD helicopters on 
September 11.66 

The 911 operators and FDNY dispatchers were not advised that rooftop 
rescues were not being undertaken.They thus were not able to communicate 
this fact to callers, some of whom spoke of attempting to climb to the roof.67 

Two on-duty NYPD officers were on the 20th floor of the North Tower at 
8:46.They climbed to the 29th floor,urging civilians to evacuate,but did not 
locate a group of civilians trapped on the 22nd floor.68 

Just before 9:00,an ESU team began to walk from Church and Vesey to the 
North Tower lobby, with the goal of climbing toward and setting up a triage 
center on the upper floors for the severely injured.A second ESU team would 
follow them to assist in removing those individuals.69 

Numerous officers responded in order to help injured civilians and to urge 
those who could walk to vacate the area immediately. Putting themselves in 
danger of falling debris, several officers entered the plaza and successfully rescued 
at least one injured, nonambulatory civilian, and attempted to rescue 
others.70 

Also by about 9:00, transit officers began shutting down subway stations 
in the vicinity of the World Trade Center and evacuating civilians from those 
stations.71 

Around the city, the NYPD cleared major thoroughfares for emergency 
vehicles to access the WTC.The NYPD and PAPD coordinated the closing of 
bridges and tunnels into Manhattan.72 

PAPD Initial Response 

The Port Authority’s on-site commanding police officer was standing in the 
concourse when a fireball erupted out of elevator shafts and exploded onto the 
mall concourse, causing him to dive for cover.The on-duty sergeant initially 
instructed the officers in the WTC Command to meet at the police desk in 5 
WTC. Soon thereafter, he instructed officers arriving from outside commands 
to meet him at the fire safety desk in the North Tower lobby. A few of these 
officers from outside commands were given WTC Command radios.73 

One PortAuthority police officer at the WTC immediately began climbing 
stairwell C in the North Tower.74 Other officers began performing rescue 
and evacuation operations on the ground floors and in the PATH (Port 
Authority Trans-Hudson) station below the WTC complex. 

Within minutes of impact, Port Authority police officers from the PATH, 
bridges, tunnels, and airport commands began responding to the WTC.The 
PAPD lacked written standard operating procedures for personnel responding 
from outside commands to the WTC during a major incident.In addition,offi</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Person>Vesey</Person>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC Command</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority’s</Organization>
    <Misc>PATH</Misc>
    <Organization>WTC.The NYPD</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower.74 Other</Location>
    <Organization>WTC.The</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>30_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

At least ten passengers and two crew members shared vital information with 
family, friends, colleagues, or others on the ground. All understood the plane 
had been hijacked. They said the hijackers wielded knives and claimed to have 
a bomb.The hijackers were wearing red bandanas, and they forced the passengers 
to the back of the aircraft.80 

Callers reported that a passenger had been stabbed and that two people were 
lying on the floor of the cabin, injured or dead—possibly the captain and first 
officer. One caller reported that a flight attendant had been killed.81 

One of the callers from United 93 also reported that he thought the hijackers 
might possess a gun. But none of the other callers reported the presence of 
a firearm. One recipient of a call from the aircraft recounted specifically asking 
her caller whether the hijackers had guns.The passenger replied that he did 
not see one.No evidence of firearms or of their identifiable remains was found 
at the aircraft’s crash site, and the cockpit voice recorder gives no indication of 
a gun being fired or mentioned at any time.We believe that if the hijackers had 
possessed a gun, they would have used it in the flight’s last minutes as the passengers 
fought back.82 

Passengers on three flights reported the hijackers’ claim of having a bomb. 
The FBI told us they found no trace of explosives at the crash sites. One of 
the passengers who mentioned a bomb expressed his belief that it was not real. 
Lacking any evidence that the hijackers attempted to smuggle such illegal 
items past the security screening checkpoints, we believe the bombs were 
probably fake.83 

During at least five of the passengers’ phone calls, information was shared 
about the attacks that had occurred earlier that morning at the World Trade 
Center. Five calls described the intent of passengers and surviving crew members 
to revolt against the hijackers. According to one call, they voted on 
whether to rush the terrorists in an attempt to retake the plane. They decided, 
and acted.84 

At 9:57, the passenger assault began. Several passengers had terminated 
phone calls with loved ones in order to join the revolt. One of the callers 
ended her message as follows:“Everyone’s running up to first class. I’ve got to 
go. Bye.”85 

The cockpit voice recorder captured the sounds of the passenger assault 
muffled by the intervening cockpit door. Some family members who listened 
to the recording report that they can hear the voice of a loved one among the 
din.We cannot identify whose voices can be heard. But the assault was sustained.
86 

In response, Jarrah immediately began to roll the airplane to the left and 
right, attempting to knock the passengers off balance. At 9:58:57, Jarrah told 
another hijacker in the cockpit to block the door. Jarrah continued to roll the 
airplane sharply left and right, but the assault continued. At 9:59:52, Jarrah 
changed tactics and pitched the nose of the airplane up and down to disrupt</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>World Trade Center</Location>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Misc>United 93</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>310_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

cers from some PAPD commands lacked interoperable radio frequencies.As a 
result, there was no comprehensive coordination of PAPD’s overall response.75 

At 9:00,the PAPD commanding officer of the WTC ordered an evacuation 
of all civilians in the World Trade Center complex, because of the magnitude 
of the calamity in the North Tower.This order was given over WTC police 
radio channel W, which could not be heard by the deputy fire safety director 
in the South Tower.76 

Also at 9:00, the PAPD Superintendent and Chief of Department arrived 
separately and made their way to the North Tower.77 

OEM Initial Response 

By 8:48, officials in OEM headquarters on the 23rd floor of 7 WTC—just to 
the north of the North Tower—began to activate the Emergency Operations 
Center by calling such agencies as the FDNY, NYPD, Department of Health, 
and the Greater Hospital Association and instructing them to send their designated 
representatives to the OEM.In addition,the Federal Emergency Management 
Agency (FEMA) was called and asked to send at least five federal 
Urban Search and Rescue Teams (such teams are located throughout the 
United States).At approximately 8:50, a senior representative from the OEM 
arrived in the lobby of the North Tower and began to act as the OEM field 
responder to the incident. He soon was joined by several other OEM officials, 
including the OEM Director.78 

Summary 

In the 17-minute period between 8:46 and 9:03 A.M. on September 11, New 
York City and the PortAuthority of New York and New Jersey had mobilized 
the largest rescue operation in the city’s history. Well over a thousand first 
responders had been deployed, an evacuation had begun, and the critical decision 
that the fire could not be fought had been made. 

Then the second plane hit. 

From 9:03 until 9:59 A.M. 

At 9:03:11, the hijacked United Airlines Flight 175 hit 2 WTC (the South 
Tower) from the south,crashing through the 77th to 85th floors.What had been 
the largest and most complicated rescue operation in city history instantly doubled 
in magnitude.The plane banked as it hit the building, leaving portions of 
the building undamaged on impact floors.As a consequence—and in contrast 
to the situation in the North Tower—one of the stairwells (A) initially remained 
passable from at least the 91st floor down, and likely from top to bottom.79 

Civilians, Fire Safety Personnel, and 911 Calls 
South Tower. At the lower end of the impact, the 78th-floor sky lobby, hundreds 
had been waiting to evacuate when the plane hit. Many had attempted 
but failed to squeeze into packed express elevators. Upon impact, many were</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Location>New Jersey</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines Flight</Organization>
    <Misc>OEM</Misc>
    <Organization>Federal Emergency Management Agency</Organization>
    <Organization>FEMA</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower—one</Location>
    <Misc>PAPD’s</Misc>
    <Location>North Tower.This</Location>
    <Misc>South Tower.76</Misc>
    <Organization>Department arrived</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower.77</Location>
    <Misc>OEM Initial Response By</Misc>
    <Location>North Tower—began</Location>
    <Organization>Emergency Operations Center</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of Health ,</Organization>
    <Organization>Greater Hospital Association</Organization>
    <Misc>OEM.In</Misc>
    <Organization>Rescue Teams</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>311_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

killed or severely injured;others were relatively unharmed.We know of at least 
one civilian who seized the initiative and shouted that anyone who could walk 
should walk to the stairs, and anyone who could help should help others in 
need of assistance.As a result, at least two small groups of civilians descended 
from that floor. Others remained on the floor to help the injured and move 
victims who were unable to walk to the stairwell to aid their rescue.80 

Still others remained alive in the impact zone above the 78th floor. Damage 
was extensive, and conditions were highly precarious.The only survivor 
known to have escaped from the heart of the impact zone described the 81st 
floor—where the wing of the plane had sliced through his office—as a “demolition” 
site in which everything was “broken up” and the smell of jet fuel was 
so strong that it was almost impossible to breathe.This person escaped by means 
of an unlikely rescue, aided by a civilian fire warden descending from a higher 
floor, who, critically, had been provided with a flashlight.81 

At least four people were able to descend stairwell A from the 81st floor or 
above. One left the 84th floor immediately after the building was hit. Even at 
that point, the stairway was dark, smoky, and difficult to navigate; glow strips 
on the stairs and handrails were a significant help. Several flights down, however,
the evacuee became confused when he reached a smoke door that caused 
him to believe the stairway had ended. He was able to exit that stairwell and 
switch to another.82 

Many civilians in and above the impact zone ascended the stairs. One small 
group reversed its descent down stairwell A after being advised by another civilian 
that they were approaching a floor “in flames.”The only known survivor 
has told us that their intention was to exit the stairwell in search of clearer air. 
At the 91st floor, joined by others from intervening floors, they perceived 
themselves to be trapped in the stairwell and began descending again. By this 
time, the stairwell was “pretty black,” intensifying smoke caused many to pass 
out, and fire had ignited in the 82nd-floor transfer hallway.83 

Others ascended to attempt to reach the roof but were thwarted by locked 
doors.At approximately 9:30 a “lock release”order—which would unlock all 
areas in the complex controlled by the buildings’ computerized security system, 
including doors leading to the roofs—was transmitted to the Security 
Command Center located on the 22nd floor of the North Tower. Damage to 
the software controlling the system,resulting from the impact of the plane,prevented 
this order from being executed.84 

Others, attempting to descend, were frustrated by jammed or locked doors 
in stairwells or confused by the structure of the stairwell deviations. By the 
lower 70s, however, stairwells A and B were well-lit, and conditions were generally 
normal.85 

Some civilians remained on affected floors, and at least one ascended from 
a lower point into the impact zone, to help evacuate colleagues or assist the 
injured.86 

Within 15 minutes after the impact, debilitating smoke had reached at least</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Security Command Center</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>312_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

one location on the 100th floor, and severe smoke conditions were reported 
throughout floors in the 90s and 100s over the course of the following half 
hour.By 9:30,a number of civilians who had failed to reach the roof remained 
on the 105th floor, likely unable to descend because of intensifying smoke in 
the stairwell.There were reports of tremendous smoke on that floor,but at least 
one area remained less affected until shortly before the building collapsed. 
There were several areas between the impact zone and the uppermost floors 
where conditions were better.At least a hundred people remained alive on the 
88th and 89th floors, in some cases calling 911 for direction.87 

The 911 system remained plagued by the operators’ lack of awareness of 
what was occurring. Just as in the North Tower, callers from below and above 
the impact zone were advised to remain where they were and wait for help. 
The operators were not given any information about the inability to conduct 
rooftop rescues and therefore could not advise callers that they had essentially 
been ruled out.This lack of information, combined with the general advice to 
remain where they were, may have caused civilians above the impact not to 
attempt to descend, although stairwell A may have been passable.88 

In addition, the 911 system struggled with the volume of calls and rigid standard 
operating procedures according to which calls conveying crucial information 
had to wait to be transferred to either EMS or FDNY dispatch.89According 
to one civilian who was evacuating down stairwell A from the heart of the impact 
zone and who stopped on the 31st floor in order to call 911, 

I told them when they answered the phone,where I was,that I had passed 
somebody on the 44th floor, injured—they need to get a medic and a 
stretcher to this floor, and described the situation in brief, and the person 
then asked for my phone number,or something,and they said—they 
put me on hold.“You gotta talk to one of my supervisors”—and suddenly 
I was on hold. And so I waited a considerable amount of time. 
Somebody else came back on the phone,I repeated the story.And then 
it happened again.I was on hold a second time,and needed to repeat the 
story for a third time. But I told the third person that I am only telling 
you once. I am getting out of the building, here are the details, write it 
down, and do what you should do.90 

Very few 911 calls were received from floors below the impact, but at least 
one person was advised to remain on the 73rd floor despite the caller’s protests 
that oxygen was running out.The last known 911 call from this location came 
at 9:52.91 

Evidence suggests that the public-address system did not continue to function 
after the building was hit. A group of people trapped on the 97th floor, 
however, made repeated references in calls to 911 to having heard “announcements” 
to go down the stairs. Evacuation tones were heard in locations both 
above and below the impact zone.92</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>EMS</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>313_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

By 9:35,the West Street lobby level of the South Tower was becoming overwhelmed 
by injured people who had descended to the lobby but were having 
difficulty going on.Those who could continue were directed to exit north or 
east through the concourse and then out of the WTC complex.93 

By 9:59, at least one person had descended from as high as the 91st floor of 
that tower, and stairwell A was reported to have been almost empty. Stairwell 
B was also reported to have contained only a handful of descending civilians 
at an earlier point in the morning. But just before the tower collapsed, a team 
of NYPD ESU officers encountered a stream of civilians descending an 
unidentified stairwell in the 20s.These civilians may have been descending from 
at or above the impact zone.94 

North Tower. In the North Tower, civilians continued their evacuation. On 
the 91st floor, the highest floor with stairway access, all civilians but one were 
uninjured and able to descend.While some complained of smoke, heat, fumes, 
and crowding in the stairwells, conditions were otherwise fairly normal on 
floors below the impact.At least one stairwell was reported to have been “clear 
and bright” from the upper 80s down.95 

Those who called 911 from floors below the impact were generally advised 
to remain in place. One group trapped on the 83rd floor pleaded repeatedly to 
know whether the fire was above or below them,specifically asking if 911 operators 
had any information from the outside or from the news.The callers were 
transferred back and forth several times and advised to stay put. Evidence suggests 
that these callers died.96 

At 8:59,the PortAuthority police desk at Newark Airport told a third party 
that a group of Port Authority civilian employees on the 64th floor should 
evacuate. (The third party was not at the WTC, but had been in phone contact 
with the group on the 64th floor.) At 9:10, in response to an inquiry from 
the employees themselves, the Port Authority police desk in Jersey City confirmed 
that employees on the 64th floor should “be careful, stay near the stairwells,
and wait for the police to come up.”When the third party inquired again 
at 9:31, the police desk at Newark Airport advised that they “absolutely” evacuate.
The third party informed the police desk that the employees had previously 
received contrary advice from the FDNY, which could only have come 
via 911.These workers were not trapped, yet unlike most occupants on the 
upper floors,they had chosen not to descend immediately after impact.They 
eventually began to descend the stairs, but most of them died in the collapse 
of the North Tower.97 

All civilians who reached the lobby were directed by NYPD and PAPD officers 
into the concourse, where other police officers guided them to exit the 
concourse and complex to the north and east so that they might avoid falling 
debris and victims.98 

By 9:55,only a few civilians were descending above the 25th floor in stair</docText>
    <Location>Jersey City</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Misc>PortAuthority</Misc>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>Newark Airport</Location>
    <Misc>North Tower.97</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>314_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

well B; these primarily were injured, handicapped, elderly, or severely overweight 
civilians, in some cases being assisted by other civilians.99 

By 9:59, tenants from the 91st floor had already descended the stairs and 
exited the concourse.However,a number of civilians remained in at least stairwell 
C, approaching lower floors. Other evacuees were killed earlier by debris 
falling on the street.100 

FDNY Response 
Increased Mobilization. Immediately after the second plane hit, the FDNY 
Chief of Department called a second fifth alarm.101 

By 9:15,the number of FDNY personnel en route to or present at the scene 
was far greater than the commanding chiefs at the scene had requested. Five 
factors account for this disparity. First, while the second fifth alarm had called 
for 20 engine and 8 ladder companies, in fact 23 engine and 13 ladder companies 
were dispatched. Second, several other units self-dispatched. Third, 
because the attacks came so close to the 9:00 shift change, many firefighters 
just going off duty were given permission by company officers to “ride heavy” 
and became part of those on-duty teams, under the leadership of that unit’s 
officer.Fourth,many off-duty firefighters responded from firehouses separately 
from the on-duty unit (in some cases when expressly told not to) or from 
home.The arrival of personnel in excess of that dispatched was particularly pronounced 
in the department’s elite units.Fifth,numerous additional FDNY personnel—
such as fire marshals and firefighters in administrative positions—who 
lacked a predetermined operating role also reported to the WTC.102 

The Repeater System. Almost immediately after the South Tower was hit, 
senior FDNY chiefs in the North Tower lobby huddled to discuss strategy for 
the operations in the two towers. Of particular concern to the chiefs—in light 
of FDNY difficulties in responding to the 1993 bombing—was communications 
capability. One of the chiefs recommended testing the repeater channel 
to see if it would work.103 

Earlier, an FDNY chief had asked building personnel to activate the 
repeater channel,which would enable greatly-enhanced FDNY portable radio 
communications in the high-rises. One button on the repeater system activation 
console in the North Tower was pressed at 8:54, though it is unclear by 
whom.As a result of this activation,communication became possible between 
FDNY portable radios on the repeater channel.In addition,the repeater’s master 
handset at the fire safety desk could hear communications made by FDNY 
portable radios on the repeater channel.The activation of transmission on the 
master handset required, however, that a second button be pressed.That second 
button was never activated on the morning of September 11.104 

At 9:05, FDNY chiefs tested the WTC complex’s repeater system. Because 
the second button had not been activated,the chief on the master handset could</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY Response Increased Mobilization</Organization>
    <Misc>WTC.102</Misc>
    <Organization>Repeater System</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>315_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

not transmit. He was also apparently unable to hear another chief who was 
attempting to communicate with him from a portable radio, either because of 
a technical problem or because the volume was turned down on the console 
(the normal setting when the system was not in use). Because the repeater 
channel seemed inoperable—the master handset appeared unable to transmit 
or receive communications—the chiefs in the North Tower lobby decided not 
to use it.The repeater system was working at least partially,however,on portable 
FDNY radios, and firefighters subsequently used repeater channel 7 in the 
South Tower.105 

FDNY North Tower Operations. Command and control decisions were 
affected by the lack of knowledge of what was happening 30, 60, 90, and 100 
floors above. According to one of the chiefs in the lobby, “One of the most 
critical things in a major operation like this is to have information.We didn’t 
have a lot of information coming in.We didn’t receive any reports of what was 
seen from the [NYPD] helicopters.It was impossible to know how much damage 
was done on the upper floors,whether the stairwells were intact or not.”106 
According to another chief present, “People watching on TV certainly had 
more knowledge of what was happening a hundred floors above us than we 
did in the lobby.... [W]ithout critical information coming in . . . it’s very difficult 
to make informed, critical decisions[.]”107 

As a result, chiefs in the lobby disagreed over whether anyone at or above 
the impact zone possibly could be rescued, or whether there should be even 
limited firefighting for the purpose of cutting exit routes through fire zones.108 

Many units were simply instructed to ascend toward the impact zone and 
report back to the lobby via radio. Some units were directed to assist specific 
groups of individuals trapped in elevators or in offices well below the impact 
zone. One FDNY company successfully rescued some civilians who were 
trapped on the 22nd floor as a result of damage caused by the initial fireball.109 

An attempt was made to track responding units’ assignments on a magnetic 
board,but the number of units and individual firefighters arriving in the lobby 
made this an overwhelming task.As the fire companies were not advised to the 
contrary, they followed protocol and kept their radios on tactical channel 1, 
which would be monitored by the chiefs in the lobby.Those battalion chiefs 
who would climb would operate on a separate command channel, which also 
would be monitored by the chiefs in the lobby.110 

Fire companies began to ascend stairwell B at approximately 9:07, laden 
with about 100 pounds of heavy protective clothing, self-contained breathing 
apparatuses, and other equipment (including hoses for engine companies and 
heavy tools for ladder companies).111 

Firefighters found the stairways they entered intact, lit, and clear of smoke. 
Unbeknownst to the lobby command post, one battalion chief in the North 
Tower found a working elevator,which he took to the 16th floor before beginning 
to climb.112</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower.105</Misc>
    <Organization>North Tower Operations</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>316_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

In ascending stairwell B, firefighters were passing a steady and heavy stream 
of descending civilians. Firemen were impressed with the composure and total 
lack of panic shown by almost all civilians. Many civilians were in awe of the 
firefighters and found their mere presence to be calming.113 

Firefighters periodically stopped on particular floors and searched to ensure 
that no civilians were still on it. In a few instances healthy civilians were found 
on floors, either because they still were collecting personal items or for no 
apparent reason;they were told to evacuate immediately.Firefighters deputized 
healthy civilians to be in charge of others who were struggling or injured.114 

Climbing up the stairs with heavy protective clothing and equipment was 
hard work even for physically fit firefighters.As firefighters began to suffer varying 
levels of fatigue, some became separated from others in their unit.115 

At 9:32,a senior chief radioed all units in the North Tower to return to the 
lobby, either because of a false report of a third plane approaching or because 
of his judgment about the deteriorating condition of the building. Once the 
rumor of the third plane was debunked,other chiefs continued operations,and 
there is no evidence that any units actually returned to the lobby.At the same 
time, a chief in the lobby was asked to consider the possibility of a rooftop rescue 
but was unable to reach FDNY dispatch by radio or phone. Out on West 
Street, however, the FDNY Chief of Department had already dismissed any 
rooftop rescue as impossible.116 

As units climbed higher, their ability to communicate with chiefs on tactical 
1 became more limited and sporadic, both because of the limited effectiveness 
of FDNY radios in high-rises and because so many units on tactical 1 were 
trying to communicate at once.When attempting to reach a particular unit, 
chiefs in the lobby often heard nothing in response.117 

Just prior to 10:00, in the North Tower one engine company had climbed 
to the 54th floor, at least two other companies of firefighters had reached the 
sky lobby on the 44th floor,and numerous units were located between the 5th 
and 37th floors.118 

FDNY South Tower and Marriott Hotel Operations. Immediately after 
the repeater test, a senior chief and a battalion chief commenced operations in 
the South Tower lobby. Almost at once they were joined by an OEM field 
responder.They were not,however,joined right away by a sizable number of 
fire companies,as units that had been in or en route to the North Tower lobby 
at 9:03 were not reallocated to the South Tower.119 

A battalion chief and a ladder company found a working elevator to the 40th 
floor and from there proceeded to climb stairwell B.Another ladder company 
arrived soon thereafter, and began to rescue civilians trapped in an elevator 
between the first and second floors.The senior chief in the lobby expressed 
frustration about the lack of units he initially had at his disposal for South Tower 
operations.120 

Unlike the commanders in the North Tower, the senior chief in the lobby</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Organization>Marriott Hotel Operations</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower.119</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>317_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

and the ascending battalion chief kept their radios on repeater channel 7. For 
the first 15 minutes of the operations, communications among them and the 
ladder company climbing with the battalion chief worked well. Upon learning 
from a company security official that the impact zone began at the 78th 
floor, a ladder company transmitted this information, and the battalion chief 
directed an engine company staged on the 40th floor to attempt to find an elevator 
to reach that upper level.121 

To our knowledge, no FDNY chiefs outside the South Tower realized that 
the repeater channel was functioning and being used by units in that tower. 
The senior chief in the South Tower lobby was initially unable to communicate 
his requests for more units to chiefs either in the North Tower lobby or 
at the outdoor command post.122 

From approximately 9:21 on, the ascending battalion chief was unable to 
reach the South Tower lobby command post because the senior chief in the 
lobby had ceased to communicate on repeater channel 7. The vast majority of 
units that entered the South Tower did not communicate on the repeater channel.
123 

The first FDNY fatality of the day occurred at approximately 9:30, when 
a civilian landed on and killed a fireman near the intersection of West and Liberty 
streets.124 

By 9:30,chiefs in charge of the South Tower still were in need of additional 
companies. Several factors account for the lag in response. First, only two units 
that had been dispatched to the North Tower prior to 9:03 reported immediately 
to the South Tower. Second, units were not actually sent until approximately 
five minutes after the FDNY Chief of Department ordered their 
dispatch. Third, those units that had been ordered at 8:53 to stage at the 
Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel—and thus very close to the WTC complex—were 
not dispatched after the plane hit the South Tower. Fourth, units parked further 
north on West Street, then proceeded south on foot and stopped at the 
overall FDNY command post on West Street, where in some cases they were 
told to wait.Fifth,some units responded directly to the North Tower.(Indeed, 
radio communications indicated that in certain cases some firemen believed 
that the South Tower was 1 WTC when in fact it was 2 WTC.) Sixth, some 
units couldn’t find the staging area (at West Street south of Liberty) for the 
South Tower. Finally, the jumpers and debris that confronted units attempting 
to enter the South Tower from its main entrance on Liberty Street caused some 
units to search for indirect ways to enter that tower, most often through the 
Marriott Hotel, or simply to remain on West Street.125 

A chief at the overall outdoor command post was under the impression that 
he was to assist in lobby operations of the South Tower, and in fact his aide 
already was in that lobby.But because of his lack of familiarity with the WTC 
complex and confusion over how to get to there, he instead ended up in the 
Marriott at about 9:35. Here he came across about 14 units, many of which 
had been trying to find safe access to the South Tower. He directed them to</docText>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott Hotel</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>Liberty</Location>
    <Location>Liberty Street</Location>
    <Location>West Street.125</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>318_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

secure the elevators and conduct search-and-rescue operations on the upper 
floors of the Marriott. Four of these companies searched the spa on the hotel’s 
top floor—the 22nd floor—for civilians, and found none.126 

Feeling satisfied with the scope of the operation in the Marriott, the chief 
in the lobby there directed some units to proceed to what he thought was the 
South Tower.In fact,he pointed them to the North Tower.Three of the FDNY 
companies who had entered the North Tower from the Marriott found a working 
elevator in a bank at the south end of the lobby, which they took to the 
23rd floor.127 

In response to the shortage of units in the South Tower, at 9:37 an additional 
second alarm was requested by the chief at the West and Liberty streets 
staging area.At this time,the units that earlier had been staged on the Brooklyn 
side of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel were dispatched to the South Tower; 
some had gone through the tunnel already and had responded to the Marriott, 
not the South Tower.128 

Between 9:45 and 9:58, the ascending battalion chief continued to lead 
FDNY operations on the upper floors of the South Tower.At 9:50,an FDNY 
ladder company encountered numerous seriously injured civilians on the 70th 
floor.With the assistance of a security guard,at 9:53 a group of civilians trapped 
in an elevator on the 78th-floor sky lobby were found by an FDNY company. 
They were freed from the elevator at 9:58.By that time the battalion chief had 
reached the 78th floor on stairwell A; he reported that it looked open to the 
79th floor,well into the impact zone.He also reported numerous civilian fatalities 
in the area.129 

FDNY Command and Control Outside the Towers. The overall command 
post consisted of senior chiefs,commissioners,the field communications 
van (Field Comm),numerous units that began to arrive after the South Tower 
was hit, and EMS chiefs and personnel.130 

Field Comm’s two main functions were to relay information between the 
overall operations command post and FDNY dispatch and to track all units 
operating at the scene on a large magnetic board.Both of these missions were 
severely compromised by the magnitude of the disaster on September 11. 
First, the means of transmitting information were unreliable. For example, 
while FDNY dispatch advised Field Comm that 100 people were reported 
via 911 to be trapped on the 105th floor of the North Tower, and Field 
Comm then attempted to convey that report to chiefs at the outdoor command 
post, this information did not reach the North Tower lobby. Second, 
Field Comm’s ability to keep track of which units were operating where was 
limited, because many units reported directly to the North Tower, the South 
Tower,or the Marriott.Third,efforts to track units by listening to tactical 1 
were severely hampered by the number of units using that channel; as many 
people tried to speak at once, their transmissions overlapped and often 
became indecipherable. In the opinion of one of the members of the Field</docText>
    <Location>Brooklyn</Location>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>EMS</Organization>
    <Person>Field Comm</Person>
    <Organization>Marriott</Organization>
    <Location>South Tower.In</Location>
    <Location>North Tower.Three</Location>
    <Organization>Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel</Organization>
    <Location>South Tower.128 Between</Location>
    <Misc>South Tower.At</Misc>
    <Organization>FDNY Command and Control Outside</Organization>
    <Organization>Towers</Organization>
    <Organization>Field Comm</Organization>
    <Organization>Field Comm’s</Organization>
    <Person>Field</Person>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>319_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Comm group, tactical 1 simply was not designed to handle the number of 
units operating on it that morning.131 

The primary Field Comm van had access to the NYPD’s Special Operations 
channel (used by NYPD Aviation), but it was in the garage for repairs on 
September 11.The backup van lacked that capability.132 

The Chief of Department, along with civilian commissioners and senior 
EMS chiefs, organized ambulances on West Street to expedite the transport of 
injured civilians to hospitals.133 

To our knowledge, none of the chiefs present believed that a total collapse 
of either tower was possible. One senior chief did articulate his concern that 
upper floors could begin to collapse in a few hours, and that firefighters thus 
should not ascend above floors in the 60s.That opinion was not conveyed to 
chiefs in the North Tower lobby,and there is no evidence that it was conveyed 
to chiefs in the South Tower lobby either.134 

Although the Chief of Department had general authority over operations, 
tactical decisions remained the province of the lobby commanders. The 
highest-ranking officer in the North Tower was responsible for communicating 
with the Chief of Department.They had two brief conversations. In the 
first, the senior lobby chief gave the Chief of Department a status report and 
confirmed that this was a rescue,not firefighting,operation.In the second conversation,
at about 9:45,the Chief of Department suggested that given how the 
North Tower appeared to him, the senior lobby chief might want to consider 
evacuating FDNY personnel.135 

At 9:46, the Chief of Department called an additional fifth alarm, and at 9:54 
an additional 20 engine and 6 ladder companies were sent to the WTC. As a 
result, more than one-third of all FDNY companies now had been dispatched 
to the WTC.At about 9:57,an EMS paramedic approached the FDNY Chief of 
Department and advised that an engineer in front of 7 WTC had just remarked 
that the Twin Towers in fact were in imminent danger of a total collapse.136 

NYPD Response 

Immediately after the second plane hit,the Chief of Department of the NYPD 
ordered a second Level 4 mobilization, bringing the total number of NYPD 
officers responding to close to 2,000.137 

The NYPD Chief of Department called for Operation Omega, which 
required the protection of sensitive locations around the city.NYPD headquarters 
were secured and all other government buildings were evacuated.138 

The ESU command post at Church andVesey streets coordinated all NYPD 
ESU rescue teams.After the South Tower was hit,the ESU officer running this 
command post decided to send one ESU team (each with approximately six 
police officers) up each of the Twin Towers’stairwells.While he continued to 
monitor the citywide SOD channel, which NYPD helicopters were using, he 
also monitored the point-to-point tactical channel that the ESU teams climbing 
in the towers would use.139</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>EMS</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower</Misc>
    <Misc>Twin Towers</Misc>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>Field Comm</Location>
    <Organization>NYPD’s Special Operations</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD Aviation</Organization>
    <Location>Department</Location>
    <Organization>NYPD Response</Organization>
    <Organization>Department of the NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Operation Omega</Organization>
    <Organization>Twin Towers’stairwells.While</Organization>
    <Organization>SOD</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>31_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the assault.The recorder captured the sounds of loud thumps,crashes,shouts, 
and breaking glasses and plates.At 10:00:03,Jarrah stabilized the airplane.87 

Five seconds later,Jarrah asked,“Is that it? Shall we finish it off?”A hijacker 
responded,“No. Not yet.When they all come, we finish it off.” The sounds of 
fighting continued outside the cockpit. Again, Jarrah pitched the nose of the 
aircraft up and down.At 10:00:26,a passenger in the background said,“In the 
cockpit.If we don’t we’ll die!”Sixteen seconds later,a passenger yelled,“Roll 
it!”Jarrah stopped the violent maneuvers at about 10:01:00 and said,“Allah is 
the greatest! Allah is the greatest!”He then asked another hijacker in the cockpit,“
Is that it? I mean, shall we put it down?” to which the other replied,“Yes, 
put it in it, and pull it down.”88 

The passengers continued their assault and at 10:02:23,a hijacker said,“Pull 
it down! Pull it down!”The hijackers remained at the controls but must have 
judged that the passengers were only seconds from overcoming them.The airplane 
headed down; the control wheel was turned hard to the right.The airplane 
rolled onto its back, and one of the hijackers began shouting “Allah is 
the greatest.Allah is the greatest.”With the sounds of the passenger counterattack 
continuing,the aircraft plowed into an empty field in Shanksville,Pennsylvania, 
at 580 miles per hour, about 20 minutes’ flying time from 
Washington, D.C.89 

Jarrah’s objective was to crash his airliner into symbols of the American 
Republic, the Capitol or the White House. He was defeated by the alerted, 
unarmed passengers of United 93. 

1.2 IMPROVISING A HOMELAND DEFENSE 
The FAA and NORAD 

On 9/11, the defense of U.S. airspace depended on close interaction between 
two federal agencies: the FAA and the North American Aerospace Defense 
Command (NORAD).The most recent hijacking that involved U.S. air traffic 
controllers, FAA management, and military coordination had occurred in 
1993.90 In order to understand how the two agencies interacted eight years 
later,we will review their missions,command and control structures,and working 
relationship on the morning of 9/11. 

FAA Mission and Structure. As of September 11, 2001, the FAA was mandated 
by law to regulate the safety and security of civil aviation. From an air 
traffic controller’s perspective, that meant maintaining a safe distance between 
airborne aircraft.91 

Many controllers work at the FAA’s 22 Air Route Traffic Control Centers. 
They are grouped under regional offices and coordinate closely with the 
national Air Traffic Control System Command Center, located in Herndon,</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Shanksville</Location>
    <Location>Pennsylvania</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>NORAD</Organization>
    <Organization>Capitol</Organization>
    <Date>September 11, 2001</Date>
    <Person>Jarrah</Person>
    <Organization>Air Traffic Control System Command Center</Organization>
    <Organization>North American Aerospace Defense Command</Organization>
    <Location>Herndon</Location>
    <Person>Allah</Person>
    <Person>D.C.89 Jarrah’s</Person>
    <Location>American Republic</Location>
    <Location>United 93</Location>
    <Organization>HOMELAND DEFENSE</Organization>
    <Organization>Air Route Traffic Control Centers</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>320_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

The first NYPD ESU team entered the West Street–level lobby of the North 
Tower and prepared to begin climbing at about 9:15 A.M. They attempted to 
check in with the FDNY chiefs present, but were rebuffed. OEM personnel 
did not intervene.The ESU team began to climb the stairs. Shortly thereafter, 
a second NYPD ESU team entered the South Tower.The OEM field responder 
present ensured that they check in with the FDNY chief in charge of the 
lobby, and it was agreed that the ESU team would ascend and support FDNY 
personnel.140 

A third ESU team subsequently entered the North Tower at its elevated 
mezzanine lobby level and made no effort to check in with the FDNY command 
post.A fourth ESU team entered the South Tower.By 9:59,a fifth ESU 
team was next to 6 WTC and preparing to enter the North Tower.141 

By approximately 9:50, the lead ESU team had reached the 31st floor, 
observing that there appeared to be no more civilians still descending. This 
ESU team encountered a large group of firefighters and administered oxygen 
to some of them who were exhausted.142 

At about 9:56, the officer running the ESU command post on Church and 
Vesey streets had a final radio communication with one of the ESU teams in 
the South Tower. The team then stated that it was ascending via stairs, was 
somewhere in the 20s, and was making slow progress because of the numerous 
descending civilians crowding the stairwell.143 

Three plainclothes NYPD officers without radios or protective gear had 
begun ascending either stairwell A or C of the North Tower.They began checking 
every other floor above the 12th for civilians. Only occasionally did they 
find any, and in those few cases they ordered the civilians to evacuate immediately.
While checking floors,they used office phones to call their superiors. 
In one phone call an NYPD chief instructed them to leave the North Tower, 
but they refused to do so.As they climbed higher,they encountered increasing 
smoke and heat. Shortly before 10:00 they arrived on the 54th floor.144 

Throughout this period (9:03 to 9:59), a group of NYPD and PortAuthority 
police officers,as well as two Secret Service agents,continued to assist civilians 
leaving the North Tower. They were positioned around the mezzanine 
lobby level of the North Tower, directing civilians leaving stairwells A and C 
to evacuate down an escalator to the concourse.The officers instructed those 
civilians who seemed composed to evacuate the complex calmly but rapidly. 
Other civilians exiting the stairs who were either injured or exhausted collapsed 
at the foot of these stairs; officers then assisted them out of the building.145 

When civilians reached the concourse, another NYPD officer stationed at 
the bottom of the escalator directed them to exit through the concourse to the 
north and east and then out of the WTC complex.This exit route ensured that 
civilians would not be endangered by falling debris and people on West Street, 
on the plaza between the towers, and on Liberty Street.146 

Some officers positioned themselves at the top of a flight of stairs by 5 WTC 
that led down into the concourse, going into the concourse when necessary</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Misc>ESU</Misc>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>Vesey</Location>
    <Location>West Street–level</Location>
    <Misc>South Tower.The</Misc>
    <Misc>South Tower.By</Misc>
    <Location>North Tower.141</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower.They</Organization>
    <Misc>Liberty Street.146 Some</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>321_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

to evacuate injured or disoriented civilians. Numerous other NYPD officers 
were stationed throughout the concourse,assisting burned,injured,and disoriented 
civilians, as well as directing all civilians to exit to the north and east. 
NYPD officers were also in the South Tower lobby to assist in civilian evacuation. 
NYPD officers stationed on Vesey Street between West Street and 
Church Street urged civilians not to remain in the area and instead to keep 
walking north.147 

At 9:06, the NYPD Chief of Department instructed that no units were to 
land on the roof of either tower.At about 9:30,one of the helicopters present 
advised that a rooftop evacuation still would not be possible. One NYPD helicopter 
pilot believed one portion of the North Tower roof to be free enough 
of smoke that a hoist could be lowered in order to rescue people,but there was 
no one on the roof.This pilot’s helicopter never attempted to hover directly 
over the tower. Another helicopter did attempt to do so, and its pilot stated 
that the severity of the heat from the jet fuel–laden fire in the North Tower 
would have made it impossible to hover low enough for a rescue, because the 
high temperature would have destabilized the helicopter.148 

At 9:51,an aviation unit warned units of large pieces of debris hanging from 
the building. Prior to 9:59, no NYPD helicopter pilot predicted that either 
tower would collapse.149 

Interaction of 911 Calls and NYPD Operations. At 9:37, a civilian on 
the 106th floor of the South Tower reported to a 911 operator that a lower 
floor—the “90-something floor”—was collapsing. This information was 
conveyed inaccurately by the 911 operator to an NYPD dispatcher.The dispatcher 
further confused the substance of the 911 call by telling NYPD officers 
at the WTC complex that “the 106th floor is crumbling” at 9:52, 15 
minutes after the 911 call was placed.The NYPD dispatcher conveyed this 
message on the radio frequency used in precincts in the vicinity of the WTC 
and subsequently on the Special Operations Division channel, but not on 
City Wide channel 1.150 

PAPD Response 

Initial responders from outside PAPD commands proceeded to the police desk 
in 5 WTC or to the fire safety desk in the North Tower lobby. Some officers 
were then assigned to assist in stairwell evacuations; others were assigned to 
expedite evacuation in the plaza,concourse,and PATH station.As information 
was received of civilians trapped above ground-level floors of the North Tower, 
other PAPD officers were instructed to climb to those floors for rescue efforts. 
Still others began climbing toward the impact zone.151 

At 9:11, the PAPD Superintendent and an inspector began walking up stairwell 
B of the North Tower to assess damage near and in the impact zone.The 
PAPD Chief and several other PAPD officers began ascending a stairwell in</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Special Operations Division</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>Vesey Street</Location>
    <Location>Church Street</Location>
    <Organization>NYPD Operations</Organization>
    <Location>City Wide</Location>
    <Organization>PAPD Response Initial</Organization>
    <Misc>PATH</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>322_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

order to reach the Windows on the World restaurant on the 106th floor, from 
which calls had been made to the PAPD police desk reporting at least 100 people 
trapped.152 

Many PAPD officers from different commands responded on their own initiative. 
By 9:30, the PAPD central police desk requested that responding officers 
meet at West and Vesey and await further instructions.In the absence of a 
predetermined command structure to deal with an incident of this magnitude, 
a number of PAPD inspectors, captains, and lieutenants stepped forward at 
around 9:30 to formulate an on-site response plan.They were hampered by 
not knowing how many officers were responding to the site and where those 
officers were operating. Many of the officers who responded to this command 
post lacked suitable protective equipment to enter the complex.153 

By 9:58,one PAPD officer had reached the 44th-floor sky lobby of the North 
Tower.Also in the North Tower,one team of PAPD officers was in the mid-20s 
and another was in the lower 20s. Numerous PAPD officers were also climbing 
in the South Tower, including the PAPD ESU team. Many PAPD officers were 
on the ground floors of the complex—some assisting in evacuation,others manning 
the PAPD desk in 5 WTC or assisting at lobby command posts.154 

OEM Response 

After the South Tower was hit, OEM senior leadership decided to remain in 
its “bunker” and continue conducting operations, even though all civilians had 
been evacuated from 7 WTC. At approximately 9:30, a senior OEM official 
ordered the evacuation of the facility, after a Secret Service agent in 7 WTC 
advised him that additional commercial planes were not accounted for. Prior 
to its evacuation, no outside agency liaisons had reached OEM. OEM field 
responders were stationed in each tower’s lobby, at the FDNY overall command 
post, and, at least for some period of time, at the NYPD command post 
at Church and Vesey.155 

Summary 

The emergency response effort escalated with the crash of United 175 into the 
South Tower.With that escalation, communications as well as command and 
control became increasingly critical and increasingly difficult. First responders 
assisted thousands of civilians in evacuating the towers, even as incident commanders 
from responding agencies lacked knowledge of what other agencies 
and, in some cases, their own responders were doing. 

From 9:59 until 10:28 A.M. 

At 9:58:59, the South Tower collapsed in ten seconds, killing all civilians and 
emergency personnel inside, as well a number of individuals—both first 
responders and civilians—in the concourse, in the Marriott, and on neighboring 
streets.The building collapsed into itself,causing a ferocious windstorm and</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott</Organization>
    <Organization>OEM</Organization>
    <Location>Vesey</Location>
    <Misc>Windows on the World</Misc>
    <Location>North Tower.Also</Location>
    <Organization>OEM Response After</Organization>
    <Misc>Vesey.155 Summary</Misc>
    <Misc>South Tower.With</Misc>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>323_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

creating a massive debris cloud.The Marriott hotel suffered significant damage 
as a result of the collapse of the South Tower.156 

Civilian Response in the North Tower 

The 911 calls placed from most locations in the North Tower grew increasingly 
desperate as time went on.As late as 10:28,people remained alive in some 
locations, including on the 92nd and 79th floors. Below the impact zone, it is 
likely that most civilians who were physically and emotionally capable of 
descending had exited the tower.The civilians who were nearing the bottom 
of stairwell C were assisted out of the building by NYPD, FDNY, and PAPD 
personnel. Others, who experienced difficulty evacuating, were being helped 
by first responders on lower floors.157 

FDNY Response 
Immediate Impact of the Collapse of the South Tower. The FDNY 
overall command post and posts in the North Tower lobby,the Marriott lobby, 
and the staging area on West Street south of Liberty all ceased to operate upon 
the collapse of the South Tower,as did EMS staging areas,because of their proximity 
to the building.158 

Those who had been in the North Tower lobby had no way of knowing 
that the South Tower had suffered a complete collapse. Chiefs who had fled 
from the overall command post on the west side of West Street took shelter in 
the underground parking garage at 2 World Financial Center and were not 
available to influence FDNY operations for the next ten minutes or so.159 

When the South Tower collapsed,firefighters on upper floors of the North 
Tower heard a violent roar, and many were knocked off their feet; they saw 
debris coming up the stairs and observed that the power was lost and emergency 
lights activated. Nevertheless, those firefighters not standing near windows 
facing south had no way of knowing that the South Tower had collapsed; 
many surmised that a bomb had exploded, or that the North Tower had suffered 
a partial collapse on its upper floors.160 

We do not know whether the repeater channel continued to function 
after 9:59.161 

Initial Evacuation Instructions and Communications. The South 
Tower’s total collapse was immediately communicated on the Manhattan dispatch 
channel by an FDNY boat on the Hudson River;but to our knowledge, 
no one at the site received this information, because every FDNY command 
post had been abandoned—including the overall command post, which 
included the Field Comm van.Despite his lack of knowledge of what had happened 
to the South Tower,a chief in the process of evacuating the North Tower 
lobby sent out an order within a minute of the collapse:“Command to all units 
in Tower 1,evacuate the building.”Another chief from the North Tower lobby 
soon followed with an additional evacuation order issued on tactical 1.162</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>EMS</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Organization>South Tower.156 Civilian Response</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY Response Immediate Impact</Organization>
    <Organization>Liberty</Organization>
    <Organization>World Financial Center</Organization>
    <Location>South Tower’s</Location>
    <Location>Manhattan</Location>
    <Location>Hudson River</Location>
    <Location>Field Comm</Location>
    <Organization>Tower</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>324_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

Evacuation orders did not follow the protocol for giving instructions when 
a building’s collapse may be imminent—a protocol that includes constantly 
repeating “Mayday,Mayday,Mayday”—during the 29 minutes between the fall 
of the South Tower and that of the North Tower.In addition,most of the evacuation 
instructions did not mention that the South Tower had collapsed.However, 
at least three firefighters heard evacuation instructions which stated that 
the North Tower was in danger of “imminent collapse.”163 

FDNY Personnel above the Ground Floors of the North Tower. Within 
minutes, some firefighters began to hear evacuation orders over tactical 1. At 
least one chief also gave the evacuation instruction on the command channel 
used only by chiefs in the North Tower, which was much less crowded.164 

At least two battalion chiefs on upper floors of the North Tower—one on 
the 23rd floor and one on the 35th floor—heard the evacuation instruction on 
the command channel and repeated it to everyone they came across.The chief 
on the 23rd floor apparently aggressively took charge to ensure that all firefighters 
on the floors in the immediate area were evacuating.The chief on the 
35th floor also heard a separate radio communication stating that the South 
Tower had collapsed (which the chief on the 23rd floor may have heard as well). 
He subsequently acted with a sense of urgency, and some firefighters heard the 
evacuation order for the first time when he repeated it on tactical 1.This chief 
also had a bullhorn and traveled to each of the stairwells and shouted the evacuation 
order:“All FDNY,get the fuck out!”As a result of his efforts,many firefighters 
who had not been in the process of evacuating began to do so.165 

Other firefighters did not receive the evacuation transmissions, for one of 
four reasons:First,some FDNY radios did not pick up the transmission because 
of the difficulties of radio communications in high-rises. Second, the numbers 
trying to use tactical 1 after the South Tower collapsed may have drowned out 
some evacuation instructions. According to one FDNY lieutenant who was 
on the 31st floor of the North Tower at the time, “[Tactical] channel 1 just 
might have been so bogged down that it may have been impossible to get that 
order through.”166 Third, some firefighters in the North Tower were off-duty 
and did not have radios.Fourth,some firefighters in the North Tower had been 
dispatched to the South Tower and likely were on the different tactical channel 
assigned to that tower.167 

FDNY personnel in the North Tower who received the evacuation orders 
did not respond uniformly. Some units—including one whose officer knew 
that the South Tower had collapsed—either delayed or stopped their evacuation 
in order to assist nonambulatory civilians.Some units whose members had 
become separated during the climb attempted to regroup so they could 
descend together.Some units began to evacuate but,according to eyewitnesses, 
did not hurry.At least several firefighters who survived believed that they and 
others would have evacuated more urgently had they known of the South 
Tower’s complete collapse.Other firefighters continued to sit and rest on floors</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower’s</Misc>
    <Location>North Tower.In</Location>
    <Organization>FDNY Personnel</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower—one</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>325_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

while other companies descended past them and reminded them that they were 
supposed to evacuate.Some firefighters were determined not to leave the building 
while other FDNY personnel remained inside and, in one case, convinced 
others to remain with them. In another case, firefighters had successfully 
descended to the lobby,where another firefighter then persuaded them to reascend 
in order to look for specific FDNY personnel.168 

Other FDNY personnel did not hear the evacuation order on their radio 
but were advised orally to leave the building by other firefighters and police 
who were themselves evacuating.169 

By 10:24,approximately five FDNY companies reached the bottom of stairwell 
B and entered the North Tower lobby.They stood in the lobby for more 
than a minute, not certain what to do, as no chiefs were present. Finally, one 
firefighter—who had earlier seen from a window that the South Tower had collapsed—
urged that they all leave, as this tower could fall as well.The units then 
proceeded to exit onto West Street.While they were doing so,the North Tower 
began its pancake collapse, killing some of these men.170 

Other FDNY Personnel. The Marriott Hotel suffered significant damage in 
the collapse of the South Tower.Those in the lobby were knocked down and 
enveloped in the darkness of a debris cloud. Some were hurt but could walk. 
Others were more severely injured, and some were trapped. Several firefighters 
came across a group of about 50 civilians who had been taking shelter in 
the restaurant and assisted them in evacuating. Up above, at the time of the 
South Tower’s collapse four companies were descending the stairs single file in 
a line of approximately 20 men. Four survived.171 

At the time of the South Tower’s collapse,two FDNY companies were either 
at the eastern side of the North Tower lobby,near the mall concourse,or actually 
in the mall concourse,trying to reach the South Tower.Many of these men 
were thrown off their feet by the collapse of the South Tower; they then 
attempted to regroup in the darkness of the debris cloud and evacuate civilians 
and themselves, not knowing that the South Tower had collapsed. Several 
of these firefighters subsequently searched the PATH station below the concourse—
unaware that the PAPD had cleared the area of all civilians by 9:19.172 

At about 10:15, the FDNY Chief of Department and the Chief of Safety, 
who had returned to West Street from the parking garage, confirmed that the 
South Tower had collapsed.The Chief of Department issued a radio order for 
all units to evacuate the North Tower, repeating it about five times. He then 
directed that the FDNY command post be moved further north on West Street 
and told FDNY units in the area to proceed north on West Street toward 
Chambers Street. At approximately 10:25, he radioed for two ladder companies 
to respond to the Marriott, where he was aware that both FDNY personnel 
and civilians were trapped.173 

Many chiefs, including several of those who had been in the North Tower 
lobby, did not learn that the South Tower had collapsed until 30 minutes or</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott Hotel</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>West Street.While</Location>
    <Misc>FDNY Personnel</Misc>
    <Location>South Tower.Those</Location>
    <Organization>South Tower’s</Organization>
    <Location>South Tower.Many</Location>
    <Organization>FDNY Chief of Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Department</Organization>
    <Location>Chambers Street</Location>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

more after the event. According to two eyewitnesses, however, one senior 
FDNY chief who knew that the South Tower had collapsed strongly expressed 
the opinion that the North Tower would not collapse,because unlike the South 
Tower, it had not been hit on a corner.174 

After the South Tower collapsed, some firefighters on the streets neighboring 
the North Tower remained where they were or came closer to the North 
Tower.Some of these firefighters did not know that the South Tower had collapsed, 
but many chose despite that knowledge to remain in an attempt to save 
additional lives.According to one such firefighter, a chief who was preparing 
to mount a search-and-rescue mission in the Marriott,“I would never think 
of myself as a leader of men if I had headed north on West Street after [the] 
South Tower collapsed.”Just outside the North Tower on West Street one firefighter 
was directing others exiting the building, telling them when no 
jumpers were coming down and it was safe to run out. A senior chief had 
grabbed an NYPD bullhorn and was urging firefighters exiting onto West 
Street to continue running north,well away from the WTC.Three of the most 
senior and respected members of the FDNY were involved in attempting to 
rescue civilians and firefighters from the Marriott.175 

NYPD Response 

A member of the NYPD Aviation Unit radioed that the South Tower had collapsed 
immediately after it happened,and further advised that all people in the 
WTC complex and nearby areas should be evacuated.At 10:04, NYPD aviation 
reported that the top 15 stories of the North Tower “were glowing red” 
and that they might collapse. At 10:08, a helicopter pilot warned that he did 
not believe the North Tower would last much longer.176 

Immediately after the South Tower collapsed, many NYPD radio frequencies 
became overwhelmed with transmissions relating to injured, trapped, or 
missing officers.As a result,NYPD radio communications became strained on 
most channels. Nevertheless, they remained effective enough for the two closest 
NYPD mobilization points to be moved further from the WTC at 10:06.177 

Just like most firefighters,the ESU rescue teams in the North Tower had no 
idea that the South Tower had collapsed. However, by 10:00 the ESU officer 
running the command post at Church and Vesey ordered the evacuation of all 
ESU units from the WTC complex.This officer, who had observed the South 
Tower collapse,reported it to ESU units in the North Tower in his evacuation 
instruction.178 

This instruction was clearly heard by the two ESU units already in the 
North Tower and the other ESU unit preparing to enter the tower.The ESU 
team on the 31st floor found the full collapse of the South Tower so unfathomable 
that they radioed back to the ESU officer at the command post and 
asked him to repeat his communication. He reiterated his urgent message.179 

The ESU team on the 31st floor conferred with the FDNY personnel there 
to ensure that they, too, knew that they had to evacuate, then proceeded down</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Person>Vesey</Person>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
    <Location>North Tower.Some</Location>
    <Location>Marriott</Location>
    <Organization>Marriott.175 NYPD Response</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD Aviation Unit</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>327_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

stairwell B. During the descent, they reported seeing many firefighters who 
were resting and did not seem to be in the process of evacuating.They further 
reported advising these firefighters to evacuate, but said that at times they were 
not acknowledged. In the opinion of one of the ESU officers, some of these 
firefighters essentially refused to take orders from cops.At least one firefighter 
who was in the North Tower has supported that assessment,stating that he was 
not going to take an evacuation instruction from a cop that morning. However, 
another firefighter reports that ESU officers ran past him without advising 
him to evacuate.180 

The ESU team on the 11th floor began descending stairwell C after receiving 
the evacuation order. Once near the mezzanine level—where stairwell C 
ended—this team spread out in chain formation, stretching from several floors 
down to the mezzanine itself.They used their flashlights to provide a path of 
beacons through the darkness and debris for civilians climbing down the stairs. 
Eventually, when no one else appeared to be descending, the ESU team exited 
the North Tower and ran one at a time to 6 WTC, dodging those who still 
were jumping from the upper floors of the North Tower by acting as spotters 
for each other.They remained in the area,conducting additional searches for 
civilians; all but two of them died.181 

After surviving the South Tower’s collapse,the ESU team that had been preparing 
to enter the North Tower spread into chain formation and created a path for 
civilians (who had exited from the North Tower mezzanine) to evacuate the WTC 
complex by descending the stairs on the north side of 5 and 6 WTC, which led 
down to Vesey Street.They remained at this post until the North Tower collapsed, 
yet all survived.182 

The three plainclothes NYPD officers who had made it up to the 54th floor 
of the North Tower felt the building shake violently at 9:59 as the South Tower 
collapsed (though they did not know the cause). Immediately thereafter, they 
were joined by three firefighters from an FDNY engine company. One of the 
firefighters apparently heard an evacuation order on his radio, but responded 
in a return radio communication,“We’re not fucking coming out!”However, 
the firefighters urged the police officers to descend because they lacked the 
protective gear and equipment needed to handle the increasing smoke and 
heat.The police officers reluctantly began descending,checking that the lower 
floors were clear of civilians.They proceeded down stairwell B, poking their 
heads into every floor and briefly looking for civilians.183 

Other NYPD officers helping evacuees on the mezzanine level of the North 
Tower were enveloped in the debris cloud that resulted from the South Tower’s 
collapse.They struggled to regroup in the darkness and to evacuate both themselves 
and civilians they encountered.At least one of them died in the collapse 
of the North Tower.At least one NYPD officer from this area managed to evacuate 
out toward 5 WTC, where he teamed up with a Port Authority police 
officer and acted as a spotter in advising the civilians who were still exiting</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower’s</Misc>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>ESU</Organization>
    <Person>B. During</Person>
    <Person>Vesey Street.They</Person>
    <Organization>North Tower.At</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

when they could safely run from 1 WTC to 5 WTC and avoid being struck 
by people and debris falling from the upper floors.184 

At the time of the collapse of the South Tower, there were numerous 
NYPD officers in the concourse, some of whom are believed to have died 
there. Those who survived struggled to evacuate themselves in darkness, 
assisting civilians as they exited the concourse in all directions.185 

Port Authority Response 

The collapse of the South Tower forced the evacuation of the PAPD command 
post on West and Vesey, compelling PAPD officers to move north. 
There is no evidence that PAPD officers without WTC Command radios 
received an evacuation order by radio. Some of these officers in the North 
Tower decided to evacuate, either on their own or in consultation with other 
first responders they came across. Some greatly slowed their own descent in 
order to assist nonambulatory civilians.186 

After 10:28 A.M. 

The North Tower collapsed at 10:28:25 A.M.,killing all civilians alive on upper 
floors, an undetermined number below, and scores of first responders. The 
FDNY Chief of Department, the Port Authority Police Department Superintendent, 
and many of their senior staff were killed. Incredibly, twelve firefighters, 
one PAPD officer, and three civilians who were descending stairwell B of 
the North Tower survived its collapse.187 

On September 11, the nation suffered the largest loss of life—2,973—on its 
soil as a result of hostile attack in its history. The FDNY suffered 343 fatalities— 
the largest loss of life of any emergency response agency in history. The PAPD 
suffered 37 fatalities—the largest loss of life of any police force in history.The 
NYPD suffered 23 fatalities—the second largest loss of life of any police force 
in history, exceeded only by the number of PAPD officers lost the same day.188 

Mayor Giuliani, along with the Police and Fire commissioners and the 
OEM director, moved quickly north and established an emergency operations 
command post at the Police Academy. Over the coming hours, weeks, and 
months, thousands of civilians and city, state, and federal employees devoted 
themselves around the clock to putting New York City back on its feet.189 

9.3 EMERGENCY RESPONSE AT THE PENTAGON 
If it had happened on any other day, the disaster at the Pentagon would be 
remembered as a singular challenge and an extraordinary national story.Yet the 
calamity at the World Trade Center that same morning included catastrophic 
damage 1,000 feet above the ground that instantly imperiled tens of thousands 
of people.The two experiences are not comparable. Nonetheless, broader les</docText>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>World Trade Center</Location>
    <Location>West</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC Command</Organization>
    <Person>Giuliani</Person>
    <Organization>Port Authority Response The</Organization>
    <Location>Vesey</Location>
    <Organization>Port Authority Police Department Superintendent</Organization>
    <Misc>PENTAGON If</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>312 

THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

© Tamara Beckwith, New York Post 
The Twin Towers following the impact of American Airlines Flight 11 and 
United Airlines Flight 175</docText>
    <Organization>United Airlines Flight</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines Flight</Organization>
    <Misc>Twin Towers</Misc>
    <Person>Tamara Beckwith</Person>
    <Organization>New York Post</Organization>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>32_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>“WE HAVE SOME PLANES” 

BOSTON 
NEW 
YORK NEW 
YORK CLEVELAND 
INDIANAPOLIS 
Boston 
Center 
Cleveland 
Center 
Indianapolis Center 
New York 
Center 
FAA Air Traffic Control Centers 

Otis 
Air Force 
Base 
Langley 
Air Force Base 
Northeast Air 
Defense Sector 
(NEADS) 
NORAD 
Headquarters 
Continental Aerospace 
Command Region (CONR) 
Reporting structure, Northeast Air Defense Sector 

Graphics courtesy of ESRI</docText>
    <Organization>NEADS</Organization>
    <Organization>CONR</Organization>
    <Location>NEW YORK</Location>
    <Organization>INDIANAPOLIS Boston Center Cleveland Center Indianapolis Center</Organization>
    <Organization>New York Center FAA Air Traffic Control Centers Otis Air Force Base Langley Air Force Base Northeast Air Defense Sector</Organization>
    <Organization>NORAD Headquarters Continental Aerospace Command Region</Organization>
    <Organization>Northeast Air Defense Sector Graphics</Organization>
    <Organization>ESRI</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>330_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

313 


The Pentagon, after being struck by American Airlines Flight 77 


© Reuters 2004 © Reuters 2004 

United Airlines Flight 93 crash site, Shanksville, Pennsylvania</docText>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Organization>United Airlines</Organization>
    <Location>Shanksville</Location>
    <Location>Pennsylvania</Location>
    <Organization>Reuters</Organization>
    <Location>The Pentagon</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
    <docID>331_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

sons in integrating multiagency response efforts are apparent when we analyze 
the response at the Pentagon. 

The emergency response at the Pentagon represented a mix of local, state, 
and federal jurisdictions and was generally effective. It overcame the inherent 
complications of a response across jurisdictions because the Incident Command 
System, a formalized management structure for emergency response, was in 
place in the National Capital Region on 9/11.190 

Because of the nature of the event—a plane crash, fire, and partial building 
collapse—the Arlington County Fire Department served as incident commander. 
Different agencies had different roles.The incident required a major 
rescue, fire, and medical response from Arlington County at the U.S. military’s 
headquarters—a facility under the control of the secretary of defense. Since it 
was a terrorist attack, the Department of Justice was the lead federal agency in 
charge (with authority delegated to the FBI for operational response). Additionally, 
the terrorist attack affected the daily operations and emergency 
management requirements of Arlington County and all bordering and surrounding 
jurisdictions.191 

At 9:37, the west wall of the Pentagon was hit by hijacked American Airlines 
Flight 77, a Boeing 757. The crash caused immediate and catastrophic 
damage.All 64 people aboard the airliner were killed,as were 125 people inside 
the Pentagon (70 civilians and 55 military service members). One hundred six 
people were seriously injured and transported to area hospitals.192 

While no emergency response is flawless, the response to the 9/11 terrorist 
attack on the Pentagon was mainly a success for three reasons:first,the strong 
professional relationships and trust established among emergency responders; 
second, the adoption of the Incident Command System; and third, the pursuit 
of a regional approach to response. Many fire and police agencies that 
responded had extensive prior experience working together on regional 
events and training exercises. Indeed, at the time preparations were under way 
at many of these agencies to ensure public safety at the annual meetings of the 
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank scheduled to be held later 
that month in Washington, D.C.193 

Local, regional, state, and federal agencies immediately responded to the 
Pentagon attack. In addition to county fire, police, and sheriff ’s departments, 
the response was assisted by the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, 
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Fire Department,Fort Myer Fire 
Department,the Virginia State Police,the Virginia Department of Emergency 
Management,the FBI,FEMA,a National Medical Response Team,the Bureau 
of Alcohol,Tobacco,and Firearms,and numerous military personnel within the 
Military District of Washington.194 

Command was established at 9:41.At the same time,the Arlington County 
Emergency Communications Center contacted the fire departments of Fairfax 
County, Alexandria, and the District of Columbia to request mutual aid.</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Department of Justice</Organization>
    <Organization>American Airlines</Organization>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>Boeing</Organization>
    <Organization>Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>Incident Command System</Organization>
    <Organization>International Monetary Fund</Organization>
    <Organization>FEMA</Organization>
    <Location>Alexandria</Location>
    <Location>District of Columbia</Location>
    <Organization>Arlington County Fire Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Virginia State Police</Organization>
    <Organization>National Capital Region</Organization>
    <Organization>Arlington County</Organization>
    <Organization>World Bank</Organization>
    <Location>D.C.193 Local</Location>
    <Person>Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Fire Department</Person>
    <Organization>Fort Myer Fire Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Virginia Department of Emergency Management</Organization>
    <Organization>National Medical Response Team</Organization>
    <Organization>Bureau of Alcohol , Tobacco</Organization>
    <Location>Military District</Location>
    <Organization>Washington.194 Command</Organization>
    <Organization>Arlington County Emergency Communications Center</Organization>
    <Location>Fairfax County</Location>
  </document>
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    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

The incident command post provided a clear view of and access to the crash 
site, allowing the incident commander to assess the situation at all times.195 

At 9:55, the incident commander ordered an evacuation of the Pentagon 
impact area because a partial collapse was imminent; it occurred at 9:57, and 
no first responder was injured.196 

At 10:15, the incident commander ordered a full evacuation of the command 
post because of the warning of an approaching hijacked aircraft passed 
along by the FBI.This was the first of three evacuations caused by reports of 
incoming aircraft, and the evacuation order was well communicated and well 
coordinated.197 

Several factors facilitated the response to this incident, and distinguish it 
from the far more difficult task in New York.There was a single incident,and 
it was not 1,000 feet above ground. The incident site was relatively easy to 
secure and contain, and there were no other buildings in the immediate area. 
There was no collateral damage beyond the Pentagon.198 

Yet the Pentagon response encountered difficulties that echo those experienced 
in New York.As the “Arlington County:After-Action Report”notes, 
there were significant problems with both self-dispatching and communications:“
Organizations,response units,and individuals proceeding on their own 
initiative directly to an incident site, without the knowledge and permission 
of the host jurisdiction and the Incident Commander, complicate the exercise 
of command, increase the risks faced by bonafide responders, and exacerbate 
the challenge of accountability.”With respect to communications,the 
report concludes: “Almost all aspects of communications continue to be problematic, 
from initial notification to tactical operations. Cellular telephones 
were of little value.... Radio channels were initially oversaturated. . . . Pagers 
seemed to be the most reliable means of notification when available and used, 
but most firefighters are not issued pagers.”199 

It is a fair inference, given the differing situations in New York City and 
Northern Virginia,that the problems in command,control,and communications 
that occurred at both sites will likely recur in any emergency of similar 
scale. The task looking forward is to enable first responders to respond in a 
coordinated manner with the greatest possible awareness of the situation. 

9.4 ANALYSIS 
Like the national defense effort described in chapter 1, the emergency 
response to the attacks on 9/11 was necessarily improvised.In New York,the 
FDNY, NYPD, the Port Authority,WTC employees, and the building occupants 
themselves did their best to cope with the effects of an unimaginable 
catastrophe—unfolding furiously over a mere 102 minutes—for which they 
were unprepared in terms of both training and mindset. As a result of the</docText>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI.This</Organization>
    <Location>New York.There</Location>
    <Misc>Pentagon.198 Yet</Misc>
    <Location>New York.As</Location>
    <Person>County:After-Action Report”notes</Person>
    <Location>Northern Virginia</Location>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

efforts of first responders, assistance from each other, and their own good 
instincts and goodwill, the vast majority of civilians below the impact zone 
were able to evacuate the towers. 

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has provided a preliminary 
estimation that between 16,400 and 18,800 civilians were in the WTC 
complex as of 8:46 A.M. on September 11. At most 2,152 individuals died at 
the WTC complex who were not (1) fire or police first responders, (2) security 
or fire safety personnel of the WTC or individual companies, (3) volunteer 
civilians who ran to the WTC after the planes’ impact to help others, or 

(4) on the two planes that crashed into the Twin Towers.Out of this total number 
of fatalities, we can account for the workplace location of 2,052 individuals, 
or 95.35 percent. Of this number, 1,942 or 94.64 percent either worked or 
were supposed to attend a meeting at or above the respective impact zones of 
the Twin Towers; only 110, or 5.36 percent of those who died, worked below 
the impact zone.While a given person’s office location at the WTC does not 
definitively indicate where that individual died that morning or whether he or 
she could have evacuated, these data strongly suggest that the evacuation was 
a success for civilians below the impact zone.200 
Several factors influenced the evacuation on September 11. It was aided 
greatly by changes made by the Port Authority in response to the 1993 bombing 
and by the training of both Port Authority personnel and civilians after 
that time. Stairwells remained lit near unaffected floors; some tenants relied on 
procedures learned in fire drills to help them to safety; others were guided 
down the stairs by fire safety officials based in the lobby. Because of damage 
caused by the impact of the planes, the capability of the sophisticated building 
systems may have been impaired. Rudimentary improvements, however, such 
as the addition of glow strips to the handrails and stairs, were credited by some 
as the reason for their survival. The general evacuation time for the towers 
dropped from more than four hours in 1993 to under one hour on September 
11 for most civilians who were not trapped or physically incapable of 
enduring a long descent. 

First responders also played a significant role in the success of the evacuation. 
Some specific rescues are quantifiable, such as an FDNY company’s rescue 
of civilians trapped on the 22d floor of the North Tower, or the success of 
FDNY, PAPD, and NYPD personnel in carrying nonambulatory civilians out 
of both the North and South Towers.In other instances,intangibles combined 
to reduce what could have been a much higher death total. It is impossible to 
measure how many more civilians who descended to the ground floors would 
have died but for the NYPD and PAPD personnel directing them—via safe 
exit routes that avoided jumpers and debris—to leave the complex urgently 
but calmly. It is impossible to measure how many more civilians would have 
died but for the determination of many members of the FDNY, PAPD, and 
NYPD to continue assisting civilians after the South Tower collapsed. It is</docText>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>National Institute of Standards and Technology</Organization>
    <Misc>Twin Towers</Misc>
    <Misc>Twin Towers.Out</Misc>
    <Location>North</Location>
    <Location>South Towers.In</Location>
  </document>
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    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

impossible to measure the calming influence that ascending firefighters had on 
descending civilians or whether but for the firefighters’ presence the poor 
behavior of a very few civilians could have caused a dangerous and panicked 
mob flight. But the positive impact of the first responders on the evacuation 
came at a tremendous cost of first responder lives lost.201 

Civilian and Private-Sector Challenges 

The “first” first responders on 9/11, as in most catastrophes, were privatesector 
civilians. Because 85 percent of our nation’s critical infrastructure is 
controlled not by government but by the private sector, private-sector civilians 
are likely to be the first responders in any future catastrophes. For that 
reason, we have assessed the state of private sector and civilian preparedness 
in order to formulate recommendations to address this critical need.Our recommendations 
grow out of the experience of the civilians at the World Trade 
Center on 9/11. 

Lack of Protocol for Rooftop Rescues. Civilians at or above the impact 
zone in the North Tower had the smallest hope of survival. Once the plane 
struck, they were prevented from descending because of damage to or impassable 
conditions in the building’s three stairwells.The only hope for those on 
the upper floors of the North Tower would have been a swift and extensive air 
rescue.Several factors made this impossible.Doors leading to the roof were kept 
locked for security reasons, and damage to software in the security command 
station prevented a lock release order from taking effect. Even if the doors had 
not been locked, structural and radiation hazards made the rooftops unsuitable 
staging areas for a large number of civilians; and even if conditions permitted 
general helicopter evacuations—which was not the case—only several people 
could be lifted at a time. 

The WTC lacked any plan for evacuation of civilians on upper floors of the 
WTC in the event that all stairwells were impassable below. 

Lack of Comprehensive Evacuation of South Tower Immediately after 
the North Tower Impact. No decision has been criticized more than the 
decision of building personnel not to evacuate the South Tower immediately 
after the North Tower was hit.A firm and prompt evacuation order would likely 
have led many to safety. Even a strictly “advisory” announcement would not 
have dissuaded those who decided for themselves to evacuate.The advice to 
stay in place was understandable,however,when considered in its context.At 
that moment, no one appears to have thought a second plane could hit the 
South Tower. The evacuation of thousands of people was seen as inherently 
dangerous. Additionally, conditions were hazardous in some areas outside the 
towers.202 

Less understandable, in our view, is the instruction given to some civilians</docText>
    <Location>World Trade Center</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>Civilian</Misc>
    <Organization>Private-Sector Challenges</Organization>
    <Misc>Comprehensive Evacuation of</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

who had reached the lobby to return to their offices.They could have been 
held in the lobby or perhaps directed through the underground concourse. 

Despite the initial advice given over its public-address system, the South 
Tower was ordered to be evacuated by the FDNY and PAPD within 12 minutes 
of the North Tower’s being hit. If not for a second, unanticipated attack, 
the evacuation presumably would have proceeded. 

Impact of Fire Safety Plan and Fire Drills on Evacuation. Once the 
South Tower was hit,civilians on upper floors wasted time ascending the stairs 
instead of searching for a clear path down, when stairwell A was at least initially 
passable.Although rooftop rescues had not been conclusively ruled out, 
civilians were not informed in fire drills that roof doors were locked, that 
rooftop areas were hazardous, and that no helicopter evacuation plan existed. 

In both towers, civilians who were able to reach the stairs and descend were 
also stymied by the deviations in the stairways and by smoke doors.This confusion 
delayed the evacuation of some and may have obstructed that of others. 
The Port Authority has acknowledged that in the future, tenants should be 
made aware of what conditions they will encounter during descent. 

Impact of 911 Calls on Evacuation. The NYPD’s 911 operators and 
FDNY dispatch were not adequately integrated into the emergency response. 
In several ways, the 911 system was not ready to cope with a major disaster. 
These operators and dispatchers were one of the only sources of information 
for individuals at and above the impact zone of the towers.The FDNY ordered 
both towers fully evacuated by 8:57,but this guidance was not conveyed to 911 
operators and FDNY dispatchers, who for the next hour often continued to 
advise civilians not to self-evacuate, regardless of whether they were above or 
below the impact zones.Nor were 911 operators or FDNY dispatchers advised 
that rooftop rescues had been ruled out.This failure may have been harmful to 
civilians on the upper floors of the South Tower who called 911 and were not 
told that their only evacuation hope was to attempt to descend, not to ascend. 
In planning for future disasters, it is important to integrate those taking 911 
calls into the emergency response team and to involve them in providing upto-
date information and assistance to the public. 

Preparedness of Individual Civilians. One clear lesson of September 11 
is that individual civilians need to take responsibility for maximizing the probability 
that they will survive,should disaster strike.Clearly,many building occupants 
in the World Trade Center did not take preparedness seriously. 
Individuals should know the exact location of every stairwell in their workplace.
In addition,they should have access at all times to flashlights,which were 
deemed invaluable by some civilians who managed to evacuate the WTC on 
September 11.</docText>
    <Location>World Trade Center</Location>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Location>North Tower’s</Location>
    <Organization>Fire Safety Plan</Organization>
    <Organization>Fire Drills</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD’s</Organization>
    <Organization>Individual Civilians</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

Challenges Experienced by First Responders 
The Challenge of Incident Command. As noted above, in July 2001, 
Mayor Giuliani updated a directive titled “Direction and Control of Emergencies 
in the City of New York.”The directive designated,for different types of 
emergencies, an appropriate agency as “Incident Commander”; it would be 
“responsible for the management of the City’s response to the emergency.” The 
directive also provided that where incidents are “so multifaceted that no one 
agency immediately stands out as the Incident Commander, OEM will assign 
the role of Incident Commander to an agency as the situation demands.”203 

To some degree, the Mayor’s directive for incident command was followed 
on 9/11.It was clear that the lead response agency was the FDNY,and that the 
other responding local, federal, bistate, and state agencies acted in a supporting 
role.There was a tacit understanding that FDNY personnel would have primary 
responsibility for evacuating civilians who were above the ground floors 
of the Twin Towers,while NYPD and PAPD personnel would be in charge of 
evacuating civilians from the WTC complex once they reached ground level. 
The NYPD also greatly assisted responding FDNY units by clearing emergency 
lanes to the WTC.204 

In addition, coordination occurred at high levels of command. For example, 
the Mayor and Police Commissioner consulted with the Chief of the 
Department of the FDNY at approximately 9:20.There were other instances 
of coordination at operational levels, and information was shared on an ad hoc 
basis. For example, an NYPD ESU team passed the news of their evacuation 
order to firefighters in the North Tower.205 

It is also clear, however, that the response operations lacked the kind of 
integrated communications and unified command contemplated in the 
directive. These problems existed both within and among individual 
responding agencies. 

Command and Control within First Responder Agencies. For a unified 
incident management system to succeed, each participant must have command 
and control of its own units and adequate internal communications.This 
was not always the case at the WTC on 9/11. 

Understandably lacking experience in responding to events of the magnitude 
of the World Trade Center attacks, the FDNY as an institution proved 
incapable of coordinating the numbers of units dispatched to different points 
within the 16-acre complex.As a result,numerous units were congregating in 
the undamaged Marriott Hotel and at the overall command post on West Street 
by 9:30, while chiefs in charge of the South Tower still were in desperate need 
of units.With better understanding of the resources already available,additional 
units might not have been dispatched to the South Tower at 9:37. 

The task of accounting for and coordinating the units was rendered difficult, 
if not impossible, by internal communications breakdowns resulting from</docText>
    <Organization>World Trade Center</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Person>Giuliani</Person>
    <Location>City</Location>
    <Location>Twin Towers</Location>
    <Organization>First Responders The Challenge of Incident Command</Organization>
    <Location>New York.”The</Location>
    <Location>Mayor’s</Location>
    <Location>WTC.204 In</Location>
    <Organization>Department of the</Organization>
    <Misc>North Tower.205 It</Misc>
    <Organization>First Responder Agencies</Organization>
    <Organization>Marriott Hotel</Organization>
    <Location>West Street</Location>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

the limited capabilities of radios in the high-rise environment of the WTC and 
from confusion over which personnel were assigned to which frequency. Furthermore, 
when the South Tower collapsed the overall FDNY command post 
ceased to operate, which compromised the FDNY’s ability to understand the 
situation; an FDNY marine unit’s immediate radio communication to FDNY 
dispatch that the South Tower had fully collapsed was not conveyed to chiefs 
at the scene.The FDNY’s inability to coordinate and account for the different 
radio channels that would be used in an emergency of this scale contributed 
to the early lack of units in the South Tower, whose lobby chief initially could 
not communicate with anyone outside that tower.206 

Though almost no one at 9:50 on September 11 was contemplating an 
imminent total collapse of the Twin Towers,many first responders and civilians 
were contemplating the possibility of imminent additional terrorist attacks 
throughout New York City. Had any such attacks occurred, the FDNY’s 
response would have been severely compromised by the concentration of so 
many of its off-duty personnel, particularly its elite personnel, at the WTC. 

The PortAuthority’s response was hampered by the lack of both standard operating 
procedures and radios capable of enabling multiple commands to respond 
in unified fashion to an incident at the WTC. Many officers reporting from the 
tunnel and airport commands could not hear instructions being issued over the 
WTC Command frequency.In addition,command and control was complicated 
by senior Port Authority Police officials becoming directly involved in frontline 
rescue operations. 

The NYPD experienced comparatively fewer internal command and control 
and communications issues. Because the department has a history of mobilizing 
thousands of officers for major events requiring crowd control, its 
technical radio capability and major incident protocols were more easily 
adapted to an incident of the magnitude of 9/11. In addition, its mission that 
day lay largely outside the towers themselves.Although there were ESU teams 
and a few individual police officers climbing in the towers, the vast majority of 
NYPD personnel were staged outside, assisting with crowd control and evacuation 
and securing other sites in the city.The NYPD ESU division had firm 
command and control over its units, in part because there were so few of them 
(in comparison to the number of FDNY companies) and all reported to the 
same ESU command post. It is unclear, however, whether non-ESU NYPD 
officers operating on the ground floors, and in a few cases on upper floors, of 
the WTC were as well coordinated. 

Significant shortcomings within the FDNY’s command and control capabilities 
were painfully exposed on September 11. To its great credit, the 
department has made a substantial effort in the past three years to address 
these.While significant problems in the command and control of the PAPD 
also were exposed on September 11, it is less clear that the Port Authority 
has adopted new training exercises or major incident protocols to address 
these shortcomings.207</docText>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC Command</Organization>
    <Misc>FDNY’s</Misc>
    <Location>Twin Towers</Location>
    <Misc>PortAuthority’s</Misc>
    <Misc>ESU</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

Lack of Coordination among First Responder Agencies. Any attempt 
to establish a unified command on 9/11 would have been further frustrated by 
the lack of communication and coordination among responding agencies.Certainly, 
the FDNY was not “responsible for the management of the City’s 
response to the emergency,” as the Mayor’s directive would have required.The 
command posts were in different locations, and OEM headquarters, which 
could have served as a focal point for information sharing,did not play an integrating 
role in ensuring that information was shared among agencies on 9/11, 
even prior to its evacuation.There was a lack of comprehensive coordination 
between FDNY, NYPD, and PAPD personnel climbing above the ground 
floors in the Twin Towers. 

Information that was critical to informed decisionmaking was not shared 
among agencies. FDNY chiefs in leadership roles that morning have told us 
that their decision making capability was hampered by a lack of information 
from NYPD aviation. At 9:51 A.M., a helicopter pilot cautioned that “large 
pieces” of the South Tower appeared to be about to fall and could pose a danger 
to those below. Immediately after the tower’s collapse, a helicopter pilot 
radioed that news.This transmission was followed by communications at 10:08, 
10:15, and 10:22 that called into question the condition of the North Tower. 
The FDNY chiefs would have benefited greatly had they been able to communicate 
with personnel in a helicopter. 

The consequence of the lack of real-time intelligence from NYPD aviation 
should not be overstated. Contrary to a widely held misperception, no NYPD 
helicopter predicted the fall of either tower before the South Tower collapsed, 
and no NYPD personnel began to evacuate the WTC complex prior to that 
time.Furthermore,the FDNY,as an institution,was in possession of the knowledge 
that the South Tower had collapsed as early as the NYPD, as its fall had 
been immediately reported by an FDNY boat on a dispatch channel. Because 
of internal breakdowns within the department, however, this information was 
not disseminated to FDNY personnel on the scene. 

The FDNY, PAPD, and NYPD did not coordinate their units that were 
searching the WTC complex for civilians. In many cases, redundant searches 
of specific floors and areas were conducted. It is unclear whether fewer first 
responders in the aggregate would have been in the Twin Towers if there had 
been an integrated response, or what impact, if any, redundant searches had on 
the total number of first responder fatalities. 

Whether the lack of coordination between the FDNY and NYPD on September 
11 had a catastrophic effect has been the subject of controversy. We 
believe that there are too many variables for us to responsibly quantify those 
consequences. It is clear that the lack of coordination did not affect adversely 
the evacuation of civilians. It is equally clear, however, that the Incident Command 
System did not function to integrate awareness among agencies or to 
facilitate interagency response.208 

If New York and other major cities are to be prepared for future terrorist</docText>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>WTC</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>PAPD</Organization>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Incident Command System</Organization>
    <Misc>First Responder Agencies</Misc>
    <Organization>Mayor’s</Organization>
    <Misc>Twin Towers</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

attacks, different first responder agencies within each city must be fully coordinated, 
just as different branches of the U.S. military are. Coordination entails a 
unified command that comprehensively deploys all dispatched police, fire, and 
other first responder resources. 

In May 2004, New York City adopted an emergency response plan that 
expressly contemplates two or more agencies jointly being lead agency when 
responding to a terrorist attack but does not mandate a comprehensive and unified 
incident command that can deploy and monitor all first responder 
resources from one overall command post. In our judgment, this falls short of 
an optimal response plan,which requires clear command and control,common 
training, and the trust that such training creates.The experience of the military 
suggests that integrated into such a coordinated response should be a unified 
field intelligence unit, which should receive and combine information 
from all first responders—including 911 operators.Such a field intelligence unit 
could be valuable in large and complex incidents. 

Radio Communication Challenges:The Effectiveness and Urgency of 
Evacuation Instructions.As discussed above,the location of the NYPD ESU 
command post was crucial in making possible an urgent evacuation order 
explaining the South Tower’s full collapse. Firefighters most certainly would 
have benefited from that information. 

A separate matter is the varied success at conveying evacuation instructions 
to personnel in the North Tower after the South Tower’s collapse.The success 
of NYPD ESU instruction is attributable to a combination of (1) the strength 
of the radios, (2) the relatively small numbers of individuals using them, and 

(3) use of the correct channel by all. 
The same three factors worked against successful communication among 
FDNY personnel. First, the radios’ effectiveness was drastically reduced in the 
high-rise environment.Second,tactical channel 1 was simply overwhelmed by 
the number of units attempting to communicate on it at 10:00. Third, some 
firefighters were on the wrong channel or simply lacked radios altogether. 

It is impossible to know what difference it made that units in the North 
Tower were not using the repeater channel after 10:00. While the repeater 
channel was at least partially operational before the South Tower collapsed,we 
do not know whether it continued to be operational after 9:59. 

Even without the repeater channel, at least 24 of the at most 32 companies 
who were dispatched to and actually in the North Tower received the evacuation 
instruction—either via radio or directly from other first responders.Nevertheless, 
many of these firefighters died, either because they delayed their 
evacuation to assist civilians, attempted to regroup their units, lacked urgency, 
or some combination of these factors. In addition, many other firefighters not 
dispatched to the North Tower also died in its collapse. Some had their radios 
on the wrong channel.Others were off-duty and lacked radios.In view of these</docText>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Organization>South Tower</Organization>
    <Misc>South Tower’s</Misc>
    <Organization>NYPD</Organization>
    <Organization>Radio Communication Challenges:The Effectiveness</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docID>33_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Virginia, which oversees daily traffic flow within the entire airspace system. 
FAA headquarters is ultimately responsible for the management of the 
National Airspace System.The Operations Center located at FAA headquarters 
receives notifications of incidents, including accidents and hijackings.92 

FAA Control Centers often receive information and make operational decisions 
independently of one another. On 9/11, the four hijacked aircraft were 
monitored mainly by the centers in Boston, New York, Cleveland, and Indianapolis. 
Each center thus had part of the knowledge of what was going on 
across the system.What Boston knew was not necessarily known by centers in 
New York, Cleveland, or Indianapolis, or for that matter by the Command 
Center in Herndon or by FAA headquarters in Washington. 

Controllers track airliners such as the four aircraft hijacked on 9/11 primarily 
by watching the data from a signal emitted by each aircraft’s transponder 
equipment.Those four planes, like all aircraft traveling above 10,000 feet, were 
required to emit a unique transponder signal while in flight.93 

On 9/11, the terrorists turned off the transponders on three of the four 
hijacked aircraft.With its transponder off, it is possible, though more difficult, 
to track an aircraft by its primary radar returns. But unlike transponder data, 
primary radar returns do not show the aircraft’s identity and altitude. Controllers 
at centers rely so heavily on transponder signals that they usually do not 
display primary radar returns on their radar scopes. But they can change the 
configuration of their scopes so they can see primary radar returns.They did this 
on 9/11 when the transponder signals for three of the aircraft disappeared.94 

Before 9/11, it was not unheard of for a commercial aircraft to deviate 
slightly from its course, or for an FAA controller to lose radio contact with a 
pilot for a short period of time. A controller could also briefly lose a commercial 
aircraft’s transponder signal, although this happened much less frequently. 
However,the simultaneous loss of radio and transponder signal would be a rare 
and alarming occurrence, and would normally indicate a catastrophic system 
failure or an aircraft crash.In all of these instances,the job of the controller was 
to reach out to the aircraft,the parent company of the aircraft,and other planes 
in the vicinity in an attempt to reestablish communications and set the aircraft 
back on course.Alarm bells would not start ringing until these efforts—which 
could take five minutes or more—were tried and had failed.95 

NORAD Mission and Structure. NORAD is a binational command established 
in 1958 between the United States and Canada. Its mission was, and is, 
to defend the airspace of North America and protect the continent.That mission 
does not distinguish between internal and external threats; but because 
NORAD was created to counter the Soviet threat, it came to define its job as 
defending against external attacks.96 

The threat of Soviet bombers diminished significantly as the Cold War 
ended, and the number of NORAD alert sites was reduced from its Cold War 
high of 26. Some within the Pentagon argued in the 1990s that the alert sites</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>FAA</Organization>
    <Location>Canada</Location>
    <Location>New York</Location>
    <Misc>Soviet</Misc>
    <Location>Boston</Location>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>NORAD</Organization>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Virginia</Location>
    <Location>North America</Location>
    <Misc>Cold War</Misc>
    <Organization>Command Center</Organization>
    <Location>Herndon</Location>
    <Location>Indianapolis</Location>
    <Organization>National Airspace System.The Operations Center</Organization>
    <Organization>FAA Control Centers</Organization>
    <Location>Cleveland</Location>
    <Organization>NORAD Mission</Organization>
    <Organization>Structure</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>HEROISM AND HORROR 

considerations, we conclude that the technical failure of FDNY radios, while 
a contributing factor, was not the primary cause of the many firefighter fatalities 
in the North Tower.209 

The FDNY has worked hard in the past several years to address its radio 
deficiencies.To improve radio capability in high-rises,the FDNY has internally 
developed a “post radio” that is small enough for a battalion chief to carry to 
the upper floors and that greatly repeats and enhances radio signal strength.210 

The story with respect to PortAuthority police officers in the North Tower 
is less complicated; most of them lacked access to the radio channel on which 
the PortAuthority police evacuation order was given.Since September 11,the 
Port Authority has worked hard to integrate the radio systems of their different 
commands. 

... 

The lesson of 9/11 for civilians and first responders can be stated simply: 
in the new age of terror, they—we—are the primary targets.The losses America 
suffered that day demonstrated both the gravity of the terrorist threat and 
the commensurate need to prepare ourselves to meet it. 

The first responders of today live in a world transformed by the attacks on 
9/11. Because no one believes that every conceivable form of attack can be 
prevented, civilians and first responders will again find themselves on the front 
lines.We must plan for that eventuality.A rededication to preparedness is perhaps 
the best way to honor the memories of those we lost that day.</docText>
    <Location>America</Location>
    <Organization>North Tower</Organization>
    <Organization>Port Authority</Organization>
    <Organization>FDNY</Organization>
    <Misc>North Tower.209</Misc>
    <Misc>PortAuthority</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText></docText>
  </document>
  <document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>10 
WARTIME 


After the attacks had occurred, while crisis managers were still sorting 
out a number of unnerving false alarms,Air Force One flew to Barksdale Air 
Force Base in Louisiana. One of these alarms was of a reported threat against 
Air Force One itself, a threat eventually run down to a misunderstood communication 
in the hectic White House Situation Room that morning.1 

While the plan at the elementary school had been to return to Washington, 
by the time Air Force One was airborne at 9:55 A.M. the Secret Service, the 
President’s advisers,and Vice President Cheney were strongly advising against 
it. President Bush reluctantly acceded to this advice and, at about 10:10, Air 
Force One changed course and began heading due west.The immediate objective 
was to find a safe location—not too far away—where the President could 
land and speak to the American people.The Secret Service was also interested 
in refueling the aircraft and paring down the size of the traveling party.The 
President’s military aide, an Air Force officer, quickly researched the options 
and, sometime around 10:20, identified Barksdale Air Force Base as an appropriate 
interim destination.2 

When Air Force One landed at Barksdale at about 11:45, personnel from 
the local Secret Service office were still en route to the airfield.The motorcade 
consisted of a military police lead vehicle and a van;the proposed briefing theater 
had no phones or electrical outlets. Staff scrambled to prepare another 
room for the President’s remarks, while the lead Secret Service agent reviewed 
the security situation with superiors in Washington.The President completed 
his statement, which for security reasons was taped and not broadcast live, and 
the traveling party returned to Air Force One.The next destination was discussed:
once again the Secret Service recommended against returning to Washington,
and the Vice President agreed.Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska was 
chosen because of its elaborate command and control facilities, and because it 
could accommodate overnight lodging for 50 persons. The Secret Service 
wanted a place where the President could spend several days, if necessary.3</docText>
    <Organization>Secret Service</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Person>Cheney</Person>
    <Misc>President’s</Misc>
    <Misc>Air Force</Misc>
    <Location>Barksdale</Location>
    <Location>Louisiana</Location>
    <Person>One</Person>
    <Location>Nebraska</Location>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

Air Force One arrived at Offutt at 2:50 P.M. At about 3:15, President Bush 
met with his principal advisers through a secure video teleconference.4 Rice 
said President Bush began the meeting with the words,“We’re at war,”5 and 
that Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet said the agency was still 
assessing who was responsible,but the early signs all pointed to al Qaeda.6That 
evening the Deputies Committee returned to the pending presidential directive 
they had labored over during the summer.7 

The secretary of defense directed the nation’s armed forces to Defense Condition 
3, an increased state of military readiness.8 For the first time in history, 
all nonemergency civilian aircraft in the United States were grounded, stranding 
tens of thousands of passengers across the country. Contingency plans for 
the continuity of government and the evacuation of leaders had been implemented.
9The Pentagon had been struck;the White House or the Capitol had 
narrowly escaped direct attack. Extraordinary security precautions were put in 
place at the nation’s borders and ports. 

In the late afternoon, the President overruled his aides’ continuing reluctance 
to have him return to Washington and ordered Air Force One back to 
Andrews Air Force Base.He was flown by helicopter back to the White House, 
passing over the still-smoldering Pentagon.At 8:30 that evening,President Bush 
addressed the nation from the White House. After emphasizing that the first 
priority was to help the injured and protect against any further attacks,he said: 
“We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts 
and those who harbor them.” He quoted Psalm 23—“though I walk through 
the valley of the shadow of death ...”No American,he said,“will ever forget 
this day.”10 

Following his speech, President Bush met again with his National Security 
Council (NSC), expanded to include Secretary of Transportation Norman 
Mineta and Joseph Allbaugh, the director of the Federal Emergency Management 
Agency.Secretary of State Colin Powell,who had returned from Peru after 
hearing of the attacks, joined the discussion.They reviewed the day’s events.11 

10.1 IMMEDIATE RESPONSES AT HOME 
As the urgent domestic issues accumulated,White House Deputy Chief of Staff 
Joshua Bolten chaired a temporary “domestic consequences” group.12 The 
agenda in those first days is worth noting, partly as a checklist for future crisis 
planners. It began with problems of how to help victims and stanch the flowing 
losses to the American economy, such as 

• 
Organizing federal emergency assistance. One question was what kind 
of public health advice to give about the air quality in Lower Manhattan 
in the vicinity of the fallen buildings.13</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Location>Washington</Location>
    <Organization>Pentagon</Organization>
    <Location>Capitol</Location>
    <Organization>Central Intelligence</Organization>
    <Person>George Tenet</Person>
    <Organization>Air Force</Organization>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Rice</Person>
    <Person>Colin Powell</Person>
    <Person>Joshua Bolten</Person>
    <Location>Lower Manhattan</Location>
    <Organization>Deputies Committee</Organization>
    <Person>Norman Mineta</Person>
    <Location>Offutt</Location>
    <Organization>Defense Condition</Organization>
    <Organization>Andrews Air Force</Organization>
    <Organization>Pentagon.At</Organization>
    <Person>Joseph Allbaugh</Person>
    <Organization>Federal Emergency Management Agency.Secretary of State</Organization>
    <Location>Peru</Location>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
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    <docText>WARTIME 
327 

• 
Compensating victims.They evaluated legislative options,eventually 
setting up a federal compensation fund and defining the powers of a 
special master to run it. 
• 
Determining federal assistance. On September 13, President Bush 
promised to provide $20 billion for New York City,in addition to the 
$20 billion his budget director had already guessed might be needed 
for the country as a whole.14 
• 
Restoring civil aviation. On the morning of September 13, the 
national airspace reopened for use by airports that met newly improvised 
security standards. 
• 
Reopening the financial markets. After extraordinary emergency 
efforts involving the White House,the Treasury Department,and the 
Securities and Exchange Commission, aided by unprecedented 
cooperation among the usually competitive firms of the financial 
industry, the markets reopened on Monday, September 17.15 
• 
Deciding when and how to return border and port security to more 
normal operations. 
• 
Evaluating legislative proposals to bail out the airline industry and cap 
its liability. 
The very process of reviewing these issues underscored the absence of an 
effective government organization dedicated to assessing vulnerabilities and 
handling problems of protection and preparedness.Though a number of agencies 
had some part of the task, none had security as its primary mission. 

By September 14,Vice President Cheney had decided to recommend, at 
least as a first step,a new White House entity to coordinate all the relevant agencies 
rather than tackle the challenge of combining them in a new department. 
This new White House entity would be a homeland security adviser and 
Homeland Security Council—paralleling the National Security Council system.
Vice President Cheney reviewed the proposal with President Bush and 
other advisers.President Bush announced the new post and its first occupant— 
Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge—in his address to a joint session of Congress 
on September 20.16 

Beginning on September 11, Immigration and Naturalization Service 
agents working in cooperation with the FBI began arresting individuals for 
immigration violations whom they encountered while following up leads in 
the FBI’s investigation of the 9/11 attacks. Eventually, 768 aliens were arrested 
as “special interest” detainees. Some (such as Zacarias Moussaoui) were actually 
in INS custody before 9/11; most were arrested after. Attorney General 
John Ashcroft told us that he saw his job in directing this effort as “risk minimization,” 
both to find out who had committed the attacks and to prevent a 
subsequent attack. Ashcroft ordered all special interest immigration hearings 
closed to the public,family members,and press;directed government attorneys</docText>
    <Organization>Treasury Department</Organization>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Misc>FBI’s</Misc>
    <Location>New York City</Location>
    <Organization>Immigration and Naturalization Service</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Location>Pennsylvania</Location>
    <Person>Cheney</Person>
    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
    <Person>John Ashcroft</Person>
    <Person>Zacarias Moussaoui</Person>
    <Organization>WARTIME</Organization>
    <Organization>Securities and Exchange Commission</Organization>
    <Organization>Homeland Security Council—paralleling</Organization>
    <Person>Tom Ridge—in</Person>
  </document>
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    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

to seek denial of bond until such time as they were “cleared” of terrorist connections 
by the FBI and other agencies; and ordered the identity of the 
detainees kept secret.INS attorneys charged with prosecuting the immigration 
violations had trouble getting information about the detainees and any terrorist 
connections; in the chaos after the attacks, it was very difficult to reach law 
enforcement officials, who were following up on other leads.The clearance 
process approved by the Justice Department was time-consuming, lasting an 
average of about 80 days.17 

We have assessed this effort to detain aliens of “special interest.” The 
detainees were lawfully held on immigration charges.Records indicate that 531 
were deported, 162 were released on bond, 24 received some kind of immigration 
benefits, 12 had their proceedings terminated, and 8—one of whom 
was Moussaoui—were remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service. 
The inspector general of the Justice Department found significant problems in 
the way the 9/11 detainees were treated.18 In response to a request about the 
counterterrorism benefits of the 9/11 detainee program, the Justice Department 
cited six individuals on the special interest detainee list, noting that two 
(including Moussaoui) were linked directly to a terrorist organization and that 
it had obtained new leads helpful to the investigation of the 9/11 terrorist 
attacks.19 A senior al Qaeda detainee has stated that U.S. government efforts 
after the 9/11 attacks to monitor the American homeland, including review of 
Muslims’immigration files and deportation of nonpermanent residents,forced 
al Qaeda to operate less freely in the United States.20 

The government’s ability to collect intelligence inside the United States,and 
the sharing of such information between the intelligence and law enforcement 
communities, was not a priority before 9/11. Guidelines on this subject issued 
in August 2001 by Deputy Attorney General LarryThompson essentially recapitulated 
prior guidance.However,the attacks of 9/11 changed everything.Less 
than one week after September 11,an early version of what was to become the 
Patriot Act (officially, the USA PATRIOT Act) began to take shape.21 A central 
provision of the proposal was the removal of “the wall” on information 
sharing between the intelligence and law enforcement communities (discussed 
in chapter 3). Ashcroft told us he was determined to take every conceivable 
action,within the limits of the Constitution,to identify potential terrorists and 
deter additional attacks.22 The administration developed a proposal that eventually 
passed both houses of Congress by large majorities and was signed into 
law on October 26.23</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Justice Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Congress</Organization>
    <Misc>American</Misc>
    <Organization>USA PATRIOT Act</Organization>
    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
    <Misc>Moussaoui</Misc>
    <Organization>Patriot Act</Organization>
    <Organization>Moussaoui—were</Organization>
    <Organization>U.S. Marshals Service</Organization>
    <Misc>United States.20</Misc>
    <Location>Constitution</Location>
  </document>
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    <docID>346_pdfsam_911Report</docID>
    <docDate></docDate>
    <docSource></docSource>
    <docText>WARTIME 329 

Flights of Saudi Nationals Leaving the United States 

Three questions have arisen with respect to the departure of Saudi 
nationals from the United States in the immediate aftermath of 9/11: 

(1) Did any flights of Saudi nationals take place before national airspace 
reopened on September 13,2001? (2) Was there any political intervention 
to facilitate the departure of Saudi nationals? (3) Did the FBI 
screen Saudi nationals thoroughly before their departure? 
First, we found no evidence that any flights of Saudi nationals, 
domestic or international, took place before the reopening of national 
airspace on the morning of September 13, 2001.24 To the contrary, 
every flight we have identified occurred after national airspace 
reopened.25 

Second, we found no evidence of political intervention.We found 
no evidence that anyone at the White House above the level of Richard 
Clarke participated in a decision on the departure of Saudi nationals. 
The issue came up in one of the many video teleconferences of the 
interagency group Clarke chaired,and Clarke said he approved of how 
the FBI was dealing with the matter when it came up for interagency 
discussion at his level.Clarke told us,“I asked the FBI,Dale Watson ... 
to handle that, to check to see if that was all right with them, to see if 
they wanted access to any of these people,and to get back to me.And 
if they had no objections,it would be fine with me.”Clarke added,“I 
have no recollection of clearing it with anybody at the White 
House.”26 

Although White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card remembered 
someone telling him about the Saudi request shortly after 9/11,he said 
he had not talked to the Saudis and did not ask anyone to do anything 
about it.The President and Vice President told us they were not aware 
of the issue at all until it surfaced much later in the media.None of the 
officials we interviewed recalled any intervention or direction on this 
matter from any political appointee.27 

Third,we believe that the FBI conducted a satisfactory screening of 
Saudi nationals who left the United States on charter flights.28 The 
Saudi government was advised of and agreed to the FBI’s requirements 
that passengers be identified and checked against various databases 
before the flights departed.29The Federal Aviation Administration representative 
working in the FBI operations center made sure that the</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Organization>Federal Aviation Administration</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Misc>Saudis</Misc>
    <Person>Richard Clarke</Person>
    <Person>Clarke</Person>
    <Date>September 13, 2001</Date>
    <Date>September 13,2001</Date>
    <Person>Dale Watson</Person>
    <Person>Andrew Card</Person>
    <Misc>White House.”26</Misc>
  </document>
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    <docText>THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT 

FBI was aware of the flights of Saudi nationals and was able to screen 
the passengers before they were allowed to depart.30 

The FBI interviewed all persons of interest on these flights prior to 
their departures.They concluded that none of the passengers was connected 
to the 9/11 attacks and have since found no evidence to change 
that conclusion. Our own independent review of the Saudi nationals 
involved confirms that no one with known links to terrorism departed 
on these flights.31 

10.2 PLANNING FOR WAR 
By late in the evening of September 11,the President had addressed the nation 
on the terrible events of the day.Vice President Cheney described the President’s 
mood as somber.32The long day was not yet over.When the larger meeting 
that included his domestic department heads broke up, President Bush 
chaired a smaller meeting of top advisers, a group he would later call his “war 
council.”33This group usually included Vice President Cheney,Secretary of State 
Powell, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, General Hugh Shelton,Vice 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs (later to become chairman) General Myers, DCI 
Tenet,Attorney General Ashcroft,and FBI Director Robert Mueller.From the 
White House staff, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice and Chief of 
Staff Card were part of the core group, often joined by their deputies, Stephen 
Hadley and Joshua Bolten. 

In this restricted National Security Council meeting, the President said it 
was a time for self-defense.The United States would punish not just the perpetrators 
of the attacks, but also those who harbored them. Secretary Powell 
said the United States had to make it clear to Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the 
Arab states that the time to act was now. He said we would need to build a 
coalition.The President noted that the attacks provided a great opportunity to 
engage Russia and China. Secretary Rumsfeld urged the President and the 
principals to think broadly about who might have harbored the attackers, 
including Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Sudan, and Iran. He wondered aloud how 
much evidence the United States would need in order to deal with these countries, 
pointing out that major strikes could take up to 60 days to assemble.34 

President Bush chaired two more meetings of the NSC on September 12. 
In the first meeting, he stressed that the United States was at war with a new 
and different kind of enemy.The President tasked principals to go beyond their 
pre-9/11 work and develop a strategy to eliminate terrorists and punish those 
who support them.As they worked on defining the goals and objectives of the 
upcoming campaign, they considered a paper that went beyond al Qaeda to</docText>
    <Organization>FBI</Organization>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Person>Qaeda</Person>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Location>Libya</Location>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Organization>National Security Council</Organization>
    <Location>Sudan</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Location>China</Location>
    <Misc>Saudi</Misc>
    <Location>Iraq</Location>
    <Location>Iran</Location>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Misc>Arab</Misc>
    <Person>Myers</Person>
    <Person>Rumsfeld</Person>
    <Person>Cheney</Person>
    <Person>DCI Tenet</Person>
    <Person>Donald Rumsfeld</Person>
    <Location>Russia</Location>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Hugh Shelton</Person>
    <Person>Powell</Person>
    <Person>Ashcroft</Person>
    <Person>Stephen Hadley</Person>
    <Person>Joshua Bolten</Person>
    <Organization>Joint Chiefs</Organization>
    <Person>Robert Mueller.From</Person>
    <Organization>National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice and Chief</Organization>
  </document>
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    <docText>WARTIME 
331 

propose the “elimination of terrorism as a threat to our way of life,”an aim that 
would include pursuing other international terrorist organizations in the Middle 
East.35 

Rice chaired a Principals Committee meeting on September 13 in the Situation 
Room to refine how the fight against al Qaeda would be conducted. 
The principals agreed that the overall message should be that anyone supporting 
al Qaeda would risk harm. The United States would need to integrate 
diplomacy, financial measures, intelligence, and military actions into an overarching 
strategy.The principals also focused on Pakistan and what it could do 
to turn the Taliban against al Qaeda.They concluded that if Pakistan decided 
not to help the United States, it too would be at risk.36 

The same day, Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage met with the 
Pakistani ambassador to the United States,Maleeha Lodhi,and the visiting head 
of Pakistan’s military intelligence service,Mahmud Ahmed.Armitage said that 
the United States wanted Pakistan to take seven steps: 

• 
to stop al Qaeda operatives at its border and end all logistical support 
for Bin Ladin; 
• 
to give the United States blanket overflight and landing rights for all 
necessary military and intelligence operations; 
• 
to provide territorial access to U.S.and allied military intelligence and 
other personnel to conduct operations against al Qaeda; 
• 
to provide the United States with intelligence information; 
• 
to continue to publicly condemn the terrorist acts; 
• 
to cut off all shipments of fuel to the Taliban and stop recruits from 
going to Afghanistan; and, 
• 
if the evidence implicated bin Ladin and al Qaeda and the Taliban 
continued to harbor them, to break relations with the Taliban 
government.37 
Pakistan made its decision swiftly.That afternoon, Secretary of State Powell 
announced at the beginning of an NSC meeting that Pakistani President 
Musharraf had agreed to every U.S. request for support in the war on terror-
ism.The next day,the U.S.embassy in Islamabad confirmed that Musharraf and 
his top military commanders had agreed to all seven demands.“Pakistan will 
need full US support as it proceeds with us,” the embassy noted.“Musharraf 
said the GOP [government of Pakistan] was making substantial concessions in 
allowing use of its territory and that he would pay a domestic price. His standing 
in Pakistan was certain to suffer.To counterbalance that he needed to show 
that Pakistan was benefiting from his decisions.”38 

At the September 13 NSC meeting, when Secretary Powell described Pakistan’s 
reply,President Bush led a discussion of an appropriate ultimatum to the 
Taliban. He also ordered Secretary Rumsfeld to develop a military plan against</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Pakistan</Location>
    <Location>U.S.embassy</Location>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Pakistani</Misc>
    <Person>Ladin</Person>
    <Misc>Pakistan’s</Misc>
    <Person>Bush</Person>
    <Person>Rumsfeld</Person>
    <Person>Richard Armitage</Person>
    <Person>Musharraf</Person>
    <Organization>NSC</Organization>
    <Person>Powell</Person>
    <Location>US</Location>
    <Location>Islamabad</Location>
    <Organization>Committee</Organization>
    <Misc>U.S.and</Misc>
    <Person>Qaeda.They</Person>
    <Location>Middle East.35 Rice</Location>
    <Person>Maleeha Lodhi</Person>
    <Person>Mahmud Ahmed.Armitage</Person>
    <Misc>GOP</Misc>
  </document>
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the Taliban.The President wanted the United States to strike the Taliban, step 
back, wait to see if they got the message, and hit them hard if they did not. He 
made clear that the military should focus on targets that would influence the 
Taliban’s behavior.39 

President Bush also tasked the State Department, which on the following 
day delivered to the White House a paper titled “Game Plan for a Political-
Military Strategy for Pakistan and Afghanistan.”The paper took it as a given 
that Bin Ladin would continue to act against the United States even while 
under Taliban control. It therefore detailed specific U.S. demands for the Taliban: 
surrender Bin Ladin and his chief lieutenants, including Ayman al 
Zawahiri;tell the United States what the Taliban knew about al Qaeda and its 
operations; close all terrorist camps; free all imprisoned foreigners; and comply 
with all UN Security Council resolutions.40 

The State Department proposed delivering an ultimatum to the Taliban: 
produce Bin Ladin and his deputies and shut down al Qaeda camps within 24 
to 48 hours, or the United States will use all necessary means to destroy the 
terrorist infrastructure. The State Department did not expect the Taliban to 
comply. Therefore, State and Defense would plan to build an international 
coalition to go into Afghanistan.Both departments would consult with NATO 
and other allies and request intelligence, basing, and other support from countries, 
according to their capabilities and resources. Finally, the plan detailed a 
public U.S. stance:America would use all its resources to eliminate terrorism 
as a threat, punish those responsible for the 9/11 attacks, hold states and other 
actors responsible for providing sanctuary to terrorists, work with a coalition 
to eliminate terrorist groups and networks, and avoid malice toward any people, 
religion, or culture.41 

President Bush recalled that he quickly realized that the administration 
would have to invade Afghanistan with ground troops.42 But the early briefings 
to the President and Secretary Rumsfeld on military options were disappointing.
43 Tommy Franks, the commanding general of Central Command 
(CENTCOM), told us that the President was dissatisfied. The U.S. military, 
Franks said, did not have an off-the-shelf plan to eliminate the al Qaeda threat 
in Afghanistan. The existing Infinite Resolve options did not, in his view, 
amount to such a plan.44 

All these diplomatic and military plans were reviewed over the weekend of 
September 15–16, as President Bush convened his war council at Camp 
David.45 Present wereVice President Cheney,Rice,Hadley,Powell,Armitage, 
Rumsfeld, Ashcroft, Mueller, Tenet, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, 
and Cofer Black, chief of the DCI’s Counterterrorist Center. 

Tenet described a plan for collecting intelligence and mounting covert operations.
He proposed inserting CIA teams into Afghanistan to work with Afghan 
warlords who would join the fight against al Qaeda.46These CIA teams would 
act jointly with the military’s Special Operations units. President Bush later 
praised this proposal, saying it had been a turning point in his thinking.47</docText>
    <Location>United States</Location>
    <Location>U.S.</Location>
    <Organization>CIA</Organization>
    <Location>White House</Location>
    <Organization>State Department</Organization>
    <Organization>Qaeda</Organization>
    <Person>Bin Ladin</Person>
    <Location>Afghanistan</Location>
    <Organization>Taliban</Organization>
    <Misc>Afghan</Misc>
    <