Could
9/11 Have Been Prevented?
Long before the tragic events of
September 11th, the White House debated taking the
fight to al-Qaeda. It didn't happen and soon it
was too late. The saga of a lost chance
BY MICHAEL ELLIOTT
Sunday, Aug. 04, 2002
Sometimes history is made by the force of arms on
battlefields, sometimes by the fall of an
exhausted empire. But often when historians set
about figuring why a nation took one course rather
than another, they are most interested in who said
what to whom at a meeting far from the public eye
whose true significance may have been missed even
by those who took part in it.
One such meeting took place in the White House
situation room during the first week of January
2001. The session was part of a program designed
by Bill Clinton's National Security Adviser, Sandy
Berger, who wanted the transition between the
Clinton and George W. Bush administrations to run
as smoothly as possible. With some bitterness,
Berger remembered how little he and his colleagues
had been helped by the first Bush Administration
in 1992-93. Eager to avoid a repeat of that
experience, he had set up a series of 10 briefings
by his team for his successor, Condoleezza Rice,
and her deputy, Stephen Hadley.
Berger attended only one of the briefings-the
session that dealt with the threat posed to the
U.S. by international terrorism, and especially by
al-Qaeda. "I'm coming to this briefing,"
he says he told Rice, "to underscore how
important I think this subject is." Later,
alone in his office with Rice, Berger says he told
her, "I believe that the Bush Administration
will spend more time on terrorism generally, and
on al-Qaeda specifically, than any other
subject." The terrorism briefing was
delivered by Richard Clarke, a career bureaucrat
who had served in the first Bush Administration
and risen during the Clinton years to become the
White House's point man on terrorism. As chair of
the interagency Counter-Terrorism Security Group
(CSG), Clarke was known as a bit of an
obsessive-just the sort of person you want in a
job of that kind. Since the bombing of the U.S.S.
Cole in Yemen on Oct. 12, 2000-an attack that left
17 Americans dead-he had been working on an
aggressive plan to take the fight to al-Qaeda. The
result was a strategy paper that he had presented
to Berger and the other national security
"principals" on Dec. 20. But Berger and
the principals decided to shelve the plan and let
the next Administration take it up. With less than
a month left in office, they did not think it
appropriate to launch a major initiative against
Osama bin Laden. "We would be handing (the
Bush Administration) a war when they took office
on Jan. 20," says a former senior Clinton
aide. "That wasn't going to happen." Now
it was up to Rice's team to consider what Clarke
had put together.
Berger had left the room by the time Clarke, using
a Powerpoint presentation, outlined his thinking
to Rice. A senior Bush Administration official
denies being handed a formal plan to take the
offensive against al-Qaeda, and says Clarke's
materials merely dealt with whether the new
Administration should take "a more active
approach" to the terrorist group. (Rice
declined to comment, but through a spokeswoman
said she recalled no briefing at which Berger was
present.) Other senior officials from both the
Clinton and Bush administrations, however, say
that Clarke had a set of proposals to "roll
back" al-Qaeda. In fact, the heading on Slide
14 of the Powerpoint presentation reads,
"Response to al Qaeda: Roll back."
Clarke's proposals called for the
"breakup" of al-Qaeda cells and the
arrest of their personnel. The financial support
for its terrorist activities would be
systematically attacked, its assets frozen, its
funding from fake charities stopped. Nations where
al-Qaeda was causing trouble-Uzbekistan, the
Philippines, Yemen-would be given aid to fight the
terrorists. Most important, Clarke wanted to see a
dramatic increase in covert action in Afghanistan
to "eliminate the sanctuary" where
al-Qaeda had its terrorist training camps and bin
Laden was being protected by the radical Islamic
Taliban regime. The Taliban had come to power in
1996, bringing a sort of order to a nation that
had been riven by bloody feuds between ethnic
warlords since the Soviets had pulled out. Clarke
supported a substantial increase in American
support for the Northern Alliance, the last
remaining resistance to the Taliban. That way,
terrorists graduating from the training camps
would have been forced to stay in Afghanistan,
fighting (and dying) for the Taliban on the front
lines. At the same time, the U.S. military would
start planning for air strikes on the camps and
for the introduction of special-operations forces
into Afghanistan. The plan was estimated to cost
"several hundreds of millions of
dollars." In the words of a senior Bush
Administration official, the proposals amounted to
"everything we've done since 9/11."
And that's the point. The proposals Clarke
developed in the winter of 2000-01 were not given
another hearing by top decision makers until late
April, and then spent another four months making
their laborious way through the bureaucracy before
they were readied for approval by President Bush.
It is quite true that nobody predicted Sept.
11-that nobody guessed in advance how and when the
attacks would come. But other things are true too.
By last summer, many of those in the know-the
spooks, the buttoned-down bureaucrats, the
law-enforcement professionals in a dozen
countries-were almost frantic with worry that a
major terrorist attack against American interests
was imminent. It wasn't averted because 2001 saw a
systematic collapse in the ability of Washington's
national-security apparatus to handle the
terrorist threat.
The winter proposals became a victim of the
transition process, turf wars and time spent on
the pet policies of new top officials. The Bush
Administration chose to institute its own
"policy review process" on the terrorist
threat. Clarke told Time that the review moved
"as fast as could be expected." And
Administration officials insist that by the time
the review was endorsed by the Bush principals on
Sept. 4, it was more aggressive than anything
contemplated the previous winter. The final plan,
they say, was designed not to "roll
back" al-Qaeda but to "eliminate"
it. But that delay came at a cost. The Northern
Alliance was desperate for help but got little of
it. And in a bureaucratic squabble that would be
farfetched on The West Wing, nobody in Washington
could decide whether a Predator drone-an unmanned
aerial vehicle (UAV) and the best possible source
of real intelligence on what was happening in the
terror camps-should be sent to fly over
Afghanistan. So the Predator sat idle from October
2000 until after Sept. 11. No single person was
responsible for all this. But
"Washington"-that organic compound of
officials and politicians, in uniform and out,
with faces both familiar and unknown-failed
horribly.
Could al-Qaeda's plot have been foiled if the U.S.
had taken the fight to the terrorists in January
2001? Perhaps not. The thrust of the winter plan
was to attack al-Qaeda outside the U.S. Yet by the
beginning of that year, Mohamed Atta and Marwan
Al-Shehhi, two Arabs who had been leaders of a
terrorist cell in Hamburg, Germany, were already
living in Florida, honing their skills in flight
schools. Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid Almihdhar had
been doing the same in Southern California. The
hijackers maintained tight security, generally
avoided cell phones, rented apartments under false
names and used cash-not wire transfers-wherever
possible. If every plan to attack al-Qaeda had
been executed, and every lead explored, Atta's
team might still never have been caught.
But there's another possibility. An aggressive
campaign to degrade the terrorist network
worldwide-to shut down the conveyor belt of
recruits coming out of the Afghan camps, to attack
the financial and logistical support on which the
hijackers depended-just might have rendered it
incapable of carrying out the Sept. 11 attacks.
Perhaps some of those who had to approve the
operation might have been killed, or the money
trail to Florida disrupted. We will never know,
because we never tried. This is the secret history
of that failure.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
Berger was determined that when he left office,
Rice should have a full understanding of the
terrorist threat. In a sense, this was an
admission of failure. For the Clinton years had
been marked by a drumbeat of terror attacks
against American targets, and they didn't seem to
be stopping.
In 1993 the World Trade Center had been bombed for
the first time; in 1996 19 American servicemen had
been killed when the Khobar Towers, in Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia, was bombed; two years later,
American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were
attacked. As the millennium celebrations at the
end of 1999 approached, the CIA warned that it
expected five to 15 attacks against American
targets over the New Year's weekend. But three
times, the U.S. got lucky. The Jordanians broke up
an al-Qaeda cell in Amman; Ahmed Ressam, an
Algerian based in Montreal, panicked when stopped
at a border crossing from Canada while carrying
explosives intended for Los Angeles International
Airport; and on Jan. 3, 2000, an al-Qaeda attack
on the U.S.S. The Sullivans in Yemen foundered
after terrorists overloaded their small
boat.
From the start of the Clinton Administration, the
job of thwarting terror had fallen to Clarke. A
bureaucratic survivor who now leads the Bush
Administration's office on cyberterrorism, he has
served four Presidents from both parties-staff
members joke that the framed photos in his office
have two sides, one for a Republican President to
admire, the other for a Democrat. Aggressive and
legendarily abrasive, Clarke was desperate to
persuade skeptics to take the terror threat as
seriously as he did. "Clarke is unbelievably
determined, high-energy, focused and
imaginative," says a senior Clinton
Administration official. "But he's totally
insensitive to rolling over others who are in his
way." By the end of 2000, Clarke didn't need
to roll over his boss; Berger was just as sure of
the danger.
The two men had an ally in George Tenet, who had
been appointed Director of Central Intelligence in
1997. "He wasn't sleeping on the job on
this," says a senior Clinton aide of Tenet,
"whatever inherent problems there were in the
agency." Those problems were immense.
Although the CIA claims it had penetrated
al-Qaeda, Republican Congressman Saxby Chambliss
of Georgia, chairman of the House Intelligence
Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland Security,
doubts that it ever got anywhere near the top of
the organization. "The CIA," he says,
"were not able to recruit human assets to
penetrate al-Qaeda and the al-Qaeda
leadership." Nobody pretends that such an
exercise would have been easy. Says a
counterterrorism official: "Where are you
going to find a person loyal to the U.S. who's
willing to eat dung beetles and sleep on the
ground in a cave for two or three years? You don't
find people willing to do that who also speak
fluent Pashtu or Arabic."
In the absence of men sleeping with the beetles,
the CIA had to depend on less reliable allies. The
agency attempted to recruit tribal leaders in
Afghanistan who might be persuaded to take on bin
Laden; contingency plans had been made for the CIA
to fly one of its planes to a desert landing strip
in Afghanistan if he was ever captured. (Clinton
had signed presidential "findings" that
were ambiguous on the question of whether bin
Laden could be killed in such an attack.) But the
tribal groups' loyalty was always in doubt.
Despite the occasional abortive raid, they never
seemed to get close to bin Laden. That meant that
the Clinton team had to fall back on a second
strategy: taking out bin Laden by cruise missile,
which had been tried after the embassy bombings in
1998. For all of 2000, sources tell Time, Clinton
ordered two U.S. Navy submarines to stay on
station in the northern Arabian Sea, ready to
attack if bin Laden's coordinates could be
determined.
But the plan was twice flawed. First, the missiles
could be used only if bin Laden's whereabouts were
known, and the CIA never definitively delivered
that information. By early 2000, Clinton was
becoming infuriated by the lack of intelligence on
bin Laden's movements. "We've got to do
better than this," he scribbled on one memo.
"This is unsatisfactory." Second, even
if a target could ever be found, the missiles
might take too long to hit it. The Pentagon
thought it could dump a Tomahawk missile on bin
Laden's camp within six hours of a decision to
attack, but the experts in the White House thought
that was impossibly long. Any missiles fired at
Afghanistan would have to fly over Pakistan, and
Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency
(ISI) was close to the Taliban. White House aides
were sure bin Laden would be tipped off as soon as
the Pakistanis detected the missiles.
Berger and Clarke wanted something more robust. On
Nov. 7, Berger met with William Cohen, then
Secretary of Defense, in the Pentagon. The time
had come, said Berger, for the Pentagon to rethink
its approach to operations against bin Laden.
"We've been hit many times, and we'll be hit
again," Berger said. "Yet we have no
option beyond cruise missiles." He wanted
"boots on the ground"-U.S. special-ops
forces deployed inside Afghanistan on a
search-and-destroy mission targeting bin Laden.
Cohen said he would look at the idea, but he and
General Hugh Shelton, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, were dead set against it. They feared a
repeat of Desert One, the 1980 fiasco in which
special-ops commandos crashed in Iran during an
abortive mission to rescue American
hostages.
It wasn't just Pentagon nerves that got in the way
of a more aggressive counterterrorism policy. So
did politics. After the U.S.S. Cole was bombed,
the secretive Joint Special Operations Command at
Fort Bragg, N.C., drew up plans to have Delta
Force members swoop into Afghanistan and grab bin
Laden. But the warriors were never given the
go-ahead; the Clinton Administration did not order
an American retaliation for the attack. "We
didn't do diddly," gripes a counterterrorism
official. "We didn't even blow up a baby-milk
factory." In fact, despite strong suspicion
that bin Laden was behind the attack in Yemen, the
CIA and FBI had not officially concluded that he
was, and would be unable to do so before Clinton
left office. That made it politically impossible
for Clinton to strike-especially given the
upcoming election and his own lack of credibility
on national security. "If we had done
anything, say, two weeks before the
election," says a former senior Clinton aide,
"we'd be accused of helping Al Gore."
For Clarke, the bombing of the Cole was final
proof that the old policy hadn't worked. It was
time for something more aggressive-a plan to make
war against al-Qaeda. One element was vital. The
Taliban's control of Afghanistan was not yet
complete; in the northeast of the country,
Northern Alliance forces led by Ahmed Shah
Massoud, a legendary guerrilla leader who had
fought against the Soviet invaders of Afghanistan
in the 1980s, were still resisting Taliban rule.
Clarke argued that Massoud should be given the
resources to develop a viable fighting force. That
way, terrorists leaving al-Qaeda's training camps
in Afghanistan would have been forced to join the
Taliban forces fighting in the north. "You
keep them on the front lines in Afghanistan,"
says a counterterrorism official. "Hopefully
you're killing them in the process, and they're
not leaving Afghanistan to plot terrorist
operations. That was the general approach."
But the approach meant that Americans had to
engage directly in the snake pit of Afghan
politics.
THE LAST MAN STANDING
In the spring of 2001, afghanistan was as rough a
place as it ever is. Four sets of forces battled
for position. Most of the country was under the
authority of the Taliban, but it was not a
homogeneous group. Some of its leaders, like
Mullah Mohammed Omar, the self-styled emir of
Afghanistan, were dyed-in-the-wool Islamic
radicals; others were fierce Afghan nationalists.
The Taliban's principal support had come from
Pakistan-another interested party, which wanted a
reasonably peaceful border to its west-and in
particular from the hard men of the isi. But
Pakistan's policy was not all of a piece either.
Since General Pervez Musharraf had taken power in
a 1999 coup, some Pakistani officials, desperate
to curry favor with the U.S.-which had cut off aid
to Pakistan after it tested a nuclear device in
1998-had seen the wisdom of distancing themselves
from the Taliban, or at the least attempting to
moderate its more radical behavior. The third
element was the Northern Alliance, a resistance
movement whose stronghold was in northeast
Afghanistan. Most of the Alliance's forces and
leaders were, like Massoud, ethnic Tajiks-a
minority in Afghanistan. Massoud controlled less
than 10% of the country and had been beaten back
by the Taliban in 2000. Nonetheless, by dint of
his personality and reputation, Massoud was
"the only military threat to the
Taliban," says Francesc Vendrell, who was
then the special representative in Afghanistan of
the U.N. Secretary-General.
And then there was al-Qaeda. The group had been
born in Afghanistan when Islamic radicals began
flocking there in 1979, after the Soviets invaded.
Bin Laden and his closest associates had returned
in 1996, when they were expelled from Sudan.
Al-Qaeda's terrorist training camps were in
Afghanistan, and bin Laden's forces and money were
vital to sustaining the Taliban's offensives
against Massoud.
By last spring, the uneasy equilibrium among the
four forces was beginning to break down.
"Moderates" in the Taliban-those who
tried to keep lines open to intermediaries in the
U.N. and the U.S.-were losing ground. In 2000,
Mullah Mohammed Rabbani, thought to be the second
most powerful member of the Taliban, had reached
out clandestinely to Massoud. "He understood
that our country had been sold out to al-Qaeda and
Pakistan," says Ahmad Jamsheed, Massoud's
secretary. But in April 2001, Rabbani died of
liver cancer. By that month, says the U.N.'s
Vendrell, "it was al- Qaeda that was running
the Taliban, not vice versa."
A few weeks before Rabbani's death, Musharraf's
government had started to come to the same
conclusion: the Pakistanis were no longer able to
moderate Taliban behavior. To worldwide
condemnation, the Taliban had announced its
intention to blow up the 1,700-year-old stone
statues of the Buddha in the Bamiyan Valley.
Musharraf dispatched his right-hand man, Interior
Minister Moinuddin Haider, to plead with Mullah
Omar for the Buddhas to be saved. The Taliban's
Foreign Minister and its ambassador to Pakistan,
says a Pakistani official close to the talks, were
in favor of saving the Buddhas. But Mullah Omar,
says a member of the Pakistani delegation,
listened to what Haider had to say and replied,
"If on Judgment Day I stand before Allah,
I'll see those two statues floating before me, and
I know that Allah will ask me why, when I had the
power, I did not destroy them." A few days
later, the Buddhas were blown up.
By summer, Pakistan had a deeper grievance. The
country had suffered a wave of sectarian
assassinations, with gangs throwing grenades into
mosques and murdering clerics. The authorities in
Islamabad knew that the murderers had fled to
Afghanistan (one of them was openly running a
store in Kabul) and sent a delegation to ask for
their return. "We gave them lists of names,
photos and the locations of training camps where
these fellows could be found," says Brigadier
Javid Iqbal Cheema, director of Pakistan's
National Crisis Management Cell, "but not a
single individual was ever handed over to
us." The Pakistanis were furious.
As the snows cleared for the annual spring
military campaign, a joint offensive against
Massoud by the Taliban and al-Qaeda seemed likely.
But the influence of al-Qaeda on the Taliban was
proving deeply unpopular among ordinary Afghans,
especially in the urban centers. "I thought
at most 20% of the population supported the
Taliban by early summer," says Vendrell. And
bin Laden's power made Massoud's plea for outside
assistance more urgent. "We told the
Americans-we told everyone-that al-Qaeda was set
upon a transnational program," says Abdullah
Abdullah, once a close aide to Massoud and now the
Afghan Foreign Minister. In April, Massoud
addressed the European Parliament in Strasbourg,
France, seeking support for the Northern Alliance.
"If President Bush doesn't help us," he
told a reporter, "these terrorists will
damage the U.S. and Europe very soon."
But Massoud never got the help that he needed-or
that Clarke's plan had deemed necessary. Most of
the time, Northern Alliance delegates to
Washington had to be satisfied with meeting
low-level bureaucrats. The Alliance craved
recognition by the U.S. as a "legitimate
resistance movement" but never got it, though
on a visit in July, Abdullah did finally get to
meet some top National Security Council (NSC) and
State Department officials for the first time. The
best the Americans seemed prepared to do was turn
a blind eye to the trickle of aid from Iran,
Russia and India. Vendrell remembers much talk
that spring of increased support from the
Americans. But in truth Massoud's best help came
from Iran, which persuaded all supporters of the
Northern Alliance to channel their aid through
Massoud alone.
Only once did something happen that might have
given Massoud hope that the U.S. would help. In
late June, he was joined in Dushanbe, Tajikistan,
by Abdul Haq, a leading Pashtun, based in Dubai,
who was opposed to the Taliban. Haq was
accompanied by someone Massoud knew well: Peter
Tomsen, a retired ambassador who from 1989 to '92
had been the U.S. State Department's special envoy
to the Afghan resistance. Also present was James
Ritchie, a successful Chicago options trader who
had spent part of his childhood in Afghanistan and
was helping bankroll the groups opposed to the
Taliban. (Haq was captured and executed by the
Taliban last October while on a quixotic mission
to Afghanistan.) Tomsen insists that the June 2001
trip was a private one, though he had told State
Department officials of it in advance. Their
message, he says, was limited to a noncommittal
"good luck and be careful."
The purpose of the meeting, according to Tomsen,
was to see if Massoud and Haq could forge a joint
strategy against the Taliban. "The
idea," says Sayeed Hussain Anwari, now the
Afghan Minister of Agriculture, who was present at
the meeting, "was to bring Abdul Haq inside
the country to begin an armed struggle in the
southeast." Still hoping for direct
assistance from Washington, Massoud gave Tomsen
all the intelligence he had on al-Qaeda and asked
Tomsen to take it back to Washington. But when he
briefed State Department officials after his trip,
their reaction was muted. The American position
was clear. If anything was to be done to change
the realities in Afghanistan, it would have to be
done not by the U.S. but by Pakistan. Massoud was
on his own.
CLARKE: CRYING WOLF
In Washington, dick clarke didn't seem to have a
lot of friends either. His proposals were still
grinding away. No other great power handles the
transition from one government to another in so
shambolic a way as the U.S.-new appointments take
months to be confirmed by the Senate; incoming
Administrations tinker with even the most sensible
of existing policies. The fight against terrorism
was one of the casualties of the transition, as
Washington spent eight months going over and over
a document whose outline had long been clear.
"If we hadn't had a transition," says a
senior Clinton Administration official,
"probably in late October or early November
2000, we would have had (the plan to go on the
offensive) as a presidential
directive."
As the new Administration took office, Rice kept
Clarke in his job as counterterrorism czar. In
early February, he repeated to Vice President Dick
Cheney the briefing he had given to Rice and
Hadley. There are differing opinions on how
seriously the Bush team took Clarke's wwarnings.
Some members of the outgoing Administration got
the sense that the Bush team thought the
Clintonites had become obsessed with terrorism.
"It was clear," says one, "that
this was not the same priority to them that it was
to us."
For other observers, however, the real point was
not that the new Administration dismissed the
terrorist theat. On the contrary, Rice, Hadley and
Cheney, says an official, "all got that it
was important." The question is, How high a
priority did terrorism get? Clarke says that
dealing with al-Qaeda "was in the top tier of
issues reviewed by the Bush Administration."
But other topics got far more attention. The whole
Bush national-security team was obsessed with
setting up a national system of missile defense.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was absorbed
by a long review of the military's force
structure. Attorney General John Ashcroft had come
into office as a dedicated crime buster. Rice was
desperately trying to keep in line a
national-security team-including Rumsfeld, Cheney
and Secretary of State Colin Powell-whose members
had wildly different agendas and styles.
"Terrorism," says a former Clinton White
House official, speaking of the new
Administration, "wasn't on their plate of key
issues." Al-Qaeda had not been a feature of
the landscape when the Republicans left office in
1993. The Bush team, says an official, "had
to learn about (al-Qaeda) and figure out where it
fit into their broader foreign policy." But
doing so meant delay.
Some counterterrorism officials think there is
another reason for the Bush Administration's
dilatory response. Clarke's paper, says an
official, "was a Clinton proposal."
Keeping Clarke around was one thing; buying into
the analysis of an Administration that the Bush
team considered feckless and naive was quite
another. So Rice instructed Clarke to initiate a
new "policy review process" on the
terrorism threat. Clarke dived into yet another
round of meetings. And his proposals were nibbled
nearly to death.
This was, after all, a White House plan, which
means it was resented from the moment of
conception. "When you look at the Pentagon
and the cia," says a former senior Clinton
aide, "it's not their plan. The military will
never accept the White House staff doing military
planning." Terrorism, officials from the
State Department suggested, needed to be put in
the broader context of American policy in South
Asia. The rollback plan was becoming the victim of
a classic Washington power play between those with
"functional" responsibilities-like
terrorism-and those with "regional"
ones-like relations with India and Pakistan. The
State Department's South Asia bureau, according to
a participant in the meetings, argued that a
fistful of other issues-Kashmir, nuclear
proliferation, Musharraf's dictatorship-were just
as pressing as terrorism. By now, Clarke's
famously short fuse was giving off sparks. A
participant at one of the meetings paraphrases
Clarke's attitude this way: "These people are
trying to kill us. I could give a f___ if
Musharraf was democratically elected. What I do
care about is Pakistan's support for the Taliban
and turning a blind eye to this terrorist cancer
growing in their neighbor's backyard."
It was Bush who broke the deadlock. Each morning
the CIA gives the Chief Executive a top-secret
Presidential Daily Brief (PDB) on pressing issues
of national security. One day in early spring,
Tenet briefed Bush on the hunt for Abu Zubaydah,
al-Qaeda's head of international operations, who
was suspected of having been involved in the
planning of the attack on the U.S.S. Cole. After
the PDB, Bush told Rice that the approach to
al-Qaeda was too scattershot. He was tired of
"swatting at flies" and asked for a
comprehensive plan for attacking terrorism.
According to an official, Rice came back to the
nsc and said, "The President wants a plan to
eliminate al-Qaeda." Clarke reminded her that
he already had one.
But having a plan isn't the same as executing it.
Clarke's paper now had to go through three more
stages: the Deputies' Committee, made up of the
No. 2s to the main national-security officials;
the Principals' Committee, which included Cheney,
Rice, Tenet, Powell and Rumsfeld; and finally, the
President. Only when Bush had signed off would the
plan become what the Bush team called a
national-security presidential directive.
On April 30, nearly six weeks after the
Administration started holding deputies' meetings,
Clarke presented a new plan to them. In addition
to Hadley, who chaired the hour-long meeting, the
gathering included Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis
Libby; Richard Armitage, the barrel-chested Deputy
Secretary of State; Paul Wolfowitz, the scholarly
hawk from the Pentagon; and John McLaughlin from
the cia. Armitage was enthusiastic about Clarke's
plan, according to a senior official. But the CIA
was gun-shy. Tenet was a Clinton holdover and thus
vulnerable if anything went wrong. His agency was
unwilling to take risks; it wanted "top
cover" from the White House. The deputies,
says a senior official, decided to have
"three parallel reviews-one on al-Qaeda, one
on the Pakistani political situation and the third
on Indo-Pakistani relations." The issues, the
deputies thought, were interrelated. "They
wanted to view them holistically," says the
senior official, "and not until they'd had
three separate meetings on each of these were they
able to hold a fourth integrating them
all."
There was more. Throughout the spring, one
bureaucratic wrangle in particular rumbled on,
poisoning the atmosphere. At issue: the Predator.
The Predator had first been used in Bosnia in
1995. Later, the CIA and the Pentagon began a
highly classified program designed to produce
pictures-viewable in real time-that would be
fine-grained enough to identify individuals. The
new, improved Predator was finally ready in
September 2000, and the CIA flew it over
Afghanistan in a two-week "test of
concept." First results were promising; one
video sent to the White House showed a man who
might have been bin Laden. For the first time, the
CIA now had a way to check out a tip by one of its
agents among the Afghan tribes. If there was a
report that bin Laden was in the vicinity, says a
former aide to Clinton, "we could put the
Predator over the location and have eyes on the
target."
But in October 2000, the Predator crashed when
landing at its base in a country bordering
Afghanistan. The unmanned aerial vehicle needed
repairs, and in any event, the CIA and the
Pentagon decided that the winter weather over
Afghanistan would make it difficult to take good
pictures. The Clinton team left office assuming
that the Predator would be back in the skies by
March 2001.
In fact, the Predator wouldn't fly again until
after Sept. 11. In early 2001 it was decided to
develop a new version that would not just take
photos but also be armed with Hellfire missiles.
To the frustration of Clarke and other White House
aides, the CIA and the Pentagon couldn't decide
who controlled the new program or who should pay
for it-though each craft cost only $1 million.
While the new uav was being rapidly developed at a
site in the southwestern U.S., the CIA opposed
using the old one for pure surveillance because it
feared al-Qaeda might see it. "Once we were
going to arm the thing," says a senior U.S.
intelligence official, "we didn't want to
expose the capability by just having it fly
overhead and spot a bunch of guys we couldn't do
anything about." Clarke and his supporters
were livid. "Dick Clarke insisted that it be
kept in the air," says a Bush Administration
official. The counterterrorism team argued that
the Taliban had shot at the uav during the Clinton
test, so its existence was hardly a secret.
Besides, combined with on-the-ground intelligence,
a Predator might just gather enough information in
time to get a Tomahawk off to the target. But when
the deputies held their fourth and final meeting
on July 16, they still hadn't sorted out what to
do with the Predator. Squabbles over who would pay
for it continued into August.
Administration sources insist that they were not
idle in the spring. They set up, for example, a
new center in the Treasury to track suspicious
foreign assets and reviewed Clinton's
"findings" on whether the CIA could kill
bin Laden. But by the summer, policy reviews were
hardly what was needed.
Intelligence services were picking up enough
chatter about a terrorist attack to scare the
pants off top officials. On June 22, the Defense
Department put its troops on full alert and
ordered six ships from the Fifth Fleet, based in
Bahrain, to steam out to sea, for fear that they
might be attacked in port. U.S. officials thought
an attack might be mounted on American forces at
the nato base at Incirlik, Turkey, or maybe in
Rome or Belgium, Germany or Southeast Asia,
perhaps the Philippines-anywhere, it seems, but in
the U.S. When Independence Day passed without
incident, Clarke called a meeting and asked Ben
Bonk, deputy director of the CIA's
counterterrorism center, to brief on bin Laden's
plans. Bonk's evidence that al-Qaeda was planning
"something spectacular," says an
official who was in the room, "was very
gripping." But nobody knew what or when or
where the spectacular would be. As if to
crystallize how much and how little anyone in the
know actually knew, the counterterrorism center
released a report titled "Threat of Impending
al- Qaeda Attack to Continue Indefinitely."
Predictably, nerves frayed. Clarke, who was widely
loathed in the cia, where he was accused of
self-aggrandizement, began to lose credibility. He
cried wolf, said his detractors; he had been in
the job too long. "The guy was reading way
too many fiction novels," says a
counterterrorism official. "He turned into a
Chicken Little. The sky was always falling for
Dick Clarke. We had our strings jerked by him so
many times, he was simply not taken
seriously." Clarke wasn't the only one living
on the edge. So, say senior officials, was Tenet.
Every few days, the CIA director would call Tom
Pickard, who had become acting director of the FBI
in June, asking "What do you hear? Do you
have anything?" Pickard never had to ask what
the topic was.
In mid-July, Tenet sat down for a special meeting
with Rice and aides. "George briefed Condi
that there was going to be a major attack,"
says an official; another, who was present at the
meeting, says Tenet broke out a huge wall chart
("They always have wall charts") with
dozens of threats. Tenet couldn't rule out a
domestic attack but thought it more likely that
al-Qaeda would strike overseas. One date already
worrying the Secret Service was July 20, when Bush
would arrive in Genoa for the G-8 summit; Tenet
had intelligence that al-Qaeda was planning to
attack Bush there. The Italians, who had heard the
same report (the way European intelligence sources
tell it, everyone but the President's dog
"knew" an attack was coming) put frogmen
in the harbor, closed airspace around the town and
ringed it with antiaircraft guns.
But nothing happened. After Genoa, says a senior
intelligence official, there was a collective sigh
of relief: "A lot of folks started letting
their guard down." After the final deputies'
meeting on Clarke's draft of a presidential
directive, on July 16, it wasn't easy to find a
date for the Principals' Committee to look at the
plan-the last stage before the paper went to Bush.
"There was one meeting scheduled for
August," says a senior official, "but
too many principals were out of town."
Eventually a date was picked: the principals would
look at the draft on Sept. 4. That was about nine
months after Clarke first put his plan on paper.
A BURNED-OUT CASE
Clarke wasn't the only person having a bad year.
In New York City, John O'Neill led the FBI's
National Security Division, commanding more than
100 experienced agents. By spring they were all
overloaded. O'Neill's boss, Assistant FBI Director
Barry Mawn, spent part of his time pleading with
Washington for more agents, more linguists, more
clerical help. He got nowhere. O'Neill was a
legend both in New York, where he hung out at
famous watering holes like Elaine's, and in the
counterterrorism world. Since 1995, when he helped
coordinate the arrest in Pakistan of Ramzi Yousef,
the man responsible for the 1993 bombing of the
World Trade Center, O'Neill had been one of the
FBI's leading figures in the fight against
terrorism. Brash, slick and ambitious, he had
spent the late 1990s working closely with Clarke
and the handful of other top officials for whom
bin Laden had become an obsession.
Now O'Neill was having a lousy few months. The New
York City field office had primary responsibility
for the investigation of the attack on the U.S.S.
Cole. But the case had gone badly from the start.
The Yemeni authorities had been lethargic and
uncooperative, and O'Neill, who led the team in
Aden, had run afoul of Barbara Bodine, then the
U.S. ambassador to Yemen, who believed the FBI's
large presence was causing political problems for
the Yemeni regime. When O'Neill left Yemen on a
trip home for Thanksgiving, Bodine barred his
return. Seething, O'Neill tried to supervise the
investigation from afar. At the same time, his
team in New York City was working double time
preparing for the trial in January 2001 of four
co-conspirators in the case of the 1998 African
embassy bombings. That involved agents shuttling
between Nairobi, Dar es Salaam and New York,
escorting witnesses, ferrying documents and
guarding al-Qaeda turncoats who would give
evidence for the prosecution.
Yet the FBI as a whole was ill equipped to deal
with the terrorist threat. It had neither the
language skills nor the analytical savvy to
understand al-Qaeda. The bureau's
information-technology capability dated to
pre-Internet days. Chambliss says the
counterterrorism investigations were decentralized
at the bureau's 56 field offices, which were
actually discouraged from sharing information with
one another or with headquarters.
That was if the cases ever got started. An
investigation by Chambliss's subcommittee found
that the FBI paid "insufficient
attention" to tracking terrorists' finances.
Most agents in the field were assigned to criminal
units; few field squads were dedicated to
gathering intelligence on radical fundamentalists.
During the Clinton Administration, says a former
senior aide, Clarke became so frustrated with the
bureau that he began touring its field offices,
giving agents "al- Qaeda 101" classes.
The bureau was, in fact, wiretapping some
suspected Islamic radicals and debriefing a few
al-Qaeda hands who had flipped. But at the end of
the Clinton years, the aide says, the FBI told the
White House that "there's not a substantial
al-Qaeda presence in the U.S., and to the extent
there was a presence, they had it covered."
The FBI didn't, and O'Neill must have known that
it didn't. So, as it happens, did some of his key
allies, who were not in the U.S. at all but
overseas. In Europe and especially in France the
threat of Islamic terrorism had been particularly
sharp ever since the Algerian Armed Islamic Group
launched a bombing campaign in Paris in 1995. By
2000, counterterrorism experts in Europe knew the
Islamic diaspora communities in Europe were seeded
with cells of terrorists. And after the arrest of
Ressam, European officials were convinced that
terrorists would soon attack targets in the U.S.
Jean-Louis Bruguire, a French magistrate who has
led many of the most prominent terrorist cases,
says Ressam's arrest signaled that the U.S.
"had to join the rest of the world in
considering itself at acute risk of
attack."
Throughout the winter and spring of 2001, European
law-enforcement agencies scored a series of
dramatic hits against al-Qaeda and associated
radical Islamic cells, with some help from the
cia. The day after Christmas 2000, German
authorities in Frankfurt arrested four Algerians
on suspicion of plotting to bomb targets in
Strasbourg. Two months later, the British arrested
six Algerians on terrorism charges. In April,
Italian police busted a cell whose members were
suspected of plotting to bomb the American embassy
in Rome. Two months later, the Spanish arrested
Mohammed Bensakhria, an Algerian who had been in
Afghanistan and had links to top al-Qaeda
officials, including bin Laden. Bensakhria, the
French alleged, had directed the Frankfurt cell
involved in the Strasbourg plot. And in the most
stunning coup of all, on July 28, Djamel Beghal, a
Frenchman of Algerian descent who had been on
France's terrorist watch list since 1997, was
arrested in Dubai on his way back from
Afghanistan. After being persuaded of terrorism's
evil by Islamic scholars, Beghal told of a plot to
attack the American embassy in Paris and gave
investigators new details on al-Qaeda's top
leadership, including the international-operations
role of Abu Zubaydah. (Now back in France, he has
tried to recant his confession.) French sources
tell Time they believe U.S. authorities knew about
Beghal's testimony.
This action by cops in Europe was meat and drink
to O'Neill. The problem was that it convinced some
U.S. antiterrorism officials that if there was
going to be an attack on American interests that
summer, it would take place outside the U.S. In
early June, for example, the FBI was so concerned
about threats to investigators left in Yemen that
it moved the agents from Aden to the American
embassy in Sana'a. Then came a second, very
specific warning about the team's safety, and
Washington decided to pull out of Yemen entirely.
"John (O'Neill) would say, 'There's a lot of
traffic,'" recalls Mawn. "Everybody was
saying, 'The drumbeats are going; something's
going to happen.' I said, 'Where and what?' And
they'd say, 'We don't know, but it seems to be
overseas, probably.'"
Some didn't lose sight of the threat at home. On
Aug. 6, while on vacation in Crawford, Texas, Bush
was given a PDB, this one on the possibility of
al-Qaeda attacks in the U.S. And not one but two
FBI field offices had inklings of al-Qaeda
activity in the U.S. that, had they been
aggressively pursued, might have fleshed out the
intelligence chatter about an upcoming attack. But
the systemic weaknesses in the FBI's bureaucracy
prevented anything from being done.
The first warning came from Phoenix, Ariz. On July
10, agent Kenneth Williams wrote a paper detailing
his suspicions about some suspected Islamic
radicals who had been taking flying lessons in
Arizona. Williams proposed an investigation to see
if al-Qaeda was using flight schools nationwide.
He spoke with the voice of experience; he had been
working on international terrorism cases for
years. The Phoenix office, according to former FBI
agent James Hauswirth, had been investigating men
with possible Islamic terrorist links since 1994,
though without much support from the FBI's local
bosses. Williams had started work on his probe of
flight schools in early 2001 but had spent much of
the next months on nonterrorist cases. Once he was
back on terrorism, it took only a few weeks for
alarm bells to ring. He submitted his memo to
headquarters and to two FBI field offices,
including New York City. In all three places it
died.
Five weeks after Williams wrote his memo, a second
warning came in from another FBI field office, and
once again, headquarters bungled the case. On Aug.
13, Zacarias Moussaoui, a 33-year-old Frenchman of
Moroccan ancestry, arrived at Pan Am International
Flight Academy in Minnesota for simulator training
on a Boeing 747. Moussaoui, who had been in the
U.S. since February and had already taken flying
lessons at a school in Norman, Okla., was in a
hurry. John Rosengren, who was director of
operations at Pan Am until February this year,
says Moussaoui wanted to learn how to fly the 747
in "four or five days." After just two
days of training, Moussaoui's flight instructor
expressed concern that his student didn't want it
known that he was a Muslim. One of Pan Am's
managers had a contact in the FBI; should the
manager call him? "I said, 'No
problem,'" says Rosengren. "The next day
I got a call from a Minneapolis agent telling me
Moussaoui had been detained at the Residence Inn
in Eagan."
Though Moussaoui is the only person to be indicted
in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks, his role
in them is as clear as mud. (He is detained in
Alexandria, Va., awaiting trial in federal
district court.) German authorities have confirmed
to Time that-as alleged in the indictment-Ramzi
Binalshibh, a Hamburg friend of Atta and
Al-Shehhi, wired two money transfers to Moussaoui
in August. Binalshibh, who was denied a visa to
visit the U.S. four times in 2000, is thought to
have been one of the conduits for funds to the
hijackers, relaying cash that originated in the
Persian Gulf. But no known telephone calls or
other evidence links the hijackers directly to
Moussaoui.
Whatever Moussaoui's true tale may be, the
Minnesota field office was convinced he was worth
checking out. Agents spent much of the next two
weeks in an increasingly frantic-and ultimately
fruitless- effort to persuade FBI headquarters to
authorize a national-security warrant to search
Moussaoui's computer. From Washington, requests
were sent to authorities in Paris for background
details on the suspect. Like most things having to
do with Moussaoui, the contents of the dossier
sent over from Paris are in dispute. One senior
French law-enforcement source told Time the
Americans were given "everything they
needed" to understand that Moussaoui was
associated with Islamic terrorist groups.
"Even a neophyte," says this source,
"working in some remote corner of Florida,
would have understood the threat based on what was
sent." But several officials in FBI
headquarters say that before Sept. 11 the French
sent only a three-page document, which portrayed
Moussaoui as a radical but was too sketchy to
justify a search warrant for his computer.
The precise wording of the French letter isn't the
issue. The extraordinary thing about Moussaoui's
case-like the Phoenix memo-is that it was never
brought to the attention of top officials in
Washington who were, almost literally, sleepless
with worry about an imminent terrorist attack.
Nobody in the FBI or CIA ever informed anybody in
the White House of Moussaoui's detention. That was
unforgivable. "Do you think," says a
White House antiterrorism official, "that if
Dick Clarke had known the FBI had in custody a
foreigner who was learning to fly a plane in
midair, he wouldn't have done something?"
In blissless ignorance, Clarke and Tenet waited
for the meeting of the Principals. But the odd
little ways of Washington had one more trick to
play. Heeding the pleas from the FBI's New York
City office, where Mawn and O'Neill were desperate
for new linguists and analysts, acting FBI
director Pickard asked the Justice Department for
some $50 million for the bureau's counterterrorism
program. He was turned down. In August, a bureau
source says, he appealed to Attorney General
Ashcroft. The reply was a flat no.
Pickard got Ashcroft's letter on Sept. 10. A few
days before, O'Neill had started a new job. He was
burned out, and he knew it. Over the summer, he
had come to realize that he had made too many
enemies ever to succeed Mawn. O'Neill handed in
his papers, left the FBI and began a new life as
head of security at the World Trade Center.
THE TWO VISITORS
As the first cool nights of fall settled on
northeast Afghanistan, Ahmed Shah Massoud was
barely hanging on. His summer offensive had been a
bust. An attempt to capture the city of Taloqan,
which he had lost to the Taliban in 2000, ended in
failure. But old allies, like the brutal Uzbek
warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum, had returned to the
field, and Massoud still thought the unpopularity
of the Taliban might yet make them vulnerable.
"He was telling us not to worry, that we'd
soon capture Kabul," says Shah Pacha, an
infantry commander in the Northern Alliance.
Around Sept. 1, Massoud summoned his top men to
his command post in Khoja Bahauddin. The intention
was to plan an attack, but Zahir Akbar, one of
Massoud's generals, remembers a phone call after
which Massoud changed his plans. "He'd been
told al-Qaeda and the Pakistanis were deploying
five combat units to the front line," says
Akbar. Northern Alliance soldiers reported a
buildup of Taliban and al-Qaeda forces; there was
no big push from the south, although there were a
number of skirmishes in the first week in
September. "We were puzzled and confused when
they didn't attack," says a senior Afghan
intelligence source. "And Taliban
communications showed the units had been ordered
to wait."
What were they waiting for? Some of Massoud's
closest aides think they know. For about three
weeks, two Arab journalists had been waiting in
Khoja Bahauddin to interview Massoud. The men said
they represented the Islamic Observation Center in
London and had a letter of introduction from its
head, Yasser al-Siri. The men, who had been given
safe passage through the Taliban front lines,
"said they'd like to document Islam in
Afghanistan," recalls Faheem Dashty, who made
films with the Northern Alliance and is editor in
chief of the Kabul Weekly newspaper. By the night
of Sept. 8, the visitors were getting antsy,
pestering Massoud's officials to firm up the
meeting with him and threatening to return to
Kabul if they could not see Massoud in the next 24
hours. "They were so worried and excitable
they were begging us," says Jamsheed,
Massoud's secretary.
The interview was finally granted just before
lunch on Sunday, Sept. 9. Dashty was asked to
record it on his camera. Massoud sat next to his
friend Masood Khalili, now Afghanistan's
ambassador to India. "The commander said he
wanted to sit with me and translate," says
Khalili. "Then he and I would go and have
lunch together by the Oxus River." The Arabs
entered and set up a TV camera in front of
Massoud; the guests, says Khalili, were "very
calm, very quiet." Khalili asked them which
newspaper they represented. When they replied that
they were acting for "Islamic Centers,"
says Khalili, he became reluctant to continue, but
Massoud said they should all go ahead.
Khalili says Massoud asked to know the Arabs'
questions before they started recording. "I
remember that out of 15 questions, eight were
about bin Laden," says Khalili. "I
looked over at Massoud. He looked uncomfortable;
there were five worry lines on his forehead
instead of the one he usually had. But he said,
'O.K. Let's film.'" Khalili started
translating the first question into Dari; Dashty
was fiddling with the lighting on his camera.
"Then," says Dashty, "I felt the
explosion." The bomb was in the camera, and
it killed one of the Arabs; the second was shot
dead by Massoud's guards while trying to escape.
Khalili believes he was saved by his passport,
which was in his left breast pocket-eight pieces
of shrapnel were found embedded in it. Dashty
remembers being rushed to a helicopter with
Massoud, who had terrible wounds. The chopper flew
them both to a hospital in Tajikistan. By the time
they arrived, Massoud was dead. The killers had
come from Europe, and they were members of a group
allied with al-Qaeda. Massoud's enemies had been
waiting for the news. Within hours, Taliban radio
began to crackle: "Your father is dead. Now
you can't resist us." "They were
clever," says a member of Massoud's staff.
"Their offensive was primed to begin after
the assassination." That night the Taliban
attacked Massoud's front lines. One last time, his
forces held out on their own.
As the battle raged, Clarke's plan awaited Bush's
signature. Soon enough, the Northern Alliance
would get all the aid it had been seeking-U.S.
special forces, money, B-52 bombers, and, of
course, as many Predators as the CIA and Pentagon
could get into the sky. The decision that had been
put off for so long had suddenly become easy
because a little more than 50 hours after
Massoud's death, Atta, sitting on American
Airlines Flight 11 on the runway at Boston's Logan
Airport, had used his mobile phone to speak for
the last time to his friend Al-Shehhi, on United
Flight 175. Their plot was a go.
That morning, O'Neill, Clarke's former partner in
the fight against international terrorism, arrived
at his new place of work. He had been on the job
just two weeks. After Atta and Al-Shehhi crashed
their planes into the World Trade Center, O'Neill
called his son and a girlfriend from outside the
Towers to say he was safe. Then he rushed back in.
His body was identified 10 days later.
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