Germans Gave CIA Data on 911 Hijackers 18 Months Before Attack
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/24/politics/24TERR.html?hp=&pagewanted=print&position=
February 24, 2004
C.I.A. Was Given Data on Hijacker Long Before 9/11
By JAMES RISEN and ERIC LICHTBLAU
WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 American investigators were given the first name and
telephone number of one of the Sept. 11 hijackers two and a half years before
the attacks on New York and Washington, but the United States appears to have
failed to pursue the lead aggressively, American and German officials say.
The information the earliest known signal that the United States received
about any of the hijackers has now become an important element of an
independent commission's investigation into the events of Sept. 11, 2001,
officials said Monday. It is considered particularly significant because it
may have represented a missed opportunity for American officials to penetrate
the Qaeda terror cell in Germany that was at the heart of the plot. And it
came roughly 16 months before the hijacker showed up at flight schools in the
United States.
In March 1999, German intelligence officials gave the Central Intelligence
Agency the first name and telephone number of Marwan al-Shehhi, and asked the
Americans to track him.
The name and phone number in the United Arab Emirates had been obtained by the
Germans by monitoring the telephone of Mohamed Heidar Zammar, an Islamic
militant in Hamburg who was closely linked to the important Qaeda plotters who
ultimately mastermined the Sept. 11 attacks, German officials said.
After the Germans passed the information on to the C.I.A., they did not hear
from the Americans about the matter until after Sept. 11, a senior German
intelligence official said.
"There was no response" at the time, the official said. After receiving the
tip, the C.I.A. decided that "Marwan" was probably an associate of Osama bin
Laden, but never tracked him down, American officials say.
The Germans considered the information on Mr. Shehhi particularly valuable,
and the commission is keenly interested in why it apparently did not lead to
greater scrutiny of him.
The information concerning Mr. Shehhi, the man who took over the controls of
United Airlines Flight 175, which flew into the south tower of the World Trade
Center, came months earlier than well-documented tips about other hijackers,
including two who were discovered to have attended a meeting of militants in
Malaysia in January 2000.
The independent commission investigating the attacks has received information
on the 1999 Shehhi tip, and is actively investigating the issue, said Philip
Zelikow, executive director of the commission.
American intelligence officials and others involved with the matter say they
are uncertain whether Mr. Shehhi's phone was ever monitored.
An American official said: "The Germans did give us the name `Marwan' and a
phone number, but we were unable to come up with anything. It was an unlisted
phone number in the U.A.E., which he was known to use."
The incident is of particular importance because Mr. Shehhi was a crucial
member of the Qaeda cell in Hamburg at the heart of the Sept. 11 plot. Close
surveillance of Mr. Shehhi in 1999 might have led investigators to other plot
leaders, including Mohammed Atta, who was Mr. Shehhi's roommate. A native of
the United Arab Emirates, Mr. Shehhi moved to Germany in 1996 and was almost
inseparable from Mr. Atta in their time there. Both men attended the wedding
of a fellow Muslim at a radical mosque in Hamburg in October 1999 an event
considered an important gathering for the Sept. 11 hijacking teams just as the
plotting was getting under way. American and European authorities say that Mr.
Shehhi was actively involved in the planning and logistics of the Sept. 11
plot.
"The Hamburg cell is very important" to the investigation of the Sept. 11
attacks, Mr. Zelikow said. The intelligence on Mr. Shehhi "is an issue that's
obviously of importance to us, and we're investigating it," he added.
Asked whether American intelligence officials gave sufficient attention to the
information about Mr. Shehhi, Mr. Zelikow said, "We haven't reached any
conclusions."
The joint Congressional inquiry that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks was
told about the matter by the C.I.A., but only a small part of the information
was declassified and made public in the panel's final report in December 2002,
several officials said. The public report mentioned only that the C.I.A. had
received Mr. Shehhi's first name, but made no mention that the agency had also
obtained his telephone number.
Officials involved with the work of the joint Congressional investigation made
it clear that the publication of a more complete version of the story was the
subject of a declassification dispute with the C.I.A. A former official
involved with the Congressional inquiry acknowledged that having a telephone
number for one of the hijackers was far more significant than simply having a
first name.
Since the Sept. 11 attacks, the C.I.A., F.B.I. and other government agencies
have been heavily criticized for failing to put together fragmentary pieces of
information they received from a wide array of sources in order to predict or
prevent the terrorist plot. The joint Congressional panel that investigated
the attacks concluded that American authorities "missed opportunities to
disrupt the Sept. 11 plot by denying entry to or detaining would-be hijackers;
to at least try to unravel the plot through surveillance and other
investigative work within the United States; and finally, to generate a
heightened state of alert and thus harden the homeland against attack."
Until now, the most highly scrutinized failure has related to the C.I.A.'s
handling of information about a meeting of extremists in Malaysia in January
2000 that involved two of the men who would become hijackers, Khalid al-Midhar
and Nawaq Alhazmi. Although the C.I.A. identified the two men as suspected
extremists, the agency did not request that they be placed on the government's
watch lists to keep them out of the United States until late August 2001. By
that time, they were both already in the country. In addition, while the two
men lived in San Diego, their landlord was an F.B.I. informant, but the bureau
did not learn of their terrorist links from the informant.
But unlike the leads to Mr. Midhar and Mr. Alhazmi in San Diego, the earlier
information about Mr. Shehhi could have taken investigators to the core of the
Qaeda cell at a time when the plot was probably in its formative stages.
According to testimony in Germany in December in a criminal case related to
the Sept. 11 attacks, Mr. Shehhi was one of only four members of the Hamburg
cell who knew about the attacks beforehand.
Mr. Shehhi and Mr. Atta traveled to Afghanistan in 2000 to train at a Qaeda
camp with several other Sept. 11 plotters. And after returning to Germany, Mr.
Shehhi made an ominous reference to the World Trade Center to a Hamburg
librarian, saying: "There will be thousands of dead. You will all think of
me," German authorities said.
Soon after, Mr. Shehhi, Mr. Atta and another plotter, Ziad al-Jarrah, began
e-mailing several dozen American flight schools from Germany to inquire about
enrollment, and they arrived in the United States later in 2000 to begin
flight training.
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