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9/11 report denies Bush version

by Open-Publishing - Friday 18 June 2004
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CURT ANDERSON, AP

WASHINGTON Rebuffing U.S. government claims, the independent commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks said yesterday no evidence exists that al-Qaida had strong ties to deposed Iraqi president Saddam Hussein. In hair-raising detail, the commission said the terror network had envisioned a much larger attack and is working hard to strike again.

Although Osama bin Laden asked for help from Iraq in the mid-1990s, Saddam’s government never responded, according to a report by the commission staff based on interviews with government intelligence and law enforcement officials. The report asserted "no credible evidence" has emerged that Iraq was involved in the Sept. 11 strikes.

Al-Qaida is actively trying to replicate the destruction of that day, the report said, though the terrorist network has been weakened by losing its sanctuary in Afghanistan and many leaders to U.S. strikes and arrests. It also is trying to obtain a nuclear weapon and is "extremely interested" in chemical, radiological and biological attacks, including anthrax use, it said.

"The trend toward attacks intended to cause ever-higher casualties will continue," the report said.

The commission staff said that Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed initially outlined an attack involving 10 aircraft targeting both U.S. coasts. Mohammed proposed that he pilot one of the planes, kill all the male passengers, land the plane at a U.S. airport and make a "speech denouncing U.S. policies in the Middle East before releasing all the women and children," the report said.

Bin Laden rejected that plan as too complex, deciding instead on four aircraft piloted by handpicked suicide operatives. The report said the targets were chosen based on symbolism: the Pentagon, which represented the U.S. military; the World Trade Center, a symbol of American economic strength; the Capitol, the perceived source of U.S. support for Israel, and the White House. Training for the attacks began in 1999.

The attacks were planned for as early as May 2001, but they were pushed back to September, partly because al-Qaida sought to strike when Congress would be at the Capitol. A second wave of hijackings never materialized because Mohammed was too busy planning the Sept. 11 attacks, the report said.

Under questioning, John Pistole, the FBI’s top counterterrorism official, told the commission the government "has probably prevented a few aviation attacks" in the United States since Sept. 11, but that some operatives in those plots are still at large.

The findings were released as the commission began its last two days of hearings on the terror attacks that killed nearly 3,000. The last day will focus on the Federal Aviation Administration and U.S. air defences. The commission’s final report is due July 26.

The conclusions that al-Qaida and Iraq had no co-operative relationship run counter to repeated assertions by President George W. Bush, Vice-President Dick Cheney and other administration officials. The claims that bin Laden and Saddam were in league were central to the administration’s justification for going to war in Iraq.

As recently as Monday, Cheney said in a speech that the Iraqi president "had long-established ties with al-Qaida."

Last fall he cited what he called an unconfirmed but credible intelligence report that Mohamed Atta, ringleader of the Sept. 11 hijackers, met in Prague, capital of the Czech Republic, with a senior Iraqi intelligence official before the attacks.

The commission concluded no such meeting occurred.

http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/LondonFreePress/News/2004/06/17/502285.html

Forum posts

  • According to the comissioners, there was no evidence that Iraq and al-Qaida cooperated to perform the attacks on Sept 11. However, just as the administration has maintained, there were contacts between the two. There appears to be no conlict in stories. It should be incumbent on you to give full and factual accounts!