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Monday, March 27, 2006


Moussaoui And Reid Were To Fly 5th Plane Into White House

Wow...

Al-Qaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui testified Monday that he and would-be shoe bomber Richard Reid were supposed to hijack a fifth airplane on Sept. 11, 2001, and fly it into the White House.

Moussaoui's testimony on his own behalf stunned the courtroom as he disclosed details he had never revealed before. It was in stark contrast to Moussaoui's previous statements in which he said the White House attack was to come later if the United States refused to release a radical Egyptian sheik imprisoned on earlier terrorist convictions.

Moussaoui testified Monday he lied to investigators when arrested in August 2001 because he wanted to let the attacks of Sept. 11 go forward.

"Yes, you can say that," Moussaoui said when the prosecution asked if that was why he misled them. The statement was key to the government's case that the attacks might have been averted if Moussaoui had been more cooperative following his arrest.

He told the court he knew the attacks were coming some time after August 2001 and bought a radio so he could hear them unfold.


This from the article is also interesting:

Just before Moussaoui took the stand, the court heard testimony that two months before the attacks that a CIA deputy chief waited in vain for permission to tell the FBI about a "very high interest" al-Qaida operative who became one of the hijackers.

The official, a senior figure in the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit, said he sought authorization on July 13, 2001, to send information to the FBI but got no response for 10 days, then asked again.

As it turned out, the information on Khalid al-Mihdhar did not reach the FBI until late August. At the time, CIA officers needed permission from a special unit before passing certain intelligence on to the FBI.

The official was identified only as John. His written testimony was read into the record.

"John's" testimony was part of the defense's case that federal authorities missed multiple opportunities to catch hijackers and perhaps thwart the 9/11 plot.

His testimony included an e-mail sent by FBI supervisor Michael Maltbie discussing Moussaoui but playing down his terrorist connections. Maltbie's e-mail said "there's no indication that (Moussaoui) had plans for any nefarious activity."


Two points:

  1. It is absolutely pathetic that prior to 9/11 our domestic law enforcement agency (the FBI) and our international intelligence agencies (in this instance the CIA) couldn't share information to keep this country safe. For that we have the "wall of separation" between domestic law enforcement and foreign intelligence services instituted by Jamie Gorelick and the Clinton administration to thank.


  2. An interesting part of Moussaoui's defense is revealed in the bolded statement. Apparently the suggestion here is that because our national security forces failed to stop the 9/11 attacks Moussaoui is not guilty of having participated in their planning. Which, of course, is a bit like saying that bank robbers aren't guilty of robbing a bank because the cops didn't catch them before they did it.

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