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» mitelo - the BIG spin-1000 Years For Revenge In response to the BIG spin posted by stocktiger:1000 Years for Revenge: A Conversation With Peter Lance by Claire E. White Could the terrorist attacks of 9/11 have been prevented? Absolutely, says five-time Emmy award-winning investigative journalist and bestselling author Peter Lance, in his new book, 1000 Years for Revenge: International Terrorism and the FBI, the Untold Story (ReganBooks). In a groundbreaking work, Lance lays out the long-range al-Qaeda plan to attack a number of American landmarks over the last ten years, which culminated in the attacks against the Pentagon and the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. Lance tells the story through the eyes of three very different people: two American heroes, FBI Special Agent Nancy Floyd and FDNY Fire Marshal Ronnie Bucca, and one master terrorist, Ramzi Achmed Yousef, the man responsible for the first World Trade Center bombing and the architect of many other terrorist attacks. The book features a detailed color timeline which clearly connects the dots between the events which led up to 9/11. The timeline also provides photographs of all the key players in the al-Qaeda network who were involved in this far-reaching plot. Based upon numerous interviews and hundreds of pages of declassified documents, the book is meticulously researched. One of the most disturbing aspects of the book is the fact that a number of talented FBI agents who were close to putting the pieces together were thwarted at every turn by their superiors. As Lance states, "The attacks of September 11 represented the greatest failure of intelligence since the Trojan Horse." Lance concludes that the FBI is the wrong intelligence agency to fight terrorism because of the institutional culture of arrogance and the fact that it focuses on making a legal case after something has happened, instead of focusing on prevention. In a recent speech, Vice-President Dick Cheney appeared to reach the same conclusion about the FBI. When talking about the intelligence community's failure to follow active leads after the arrest and conviction of World Trade Center bomber Ramzi Yousef, Vice President Cheney stated: "But the case was not closed. The leads were not successfully followed. The dots were not adequately connected. The threat was not recognized for what it was." 1000 Years for Revenge is an important book which puts all the pieces together for the reader in a fast-moving, gripping narrative. Peter spoke with us about why he felt it was so important to write this book, how al-Qaeda managed to operate on U.S. soil for over ten years without being caught and why he feels the United States is now in even more danger from al-Qaeda than ever before. The book is really shocking. Although sometimes nonfiction of this type, with all the confusing names and dates, can be dry, this reads more like a thriller.
I really wanted this book to be a tool for people to see what led up to 9/11 and the threat that we still face as Americans. I got a free master's degree in a way. In two years I got a master's degree in terror and the U.S. Government's attempts to stop it, and I wanted to be able to communicate that to the average American. Well let's start with Ronnie Bucca's story. I was really saddened by his story; he was the only Fire Marshal who actually died on 9/11. What I was most shocked about was that he basically uncovered a terrorist right inside the New York Fire Department - Ahmen Amin Refai. Ronnie believed Refai was some kind of mole. The most extraordinary thing was that if you looked at my story -- some of the things that I think I document very well -- is that al Qaeda, with the exception of Osama bin Laden himself, who is a Saudi of Yemeni origin, is dominated completely by radical Egyptians. Ayman al-Zawahiri, who was recently seen on the video of bin Laden that showed up within the last week, is an Egyptian. Mohammed Atef who was reportedly killed after the US invaded Afghanistan in the Fall of 2001 is an Egyptian and a radical. And of course their spiritual guide -- and their Pope if you will -- is the blind Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman. This man was indicted in the plot to assassinate Anwar Sadat, but he escaped punishment because they couldn't prove he was directly involved. But he was the spiritual leader of two anti-American anti-Western Egyptian radical fundamentalist groups. One being the al Gamma'a Islimaya (the "IG") and the other being the Egyptian Islamic Jihad. He actually ran the IG, the al Gamma'a Islimaya. Let me give you an idea of how violent the Sheikh's connections were. The IG that he ran (he was actually the leader of) plotted and carried out the 1997 massacre in Luxor, Egypt in which 58 tourists were killed. Men, women and children were massacred, their bodies were split open and they inserted into their bodies leaflets that said "Free the Blind Sheikh." This is after he had been convicted of a plot to blow up the bridges and tunnels around New York City. "They have an expression [in Baluchistan] -- 'If it takes me ten centuries to kill my enemy, I will wait 1000 years for revenge.' This is about the Crusades. This is a 1000 year war of vengeance that these guys have been waiting for, to try and punish the West for the time when the Knight Templars came down from Europe and sacked the councils of the Islamic princes in the 11th century. So, this is -- unfortunately -- what we are up against." So the Blind Sheikh was basically a founding member of al-Qaeda?
That's disturbing. Okay, so now the Blind Sheikh, he was actually convicted for conspiracy in the first World Trade Center bombing? "The Bush administration clearly had to invade Afghanistan. It was a haven for al-Qaeda and the Central Command. It was also a terrible regime, which was extremely violative of human rights. Because of al-Qaeda's presence there, Afghanistan was a direct threat to the security of the United States. So they had to go in to Afghanistan." That is very disturbing. Where is the Blind Sheikh right now? I'm not sure what Federal Prison he is because he was in prison in Minnesota. But a recent indictment that come down in April, 2002, alleged by the feds that while in Minnesota his lawyer, Lynn Stuart, and a translator, actually distracted the guards at the prison so that the Blind Sheikh could communicate direction to the IG, this terrorist group. What happened was there was a U.S. Postal worker named Abdel Sattar. Sattar basically was running the IG from his house on Staten Island. He was giving the information from the Blind Sheikh that was being trafficked through the translator. These are current, pending allegations. There is a federal indictment against his lawyer, Lynn Stuart and this translator and Sattar. It is alleged that they were getting the directions from the Sheikh in a prison in Rochester, Minnesota. Then Sattar from Staten Island was acting as the U.S. communication director for this terrorist group. This is a U.S. postal worker: another naturalized Egyptian. And that's one of the reasons that the Ahmed Amin Refai story (the mole in the New York Fire Department) resonates so much, because there is a very similar fact pattern. Refai was a naturalized Egyptian who was working as an accountant in the FDNY for twenty-five years and was later discovered by Fire Marshal Ronnie Bucca a) to have obtained the plans to the World Trade Center prior to the bombing and b) in 1999 to have lied to obtain a second ID to Metrotech, which is the city's most secure building, the FDNY's new headquarters where the plans of most of the city's buildings are kept. So, how did Ronnie Bucca become suspicious of Refai? So Ronnie Bucca was a Fire Marshal. He was a decorated heroic firefighter. He was in Rescue One; Rescue One is like the Green Berets of the Fire Department. They are the guys that go in and do all the heavy rescue work in Manhattan. Ronnie had been injured seriously in 1986 in a fall in which he broke his back and was not expected to live. He could have retired on a three-quarters tax-free pension. Not only did he go back to the Fire Department, but he went back to Rescue One in one year which is unheard of. He was known henceforth as the Flying Firefighter. He was kind of a legend to begin with in the Fire Department. He had always had an active duty army reserve presence. He was a paratrooper in the 101st Airborne and because he hurt his back, he put in for Military Intelligence. He was ultimately in a unit that was one of only four army reserve units in the entire country that was tasked to the Defense Intelligence Analysis Center at Boling Air Force Base in Washington. So, Ronnie had top-secret clearance from the U.S. government. After the first World Trade Center bombing, he had a personal interest in investigating because of Kevin Shea, the firefighter who fell into the four story hole that the bomber Ramzi Yousef had created, right after Rescue One responded. This firefighter, Kevin Shea, literally dropped four stories and almost died. He was in the hospital that night and Ronnie went to see him. So Ronnie was not only interested in the World Trade Center bombing because he was a Fire Marshal, this was arguably the greatest arson fire in New York City history and the Fire Marshal should have had jurisdiction. But he also had a personal stake because his friend was hurt. He assumed that the FBI would allow the Fire Marshals into the investigation. But, except for two token Marshals, they excluded the Fire Department completely. This is one of the many problems that the Joint Congressional Inquiry found on the road to 9/11: this arrogance, this exclusion of various agencies from crucial investigations. The report states that the CIA kept information from the FBI. Here is an example where the FBI kept out capable local fire department investigators who could have contributed. Having been thwarted the first time from being involved in the FBI investigation, Ronnie then educated himself about Islamic terrorism and began his own, personal probe. He came across an astonishing piece of evidence early on (not long after the bombing) that convinced him that these guys were going to come back to New York and try again to topple the World Trade Center. Ronnie learned a lot because of his contacts at Army Reserve Military Intelligence. The evidence he had was this. A computer was found in New Jersey, on which bomber Ramzi Yousef had written threat letters to five New York newspapers, after the bombing. Yousef's letter was eventually published in The New York Times. In the letter, Yousef called his terrorist group The 5th Battalion of the Liberation Army. The letter was typed on the computer of one Nidel Ayyad, who is a Rutgers graduate, a Kuwaiti, who was one of the four original bombers convicted. When the Feds found the computer, at the bottom of the computer, was a coda that had been added to by Nidel Ayyad on behalf of Ramzi Yousef which said in so many words, "We know what we did wrong, we placed the bomb in the wrong spot." It was clear that the terrorists had wanted to knock Tower 1 into Tower 2, but didn't place the bomb in the correct position. Essentially the translation was "We know what we did wrong, we'll come back and next time the twin towers will not stand." (I'm paraphrasing here.) Ronnie had access to this information, the public did not. So Ronnie himself was concerned about the Twin Towers. From 1993 up until 9/11, he was obsessed (in the best possible way) with learning as much as he could about the threat from Islamic fundamentalists and protecting the Twin Towers. He told dozens of people over the years that he was convinced that there was going to be another attack on the World Trade Center. He even gave up his vacations to get extra training, didn't he? "Of course, we do have more modern mechanisms like, ELINT, electronic surveillance, and PHOINT, which is from satellites, but as has been pointed out by a few conservatives after 9/11, the decimation of the human spy element in the CIA is what blinded us to 9/11. To this day, as far as I know, there has been no significant inroads made in the ability to penetrate the al-Qaeda organization." Ronnie Bucca then discovered that the FBI had interviewed him twice in 1994. But more specifically Ronnie found out from people in the fire department that this man, Refai, had been seen in new footage walking near the Blind Sheikh, holding his arm. So Ronnie went up to Channel 7 Eyewitness News where Ronnie knew a film editor who did him a favor. Ronnie had no expectations, but by the fourth or fifth cassette he was looking at, he found the tape showing Refai on the arm of the Blind Sheikh, acting like his bodyguard , moving him through the crowd, while whispering in his ear -- like an intimate of one of the most dangerous terrorists America has ever known. Don't you have to be one of the inner circle to be allowed to get that close to a leader like the Sheikh? Absolutely. An FBI agent named Joe O'Brien, a veteran agent who wrote the book Boss of Bosses with his partner Andy Kurins, and who spent 19 years in the FBI as an organized crime expert, went down with me to interview Refai for the book. When I finally got the story I had to give him an opportunity to respond. Joe told me that the Sheikh would have had to trust Refai with life to let him get that close to him. But, more importantly, when I interviewed Refai he admitted that he had acted as the Sheikh's translator at his INS hearing. Now this is a hearing where his status in the country is going to be affected. He wouldn't just let any random guy represent him - he would have to have an intimate man he could trust. Even more significantly, Refai later admitted that he was a member of the al-Salaam mosque in Jersey City. Now he frequented the two others mosques in Brooklyn where the Sheikh would preach - the Al Farooq Mosque - where those Middle-Eastern men where going in 1989 - that was the al Qaeda base. The Sheikh preached there and he also preached at another mosque called the Abu Bakr. But the main mosque was a dingy little third-floor room over a toy store in Jersey City called the al-Salaam, the Mosque of Peace, ironically. That room would only hold like twenty-five people, tops, that's how small it was. Of the twenty-five men in that room, seven of them have been convicted of terrorism. One third of the members in that room on any given night during that time period are now in federal prison. Ironically enough, this guy Refai lives in Middletown, New Jersey, which is the town in New Jersey that has the highest concentration of 9/11 widows, because that's where a lot of Cantor Fitzgerald people lived. Refai lives in a nice, beautiful upper middle class neighborhood in a split-level house an hour and a half south of Jersey City. For him to go that dingy little mosque means only one thing -- he was there for the Sheikh, to serve the Sheikh and to act on behalf on the Sheikh. So Ronnie Bucca finds this information that Refai had plans to the World Trade Center and he brings it to the FBI in September of 1999. And what do they do? They say, "Well, we don't see any crime here. There is nothing we can do." He was absolutely stunned. He was shocked. What was his reaction when you told Refai about your book? I did this interview for like 45 minutes which I recorded and I asked him four times if he would renounce the Blind Sheikh, a convicted terrorist -- and he refused to renounce him. I gave him four opportunities during the course of the interview. I showed him a video picture. I found the same video last Christmas. I called in a favor with one of my old producers at ABC News. I went up to ABC World News Tonight and went into a room with about a dozen cassettes. I had no idea what I would find, but I found this thing on the sixth or seventh cassette I looked at. I couldn't believe it. This is a picture worth a million words because Refai's body language -- the way he is moving the Sheikh through the crowd and whispering in his ear -- it clearly looks like the guy's bodyguard. So I took a video still of that and showed it to him and he admitted that that was him. He denied that he had obtained the plans to the World Trade Center. He denied that he had called in sick for work that day. But he basically said that he was just a member of the mosque that was walking the Sheikh to an immigration hearing as his translator. So, then I pressed him and I asked, "Well did you know Mahmud Abouhalima?" And he said, "Yes, I know him." "Did you know Mohammed Salameh?" "Yes, I know him." "Did you know Nidal Ayyad?" "Yes, I knew him." "Did you know El Sayyid Nosair?" "Yes I knew him. But I do not really know these men. In other words I was acquainted with them." Now, how he can be in a room with these twenty men (which was essentially a nest of vipers in Jersey City) and not know what they were up to is beyond any reasonable belief. So, at the very end of the interview I asked him at one point "How did you feel about 9/11?" And he tried to fake a weepy eyed kind of expression, saying "I went to the park in the town and I hold a candle for these people." He started to get like he was getting sad, but not for long, because I really pressed this guy hard. I kept pushing on him about the Sheikh and his relationship with him and (just a few minutes later) he finally lost it. He said, "Do you know why the FBI did not discover 9/11?" I didn't understand what he was saying. I said, "Well that's what my book seeks to answer." And he said, "No do you understand what my people believe? This is not bin Laden. This is not the Sheikh. This is the U.S. Government doing this for Israel." I'm said, "What??" I looked at FBI agent Joe O'Brien and he looked over at me. We were stunned. I said, "Let me get this straight: you are saying that your people believe that the 3,000 people were murdered by the U.S. Government on behalf of the State of Israel?" He said, "This is what my people believe." Which is just absurd. That was the way the interview ended, except as I was walking out of his house I was asked, "What is the name of your book?" I said it was 1000 Years for Revenge. He began to laugh: "Ah ha ha ha." Kind of this chilling laugh. He thought that was very funny. The phrase "1000 Years for Revenge" comes from an expression in Baluchistan, a no-man's land between Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran. It's about the size of France and is a hotbed of Islamic radicalism. Ramzi Yousef comes from there, his uncle Khalid Shaikh Mohammed has his roots there and so did Mir Aimal Kasi, the CIA shooter -- the man who killed two people outside the CIA. They have an expression there -- "If it takes me ten centuries to kill my enemy, I will wait 1000 years for revenge." This is about the Crusades. This is a 1000 year war of vengeance that these guys have been waiting for, to try and punish the West for the time when the Knight Templar came down from Europe and sacked the castles of the Islamic princes in the 11th century. So, this is unfortunately what we are up against. You told Paula Zahn on CNN that you thought America was still in grave danger. What did you mean by that? "I'm very praiseworthy of the U.S. military. Since Vietnam, they have had so much improvement with the efficiency with which they fight a war, the collateral damage is down, the number of POWs and casualties are down. They really have learned the lessons of Vietnam. Unfortunately, our intelligence agencies have not. They still have this old mentality." The Memo memorializes the interrogation by two Bureau agents who are questioning Ramzi Yousef's partner, Abdul Hakim Murad, as he was being extradited back to the U.S. on a plane. The interrogation was memorialized in this seventeen page memo that they call a "302 Form." In the memo it states "Murad advises that Ramzi Yousef wants to return to New York to bomb the World Trade Center a second time." It's right there in black and white, in April, 1995. So when Director Mueller made that statement, Colleen Rowley and her co-workers in Minneapolis were so shocked that she dashed off a twelve page letter to him, criticizing his statements. Only after this letter was made public, did Mueller announce these reforms. On February 26, 2003, prior to the invasion of Iraq, she wrote him another letter saying (and I'm paraphrasing) she had grave concerns that the agency would not be able to meet the increased level of danger that would come at the country after we invaded Iraq. She said she was not sure if he, as Director of the FBI, had communicated this to the President. This is coming from the inside. I can give you a quick recap of a dozen reasons why I believe we are at greater risk. Saddam Hussein was a despot, but he was a self-contained despot who directed his villainy towards his own people. We know now, that despite the allegations of the Bush administration prior to the invasion, there was next to no evidence of any weapons of mass destruction, no evidence that America was in imminent danger from Iraq and literally no evidence of any al-Qaeda connection. Iraq certainly had no connections to 9/11 (which the White House has stated recently). There was a training camp in Northern Iraq that was in Kurdish-held territory (not even Saddam's territory), there was one al-Qaeda member who had medical treatment in Baghdad, but in terms of any significant proof that Saddam Hussein had been in league with bin Laden or had any direct connection to 9/11 has never been found. We've been on the ground for five months and, believe me, if there was a single piece of paper proving that found in Iraq, it would be on the front page of the Washington Times. We now know that the very reason that Americans supported the invasion was based on faulty intelligence. There are also the lies that have been documented about the alleged importing of uranium (which turned out to be a forgery.). So here's the situation now. We have a protracted guerrilla war. Our brave men and women are now in harm's way. Our service people are subjected to daily life-threatening situations where the front is all around them now, as it was in Vietnam. There is no clearly defined enemy. You have a virulent anti-American Shiite majority. And you have the prospect that if in fact democracy is restored to that country, they will vote in an Iran-like or Taliban-like anti-American radical Islamic regime that will be much more likely to ally itself with al-Qaeda than ever before. You now have evidence of al-Qaeda operatives entering Iraq to ally with the Baath party members, where before, Osama bin Laden, the Blind Sheikh and Ramzi Yousef hated Saddam Hussein. The last moment of Ramzi Yousef's public career was at the end of his trial. He went out of his way to condemn Saddam Hussein as a secular Islamic leader. The Sheikh was booed off a pulpit in a mosque in Brooklyn in 1991 for condemning Saddam Hussein for the invasion of Kuwait. So these guys, after Israel and the U.S., they put Saddam Hussein as #3 on their enemies list, prior to the invasion. But now the Arab street has united against the United States as a result of the invasion. Therefore to me, the danger is exponentially greater. After 9/11, the White House never came out and blamed the FBI. In fact, it went out of its way to praise them and the CIA publicly. But, President Bush then immediately turned around and created the Office of Homeland Security, which was clearly a slap in the face of both the CIA and the FBI, saying "you can't get it done, obviously, we need a new agency." How do the agencies all work together now? Is it working or has it just created a giant bureaucracy? "The FBI never should have been given this job of defending America, protecting America against domestic terrorism. The FBI is in the business of solving crimes, after the chalk mark is on the ground. Even with that job, they've had a lot of foibles over the years. But at least they know how to do that. The way it works is this. You get ahead in the Justice Department and the FBI by making cases, by getting convictions, not stopping crimes before they happen. One of the biggest problems they've had over the years is treating these incidents -- the first Trade Center bombing, the murder of Kahane, the Day of Terror plot, Project Bojinka -- they treated them as a series of legal cases that could be taken one at a time, they get a conviction, they get a long sentence for these guys, and they figure that the threat is over. They weren't stepping back and looking at this as the political threat that it was. It was a war and they were treating it as a series of legal cases. But that's the nature of the FBI and the Justice Department, that's what they do." That's unbelievable. In light of recent tapes which appear to show bin Laden tripping along on an afternoon ramble in the mountains, looking pretty spry for a guy with kidney problems, as a practical matter, how do these terror cells work? How does the money flow? It seems like Kalid Sheikh Mohammed had a lot of freedom in what he did. Photo of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed So you would not agree that we have "broken the back" of al-Qaeda? No, we have not broken the back of al-Qaeda. So we have Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, on the run. As a practical matter, do you and your sources think they are still plotting against us? How do they communicate, as a practical matter? Or is Osama just a figurehead to inspire terror? Photo of Osama bin Laden The African Embassy bombing had been planned for three or four years. So they have the time to wait us out. That is what is so terrifying about it. What I wish is that the FBI and the CIA would do a wholesale national recruiting campaign for middle eastern immigrants of Islamic origin who speak Arabic and speak Uzbeki and Urdu and the languages that the terrorists speak. That they would say to these people "We want you -- the patriotic, loyal citizens." There are people of multi-generations all living in America loyal to the flag, loyal to our country -- not loyal to the higher power of radical Islam. They could be trusted, they could be vetted, they could be polygraphed and we could embrace those people and send them back to have them infiltrate al Qaeda, but for some reason to these day it hasn't happened. There was a story a month ago in the New York Times about one of the top FBI agents who speaks fluent Arabic (he is one of the few people who can actually conduct a polygraph in Arabic) was frozen out by Dale Watson, the very guy I just described, who is now retired. That agent did such a good job on the Khobar Towers investigation while Watson had told FBI Director Louis Freeh that we were getting nowhere in the investigation. This agent went to Saudi Arabia and had incredible success. Watson apparently felt threatened and basically put a cloud over this man's career. That is what has been alleged, in any event. So this guy has been frozen out. This is one of the most important guys that we need right now in the Bureau and this guy has a cloud over his career. "There was a tendency to treat incidents like these as individual criminal acts to be handled primarily through law enforcement. Ramzi Yousef, who perpetrated the first attack on the World Trade Center, is the best case in point. The U.S. government tracking him down, arrested him and got a conviction. After he was sent off to serve a 240-year sentence, some might have thought, 'Case closed.' But the case was not closed. The leads were not successfully followed. The dots were not adequately connected. The threat was not recognized for what it was." Yes, that's a very good question. When I interviewed Col. Rodolfo Mendoza, the interrogator of Yousef's partner Murad, some interesting things came out. I think I did the most extensive interview on audio and video that any journalist has done with him. He's the guy that said that as early as 1994 Murad told him that al-Qaeda had six targets including the Trade Center, Pentagon, Sears and Transamerica towers, CIA headquarters and a nuclear facility. They had ten men training in U.S. flight schools at that moment in 1994. He gave all this information to the U.S. Embassy in Manila. He wouldn't tell me who -- he didn't want to embarrass whoever it was. But clearly we know the FBI got it because they mention it in a Memo which I have a copy of part of in the book. And we know that they investigated two of the flight schools. Murad, Yousef's lifelong friend had been to four US flight schools in 1991 and 1992. So we know they had it. I think what happened at that point when they dropped the ball on 9/11 -- they figured we'll we have Ramzi for the Trade Center, were going to try him again for the Bojinka plot. He is going to go away -- it's all going to be over. But when they started connecting the dots and they realized that this organization related to him went all the way back to the original Trade Center bombing and we haven't even gotten to the story of Nancy Floyd -- this courageous FBI agent who came within a hair's breath of stopping the first bombing by Yousef only to be thwarted by management in New York. She almost succeeded in capturing and interdicting the plot, but the Bureau blew it. Yes, the Nancy Floyd story was very interesting. Her story and many other interesting stories are covered in the book. It's an important book for Americans to read to understand the threat that faces us today. -- posted by mitelo
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