FBI Agent: The CIA Could Have
Stopped 9/11
By Jeff Stein
June 20,
2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Newsweek"
- Updated : Mark Rossini, a
former FBI special agent at the center of
an enduring mystery related to the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks, says he is “appalled” by the newly declassified statements
by former CIA Director George Tenet defending the spy agency’s
efforts to detect and stop the plot.
Rossini, who was assigned to the CIA’s
Counterterrorism Center (CTC) at the time of the attacks, has
long maintained that the U.S. government has covered up secret
relations between the spy agency and Saudi individuals who may have
abetted the plot. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers who flew commercial
airliners into the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon, and a
failed effort to crash into the U.S. Capitol, were Saudis.
A heavily redacted 2005 CIA inspector
general’s
report, parts of which had previously been released, was further
declassified earlier this month. It found that agency investigators
"encountered no evidence" that the government of Saudi Arabia
"knowingly and willingly supported" Al-Qaeda terrorists. It added
that some CIA officers had “speculated” that “dissident sympathizers
within the government” may have supported Osama bin Laden but that
“the reporting was too sparse to determine with any accuracy such
support.”
Over 30 pages
relating to Saudi Arabia in the report were blacked out. The Obama
administration has
also refused to declassify 28 pages dealing with Saudi
connections to the hijackers in a joint congressional probe of the
attacks.
As has been
previously reported, Rossini and another FBI agent assigned to
the CTC, Doug Miller, learned in January 2000 that one of the future
hijackers, an Al-Qaeda operative by the name of Khalid al-Mihdhar,
had a multi-entry visa to enter the U.S. By mid-summer of 2001, the
CIA was repeatedly warning President George W. Bush and other White
House officials that an Al-Qaeda attack was imminent. But when
Miller and Rossini attempted to warn FBI headquarters that al-Mihdhar
could be loose in the U.S., a CIA supervisor ordered them to remain
silent.
Rossini says he is “deeply concerned” by
how the agency continues to suppress information related to contacts
between the CIA and Saudi Arabia, particularly when the spy agency
is declassifying other portions of documents to show that it did
everything possible to thwart the September 11, 2001 plot.
“There would have not been a 9/11 if
Doug's CIR [Central Intelligence Report] on al-Mihdhar was sent,” he
told Newsweek in an email. “Period. End of story.
“The total lack of accountability, nor a
desire to drill down on the truth as to why Doug's memo was not
sent,” he added, “is the reason why the 28 pages pertaining to the
Saudis have been blocked” from release.
In 2005, Tenet, the CIA director at the
time of the attacks, angrily refuted the judgment of then-CIA
Inspector General John Helgerson who said Tenet did not do enough to
stop the Al-Qaeda plot.
"Your report challenges my
professionalism, diligence and skill in leading the men and women of
U.S. intelligence in countering terrorism," Tenet wrote to Helgerson
in another heavily redacted document released June 12. "I did
everything I could to inform, warn and motivate action to prevent
harm. Your report does not fairly or accurately portray my actions,
or the heroic work of the men and women of the Intelligence
Community."
Rossini claims still-classified
documents would “show a pattern of financial assistance, and
moreover, the CIA's role to try and recruit al-Mihdhar.” He says he
was “convinced” of that and that “there is no other explanation" for
the CIA refusing to release further information.
A former CIA field operative who worked
at the CTC in 2001
told Newsweek earlier this year that Rossini’s theory
had merit. “I find that kind of hard to believe, that [al-Mihdhar]
would be a valid source,” says the former operative, who spent 25
years handling spies in some of the world’s most dangerous places,
including the Middle East. “But then again, the folks that were
making a lot of calls at the time there were junior analysts, who
had zero general experience and absolutely zero on-the-ground
operational experience or any kind of operational training.”
The analysts had begun to take
intelligence collection initiatives beyond their skill level,
usually by developing their own confidential “sources” in Middle
East spy services, says the former operative, who spoke on condition
of anonymity to freely discuss such a sensitive issue. So it is
entirely reasonable, the former operative says, that an intelligence
analyst at the CTC was trying to develop al-Mihdhar as a source
through Saudi contacts.
“I don’t think they ever personally
talked to anybody” in the field, the former operative added. “They
probably got a source through liaison. So their source [on the
hijackers] might have been someone in the Saudi service who said
they are talking to somebody, or someone in the Jordanian service
who said he was talking to someone. As far I was concerned, they
were a bunch of lying pieces of shit. So they could’ve done that.”
Rossini and his colleague, Miller,
following the CTC’s strict rules on secrecy, kept silent for years
about their thwarted effort to warn FBI headquarters about al-Mihdhar,
providing critics with ammunition to cast doubt on their story. But
in a Newsweek interview, a former FBI colleague has now
come forward publicly for the first time to buttress their version
of events.
James Bernazzani, who took charge of the
FBI contingent at the CTC in Langley, Virginia, soon after 9/11
attacks, recalled an encounter with Rossini. “Mark walks into my
office one day at Langley and says, ‘Something's been really
bothering me.’ He tells me the whole story" about how he and Miller
had been prohibited from telling anyone about the likely presence of
at least one Al-Qaeda terrorist, al-Mihdhar, in the U.S. the
previous July, Bernazzani says.
“I said, Mark, if it ain't on paper, it
never happened. He said, ‘I got it.’ After a few minutes he came
back and showed it to me.” Miller, as it turned out, had made a copy
of the warning cable he had prepared for FBI headquarters.
“I looked at it and I said, ‘Holy
friggin’ shit,’” Bernazzani recalls. “I said, ‘This would've stopped
this thing.’ I called up Assistant Director Pat D’Amuro,” who was in
charge of the FBI’s investigation into the 9/11 attacks. “I said I
needed to see him right away. He said, ‘This better be worth it.’ I
assured him it was. I drove straight to FBI headquarters. It took me
only about 15 minutes to get there. I probably set some speed
records.”
Bernazzani, who retired in 2008 with a
Presidential Award for Meritorious Service, says D’Amuro “looks
at it, he looks at me, and he says, ‘I’ll take care of it.’”
Bernazzani returned to CIA headquarters.
“I told Mark it was done, it was in the right hands,” Bernazzani
says. Later, when congressional investigators came looking for
documents related to the 9/11 attacks, “the FBI couldn't find it in
their computers,” he says. “If they did, they didn't tell me.”
D’Amuro, now managing director of 930
Capital Management in New York, did not immediately respond to
request for comment.
All these years later, “What Mark said
is true,” Bernazzani says. “It did happen” as Rossini told it.
As for why CIA analysts at the CTC
ordered Rossini and Miller not to tell the FBI about Al-Qaeda
terrorists at large in the U.S., Bernazzani can only theorize. "It
was a classic example of analysts owning information,” he says.
“Operators share information. Some analysts tended to think of
information as none of your business.”
Rossini is more blunt. “They ran a
clandestine op in the U.S., and they didn’t want the bureau involved
in it.”
Correction: An
earlier version of this story mistakenly said FBI agents Rossini and
Miller learned about al-Mihdhar’s multiple visas to America in the
summer of 2001. It was in January 2000 when they learned of his
visas.
© 2015 Newsweek LLC
See
also -
The Inside Information That Could Have
Stopped 9/11