AL QAEDA AIMS AT THE AMERICAN HOMELAND 5.1 TERRORIST ENTREPRENEURS
By early 1999, al Qaeda was already a potent adversary of the United
States. Bin Ladin and his chief of operations, Abu Hafs al Masri, also
known as Mohammed Atef, occupied undisputed leadership positions atop al
Qaeda’s organizational structure.Within this structure, al Qaeda’s
worldwide terrorist operations relied heavily on the ideas and work of
enterprising and strong-willed field commanders who enjoyed considerable
autonomy.To understand how the organization actually worked and to
introduce the origins of the 9/11 plot,we briefly examine three of these
subordinate commanders:Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), Riduan Isamuddin
(better known as Hambali), and Abd al Rahim al Nashiri. We will devote
the most attention to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the chief manager of the
"planes operation."
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
No one exemplifies the model of the terrorist entrepreneur more clearly
than Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the principal architect of the 9/11
attacks. KSM followed a rather tortuous path to his eventual membership
in al Qaeda.1 Highly educated and equally comfortable in a government
office or a terrorist safehouse,KSM applied his imagination,technical
aptitude,and managerial skills to hatching and planning an extraordinary
array of terrorist schemes. These ideas included conventional car
bombing,political assassination,aircraft bombing, hijacking, reservoir
poisoning, and, ultimately, the use of aircraft as missiles guided by
suicide operatives.
Like his nephew Ramzi Yousef (three years KSM’s junior),KSM grew up in
Kuwait but traces his ethnic lineage to the Baluchistan region
straddling Iran and Pakistan.Raised in a religious family,KSM claims to
have joined the Muslim Brotherhood at age 16 and to have become enamored
of violent jihad at youth camps in the desert. In 1983, following his
graduation from secondary
145 146 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
Detainee Interrogation Reports
Chapters 5 and 7 rely heavily on information obtained from captured al
Qaeda members.A number of these "detainees"have firsthand knowledge of
the 9/11 plot.
Assessing the truth of statements by these witnesses—sworn enemies of
the United States—is challenging. Our access to them has been limited to
the review of intelligence reports based on communications received from
the locations where the actual interrogations take place. We submitted
questions for use in the interrogations, but had no control over
whether, when, or how questions of particular interest would be asked.
Nor were we allowed to talk to the interrogators so that we could better
judge the credibility of the detainees and clarify ambiguities in the
reporting.We were told that our requests might disrupt the sensitive
interrogation process.
We have nonetheless decided to include information from captured 9/11
conspirators and al Qaeda members in our report.We have evaluated their
statements carefully and have attempted to corroborate them with
documents and statements of others. In this report, we indicate where
such statements provide the foundation for our narrative.We have been
authorized to identify by name only ten detainees whose custody has been
confirmed officially by the U.S. government.2
school, KSM left Kuwait to enroll at Chowan College, a small Baptist
school in Murfreesboro,North Carolina.After a semester at Chowan,KSM
transferred to North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State
University in Greensboro, which he attended with Yousef’s
brother,another future al Qaeda member. KSM earned a degree in
mechanical engineering in December 1986.3
Although he apparently did not attract attention for extreme Islamist
beliefs or activities while in the United States, KSM plunged into the
anti-Soviet Afghan jihad soon after graduating from college.Visiting
Pakistan for the first time in early 1987,he traveled to Peshawar,where
his brother Zahid introduced him to the famous Afghan mujahid Abdul
Rasul Sayyaf, head of the Hizbul-Ittihad El-Islami (Islamic Union
Party).Sayyaf became KSM’s mentor and provided KSM with military
training at Sayyaf’s Sada camp.KSM claims he then fought the Soviets and
remained at the front for three months before being summoned to perform
administrative duties for Abdullah Azzam. KSM next took a job working
for an electronics firm that catered to the communications needs of
Afghan groups, where he learned about drills used to excavate caves in
Afghanistan.4
Between 1988 and 1992,KSM helped run a nongovernmental organization AL
QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 147
(NGO) in Peshawar and Jalalabad; sponsored by Sayyaf, it was designed to
aid young Afghan mujahideen. In 1992, KSM spent some time fighting
alongside the mujahideen in Bosnia and supporting that effort with
financial donations. After returning briefly to Pakistan, he moved his
family to Qatar at the suggestion of the former minister of Islamic
affairs of Qatar, Sheikh Abdallah bin Khalid bin Hamad al Thani.KSM took
a position in Qatar as project engineer with the Qatari Ministry of
Electricity and Water. Although he engaged in extensive international
travel during his tenure at the ministry—much of it in furtherance of
terrorist activity—KSM would hold his position there until early 1996,
when he fled to Pakistan to avoid capture by U.S. authorities.5
KSM first came to the attention of U.S. law enforcement as a result of
his cameo role in the first World Trade Center bombing.According to
KSM,he learned of RamziYousef’s intention to launch an attack inside the
United States in 1991 or 1992,when Yousef was receiving explosives
training in Afghanistan. During the fall of 1992,whileYousef was
building the bomb he would use in that attack, KSM and Yousef had
numerous telephone conversations during which Yousef discussed his
progress and sought additional funding. On November 3, 1992, KSM wired
$660 from Qatar to the bank account of Yousef’s co-conspirator,Mohammed
Salameh.KSM does not appear to have contributed any more substantially
to this operation.6
Yousef’s instant notoriety as the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade
Center bombing inspired KSM to become involved in planning attacks
against the United States. By his own account, KSM’s animus toward the
United States stemmed not from his experiences there as a student, but
rather from his violent disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring
Israel. In 1994, KSM accompanied Yousef to the Philippines,and the two
of them began planning what is now known as the Manila air or
"Bojinka"plot—the intended bombing of 12 U.S. commercial jumbo jets over
the Pacific during a two-day span. This marked the first time KSM took
part in the actual planning of a terrorist operation.While sharing an
apartment in Manila during the summer of 1994, he and Yousef acquired
chemicals and other materials necessary to construct bombs and
timers.They also cased target flights to Hong Kong and Seoul that would
have onward legs to the United States. During this same period, KSM and
Yousef also developed plans to assassinate President Clinton during his
November 1994 trip to Manila, and to bomb U.S.-bound cargo carriers by
smuggling jackets containing nitrocellulose on board.7
KSM left the Philippines in September 1994 and met up with Yousef in
Karachi following their casing flights. There they enlisted Wali Khan
Amin Shah, also known as Usama Asmurai, in the Manila air plot. During
the fall of 1994,Yousef returned to Manila and successfully tested the
digital watch timer he had invented, bombing a movie theater and a
Philippine Airlines flight en route to Tokyo.The plot unraveled after
the Philippine authorities discovered Yousef’s bomb-making operation in
Manila;but by that time,KSM was safely 148 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, mastermind of the 9/11 plot, at the time of his
capture in 2003
back at his government job in Qatar.Yousef attempted to follow through
on the cargo carriers plan, but he was arrested in Islamabad by
Pakistani authori=ties on February 7, 1995, after an accomplice turned
him in.8
KSM continued to travel among the worldwide jihadist community after
Yousef’s arrest,visiting the Sudan,Yemen,Malaysia,and Brazil in 1995.No
clear evidence connects him to terrorist activities in those
locations.While in Sudan, he reportedly failed in his attempt to meet
with Bin Ladin. But KSM did see Atef, who gave him a contact in Brazil.
In January 1996, well aware that U.S. authorities were chasing him, he
left Qatar for good and fled to Afghanistan, where he renewed his
relationship with Rasul Sayyaf.9
Just as KSM was reestablishing himself in Afghanistan in mid-1996, Bin
Ladin and his colleagues were also completing their migration from
Sudan. Through Atef,KSM arranged a meeting with Bin Ladin inTora Bora,a
mountainous redoubt from the Afghan war days.At the meeting,KSM
presented the al Qaeda leader with a menu of ideas for terrorist
operations. According to KSM, this meeting was the first time he had
seen Bin Ladin since 1989. Although they had fought together in 1987,
Bin Ladin and KSM did not yet enjoy an especially close working
relationship.Indeed,KSM has acknowledged AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN
HOMELAND 149
that Bin Ladin likely agreed to meet with him because of the renown of
his nephew,Yousef.10
At the meeting, KSM briefed Bin Ladin and Atef on the first World Trade
Center bombing, the Manila air plot, the cargo carriers plan, and other
activities pursued by KSM and his colleagues in the Philippines.KSM also
presented a proposal for an operation that would involve training pilots
who would crash planes into buildings in the United States. This
proposal eventually would become the 9/11 operation.11
KSM knew that the successful staging of such an attack would require
per=sonnel, money, and logistical support that only an extensive and
well-funded organization like al Qaeda could provide. He thought the
operation might appeal to Bin Ladin,who had a long record of denouncing
the United States.12
From KSM’s perspective, Bin Ladin was in the process of consolidating
his new position in Afghanistan while hearing out others’ ideas, and had
not yet settled on an agenda for future anti-U.S.operations.At the
meeting,Bin Ladin listened to KSM’s ideas without much comment,but did
ask KSM formally to join al Qaeda and move his family to Afghanistan.13
KSM declined. He preferred to remain independent and retain the option
of working with other mujahideen groups still operating in Afghanistan,
including the group led by his old mentor, Sayyaf. Sayyaf was close to
Ahmed Shah Massoud,the leader of the Northern Alliance.Therefore working
with him might be a problem for KSM because Bin Ladin was building ties
to the rival Taliban.
After meeting with Bin Ladin, KSM says he journeyed onward to India,
Indonesia,and Malaysia,where he met with Jemaah Islamiah’s
Hambali.Hambali was an Indonesian veteran of the Afghan war looking to
expand the jihad into Southeast Asia. In Iran, KSM rejoined his family
and arranged to move them to Karachi; he claims to have relocated by
January 1997.14
After settling his family in Karachi, KSM tried to join the mujahid
leader Ibn al Khattab in Chechnya. Unable to travel through Azerbaijan,
KSM returned to Karachi and then to Afghanistan to renew contacts with
Bin Ladin and his colleagues.Though KSM may not have been a member of al
Qaeda at this time, he admits traveling frequently between Pakistan and
Afghanistan in 1997 and the first half of 1998, visiting Bin Ladin and
cultivating relationships with his lieutenants, Atef and Sayf al Adl, by
assisting them with computer and media projects.15
According to KSM, the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and
Dar es Salaam marked a watershed in the evolution of the 9/11 plot. KSM
claims these bombings convinced him that Bin Ladin was truly committed
to attacking the United States. He continued to make himself useful,
collecting news articles and helping other al Qaeda members with their
out-dated computer equipment. Bin Ladin, apparently at Atef’s urging,
finally decided to give KSM the green light for the 9/11 operation
sometime in late 1998 or early 1999.16 150 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
KSM then accepted Bin Ladin’s standing invitation to move to Kandahar
and work directly with al Qaeda. In addition to supervising the planning
and preparations for the 9/11 operation, KSM worked with and eventually
led al Qaeda’s media committee. But KSM states he refused to swear a
formal oath of allegiance to Bin Ladin, thereby retaining a last vestige
of his cherished autonomy.17
At this point,late 1998 to early 1999,planning for the 9/11 operation
began in earnest.Yet while the 9/11 project occupied the bulk of KSM’s
attention, he continued to consider other possibilities for terrorist
attacks. For example, he sent al Qaeda operative Issa al Britani to
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to learn about the jihad in Southeast Asia from
Hambali.Thereafter,KSM claims,at Bin Ladin’s direction in early 2001, he
sent Britani to the United States to case potential economic and
"Jewish"targets in NewYork City.Furthermore,during the summer of
2001,KSM approached Bin Ladin with the idea of recruiting a Saudi
Arabian air force pilot to commandeer a Saudi fighter jet and attack the
Israeli city of Eilat. Bin Ladin reportedly liked this proposal, but he
instructed KSM to concentrate on the 9/11 operation first. Similarly,
KSM’s proposals to Atef around this same time for attacks in Thailand,
Singapore, Indonesia, and the Maldives were never executed, although
Hambali’s Jemaah Islamiah operatives did some casing of possible
targets.18
KSM appears to have been popular among the al Qaeda rank and file. He
was reportedly regarded as an effective leader,especially after the 9/11
attacks. Co-workers describe him as an intelligent, efficient, and
even-tempered manager who approached his projects with a single-minded
dedication that he expected his colleagues to share. Al Qaeda associate
Abu Zubaydah has expressed more qualified admiration for KSM’s innate
creativity, emphasiz=ing instead his ability to incorporate the
improvements suggested by others. Nashiri has been similarly measured,
observing that although KSM floated many general ideas for attacks, he
rarely conceived a specific operation him-self.19 Perhaps these
estimates reflect a touch of jealousy; in any case, KSM was plainly a
capable coordinator,having had years to hone his skills and build
relationships.
Hambali
Al Qaeda’s success in fostering terrorism in Southeast Asia stems
largely from its close relationship with Jemaah Islamiah (JI). In that
relationship, Hambali became the key coordinator.Born and educated in
Indonesia,Hambali moved to Malaysia in the early 1980s to find
work.There he claims to have become a follower of the Islamist extremist
teachings of various clerics, including one named Abdullah
Sungkar.Sungkar first inspired Hambali to share the vision of
establishing a radical Islamist regime in Southeast Asia, then furthered
Hambali’s instruction in jihad by sending him to Afghanistan in
1986.After under-going training at Rasul Sayyaf’s Sada camp (where KSM
would later train), Hambali fought against the Soviets;he eventually
returned to Malaysia after 18 AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 151
months in Afghanistan. By 1998, Hambali would assume responsibility for
the Malaysia/Singapore region within Sungkar’s newly formed terrorist
organization, the JI.20
Also by 1998,Sungkar and JI spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir had
accepted Bin Ladin’s offer to ally JI with al Qaeda in waging war
against Christians and Jews.21Hambali met with KSM in Karachi to arrange
for JI members to receive training in Afghanistan at al Qaeda’s camps.
In addition to his close working relationship with KSM, Hambali soon
began dealing with Atef as well. Al Qaeda began funding JI’s
increasingly ambitious terrorist plans,which Atef and KSM sought to
expand. Under this arrangement, JI would perform the necessary casing
activities and locate bomb-making materials and other supplies. Al Qaeda
would underwrite operations, provide bomb-making expertise, and deliver
suicide operatives.22
The al Qaeda–JI partnership yielded a number of proposals that would
marry al Qaeda’s financial and technical strengths with JI’s access to
materials and local operatives. Here, Hambali played the critical role
of coordinator, as he distributed al Qaeda funds earmarked for the joint
operations.In one especially notable example,Atef turned to Hambali when
al Qaeda needed a scientist to take over its biological weapons program.
Hambali obliged by introducing a U.S.-educated JI member,Yazid Sufaat,
to Ayman al Zawahiri in Kandahar. In 2001, Sufaat would spend several
months attempting to cultivate anthrax for al Qaeda in a laboratory he
helped set up near the Kandahar airport.23
Hambali did not originally orient JI’s operations toward attacking the
United States,but his involvement with al Qaeda appears to have inspired
him to pursue American targets.KSM,in his post-capture
interrogations,has taken credit for this shift, claiming to have urged
the JI operations chief to concentrate on attacks designed to hurt the
U.S. economy.24 Hambali’s newfound interest in striking against the
United States manifested itself in a spate of ter=rorist plans.
Fortunately, none came to fruition.
In addition to staging actual terrorist attacks in partnership with al
Qaeda, Hambali and JI assisted al Qaeda operatives passing through Kuala
Lumpur.One important occasion was in December 1999–January 2000.Ham-bali
accommodated KSM’s requests to help several veterans whom KSM had just
finished training in Karachi.They included Tawfiq bin Attash,also known
as Khallad,who later would help bomb the USS Cole,and future 9/11
hijack=ers Nawaf al Hazmi and Khalid al Mihdhar.Hambali arranged lodging
for them and helped them purchase airline tickets for their onward
travel.Later that year, Hambali and his crew would provide
accommodations and other assistance (including information on flight
schools and help in acquiring ammonium nitrate) for Zacarias
Moussaoui,an al Qaeda operative sent to Malaysia byAtef and KSM.25
Hambali used Bin Ladin’s Afghan facilities as a training ground for JI
recruits.Though he had a close relationship with Atef and KSM,he
maintained JI’s institutional independence from al Qaeda. Hambali
insists that he did not 152 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
discuss operations with Bin Ladin or swear allegiance to him, having
already given such a pledge of loyalty to Bashir, Sungkar’s successor as
JI leader.Thus, like any powerful bureaucrat defending his
domain,Hambali objected when al Qaeda leadership tried to assign JI
members to terrorist projects without notifying him.26
Abd al Rahim al Nashiri
KSM and Hambali both decided to join forces with al Qaeda because their
terrorist aspirations required the money and manpower that only a robust
organization like al Qaeda could supply.On the other hand,Abd al Rahim
al Nashiri—the mastermind of the Cole bombing and the eventual head of
al Qaeda operations in the Arabian Peninsula—appears to have originally
been recruited to his career as a terrorist by Bin Ladin himself.
Having already participated in the Afghan jihad, Nashiri accompanied a
group of some 30 mujahideen in pursuit of jihad in Tajikistan in
1996.When serious fighting failed to materialize, the group traveled to
Jalalabad and encountered Bin Ladin, who had recently returned from
Sudan. Bin Ladin addressed them at length, urging the group to join him
in a "jihad against the Americans." Although all were urged to swear
loyalty to Bin Ladin, many, including Nashiri,found the notion
distasteful and refused.After several days of indoctrination that
included a barrage of news clippings and television documentaries,
Nashiri left Afghanistan, first returning to his native Saudi Arabia and
then visiting his home in Yemen.There,he says,the idea for his first
terrorist operation took shape as he noticed many U.S. and other foreign
ships plying the waters along the southwest coast ofYemen.27
Nashiri returned to Afghanistan,probably in 1997,primarily to check on
relatives fighting there and also to learn about the Taliban.He again
encountered Bin Ladin,still recruiting for"the coming battle with the
United States."Nashiri pursued a more conventional military jihad,
joining the Taliban forces in their fight against Ahmed Massoud’s
Northern Alliance and shuttling back and forth between the front and
Kandahar,where he would see Bin Ladin and meet with other mujahideen.
During this period, Nashiri also led a plot to smuggle four Russian-made
antitank missiles into Saudi Arabia from Yemen in early 1998 and helped
an embassy bombing operative obtain aYemeni passport.28
At some point, Nashiri joined al Qaeda. His cousin, Jihad Mohammad Ali
al Makki, also known as Azzam, was a suicide bomber for the Nairobi
attack. Nashiri traveled between Yemen and Afghanistan. In late 1998,
Nashiri pro-posed mounting an attack against a U.S.vessel.Bin Ladin
approved.He directed Nashiri to start the planning and send operatives
to Yemen,and he later provided money.29
Nashiri reported directly to Bin Ladin,the only other person
who,according to Nashiri,knew all the details of the operation.When
Nashiri had difficulty finding U.S.naval vessels to attack along the
western coast ofYemen,Bin AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 153
Ladin reportedly instructed him to case the Port of Aden, on the
southern coast, instead.30 The eventual result was an attempted attack
on the USS The Sullivans in January 2000 and the successful attack, in
October 2000, on the USS Cole.
Nashiri’s success brought him instant status within al Qaeda. He later
was recognized as the chief of al Qaeda operations in and around the
Arabian Peninsula.While Nashiri continued to consult Bin Ladin on the
planning of subsequent terrorist projects, he retained discretion in
selecting operatives and devising attacks.In the two years between the
Cole bombing and Nashiri’s capture,he would supervise several more
proposed operations for al Qaeda.The October 6, 2002, bombing of the
French tanker Limburg in the Gulf of Aden also was Nashiri’s
handiwork.Although Bin Ladin urged Nashiri to continue plotting strikes
against U.S.interests in the Persian Gulf,Nashiri maintains that he
actually delayed one of these projects because of security
concerns.31Those concerns, it seems, were well placed, as Nashiri’s
November 2002 capture in the United Arab Emirates finally ended his
career as a terrorist.
5.2 THE "PLANES OPERATION"
According to KSM,he started to think about attacking the United States
after Yousef returned to Pakistan following the 1993 World Trade Center
bombing. LikeYousef,KSM reasoned he could best influence U.S.policy by
targeting the country’s economy.KSM and Yousef reportedly brainstormed
together about what drove the U.S. economy. New York, which KSM
considered the economic capital of the United States, therefore became
the primary target. For similar reasons, California also became a target
for KSM.32
KSM claims that the earlier bombing of theWorldTrade Center taught him
that bombs and explosives could be problematic, and that he needed to
graduate to a more novel form of attack. He maintains that he and Yousef
began thinking about using aircraft as weapons while working on the
Manila air/Bojinka plot, and speculated about striking the World Trade
Center and CIA headquarters as early as 1995.33
Certainly KSM was not alone in contemplating new kinds of terrorist
operations.A study reportedly conducted byAtef,while he and Bin Ladin
were still in Sudan, concluded that traditional terrorist hijacking
operations did not fit the needs of al Qaeda, because such hijackings
were used to negotiate the release of prisoners rather than to inflict
mass casualties.The study is said to have considered the feasibility of
hijacking planes and blowing them up in flight,paralleling the Bojinka
concept.Such a study,if it actually existed,yields significant insight
into the thinking of al Qaeda’s leaders: (1) they rejected hijackings
aimed at gaining the release of imprisoned comrades as too
complex,because al Qaeda had no friendly countries in which to land a
plane and 154 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
then negotiate; (2) they considered the bombing of commercial flights in
midair—as carried out against Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie,
Scotland— a promising means to inflict massive casualties; and (3) they
did not yet con=sider using hijacked aircraft as weapons against other
targets.34
KSM has insisted to his interrogators that he always contemplated
hijacking and crashing large commercial aircraft.Indeed,KSM describes a
grandiose original plan: a total of ten aircraft to be hijacked, nine of
which would crash into targets on both coasts—they included those
eventually hit on September 11 plus CIA and FBI headquarters,nuclear
power plants,and the tallest buildings in California and the state of
Washington. KSM himself was to land the tenth plane at a U.S.airport
and,after killing all adult male passengers on board and alerting the
media,deliver a speech excoriating U.S.support for Israel,the
Philippines, and repressive governments in the Arab world. Beyond KSM’s
rationalizations about targeting the U.S. economy, this vision gives a
better glimpse of his true ambitions.This is theater,a spectacle of
destruction with KSM as the self-cast star—the superterrorist.35
KSM concedes that this proposal received a lukewarm response from al
Qaeda leaders skeptical of its scale and complexity.Although Bin Ladin
listened to KSM’s proposal,he was not convinced that it was practical.As
mentioned earlier, Bin Ladin was receiving numerous ideas for potential
operations— KSM’s proposal to attack U.S. targets with commercial
airplanes was only one of many.36
KSM presents himself as an entrepreneur seeking venture capital and
people. He simply wanted al Qaeda to supply the money and operatives
needed for the attack while retaining his independence. It is easy to
question such a statement. Money is one thing; supplying a cadre of
trained operatives willing to die is much more.Thus, although KSM
contends he would have been just as likely to consider working with any
comparable terrorist organization, he gives no indication of what other
groups he thought could supply such exceptional commodities.37
KSM acknowledges formally joining al Qaeda, in late 1998 or 1999, and
states that soon afterward,Bin Ladin also made the decision to support
his proposal to attack the United States using commercial airplanes as
weapons. Though KSM speculates about how Bin Ladin came to share his
preoccupation with attacking America, Bin Ladin in fact had long been an
opponent of the United States. KSM thinks that Atef may have persuaded
Bin Ladin to approve this specific proposal.Atef’s role in the entire
operation is unquestionably very significant but tends to fade into the
background,in part because Atef himself is not available to describe it.
He was killed in November 2001 by an American air strike in
Afghanistan.38
Bin Ladin summoned KSM to Kandahar in March or April 1999 to tell him
that al Qaeda would support his proposal.The plot was now referred to
within al Qaeda as the "planes operation."39 AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE
AMERICAN HOMELAND 155
The Plan Evolves
Bin Ladin reportedly discussed the planes operation with KSM and Atef in
a series of meetings in the spring of 1999 at the al Matar complex near
Kandahar.KSM’s original concept of using one of the hijacked planes to
make a media statement was scrapped, but Bin Ladin considered the basic
idea feasible. Bin Ladin,Atef,and KSM developed an initial list of
targets.These included the White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon,
and the World Trade Center. According to KSM,Bin Ladin wanted to destroy
theWhite House and the Pen=tagon, KSM wanted to strike the World Trade
Center, and all of them wanted to hit the Capitol.No one else was
involved in the initial selection of targets.40
Bin Ladin also soon selected four individuals to serve as suicide
operatives: Khalid al Mihdhar,Nawaf al Hazmi,Khallad,and Abu Bara
alYemeni.During the al Matar meetings, Bin Ladin told KSM that Mihdhar
and Hazmi were so eager to participate in an operation against the
United States that they had already obtained U.S.visas.KSM states that
they had done so on their own after the suicide of their friend Azzam
(Nashiri’s cousin) in carrying out the Nairobi bombing.KSM had not met
them.His only guidance from Bin Ladin was that the two should eventually
go to the United States for pilot training.41
Hazmi and Mihdhar were Saudi nationals, born in Mecca. Like the others
in this initial group of selectees, they were already experienced
mujahideen. They had traveled together to fight in Bosnia in a group
that journeyed to the Balkans in 1995.By the time Hazmi and Mihdhar were
assigned to the planes operation in early 1999, they had visited
Afghanistan on several occasions.42
Khallad was another veteran mujahid,like much of his family.His father
had been expelled fromYemen because of his extremist views.Khallad had
grown up in Saudi Arabia, where his father knew Bin Ladin, Abdullah
Azzam, and Omar Abdel Rahman (the "Blind Sheikh"). Khallad departed for
Afghanistan in 1994 at the age of 15.Three years later, he lost his
lower right leg in a bat=tle with the Northern Alliance,a battle in
which one of his brothers died.After this experience, he pledged
allegiance to Bin Ladin—whom he had first met as a child in Jeddah—and
volunteered to become a suicide operative.43
When Khallad applied for a U.S. visa, however, his application was
denied. Earlier in 1999,Bin Ladin had sent Khallad to Yemen to help
Nashiri obtain explosives for the planned ship-bombing and to obtain a
visa to visit the United States,so that he could participate in an
operation there.Khallad applied under another name, using the cover
story that he would be visiting a medical clinic to obtain a new
prosthesis for his leg.Another al Qaeda operative gave Khallad the name
of a person living in the United States whom Khallad could use as a
point of contact on a visa application.Khallad contacted this individual
to help him get an appointment at a U.S.clinic.While Khallad was waiting
for the letter from the clinic confirming the appointment, however, he
was arrested byYemeni authorities.The arrest resulted from mistaken
identity:Khallad was driving the car of another conspirator in the
ship-bombing plot who was wanted by theYemeni authorities.44 156 THE
9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
Khallad was released sometime during the summer of 1999, after his
father and Bin Ladin intervened on his behalf.Khallad learned later that
the al Qaeda leader, apparently concerned that Khallad might reveal
Nashiri’s operation while under interrogation,had contacted a Yemeni
official to demand Khallad’s release,suggesting that Bin Ladin would not
confront theYemenis if they did not confront him.This account has been
corroborated by others.Giving up on acquiring a U.S. visa and concerned
that the United States might learn of his ties to al Qaeda, Khallad
returned to Afghanistan.45
Travel issues thus played a part in al Qaeda’s operational planning from
the very start. During the spring and summer of 1999, KSM realized that
Khallad and Abu Bara,both of whom were Yemenis,would not be able to
obtain U.S. visas as easily as Saudi operatives like Mihdhar and
Hazmi.Although Khallad had been unable to acquire a U.S.visa,KSM still
wanted him and Abu Bara,as well as another Yemeni operative from Bin
Ladin’s security detail,to participate in the planes operation.Yet
because individuals with Saudi passports could travel much more easily
than Yemeni,particularly to the United States,there were fewer martyrdom
opportunities for Yemenis.To overcome this problem, KSM decided to split
the planes operation into two components.46
The first part of the planes operation—crashing hijacked aircraft into
U.S. targets—would remain as planned,with Mihdhar and Hazmi playing key
roles. The second part,however,would now embrace the idea of using
suicide operatives to blow up planes,a refinement of KSM’s old Manila
air plot.The operatives would hijack U.S.-flagged commercial planes
flying Pacific routes across East Asia and destroy them in
midair,possibly with shoe bombs,instead of flying them into targets. (An
alternate scenario apparently involved flying planes into U.S.targets in
Japan,Singapore,or Korea.) This part of the operation has been confirmed
by Khallad,who said that they contemplated hijacking several planes,
probably originating in Thailand, South Korea, Hong Kong, or
Malaysia,and using Yemenis who would not need pilot training because
they would simply down the planes.All the planes hijacked in the United
States and East Asia were to be crashed or exploded at about the same
time to maximize the attack’s psychological impact.47
Training and Deployment to Kuala Lumpur
In the fall of 1999,the four operatives selected by Bin Ladin for the
planes operation were chosen to attend an elite training course at al
Qaeda’s Mes Aynak camp in Afghanistan. Bin Ladin personally selected the
veteran fighters who received this training, and several of them were
destined for important operations.One example is Ibrahim al Thawar,or
Nibras,who would participate in the October 12,2000,suicide attack on
the USS Cole.According to KSM,this training was not given specifically
in preparation for the planes operation or any other particular al Qaeda
venture. Although KSM claims not to have been involved with the training
or to have met with the future 9/11 hijackers at Mes AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE
AMERICAN HOMELAND 157
Aynak, he says he did visit the camp while traveling from Kandahar to
Kabul with Bin Ladin and others.48
The Mes Aynak training camp was located in an abandoned Russian cop-per
mine near Kabul.The camp opened in 1999,after the United States had
destroyed the training camp near Khowst with cruise missiles in August
1998, and before theTaliban granted al Qaeda permission to open the al
Faruq camp in Kandahar.Thus,for a brief period in 1999,Mes Aynak was the
only al Qaeda camp operating in Afghanistan. It offered a full range of
instruction, including an advanced commando course taught by senior al
Qaeda member Sayf al Adl. Bin Ladin paid particular attention to the
1999 training session.When Salah al Din, the trainer for the session,
complained about the number of trainees and said that no more than 20
could be handled at once, Bin Ladin insisted that everyone he had
selected receive the training.49
The special training session at Mes Aynak was rigorous and spared no
expense.The course focused on physical fitness, firearms, close quarters
combat,shooting from a motorcycle,and night operations.Although the
subjects taught differed little from those offered at other camps, the
course placed extraordinary physical and mental demands on its
participants, who received the best food and other amenities to enhance
their strength and morale.50
Upon completing the advanced training at Mes Aynak,Hazmi,Khallad,and Abu
Bara went to Karachi, Pakistan.There KSM instructed them on Western
culture and travel. Much of his activity in mid-1999 had revolved around
the collection of training and informational materials for the
participants in the planes operation. For instance, he collected Western
aviation magazines; telephone directories for American cities such as
San Diego and Long Beach,California; brochures for schools; and airline
timetables, and he conducted Internet searches on U.S.flight schools.He
also purchased flight simulator soft-ware and a few movies depicting
hijackings.To house his students,KSM rented a safehouse in Karachi with
money provided by Bin Ladin.51
In early December 1999,Khallad and Abu Bara arrived in Karachi.Hazmi
joined them there a few days later.On his way to Karachi,Hazmi spent a
night in Quetta at a safehouse where, according to KSM, an Egyptian
named Mohamed Atta simultaneously stayed on his way to Afghanistan for
jihad training.52
Mihdhar did not attend the training in Karachi with the others. KSM says
that he never met with Mihdhar in 1999 but assumed that Bin Ladin and
Atef had briefed Mihdhar on the planes operation and had excused him
from the Karachi training.53
The course in Karachi apparently lasted about one or two weeks.According
to KSM, he taught the three operatives basic English words and phrases.
He showed them how to read phone books,interpret airline timetables,use
the Inter-net, use code words in communications, make travel
reservations, and rent an apartment. Khallad adds that the training
involved using flight simulator com-158 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
puter games, viewing movies that featured hijackings, and reading flight
schedules to determine which flights would be in the air at the same
time in different parts of the world.They used the game software to
increase their familiarity with aircraft models and functions,and to
highlight gaps in cabin security.While in Karachi,they also discussed
how to case flights in Southeast Asia.KSM told them to watch the cabin
doors at takeoff and landing,to observe whether the captain went to the
lavatory during the flight,and to note whether the flight attendants
brought food into the cockpit.KSM,Khallad,and Hazmi also visited travel
agencies to learn the visa requirements for Asian countries.54
The four trainees traveled to Kuala Lumpur:Khallad,Abu Bara,and Hazmi
came from Karachi;Mihdhar traveled from Yemen.As discussed in chapter 6,
U.S. intelligence would analyze communications associated with Mihdhar,
whom they identified during this travel, and Hazmi, whom they could have
identified but did not.55
According to KSM, the four operatives were aware that they had
volunteered for a suicide operation, either in the United States or in
Asia.With different roles, they had different tasks. Hazmi and Mihdhar
were sent to Kuala Lumpur before proceeding to their final
destination—the United States. According to KSM,they were to useYemeni
documents to fly to Malaysia,then proceed to the United States using
their Saudi passports to conceal their prior travels to and from
Pakistan. KSM had doctored Hazmi’s Saudi passport so it would appear as
if Hazmi had traveled to Kuala Lumpur from Saudi Arabia via Dubai.
Khallad and Abu Bara went to Kuala Lumpur to study airport security and
conduct casing flights.According to Khallad,he and Abu Bara departed for
Malaysia in mid-December 1999.Hazmi joined them about ten days later
after briefly returning to Afghanistan to attend to some passport
issues.56
Khallad had originally scheduled his trip in order to receive a new
prosthesis at a Kuala Lumpur clinic called Endolite, and Bin Ladin
suggested that he use the opportunity to case flights as well.According
to Khallad,Malaysia was an ideal destination because its government did
not require citizens of Saudi Arabia or other Gulf states to have a
visa.Malaysian security was reputed to be lax when it came to Islamist
jihadists.Also,other mujahideen wounded in com=bat had reportedly
received treatment at the Endolite clinic and successfully concealed the
origins of their injuries.Khallad said he got the money for the
prosthesis from his father, Bin Ladin, and another al Qaeda colleague.57
According to Khallad,when he and Abu Bara arrived in Kuala Lumpur they
contacted Hambali to let him know where they were staying, since he was
to be kept informed of al Qaeda activities in Southeast Asia. Hambali
picked up Khallad and Abu Bara and brought them to his home, enlisting
the help of a colleague who spoke better Arabic. Hambali then took them
to the clinic.58
On December 31, Khallad flew from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok; the next day,
he flew to Hong Kong aboard a U.S. airliner. He flew in first class,
which he realized was a mistake because this seating assignment on that
flight did not afford him a view of the cockpit.He claims to have done
what he could to case AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 159
the flight, testing security by carrying a box cutter in his toiletries
kit onto the flight to Hong Kong.Khallad returned to Bangkok the
following day.At the airport,the security officials searched his
carry-on bag and even opened the toi=letries kit,but just glanced at the
contents and let him pass.On this flight,Khal=lad waited until most of
the first-class passengers were dozing, then got up and removed the kit
from his carry-on.None of the flight attendants took notice.59
After completing his casing mission, Khallad returned to Kuala Lumpur.
Hazmi arrived in Kuala Lumpur soon thereafter and may even have stayed
briefly with Khallad and Abu Bara at Endolite. Mihdhar arrived on
January 5, probably one day after Hazmi.All four operatives stayed at
the apartment of Yazid Sufaat,the Malaysian JI member who made his home
available at Hambali’s request.According to Khallad,he and Hazmi spoke
about the possibility of hijacking planes and crashing them or holding
passengers as hostages, but only speculatively. Khallad admits being
aware at the time that Hazmi and Mihdhar were involved in an operation
involving planes in the United States but denies knowing details of the
plan.60
While in Kuala Lumpur,Khallad wanted to go to Singapore to meet Nibras
and Fahd al Quso, two of the operatives in Nashiri’s ship-bombing
operation. An attempt to execute that plan by attacking the USS The
Sullivans had failed just a few days earlier. Nibras and Quso were
bringing Khallad money from Yemen,but were stopped in Bangkok because
they lacked visas to continue on to Singapore.Also unable to enter
Singapore,Khallad moved the meeting to Bangkok.Hazmi and Mihdhar decided
to go there as well,reportedly because they thought it would enhance
their cover as tourists to have passport stamps from a popular tourist
destination such as Thailand.With Hambali’s help,the three obtained
tickets for a flight to Bangkok and left Kuala Lumpur together. Abu Bara
did not have a visa permitting him to return to Pakistan, so he traveled
toYemen instead.61
In Bangkok, Khallad took Hazmi and Mihdhar to one hotel, then went to
another hotel for his meeting on the maritime attack plan. Hazmi and
Mihdhar soon moved to that same hotel,but Khallad insists that the two
sets of operatives never met with each other or anyone else. After
conferring with the ship-bombing operatives, Khallad returned to Karachi
and then to Kandahar, where he reported on his casing mission to Bin
Ladin.62
Bin Ladin canceled the East Asia part of the planes operation in the
spring of 2000.He evidently decided it would be too difficult to
coordinate this attack with the operation in the United States.As for
Hazmi and Mihdhar,they had left Bangkok a few days before Khallad and
arrived in Los Angeles on January 15,2000.63
Meanwhile, the next group of al Qaeda operatives destined for the planes
operation had just surfaced in Afghanistan. As Hazmi and Mihdhar were
deploying from Asia to the United States, al Qaeda’s leadership was
recruiting and training four Western-educated men who had recently
arrived in Kanda=har.Though they hailed from four different
countries—Egypt,the United Arab 160 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
Emirates, Lebanon, and Yemen—they had formed a close-knit group as
students in Hamburg,Germany.The new recruits had come to Afghanistan
aspiring to wage jihad in Chechnya. But al Qaeda quickly recognized
their potential and enlisted them in its anti-U.S. jihad.
5.3 THE HAMBURG CONTINGENT
Although Bin Ladin,Atef,and KSM initially contemplated using established
al Qaeda members to execute the planes operation,the late 1999 arrival
in Kandahar of four aspiring jihadists from Germany suddenly presented a
more attractive alternative.The Hamburg group shared the anti-U.S.
fervor of the other candidates for the operation,but added the enormous
advantages of flu=ency in English and familiarity with life in the West,
based on years that each member of the group had spent living in
Germany. Not surprisingly, Mohamed Atta, Ramzi Binalshibh, Marwan al
Shehhi, and Ziad Jarrah would all become key players in the 9/11
conspiracy.
Mohamed Atta
Mohamed Atta was born on September 1, 1968, in Kafr el Sheikh, Egypt, to
a middle-class family headed by his father, an attorney. After
graduating from Cairo University with a degree in architectural
engineering in 1990, Atta worked as an urban planner in Cairo for a
couple of years. In the fall of 1991, he asked a German family he had
met in Cairo to help him continue his education in Germany.They
suggested he come to Hamburg and invited him to live with them there,at
least initially.After completing a course in German,Atta traveled to
Germany for the first time in July 1992. He resided briefly in Stuttgart
and then, in the fall of 1992, moved to Hamburg to live with his host
family. After enrolling at the University of Hamburg, he promptly
transferred into the city engineering and planning course at the
Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg,where he would remain registered
as a student until the fall of 1999.He appears to have applied himself
fairly seriously to his studies (at least in comparison to his jihadist
friends) and actually received his degree shortly before traveling to
Afghanistan.In school,Atta came across as very intelligent and
reasonably pleasant,with an excellent command of the German language.64
When Atta arrived in Germany, he appeared religious, but not fanatically
so.This would change,especially as his tendency to assert leadership
became increasingly pronounced.According to Binalshibh,as early as 1995
Atta sought to organize a Muslim student association in Hamburg. In the
fall of 1997, he joined a working group at the Quds mosque in Hamburg, a
group designed to bridge the gap between Muslims and Christians.Atta
proved a poor bridge, however, because of his abrasive and increasingly
dogmatic personality. But AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 161
among those who shared his beliefs, Atta stood out as a
decisionmaker.Atta’s friends during this period remember him as
charismatic, intelligent, and per-suasive, albeit intolerant of
dissent.65
In his interactions with other students,Atta voiced virulently
anti-Semitic and anti-American opinions, ranging from condemnations of
what he described as a global Jewish movement centered in New York City
that supposedly controlled the financial world and the media,to polemics
against governments of the Arab world.To him,Saddam Hussein was an
American stooge set up to giveWashington an excuse to intervene in the
Middle East.Within his circle,Atta advocated violent jihad.He reportedly
asked one individual close to the group if he was "ready to fight for
[his] belief"and dismissed him as too weak for jihad when the person
declined. On a visit home to Egypt in 1998, Atta met one of his college
friends. According to this friend, Atta had changed a great deal,had
grown a beard,and had "obviously adopted fundamentalism" by that time.66
Ramzi Binalshibh
Ramzi Binalshibh was born on May 1,1972,in Ghayl Bawazir,Yemen.There
does not seem to be anything remarkable about his family or early
background.A friend who knew Binalshibh in Yemen remembers him as
"religious,but not too religious." From 1987 to 1995, Binalshibh worked
as a clerk for the International Bank ofYemen.He first attempted to
leaveYemen in 1995,when he applied for a U.S.visa.After his application
was rejected,he went to Germany and applied for asylum under the name
Ramzi Omar,claiming to be a Sudanese citizen seeking asylum.While his
asylum petition was pending,Binalshibh lived in Hamburg and associated
with individuals from several mosques there. In 1997, after his asylum
application was denied,Binalshibh went home toYemen but returned to
Germany shortly thereafter under his true name,this time registering as
a student in Hamburg.Binalshibh continually had academic
problems,failing tests and cutting classes; he was expelled from one
school in September 1998.67
According to Binalshibh, he and Atta first met at a mosque in Hamburg in
1995.The two men became close friends and became identified with their
shared extremist outlook.Like Atta,by the late 1990s Binalshibh was
decrying what he perceived to be a "Jewish world conspiracy." He
proclaimed that the highest duty of every Muslim was to pursue jihad,
and that the highest honor was to die during the jihad.Despite his
rhetoric,however,Binalshibh presented a more amiable figure than the
austere Atta, and was known within the community as being sociable,
extroverted, polite, and adventuresome.68
In 1998,Binalshibh and Atta began sharing an apartment in the Harburg
section of Hamburg, together with a young student from the United Arab
Emi=rates named Marwan al Shehhi.69 162 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
Marwan al Shehhi
Marwan al Shehhi was born on May 9, 1978, in Ras al Khaimah, the United
Arab Emirates. His father, who died in 1997, was a prayer leader at the
local mosque.After graduating from high school in 1995,Shehhi joined the
Emi=rati military and received half a year of basic training before
gaining admission to a military scholarship program that would fund his
continued study in Germany.70
Shehhi first entered Germany in April 1996.After sharing an apartment in
Bonn for two months with three other scholarship students, Shehhi moved
in with a German family, with whom he resided for several months before
mov=ing into his own apartment. During this period, he came across as
very reli=gious, praying five times a day. Friends also remember him as
convivial and "a regular guy,"wearing Western clothes and occasionally
renting cars for trips to Berlin, France, and the Netherlands.71
As a student, Shehhi was less than a success. Upon completing a course
in German, he enrolled at the University of Bonn in a program for
technical, mathematical,and scientific studies.In June 1997,he requested
a leave from his studies,citing the need to attend to unspecified
"problems"in his home country.Although the university denied his
request,Shehhi left anyway,and consequently was compelled to repeat the
first semester of his studies.In addition to having academic
difficulties at this time, Shehhi appeared to become more extreme in the
practice of his faith;for example,he specifically avoided restaurants
that cooked with or served alcohol. In late 1997, he applied for
permission to complete his course work in Hamburg,a request apparently
motivated by his desire to join Atta and Binalshibh.Just how and when
the three of them first met remains unclear, although they seemed to
know each other already when Shehhi relocated to Hamburg in early
1998.Atta and Binalshibh moved into his apartment in April.72
The transfer to Hamburg did not help Shehhi’s academic progress; he was
directed by the scholarship program administrators at the Emirati
embassy to repeat his second semester starting in August 1998, but back
in Bonn. Shehhi initially flouted this directive, however, and did not
reenroll at the University of Bonn until the following January,barely
passing his course there.By the end of July 1999, he had returned to
Hamburg, applying to study shipbuilding at the Technical University
and,more significantly,residing once again with Atta and Binalshibh, in
an apartment at 54 Marienstrasse.73
After Shehhi moved in with Atta and Binalshibh, his evolution toward
Islamic fundamentalism became more pronounced.A fellow Emirati student
who came to Hamburg to visit Shehhi noticed he no longer lived as
comfort-ably as before. Shehhi now occupied an old apartment with a
roommate, had no television,and wore inexpensive clothes.When asked why
he was living so frugally, Shehhi responded that he was living the way
the Prophet had lived.74 Similarly, when someone asked why he and Atta
never laughed, Shehhi retorted,"How can you laugh when people are dying
in Palestine?"75 AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 163
Ziad Jarrah
Born on May 11, 1975, in Mazraa, Lebanon, Ziad Jarrah came from an
affluent family and attended private, Christian schools. Like Atta,
Binalshibh, and Shehhi, Jarrah aspired to pursue higher education in
Germany. In April 1996, he and a cousin enrolled at a junior college in
Greifswald,in northeastern Germany.There Jarrah met and became intimate
with Aysel Senguen, the daughter of Turkish immigrants, who was
preparing to study dentistry.76
Even with the benefit of hindsight, Jarrah hardly seems a likely
candidate for becoming an Islamic extremist. Far from displaying radical
beliefs when he first moved to Germany, he arrived with a reputation for
knowing where to find the best discos and beaches in Beirut, and in
Greifswald was known to enjoy student parties and drinking beer.
Although he continued to share an apartment in Greifswald with his
cousin,Jarrah was mostly at Senguen’s apart=ment.Witnesses interviewed
by German authorities after 9/11,however,recall that Jarrah started
showing signs of radicalization as early as the end of 1996. After
returning from a trip home to Lebanon,Jarrah started living more
strictly according to the Koran.He read brochures in Arabic about
jihad,held forth to friends on the subject of holy war,and professed
disaffection with his previous life and a desire not to leave the world
"in a natural way."77
In September 1997, Jarrah abruptly switched his intended course of study
from dentistry to aircraft engineering—at the Technical University of
Hamburg-Harburg. His motivation for this decision remains unclear. The
rationale he expressed to Senguen—that he had been interested in
aviation since playing with toy airplanes as a child—rings somewhat
hollow. In any event,Jarrah appears already to have had Hamburg contacts
by this time,some of whom may have played a role in steering him toward
Islamic extremism.78
Following his move to Hamburg that fall, he began visiting Senguen in
Greifswald on weekends,until she moved to the German city of Bochum one
year later to enroll in dental school.Around the same time,he began
speaking increasingly about religion, and his visits to Senguen became
less and less frequent. He began criticizing her for not being religious
enough and for dressing too provocatively. He grew a full beard and
started praying regularly. He refused to introduce her to his Hamburg
friends because,he told her,they were religious Muslims and her refusal
to become more observant embarrassed him. At some point in 1999, Jarrah
told Senguen that he was planning to wage a jihad because there was no
greater honor than to die for Allah.Although Jarrah’s transformation
generated numerous quarrels, their breakups invariably were followed by
reconciliation.79
Forming a Cell
In Hamburg, Jarrah had a succession of living accommodations, but he
apparently never resided with his future co-conspirators. It is not
clear how and when he became part of Atta’s circle. He became
particularly friendly with Binalshibh after meeting him at the Quds
mosque in Hamburg, which Jarrah 164 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
began attending regularly in late 1997.The worshippers at this mosque
featured an outspoken, flamboyant Islamist named Mohammed Haydar Zammar.
A well-known figure in the Muslim community (and to German and
U.S.intelligence agencies by the late 1990s),Zammar had fought in
Afghanistan and relished any opportunity to extol the virtues of violent
jihad. Indeed, a witness has reported hearing Zammar press Binalshibh to
fulfill his duty to wage jihad. Moreover, after 9/11, Zammar reportedly
took credit for influencing not just Binalshibh but the rest of the
Hamburg group. In 1998, Zammar encouraged them to participate in jihad
and even convinced them to go to Afghanistan.80
Owing to Zammar’s persuasion or some other source of inspiration,Atta,
Binalshibh,Shehhi,and Jarrah eventually prepared themselves to translate
their extremist beliefs into action. By late 1999, they were ready to
abandon their student lives in Germany in favor of violent jihad.This
final stage in their evolution toward embracing Islamist extremism did
not entirely escape the notice of the people around them.The foursome
became core members of a group of radical Muslims,often hosting sessions
at their Marienstrasse apartment that involved extremely anti-American
discussions. Meeting three to four times a week, the group became
something of a "sect" whose members, according to one participant in the
meetings, tended to deal only with each other.81 Atta’s rent checks for
the apartment provide evidence of the importance that the apartment
assumed as a center for the group, as he would write on them the
notation "Dar el Ansar," or "house of the followers."82
In addition to Atta,Binalshibh,Shehhi,and Jarrah,the group included
other extremists, some of whom also would attend al Qaeda training camps
and, in some instances, would help the 9/11 hijackers as they executed
the plot:
• Said Bahaji,son of a Moroccan immigrant,was the only German citizen in
the group.Educated in Morocco,Bahaji returned to Germany to study
electrical engineering at the Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg.
He spent five months in the German army before obtaining a medical
discharge, and lived with Atta and Binalshibh at 54 Marienstrasse for
eight months between November 1998 and July 1999. Described as an
insecure follower with no personality and with limited knowledge of
Islam,Bahaji nonetheless professed his readiness to engage in
violence.Atta and Binalshibh used Bahaji’s computer for Internet
research, as evidenced by documents and diskettes seized by German
authorities after 9/11.83
• Zakariya Essabar, a Moroccan citizen, moved to Germany in February
1997 and to Hamburg in 1998, where he studied medical technology. Soon
after moving to Hamburg, Essabar met Binalshibh and the others through a
Turkish mosque.Essabar turned extremist fairly suddenly, probably in
1999, and reportedly pressured one acquaintance with physical force to
become more religious,grow a beard,and
AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 165
compel his wife to convert to Islam.Essabar’s parents were said to have
made repeated but unsuccessful efforts to sway him from this lifestyle.
Shortly before the 9/11 attacks, he would travel to Afghanistan to
communicate the date for the attacks to the al Qaeda leadership.84 •
Mounir el Motassadeq,another Moroccan,came to Germany in 1993, moving to
Hamburg two years later to study electrical engineering at theTechnical
University.A witness has recalled Motassadeq saying that he would kill
his entire family if his religious beliefs demanded it.One of
Motassadeq’s roommates recalls him referring to Hitler as a "good man"
and organizing film sessions that included speeches by Bin Ladin.
Motassadeq would help conceal the Hamburg group’s trip to Afghanistan in
late 1999.85
• Abdelghani Mzoudi, also a Moroccan, arrived in Germany in the summer
of 1993, after completing university courses in physics and chemistry.
Mzoudi studied in Dortmund, Bochum, and Muenster before moving to
Hamburg in 1995. Mzoudi described himself as a weak Muslim when he was
home in Morocco,but much more devout when he was back in Hamburg. In
April 1996, Mzoudi and Motassadeq witnessed the execution of Atta’s
will.86
During the course of 1999,Atta and his group became ever more extreme
and secretive, speaking only in Arabic to conceal the content of their
conver-sations.87 When the four core members of the Hamburg cell left
Germany to journey to Afghanistan late that year, it seems unlikely that
they already knew about the planes operation;no evidence connects them
to al Qaeda before that time. Witnesses have attested, however, that
their pronouncements reflected ample predisposition toward taking some
action against the United States.88In short,they fit the bill for Bin
Ladin,Atef,and KSM.
Going to Afghanistan
The available evidence indicates that in 1999,Atta,Binalshibh,Shehhi,and
Jar=rah decided to fight in Chechnya against the Russians. According to
Binalhibh, a chance meeting on a train in Germany caused the group to
travel to Afghanistan instead.An individual named Khalid al Masri
approached Binalshibh and Shehhi (because they wereArabs with
beards,Binalshibh thinks) and struck up a conversation about jihad in
Chechnya.When they later called Masri and expressed interest in going to
Chechnya, he told them to contact Abu Musab in Duisburg, Germany. Abu
Musab turned out to be Mohamedou Ould Slahi, a significant al Qaeda
operative who, even then, was well known to U.S.and German
intelligence,though neither government apparently knew he was operating
in Germany in late 1999.When telephoned by Binalshibh and Shehhi, Slahi
reportedly invited these promising recruits to come see him in
Duisburg.89
Binalshibh, Shehhi, and Jarrah made the trip. When they arrived, Slahi
166 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
explained that it was difficult to get to Chechnya at that time because
many travelers were being detained in Georgia. He recommended they go to
Afghanistan instead, where they could train for jihad before traveling
onward to Chechnya. Slahi instructed them to obtain Pakistani visas and
then return to him for further directions on how to reach
Afghanistan.Although Atta did not attend the meeting,he joined in the
plan with the other three.After obtain=ing the necessary visas, they
received Slahi’s final instructions on how to travel to Karachi and then
Quetta,where they were to contact someone named Umar al Masri at the
Taliban office.90
Following Slahi’s advice,Atta and Jarrah left Hamburg during the last
week of November 1999,bound for Karachi.Shehhi left for Afghanistan
around the same time;Binalshibh,about two weeks later.Binalshibh
remembers that when he arrived at the Taliban office in Quetta, there
was no one named Umar al Masri.The name,apparently,was simply a code;a
group of Afghans from the office promptly escorted him to Kandahar.There
Binalshibh rejoined Atta and Jarrah, who said they already had pledged
loyalty to Bin Ladin and urged him to do the same.They also informed him
that Shehhi had pledged as well and had already left for the United Arab
Emirates to prepare for the mission.Binalshibh soon met privately with
Bin Ladin, accepted the al Qaeda leader’s invitation to work under
him,and added his own pledge to those of his Hamburg colleagues.By this
time,Binalshibh claims,he assumed he was volunteering for a martyrdom
operation.91
Atta, Jarrah, and Binalshibh then met with Atef, who told them they were
about to undertake a highly secret mission. As Binalshibh tells it, Atef
instructed the three to return to Germany and enroll in flight
training.Atta— whom Bin Ladin chose to lead the group—met with Bin Ladin
several times to receive additional instructions, including a
preliminary list of approved tar-gets: the World Trade Center, the
Pentagon, and the U.S. Capitol.92 The new recruits also learned that an
individual named Rabia al Makki (Nawaf al Hazmi) would be part of the
operation.93
In retrospect, the speed with which Atta, Shehhi, Jarrah, and Binalshibh
became core members of the 9/11 plot—with Atta designated its
operational leader—is remarkable.They had not yet met with KSM when all
this occurred. It is clear,then,that Bin Ladin and Atef were very much
in charge of the operation.That these candidates were selected so
quickly—before comprehensive testing in the training camps or in
operations—demonstrates that Bin Ladin and Atef probably already
understood the deficiencies of their initial team, Hazmi and Mihdhar.The
new recruits from Germany possessed an ideal com=bination of technical
skill and knowledge that the original 9/11 operatives,veteran fighters
though they were, lacked. Bin Ladin and Atef wasted no time in assigning
the Hamburg group to the most ambitious operation yet planned by al
Qaeda.
Bin Ladin and Atef also plainly judged that Atta was best suited to be
the AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 167
tactical commander of the operation.Such a quick and critical judgment
invites speculation about whether they had already taken Atta’s measure
at some earlier meeting.To be sure, some gaps do appear in the record of
Atta’s known whereabouts during the preceding years. One such gap is
February–March 1998,a period for which there is no evidence of his
presence in Germany and when he conceivably could have been in
Afghanistan.94 Yet to date, neither KSM, Binalshibh, nor any other al
Qaeda figure interrogated about the 9/11 plot has claimed that Atta or
any other member of the Hamburg group traveled to Afghanistan before the
trip in late 1999.
While the four core Hamburg cell members were in Afghanistan,their
associates back in Hamburg handled their affairs so that their trip
could be kept secret. Motassadeq appears to have done the most. He
terminated Shehhi’s apartment lease, telling the landlord that Shehhi
had returned to the UAE for family reasons, and used a power of attorney
to pay bills from Shehhi’s bank account.95Motassadeq also assisted
Jarrah,offering to look after Aysel Senguen in Jarrah’s absence.Said
Bahaji attended to similar routine matters for Atta and
Binalshibh,thereby helping them remain abroad without drawing attention
to their absence.96
Preparing for the Operation
In early 2000,Atta,Jarrah,and Binalshibh returned to Hamburg.Jarrah
arrived first, on January 31, 2000.97 According to Binalshibh, he and
Atta left Kandahar together and proceeded first to Karachi, where they
met KSM and were instructed by him on security and on living in the
United States.Shehhi apparently had already met with KSM before
returning to the UAE.Atta returned to Hamburg in late February, and
Binalshibh arrived shortly thereafter. Shehhi’s travels took him to the
UAE (where he acquired a new passport and a U.S. visa), Saudi Arabia,
Bahrain, and one or more other destinations. Shehhi also returned to
Germany, possibly sometime in March.98
After leaving Afghanistan, the hijackers made clear efforts to avoid
appearing radical. Once back in Hamburg, they distanced themselves from
conspicuous extremists like Zammar, whom they knew attracted unwanted
attention from the authorities.99They also changed their appearance and
behavior.Atta wore Western clothing, shaved his beard, and no longer
attended extremist mosques. Jarrah also no longer wore a full beard and,
according to Senguen, acted much more the way he had when she first met
him.And when Shehhi, while still in the UAE in January 2000,held a
belated wedding celebration (he actually had been married in 1999),a
friend of his was surprised to see that he had shaved off his beard and
was acting like his old self again.100
But Jarrah’s apparent efforts to appear less radical did not completely
conceal his transformation from his Lebanese family,which grew
increasingly concerned about his fanaticism. Soon after Jarrah returned
to Germany, his father asked Jarrah’s cousin—a close companion from
boyhood—to intercede.The 168 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
cousin’s ensuing effort to persuade Jarrah to depart from "the path he
was taking"proved unavailing.101Yet Jarrah clearly differed from the
other hijackers in that he maintained much closer contact with his
family and continued his intimate relationship with Senguen.These ties
may well have caused him to harbor some doubts about going through with
the plot,even as late as the sum=mer of 2001, as discussed in chapter 7.
After leaving Afghanistan,the four began researching flight schools and
aviation training.In early January 2000,Ali Abdul Aziz Ali—a nephew of
KSM living in the UAE who would become an important facilitator in the
plot— used Shehhi’s credit card to order a Boeing 747-400 flight
simulator program and a Boeing 767 flight deck video,together with
attendant literature;Ali had all these items shipped to his employer’s
address. Jarrah soon decided that the schools in Germany were not
acceptable and that he would have to learn to fly in the United States.
Binalshibh also researched flight schools in Europe, and in the
Netherlands he met a flight school director who recommended flight
schools in the United States because they were less expensive and
required shorter training periods.102
In March 2000,Atta emailed 31 different U.S.flight schools on behalf of
a small group of men from various Arab countries studying in Germany
who, while lacking prior training, were interested in learning to fly in
the United States. Atta requested information about the cost of the
training, potential financing, and accommodations.103
Before seeking visas to enter the United States, Atta, Shehhi, and
Jarrah obtained new passports,each claiming that his old passport had
been lost.Presumably they were concerned that the Pakistani visas in
their old passports would raise suspicions about possible travel to
Afghanistan.Shehhi obtained his visa on January 18,2000;Atta,on May
18;and Jarrah,on May 25.104 Binalshibh’s visa request was rejected,
however, as were his three subsequent appli-cations.105 Binalshibh
proved unable to obtain a visa, a victim of the generalized suspicion
that visa applicants fromYemen—especially young men applying in another
country (Binalshibh first applied in Berlin)—might join the ranks of
undocumented aliens seeking work in the United States. Before 9/11,
security concerns were not a major factor in visa issuance unless the
applicant already was on a terrorist watchlist,and none of these four
men was. Concerns that Binalshibh intended to immigrate to the United
States doomed his chances to participate firsthand in the 9/11 attacks.
Although Binalshibh had to remain behind, he would provide critical
assistance from abroad to his co-conspirators.
Once again, the need for travel documents dictated al Qaeda’s plans.
Travel
It should by now be apparent how significant travel was in the planning
under-taken by a terrorist organization as far-flung as al Qaeda.The
story of the plot includes references to dozens of international
trips.Operations required travel, AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND
169
as did basic communications and the movement of money.Where electronic
communications were regarded as insecure, al Qaeda relied even more
heavily on couriers.
KSM and Abu Zubaydah each played key roles in facilitating travel for al
Qaeda operatives. In addition, al Qaeda had an office of passports and
host country issues under its security committee. The office was located
at the Kandahar airport and was managed by Atef.The committee altered
papers, including passports, visas, and identification cards.106
Moreover, certain al Qaeda members were charged with organizing
pass-port collection schemes to keep the pipeline of fraudulent
documents flowing.To this end, al Qaeda required jihadists to turn in
their passports before going to the front lines in Afghanistan.If they
were killed,their passports were recycled for use.107 The operational
mission training course taught operatives how to forge documents.Certain
passport alteration methods,which included substituting photos and
erasing and adding travel cachets, were also taught. Manuals
demonstrating the technique for "cleaning"visas were reportedly
circulated among operatives.Mohamed Atta and Zakariya Essabar were
reported to have been trained in passport alteration.108
The purpose of all this training was twofold: to develop an
institutional capacity for document forgery and to enable operatives to
make necessary adjustments in the field. It was well-known, for example,
that if a Saudi traveled to Afghanistan via Pakistan, then on his return
to Saudi Arabia his pass-port, bearing a Pakistani stamp, would be
confiscated. So operatives either erased the Pakistani visas from their
passports or traveled through Iran, which did not stamp visas directly
into passports.109
5.4 A MONEY TRAIL?
Bin Ladin and his aides did not need a very large sum to finance their
planned attack on America.The 9/11 plotters eventually spent somewhere
between $400,000 and $500,000 to plan and conduct their attack.
Consistent with the importance of the project, al Qaeda funded the
plotters. KSM provided his operatives with nearly all the money they
needed to travel to the United States, train, and live. The plotters’
tradecraft was not especially sophisticated, but it was good enough.They
moved,stored,and spent their money in ordinary ways, easily defeating
the detection mechanisms in place at the time.110 The origin of the
funds remains unknown, although we have a general idea of how al Qaeda
financed itself during the period leading up to 9/11.
General Financing
As we explained in chapter 2, Bin Ladin did not fund al Qaeda through a
personal fortune and a network of businesses in Sudan. Instead, al Qaeda
relied primarily on a fund-raising network developed over time.The CIA
170 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
now estimates that it cost al Qaeda about $30 million per year to
sustain its activities before 9/11 and that this money was raised almost
entirely through donations.111
For many years, the United States thought Bin Ladin financed al Qaeda’s
expenses through a vast personal inheritance.Bin Ladin purportedly
inherited approximately $300 million when his father died,and was
rumored to have had access to these funds to wage jihad while in Sudan
and Afghanistan and to secure his leadership position in al Qaeda. In
early 2000, the U.S. government discovered a different reality: roughly
from 1970 through 1994, Bin Ladin received about $1 million per year—a
significant sum, to be sure, but not a $300 million fortune that could
be used to fund jihad.112 Then, as part of a Saudi government crackdown
early in the 1990s, the Bin Ladin family was forced to find a buyer for
Usama’s share of the family company in 1994.The Saudi government
subsequently froze the proceeds of the sale.This action had the effect
of divesting Bin Ladin of what otherwise might indeed have been a large
fortune.113
Nor were Bin Ladin’s assets in Sudan a source of money for al Qaeda.When
Bin Ladin lived in Sudan from 1991 to 1996,he owned a number of
businesses and other assets.These could not have provided significant
income, as most were small or not economically viable.When Bin Ladin
left in 1996,it appears that the Sudanese government expropriated all
his assets: he left Sudan with practically nothing.When Bin Ladin
arrived in Afghanistan,he relied on the Taliban until he was able to
reinvigorate his fund-raising efforts by drawing on ties to wealthy
Saudi individuals that he had established during the Afghan war in the
1980s.114
Al Qaeda appears to have relied on a core group of financial
facilitators who raised money from a variety of donors and other
fund-raisers, primarily in the Gulf countries and particularly in Saudi
Arabia.115 Some individual donors surely knew,and others did not,the
ultimate destination of their donations.Al Qaeda and its friends took
advantage of Islam’s strong calls for charitable giving, zakat.These
financial facilitators also appeared to rely heavily on certain imams at
mosques who were willing to divert zakat donations to al Qaeda’s
cause.116
Al Qaeda also collected money from employees of corrupt charities.117 It
took two approaches to using charities for fund-raising. One was to rely
on al Qaeda sympathizers in specific foreign branch offices of large,
international charities—particularly those with lax external oversight
and ineffective inter=nal controls, such as the Saudi-based al Haramain
Islamic Foundation.118 Smaller charities in various parts of the globe
were funded by these large Gulf charities and had employees who would
siphon the money to al Qaeda.119
In addition,entire charities,such as the al Wafa organization,may have
wit-tingly participated in funneling money to al Qaeda. In those cases,
al Qaeda operatives controlled the entire organization, including access
to bank AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 171
accounts.120 Charities were a source of money and also provided
significant cover,which enabled operatives to travel undetected under
the guise of work=ing for a humanitarian organization.
It does not appear that any government other than the Taliban
financially supported al Qaeda before 9/11, although some governments
may have contained al Qaeda sympathizers who turned a blind eye to al
Qaeda’s fund-raising activities.121 Saudi Arabia has long been
considered the primary source of al Qaeda funding, but we have found no
evidence that the Saudi government as an institution or senior Saudi
officials individually funded the organization. (This conclusion does
not exclude the likelihood that charities with significant Saudi
government sponsorship diverted funds to al Qaeda.)122
Still, al Qaeda found fertile fund-raising ground in Saudi Arabia, where
extreme religious views are common and charitable giving was both
essential to the culture and subject to very limited oversight.123 Al
Qaeda also sought money from wealthy donors in other Gulf states.
Al Qaeda frequently moved the money it raised by hawala,an informal and
ancient trust-based system for transferring funds.124In some ways,al
Qaeda had no choice after its move to Afghanistan in 1996:first,the
banking system there was antiquated and undependable; and second, formal
banking was risky due to the scrutiny that al Qaeda received after the
August 1998 East Africa embassy bombings, including UN resolutions
against it and the Taliban.125 Bin Ladin relied on the established
hawala networks operating in Pakistan, in Dubai, and throughout the
Middle East to transfer funds efficiently.Hawaladars associated with al
Qaeda may have used banks to move and store money, as did various al
Qaeda fund-raisers and operatives outside of Afghanistan, but there is
little evidence that Bin Ladin or core al Qaeda members used banks while
in Afghanistan.126
Before 9/11,al Qaeda spent funds as quickly as it received them.Actual
terrorist operations represented a relatively small part of al Qaeda’s
estimated $30 million annual operating budget.Al Qaeda funded salaries
for jihadists,training camps, airfields, vehicles, arms, and the
development of training manuals. Bin Ladin provided approximately
$10–$20 million per year to the Taliban in return for safe haven. Bin
Ladin also may have used money to create alliances with other terrorist
organizations, although it is unlikely that al Qaeda was funding an
overall jihad program.Rather,Bin Ladin selectively provided start-up
funds to new groups or money for specific terrorist operations.127
Al Qaeda has been alleged to have used a variety of illegitimate
means,particularly drug trafficking and conflict diamonds,to finance
itself.While the drug trade was a source of income for the Taliban,it
did not serve the same purpose for al Qaeda, and there is no reliable
evidence that Bin Ladin was involved in or made his money through drug
trafficking.128Similarly,we have seen no per-suasive evidence that al
Qaeda funded itself by trading in African conflict dia-monds.129 There
also have been claims that al Qaeda financed itself through 172 THE 9/11
COMMISSION REPORT
manipulation of the stock market based on its advance knowledge of the
9/11 attacks.Exhaustive investigations by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, FBI,and other agencies have uncovered no evidence that
anyone with advance knowledge of the attacks profited through securities
transactions.130
To date, the U.S. government has not been able to determine the origin
of the money used for the 9/11 attacks. Ultimately the question is of
little practical significance.Al Qaeda had many avenues of funding.If a
particular fund=ing source had dried up, al Qaeda could have easily
tapped a different source or diverted funds from another project to fund
an operation that cost $400,000–$500,000 over nearly two years.
The Funding of the 9/11 Plot
As noted above, the 9/11 plotters spent somewhere between $400,000 and
$500,000 to plan and conduct their attack.The available evidence
indicates that the 19 operatives were funded by al Qaeda,either through
wire transfers or cash provided by KSM,which they carried into the
United States or deposited in foreign accounts and accessed from this
country. Our investigation has uncovered no credible evidence that any
person in the United States gave the hijackers substantial financial
assistance. Similarly, we have seen no evidence that any foreign
government—or foreign government official—supplied any funding.131
We have found no evidence that the Hamburg cell members (Atta,Shehhi,
Jarrah, and Binalshibh) received funds from al Qaeda before late 1999.
It appears they supported themselves. KSM, Binalshibh, and another plot
facilitator,Mustafa al Hawsawi,each received money,in some cases perhaps
as much as $10,000, to perform their roles in the plot.132
After the Hamburg recruits joined the 9/11 conspiracy,al Qaeda began
giving them money.Our knowledge of the funding during this period,before
the operatives entered the United States,remains murky.According to
KSM,the Hamburg cell members each received $5,000 to pay for their
return to Germany from Afghanistan after they had been selected to join
the plot, and they received additional funds for travel from Germany to
the United States.Financial transactions of the plotters are discussed
in more detail in chapter 7.
Requirements for a Successful Attack
As some of the core operatives prepared to leave for the United States,
al Qaeda’s leaders could have reflected on what they needed to be able
to do in order to organize and conduct a complex international terrorist
operation to inflict catastrophic harm.We believe such a list of
requirements would have included
• leaders able to evaluate,approve,and supervise the planning and
direction of the operation;
• communications sufficient to enable planning and direction of the
operatives and those who would be helping them;
AL QAEDA AIMS ATTHE AMERICAN HOMELAND 173
• a personnel system that could recruit candidates, vet them,
indoctri=nate them, and give them necessary training;
• an intelligence effort to gather required information and form
assess=ments of enemy strengths and weaknesses;
• the ability to move people; and • the ability to raise and move the necessary money.
Credit: The 911 Commision Report |