RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 4.1
BEFORE THE BOMBINGS IN KENYA AND TANZANIA
Although the 1995 National Intelligence Estimate had warned of a new
type of terrorism, many officials continued to think of terrorists as
agents of states (Saudi Hezbollah acting for Iran against Khobar Towers)
or as domestic criminals (Timothy McVeigh in Oklahoma City).As we
pointed out in chapter 3, the White House is not a natural locus for
program management.Hence,government efforts to cope with terrorism were
essentially the work of individual agencies.
President Bill Clinton’s counterterrorism Presidential Decision
Directives in 1995 (no.39) and May 1998 (no.62) reiterated that
terrorism was a national security problem,not just a law enforcement
issue.They reinforced the authority of the National Security Council
(NSC) to coordinate domestic as well as foreign counterterrorism
efforts, through Richard Clarke and his interagency Counterterrorism
Security Group (CSG). Spotlighting new concerns about unconventional
attacks, these directives assigned tasks to lead agencies but did not
differentiate types of terrorist threats.Thus,while Clarke might
prodorpush agencies to act,what actually happened was usually decided at
the State Department,the Pentagon,the CIA,or the Justice Department.The
efforts of these agencies were sometimes energetic and sometimes
effective.Terrorist plots were disrupted and individual terrorists were
captured.But the United States did not, before 9/11, adopt as a clear
strategic objective the elimination of al Qaeda.Early Efforts against
Bin Ladin Until
1996,hardly anyone in the U.S.government understood that Usama Bin Ladin
was an inspirer and organizer of the new terrorism. In 1993, the CIA
noted that he had paid for the training of some Egyptian terrorists in
Sudan. The State Department detected his money in aid to theYemeni
terrorists who 108
RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 109set a bomb in an attempt to
kill U.S.troops in Aden in 1992.State Department sources even saw
suspicious links with Omar Abdel Rahman, the "Blind Sheikh"in the
NewYork area,commenting that Bin Ladin seemed "committed to financing
‘Jihads’ against ‘anti Islamic’ regimes worldwide." After the department
designated Sudan a state sponsor of terrorism in 1993, it put Bin Ladin
on its TIPOFF watchlist, a move that might have prevented his getting a
visa had he tried to enter the United States. As late as 1997, however,
even the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center continued to describe him as an
"extremist financier."1In 1996, the CIA set up a special unit of a dozen
officers to analyze intelligence on and plan operations against Bin
Ladin. David Cohen, the head of the CIA’s Directorate of Operations,
wanted to test the idea of having a "virtual station"—a station based at
headquarters but collecting and operating against a subject much as
stations in the field focus on a country.Taking his cue from National
Security Advisor Anthony Lake,who expressed special interest in
terrorist finance,Cohen formed his virtual station as a terrorist
financial links unit. He had trouble getting any Directorate of
Operations officer to run it;he finally recruited a former analyst who
was then running the Islamic Extremist Branch of the Counterterrorist
Center.This officer,who was especially knowledgeable about Afghanistan,
had noticed a recent stream of reports about Bin Ladin and something
called al Qaeda, and suggested to Cohen that the station focus on this
one individual. Cohen agreed.Thus was born the Bin Ladin unit.2In May
1996,Bin Ladin left Sudan for Afghanistan.A few months later,as the Bin
Ladin unit was gearing up, Jamal Ahmed al Fadl walked into a U.S.
embassy in Africa,established his bona fides as a former senior employee
of Bin Ladin,and provided a major breakthrough of intelligence on the
creation,character,direction,and intentions of al Qaeda.Corroborating
evidence came from another walk-in source at a different
U.S.embassy.More confirmation was sup-plied later that year by
intelligence and other sources, including material gathered by FBI
agents and Kenyan police from an al Qaeda cell in Nairobi.3 By
1997,officers in the Bin Ladin unit recognized that Bin Ladin was more
than just a financier.They learned that al Qaeda had a military
committee that was planning operations against U.S. interests worldwide
and was actively trying to obtain nuclear material. Analysts assigned to
the station looked at the information it had gathered and "found
connections everywhere," including links to the attacks on U.S. troops
in Aden and Somalia in 1992 and 1993 and to the Manila air plot in the
Philippines in 1994–1995.4The Bin Ladin station was already working on
plans for offensive operations against Bin Ladin.These plans were
directed at both physical assets and sources of finance. In the end,
plans to identify and attack Bin Ladin’s money sources did not go
forward.5In late 1995, when Bin Ladin was still in Sudan, the State
Department and the CIA learned that Sudanese officials were discussing
with the Saudi gov-110 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT ernment
the possibility of expelling Bin Ladin.U.S.Ambassador Timothy Carney
encouraged the Sudanese to pursue this course.The Saudis,however,did not
want Bin Ladin, giving as their reason their revocation of his
citizenship.6 Sudan’s
minister of defense, Fatih Erwa, has claimed that Sudan offered to hand
Bin Ladin over to the United States.The Commission has found no credible
evidence that this was so.Ambassador Carney had instructions only to
push the Sudanese to expel Bin Ladin.Ambassador Carney had no legal
basis to ask for more from the Sudanese since, at the time, there was no
indictment out-standing.7The chief of the Bin Ladin station, whom we
will call "Mike," saw Bin Ladin’s move to Afghanistan as a stroke of
luck.Though the CIA had virtually abandoned Afghanistan after the Soviet
withdrawal, case officers had reestablished old contacts while tracking
down Mir Amal Kansi, the Pakistani gun-man who had murdered two CIA
employees in January 1993.These contacts contributed to intelligence
about Bin Ladin’s local movements, business activities, and security and
living arrangements, and helped provide evidence that he was spending
large amounts of money to help the Taliban.The chief of the
Counterterrorist Center,whom we will call "Jeff,"told Director George
Tenet that the CIA’s intelligence assets were "near to providing
real-time information about Bin Ladin’s activities and travels in
Afghanistan." One of the contacts was a group associated with particular
tribes among Afghanistan’s ethnic Pashtun community.8By the fall of
1997, the Bin Ladin unit had roughed out a plan for these Afghan tribals
to capture Bin Ladin and hand him over for trial either in the United
States or in an Arab country. In early 1998, the cabinet-level
Principals Committee apparently gave the concept its blessing.9 On
their own separate track,getting information but not direction from the
CIA,the FBI’s NewYork Field Office and the U.S.Attorney for the Southern
District of New York were preparing to ask a grand jury to indict Bin
Ladin. The Counterterrorist Center knew that this was happening.10 The
eventual charge, conspiring to attack U.S. defense installations, was
finally issued from the grand jury in June 1998—as a sealed
indictment.The indictment was publicly disclosed in November of that
year.When Bin Ladin moved to Afghanistan in May 1996, he became a
subject of interest to the State Department’s South Asia bureau. At the
time, as one diplomat told us, South Asia was seen in the department and
the government generally as a low priority. In 1997, as Madeleine
Albright was beginning her tenure as secretary of state, an NSC policy
review concluded that the United States should pay more attention not
just to India but also to Pakistan and Afghanistan.11 With regard to
Afghanistan, another diplomat said, the United States at the time had
"no policy."12In the State Department, concerns about India-Pakistan
tensions often crowded out attention to Afghanistan or Bin Ladin. Aware
of instability and RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 111growing
Islamic extremism in Pakistan,State Department officials worried most
about an arms race and possible war between Pakistan and India.After May
1998, when both countries surprised the United States by testing nuclear
weapons, these dangers became daily first-order concerns of the State
Department.13 In
Afghanistan,the State Department tried to end the civil war that had
continued since the Soviets’ withdrawal.The South Asia bureau believed
it might have a carrot for Afghanistan’s warring factions in a project
by the Union Oil Company of California (UNOCAL) to build a pipeline
across the country. While there was probably never much chance of the
pipeline actually being built, the Afghan desk hoped that the prospect
of shared pipeline profits might lure faction leaders to a conference
table.U.S.diplomats did not favor the Taliban over the rival factions.
Despite growing concerns, U.S. diplomats were willing at the time, as
one official said, to "give the Taliban a chance."14Though Secretary
Albright made no secret of thinking the Taliban "despicable," the U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, led a delegation to
South Asia—including Afghanistan—in April 1998.No U.S.official of such
rank had been to Kabul in decades.Ambassador Richardson went primarily
to urge negotiations to end the civil war. In view of Bin Ladin’s recent
public call for all Muslims to kill Americans, Richardson asked the
Taliban to expel Bin Ladin.They answered that they did not know his
whereabouts. In any case, the Taliban said, Bin Ladin was not a threat
to the United States.15In sum, in late 1997 and the spring of 1998, the
lead U.S. agencies each pursued their own efforts against Bin Ladin.The
CIA’s Counterterrorist Center was developing a plan to capture and
remove him from Afghanistan. Parts of the Justice Department were moving
toward indicting Bin Ladin, making possible a criminal trial in a
NewYork court.Meanwhile,the State Department was focused more on
lessening Indo-Pakistani nuclear tensions, ending the Afghan civil war,
and ameliorating the Taliban’s human rights abuses than on driving out
Bin Ladin. Another key actor, Marine General Anthony Zinni, the
commander in chief of the U.S. Central Command, shared the State
Department’s view.16The CIA Develops a Capture Plan
Initially, the DCI’s Counterterrorist Center and its Bin Ladin unit
considered a plan to ambush Bin Ladin when he traveled between Kandahar,
the Taliban capital where he sometimes stayed the night, and his primary
residence at the time,Tarnak Farms.After the Afghan tribals reported
that they had tried such an ambush and failed,the Center gave up on
it,despite suspicions that the tribals’ story might be
fiction.Thereafter, the capture plan focused on a nighttime raid on
Tarnak Farms.17A compound of about 80 concrete or mud-brick buildings
surrounded by a 10-foot wall,Tarnak Farms was located in an isolated
desert area on the out-skirts of the Kandahar airport. CIA officers were
able to map the entire site, identifying the houses that belonged to Bin
Ladin’s wives and the one where 112 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTBin Ladin
himself was most likely to sleep.Working with the tribals,they drew up
plans for the raid.They ran two complete rehearsals in the United States
during the fall of 1997.18 By
early 1998, planners at the Counterterrorist Center were ready to come
back to the White House to seek formal approval. Tenet apparently walked
National Security Advisor Sandy Berger through the basic plan on
February 13. One group of tribals would subdue the guards, enter Tarnak
Farms stealthily, grab Bin Ladin, take him to a desert site outside
Kandahar, and turn him over to a second group.This second group of
tribals would take him to a desert landing zone already tested in the
1997 Kansi capture. From there, a CIA plane would take him to New York,
an Arab capital, or wherever he was to be arraigned. Briefing papers
prepared by the Counterterrorist Center acknowledged that hitches might
develop. People might be killed, and Bin Ladin’s sup-porters might
retaliate,perhaps taking U.S.citizens in Kandahar hostage.But the
briefing papers also noted that there was risk in not acting."Sooner or
later," they said,"Bin Ladin will attack U.S.interests,perhaps using WMD
[weapons of mass destruction]."19Clarke’s Counterterrorism Security
Group reviewed the capture plan for Berger. Noting that the plan was in
a "very early stage of development," the NSC staff then told the CIA
planners to go ahead and, among other things, start drafting any legal
documents that might be required to authorize the covert action.The CSG
apparently stressed that the raid should target Bin Ladin himself, not
the whole compound.20The CIA planners conducted their third complete
rehearsal in March, and they again briefed the CSG. Clarke wrote Berger
on March 7 that he saw the operation as "somewhat embryonic"and the CIA
as "months away from doing anything."21 "Mike"
thought the capture plan was "the perfect operation." It required
minimum infrastructure.The plan had now been modified so that the
tribals would keep Bin Ladin in a hiding place for up to a month before
turning him over to the United States—thereby increasing the chances of
keeping the U.S. hand out of sight."Mike" trusted the information from
the Afghan network; it had been corroborated by other means,he told
us.The lead CIA officer in the field, Gary Schroen, also had confidence
in the tribals. In a May 6 cable to CIA headquarters, he pronounced
their planning "almost as professional and detailed . . . as would be
done by any U.S. military special operations element." He and the other
officers who had worked through the plan with the tribals judged it
"about as good as it can be." (By that, Schroen explained, he meant that
the chance of capturing or killing Bin Ladin was about 40 percent.)
Although the tribals thought they could pull off the raid, if the
operation were approved by headquarters and the policymakers, Schroen
wrote there was going to be a point when "we step back and keep our
fingers crossed that the [tribals] prove as good (and as lucky) as they
think they will be."22 RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS
113Military officers reviewed the capture plan and, according to "Mike,"
"found no showstoppers."The commander of Delta Force felt
"uncomfortable" with having the tribals hold Bin Ladin captive for so
long,and the commander of Joint Special Operations Forces, Lieutenant
General Michael Canavan, was worried about the safety of the tribals
inside Tarnak Farms. General Canavan said he had actually thought the
operation too complicated for the CIA—"out of their league"—and an
effort to get results "on the cheap." But a senior Joint Staff officer
described the plan as "generally, not too much different than we might
have come up with ourselves." No one in the Pentagon, so far as we know,
advised the CIA or the White House not to proceed.23In Washington,Berger
expressed doubt about the dependability of the tribals. In his meeting
with Tenet, Berger focused most, however, on the question of what was to
be done with Bin Ladin if he were actually captured. He worried that the
hard evidence against Bin Ladin was still skimpy and that there was a
danger of snatching him and bringing him to the United States only to
see him acquitted.24 On May
18, CIA’s managers reviewed a draft Memorandum of Notification (MON),a
legal document authorizing the capture operation.A 1986 presidential
finding had authorized worldwide covert action against terrorism and
probably provided adequate authority.But mindful of the old "rogue
elephant" charge, senior CIA managers may have wanted something on paper
to show that they were not acting on their own.Discussion of this
memorandum brought to the surface an unease about paramilitary covert
action that had become ingrained,at least among some CIA senior
managers. James Pavitt, the assistant head of the Directorate of
Operations,expressed concern that people might get killed;it appears he
thought the operation had at least a slight flavor of a plan for an
assassination. Moreover, he calculated that it would cost several
million dollars.He was not prepared to take that money "out of hide,"
and he did not want to go to all the necessary congressional committees
to get special money.Despite Pavitt’s misgivings,the CIA leadership
cleared the draft memorandum and sent it on to the National Security
Council.25Counterterrorist Center officers briefed Attorney General
Janet Reno and FBI Director Louis Freeh, telling them that the operation
had about a 30 per-cent chance of success.The Center’s
chief,"Jeff,"joined John O’Neill,the head of the FBI’s NewYork Field
Office,in briefing Mary JoWhite,the U.S.Attorney for the Southern
District of New York,and her staff.Though "Jeff"also used the 30 percent
success figure, he warned that someone would surely be killed in the
operation.White’s impression from the NewYork briefing was that the
chances of capturing Bin Ladin alive were nil.26From May 20 to 24, the
CIA ran a final, graded rehearsal of the operation, spread over three
time zones, even bringing in personnel from the region.The FBI also
participated. The rehearsal went well. The Counterterrorist Center 114
THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT planned
to brief cabinet-level principals and their deputies the following week,
giving June 23 as the date for the raid, with Bin Ladin to be brought
out of Afghanistan no later than July 23.27 On May
20, Director Tenet discussed the high risk of the operation with Berger
and his deputies, warning that people might be killed, including Bin
Ladin. Success was to be defined as the exfiltration of Bin Ladin out of
Afghanistan.28 A meeting of principals was scheduled for May 29 to
decide whether the operation should go ahead. The
principals did not meet. On May 29,"Jeff" informed "Mike" that he had
just met with Tenet,Pavitt,and the chief of the Directorate’s Near
Eastern Division.The decision was made not to go ahead with the
operation."Mike" cabled the field that he had been directed to "stand
down on the operation for the time being." He had been told, he wrote,
that cabinet-level officials thought the risk of civilian
casualties—"collateral damage"—was too high.They were concerned about
the tribals’ safety, and had worried that "the purpose and nature of the
operation would be subject to unavoidable misinterpretation and
misrepresentation—and probably recriminations—in the event that Bin
Ladin, despite our best intentions and efforts, did not
survive."29Impressions vary as to who actually decided not to proceed
with the operation. Clarke told us that the CSG saw the plan as flawed.
He was said to have described it to a colleague on the NSC staff as
"half-assed" and predicted that the principals would not approve it.
"Jeff " thought the decision had been made at the cabinet level. Pavitt
thought that it was Berger’s doing, though perhaps on Tenet’s
advice.Tenet told us that given the recommendation of his chief
operations officers, he alone had decided to "turn off" the operation.He
had simply informed Berger,who had not pushed back.Berger’s recollection
was similar. He said the plan was never presented to the White House for
a decision.30The CIA’s senior management clearly did not think the plan
would work. Tenet’s deputy director of operations wrote to Berger a few
weeks later that the CIA assessed the tribals’ ability to capture Bin
Ladin and deliver him to U.S. officials as low.But working-level CIA
officers were disappointed.Before it was canceled, Schroen described it
as the "best plan we are going to come up with to capture [Bin Ladin]
while he is in Afghanistan and bring him to justice."31 No capture plan
before 9/11 ever again attained the same level of detail and
preparation.The tribals’ reported readiness to act diminished.And Bin
Ladin’s security precautions and defenses became more elaborate and
formidable.At this time, 9/11 was more than three years away. It was the
duty of Tenet and the CIA leadership to balance the risks of inaction
against jeopardizing the lives of their operatives and agents.And they
had reason to worry about failure: millions of dollars down the drain; a
shoot-out that could be seen as an assassination;and,if there were
repercussions in Pakistan,perhaps a coup.The decisions of the U.S.
government in May 1998 were made, as Berger has put RESPONSES TO AL
QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 115it, from the vantage point of the driver
looking through a muddy windshield moving forward, not through a clean
rearview mirror.32 Looking
for Other Options The
Counterterrorist Center continued to track Bin Ladin and to contemplate
covert action.The most hopeful possibility seemed now to lie in
diplomacy— but not diplomacy managed by the Department of State, which
focused primarily on India-Pakistan nuclear tensions during the summer
of 1998.The CIA learned in the spring of 1998 that the Saudi government
had quietly disrupted Bin Ladin cells in its country that were planning
to attack U.S. forces with shoulder-fired missiles.They had arrested
scores of individuals, with no publicity.When thanking the
Saudis,Director Tenet took advantage of the opening to ask them to help
against Bin Ladin. The response was encouraging enough that President
Clinton made Tenet his informal personal representative to work with the
Saudis on terrorism, and Tenet visited Riyadh in May and again in early
June.33Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, who had taken charge from the ailing
King Fahd, promised Tenet an all-out secret effort to persuade the
Taliban to expel Bin Ladin so that he could be sent to the United States
or to another country for trial.The Kingdom’s emissary would be its
intelligence chief, Prince Turki bin Faisal.Vice President Al Gore later
added his thanks to those of Tenet,both making clear that they spoke
with President Clinton’s blessing.Tenet reported that it was imperative
to get an indictment against Bin Ladin.The New York grand jury issued
its sealed indictment a few days later, on June 10.Tenet also
recommended that no action be taken on other U.S.options,such as the
covert action plan.34Prince Turki followed up in meetings during the
summer with Mullah Omar and other Taliban leaders. Apparently employing
a mixture of possible incentives and threats,Turki received a commitment
that Bin Ladin would be expelled, but Mullah Omar did not make good on
this promise.35 On
August 5, Clarke chaired a CSG meeting on Bin Ladin. In the discussion
of what might be done,the note taker wrote,"there was a dearth of bright
ideas around the table,despite a consensus that the [government] ought
to pursue every avenue it can to address the problem."36 4.2
CRISIS:AUGUST 1998 On
August 7, 1998, National Security Advisor Berger woke President Clinton
with a phone call at 5:35 A.M. to tell him of the almost simultaneous
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es
Salaam,Tanzania. Suspicion quickly focused on Bin Ladin.Unusually good
intelligence,chiefly from 116 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT the
yearlong monitoring of al Qaeda’s cell in Nairobi,soon firmly fixed
responsibility on him and his associates.37Debate about what to do
settled very soon on one option:Tomahawk cruise missiles. Months
earlier, after cancellation of the covert capture operation, Clarke had
prodded the Pentagon to explore possibilities for military action. On
June 2, General Hugh Shelton, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
had directed General Zinni at Central Command to develop a plan, which
he had submitted during the first week of July. Zinni’s planners surely
considered the two previous times the United States had used force to
respond to terror-ism, the 1986 strike on Libya and the 1993 strike
against Iraq.They proposed firing Tomahawks against eight terrorist
camps in Afghanistan, including Bin Ladin’s compound at Tarnak Farms.38
After the embassy attacks, the Pentagon offered this plan to the White
House.The day after the embassy bombings,Tenet brought to a principals
meeting intelligence that terrorist leaders were expected to gather at a
camp near Khowst,Afghanistan,to plan future attacks.According to
Berger,Tenet said that several hundred would attend,including Bin
Ladin.The CIA described the area as effectively a military cantonment,
away from civilian population centers and overwhelmingly populated by
jihadists. Clarke remembered sitting next to Tenet in a White House
meeting,asking Tenet "You thinking what I’m thinking?" and his nodding
"yes."39 The principals quickly reached a consensus on attacking the
gathering.The strike’s purpose was to kill Bin Ladin and his chief
lieutenants.40Berger put in place a tightly compartmented process
designed to keep all planning secret. On August 11, General Zinni
received orders to prepare detailed plans for strikes against the sites
in Afghanistan.The Pentagon briefed President Clinton about these plans
on August 12 and 14.Though the principals hoped that the missiles would
hit Bin Ladin, NSC staff recommended the strike whether or not there was
firm evidence that the commanders were at the facilities.41
Considerable debate went to the question of whether to strike targets
out-side of Afghanistan, including two facilities in Sudan. One was a
tannery believed to belong to Bin Ladin.The other was al Shifa, a
Khartoum pharmaceutical plant, which intelligence reports said was
manufacturing a precursor ingredient for nerve gas with Bin Ladin’s
financial support.The argument for hitting the tannery was that it could
hurt Bin Ladin financially.The argument for hitting al Shifa was that it
would lessen the chance of Bin Ladin’s having nerve gas for a later
attack.42Ever since March 1995, American officials had had in the backs
of their minds Aum Shinrikyo’s release of sarin nerve gas in the Tokyo
subway. President Clinton himself had expressed great concern about
chemical and biological terrorism in the United States. Bin Ladin had
reportedly been heard to speak of wanting a "Hiroshima"and at least
10,000 casualties.The CIA reported RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL
ASSAULTS 117that a soil sample from the vicinity of the al Shifa plant
had tested positive for EMPTA,a precursor chemical forVX,a nerve gas
whose lone use was for mass killing.Two days before the embassy
bombings, Clarke’s staff wrote that Bin Ladin "has invested in and
almost certainly has access toVX produced at a plant in Sudan."43 Senior
State Department officials believed that they had received a similar
verdict independently, though they and Clarke’s staff were probably
relying on the same report. Mary McCarthy, the NSC senior director
responsible for intelligence programs,initially cautioned Berger that
the "bottom line" was that "we will need much better intelligence on
this facility before we seriously consider any options." She added that
the link between Bin Ladin and al Shifa was "rather uncertain at this
point." Berger has told us that he thought about what might happen if
the decision went against hitting al Shifa,and nerve gas was used in a
New York subway two weeks later.44By the early hours of the morning of
August 20, President Clinton and all his principal advisers had agreed
to strike Bin Ladin camps in Afghanistan near Khowst,as well as hitting
al Shifa.The President took the Sudanese tannery off the target list
because he saw little point in killing uninvolved people without doing
significant harm to Bin Ladin. The principal with the most qualms
regarding al Shifa was Attorney General Reno. She expressed concern
about attacking two Muslim countries at the same time. Looking back, she
said that she felt the "premise kept shifting."45 Later
on August 20, Navy vessels in the Arabian Sea fired their cruise
missiles.Though most of them hit their intended targets, neither Bin
Ladin nor any other terrorist leader was killed.Berger told us that an
after-action review by Director Tenet concluded that the strikes had
killed 20–30 people in the camps but probably missed Bin Ladin by a few
hours.Since the missiles headed for Afghanistan had had to cross
Pakistan, the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs was sent to meet with
Pakistan’s army chief of staff to assure him the missiles were not
coming from India. Officials in Washington speculated that one or
another Pakistani official might have sent a warning to the Taliban or
Bin Ladin.46The air strikes marked the climax of an intense 48-hour
period in which Berger notified congressional leaders, the principals
called their foreign counterparts,and President Clinton flew back from
his vacation on Martha’s Vine-yard to address the nation from the Oval
Office. The President spoke to the congressional leadership from Air
Force One,and he called British Prime Minister Tony Blair,Pakistani
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif,and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak from
the White House.47 House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lott initially supported the President.The next month,
Gingrich’s office dismissed the cruise missile attacks as
"pinpricks."48At the time,President Clinton was embroiled in the
Lewinsky scandal,which continued to consume public attention for the
rest of that year and the first months of 1999. As it happened, a
popular 1997 movie, Wag the Dog, features a 118 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORT
president who fakes a war to distract public attention from a domestic
scandal. Some Republicans in Congress raised questions about the timing
of the strikes. Berger was particularly rankled by an editorial in the
Economist that said that only the future would tell whether the U.S.
missile strikes had "created 10,000 new fanatics where there would have
been none."49 Much
public commentary turned immediately to scalding criticism that the
action was too aggressive. The Sudanese denied that al Shifa produced
nerve gas, and they allowed journalists to visit what was left of a
seemingly harmless facility.President Clinton,Vice President
Gore,Berger,Tenet,and Clarke insisted to us that their judgment was
right, pointing to the soil sample evidence.No independent evidence has
emerged to corroborate the CIA’s assessment.50Everyone involved in the
decision had, of course, been aware of President Clinton’s problems. He
told them to ignore them. Berger recalled the President saying to him
"that they were going to get crap either way,so they should do the right
thing."51 All his aides testified to us that they based their advice
solely on national security considerations.We have found no reason to
question their statements.The failure of the strikes, the "wag the dog"
slur, the intense partisanship of the period,and the nature of the al
Shifa evidence likely had a cumulative effect on future decisions about
the use of force against Bin Ladin. Berger told us that he did not feel
any sense of constraint.52 The
period after the August 1998 embassy bombings was critical in shaping
U.S. policy toward Bin Ladin.Although more Americans had been killed in
the 1996 KhobarTowers attack,and many more in Beirut in 1983,the
over-all loss of life rivaled the worst attacks in memory.More
ominous,perhaps,was the demonstration of an operational capability to
coordinate two nearly simultaneous attacks on U.S. embassies in
different countries. Despite
the availability of information that al Qaeda was a global network, in
1998 policymakers knew little about the organization.The reams of new
information that the CIA’s Bin Ladin unit had been developing since 1996
had not been pulled together and synthesized for the rest of the
government. Indeed, analysts in the unit felt that they were viewed as
alarmists even within the CIA. A National Intelligence Estimate on
terrorism in 1997 had only briefly mentioned Bin Ladin, and no
subsequent national estimate would authoritatively evaluate the
terrorism danger until after 9/11. Policymakers knew there was a
dangerous individual,Usama Bin Ladin,whom they had been trying to
capture and bring to trial. Documents at the time referred to Bin Ladin
"and his associates"or Bin Ladin and his "network."They did not
emphasize the existence of a structured worldwide organization gearing
up to train thousands of potential terrorists.53In the critical days and
weeks after the August 1998 attacks, senior policy-makers in the Clinton
administration had to reevaluate the threat posed by Bin RESPONSES TO AL
QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 119Ladin.Was this just a new and especially
venomous version of the ordinary terrorist threat America had lived with
for decades, or was it radically new, posing a danger beyond any yet
experienced? Even
after the embassy attacks,Bin Ladin had been responsible for the deaths
of fewer than 50 Americans, most of them overseas.An NSC staffer working
for Richard Clarke told us the threat was seen as one that could cause
hundreds of casualties, not thousands.54 Even officials who acknowledge
a vital threat intellectually may not be ready to act on such beliefs at
great cost or at high risk.
Therefore,the government experts who believed that Bin Ladin and his
net-work posed such a novel danger needed a way to win broad support for
their views, or at least spotlight the areas of dispute.The Presidential
Daily Brief and the similar, more widely circulated daily reports for
high officials—consisting mainly of brief reports of intelligence "news"
without much analysis or context—did not provide such a vehicle. The
national intelligence estimate has often played this role, and is
sometimes controversial for this very reason. It played no role in
judging the threat posed by al Qaeda, either in 1998 or later.In the
late summer and fall of 1998, the U.S. government also was worrying
about the deployment of military power in two other ongoing
conflicts.After years of war in the Balkans, the United States had
finally committed itself to significant military intervention in
1995–1996.Already maintaining a NATO-led peacekeeping force in Bosnia,
U.S. officials were beginning to consider major combat operations
against Serbia to protect Muslim civilians in Kosovo from ethnic
cleansing.Air strikes were threatened in October 1998;a full-scale NATO
bombing campaign against Serbia was launched in March 1999.55In
addition, the Clinton administration was facing the possibility of major
combat operations against Iraq. Since 1996, the UN inspections regime
had been increasingly obstructed by Saddam Hussein.The United States was
threatening to attack unless unfettered inspections could resume. The
Clinton administration eventually launched a large-scale set of air
strikes against Iraq, Operation Desert Fox, in December 1998. These
military commitments became the context in which the Clinton
administration had to consider opening another front of military
engagement against a new terrorist threat based in Afghanistan. A
Follow-On Campaign? Clarke
hoped the August 1998 missile strikes would mark the beginning of a
sustained campaign against Bin Ladin. Clarke was, as he later admitted,
"obsessed"with Bin Ladin,and the embassy bombings gave him new scope for
pursuing his obsession.Terrorism had moved high up among the President’s
concerns,and Clarke’s position had elevated accordingly.The CSG,unlike
most standing interagency committees, did not have to report through the
Deputies Committee. Although such a reporting relationship had been
prescribed in 120 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTthe May 1998 presidential
directive (after expressions of concern by Attorney General Reno, among
others), that directive contained an exception that permitted the CSG to
report directly to the principals if Berger so elected. In practice, the
CSG often reported not even to the full Principals Commit-tee but
instead to the so-called Small Group formed by Berger, consisting only
of those principals cleared to know about the most sensitive issues
connected with counterterrorism activities concerning Bin Ladin or the
Khobar Towers investigation.56 For
this inner cabinet, Clarke drew up what he called "Political-Military
Plan Delenda."The Latin delenda, meaning that something "must be
destroyed," evoked the famous Roman vow to destroy its rival,
Carthage.The overall goal of Clarke’s paper was to "immediately
eliminate any significant threat to Americans"from the "Bin Ladin
network."57The paper called for diplomacy to deny Bin Ladin sanctuary;
covert action to disrupt terrorist activities, but above all to capture
Bin Ladin and his deputies and bring them to trial; efforts to dry up
Bin Ladin’s money supply; and preparation for follow-on military
action.The status of the document was and remained uncertain. It was
never formally adopted by the principals, and participants in the Small
Group now have little or no recollection of it. It did, however, guide
Clarke’s efforts.The military component of Clarke’s plan was its most
fully articulated element. He envisioned an ongoing campaign of strikes
against Bin Ladin’s bases in Afghanistan or elsewhere,whenever target
information was ripe.Acknowledging that individual targets might not
have much value,he cautioned Berger not to expect ever again to have an
assembly of terrorist leaders in his sights. But he argued that rolling
attacks might persuade the Taliban to hand over Bin Ladin and, in any
case, would show that the action in August was not a "oneoff"event.It
would show that the United States was committed to a relentless effort
to take down Bin Ladin’s network.58Members of the Small Group found
themselves unpersuaded of the merits of rolling attacks. Defense
Secretary William Cohen told us Bin Ladin’s training camps were
primitive, built with "rope ladders"; General Shelton called them
"jungle gym" camps. Neither thought them worthwhile targets for very
expensive missiles. President Clinton and Berger also worried about the
Economist’s point—that attacks that missed Bin Ladin could enhance his
stature and win him new recruits. After the United States launched air
attacks against Iraq at the end of 1998 and against Serbia in 1999, in
each case provoking world-wide criticism, Deputy National Security
Advisor James Steinberg added the argument that attacks in Afghanistan
offered "little benefit, lots of blowback against [a] bomb-happy
U.S."59During the last week of August 1998, officials began considering
possible follow-on strikes. According to Clarke, President Clinton was
inclined to launch further strikes sooner rather than later. On August
27, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Walter Slocombe advised
Secretary Cohen that the avail-RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS
121able targets were not promising. The experience of the previous week,
he wrote, "has only confirmed the importance of defining a clearly
articulated rationale for military action"that was effective as well as
justified.But Slocombe worried that simply striking some of these
available targets did not add up to an effective strategy.60 Defense
officials at a lower level, in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict, tried to meet Slocombe’s
objections.They developed a plan that, unlike Clarke’s, called not for
particular strikes but instead for a broad change in national strategy
and in the institutional approach of the Department of Defense, implying
a possible need for large-scale operations across the whole spectrum of
U.S. military capabilities. It urged the department to become a lead
agency in driving a national counterterrorism strategy forward, to
"champion a national effort to take up the gauntlet that international
terrorists have thrown at our feet." The authors expressed concern that
"we have not fundamentally altered our philosophy or our approach" even
though the terrorist threat had grown.They outlined an eight-part
strategy "to be more proactive and aggressive." The future, they warned,
might bring "horrific attacks," in which case "we will have no choice
nor,unfortunately,will we have a plan."The assistant secretary,Allen
Holmes, took the paper to Slocombe’s chief deputy, Jan Lodal, but it
went no further. Its lead author recalls being told by Holmes that Lodal
thought it was too aggressive. Holmes cannot recall what was said, and
Lodal cannot remember the episode or the paper at all.614.3 DIPLOMACY After
the August missile strikes,diplomatic options to press the Taliban
seemed no more promising than military options.The United States had
issued a formal warning to the Taliban,and also to Sudan,that they would
be held directly responsible for any attacks on Americans, wherever they
occurred, carried out by the Bin Ladin network as long as they continued
to provide sanctuary to it.62 For a
brief moment, it had seemed as if the August strikes might have shocked
the Taliban into thinking of giving up Bin Ladin. On August 22, the
reclusive Mullah Omar told a working-level State Department official
that the strikes were counterproductive but added that he would be open
to a dialogue with the United States on Bin Ladin’s presence in
Afghanistan.63 Meeting in Islamabad with William Milam, the U.S.
ambassador to Pakistan,Taliban dele-gates said it was against their
culture to expel someone seeking sanctuary but asked what would happen
to Bin Ladin should he be sent to Saudi Arabia.64Yet in September 1998,
when the Saudi emissary, Prince Turki, asked Mullah Omar whether he
would keep his earlier promise to expel Bin Ladin, the 122 THE 9/11
COMMISSION REPORT Taliban
leader said no. Both sides shouted at each other, with Mullah Omar
denouncing the Saudi government.Riyadh then suspended its diplomatic
relations with the Taliban regime. (Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and the
United Arab Emirates were the only countries that recognized the Taliban
as the legitimate government of Afghanistan.) Crown Prince Abdullah told
President Clinton and Vice President Gore about this when he visited
Washington in late September. His account confirmed reports that the
U.S. government had received independently.65 Other
efforts with the Saudi government centered on improving intelligence
sharing and permitting U.S.agents to interrogate prisoners in Saudi
custody.The history of such cooperation in 1997 and 1998 had been
strained.66 Several officials told us,in particular,that the United
States could not get direct access to an important al Qaeda financial
official, Madani al Tayyib, who had been detained by the Saudi
government in 1997.67Though U.S.officials repeatedly raised the issue,
the Saudis provided limited information. In his September 1998 meeting
with Crown Prince Abdullah,Vice President Gore, while thanking the Saudi
government for their responsiveness, renewed the request for direct
U.S.access to Tayyib.68The United States never obtained this access. An NSC
staff–led working group on terrorist finances asked the CIA in November
1998 to push again for access to Tayyib and to see "if it is possible to
elaborate further on the ties between Usama bin Ladin and prominent
individuals in Saudi Arabia,including especially the Bin Ladin
family."69 One result was two NSC-led interagency trips to Persian Gulf
states in 1999 and 2000. During these trips the NSC,Treasury, and
intelligence representatives spoke with Saudi officials, and later
interviewed members of the Bin Ladin family, about Usama’s inheritance.
The Saudis and the Bin Ladin family eventually helped in this particular
effort and U.S. officials ultimately learned that Bin Ladin was not
financing al Qaeda out of a personal inheritance.70 But Clarke was
frustrated about how little the Agency knew, complaining to Berger that
four years after "we first asked CIA to track down [Bin Ladin]’s
finances" and two years after the creation of the CIA’s Bin Ladin
unit,the Agency said it could only guess at how much aid Bin Ladin gave
to terrorist groups, what were the main sources of his budget, or how he
moved his money.71The other diplomatic route to get at Bin Ladin in
Afghanistan ran through Islamabad.In the summer before the embassy
bombings,the State Department had been heavily focused on rising
tensions between India and Pakistan and did not aggressively challenge
Pakistan on Afghanistan and Bin Ladin.But State Department
counterterrorism officials wanted a stronger position; the department’s
acting counterterrorism coordinator advised Secretary Albright to
designate Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism, noting that despite
high-level Pakistani assurances, the country’s military intelligence
service continued "activities in support of international terrorism"by
supporting attacks on civilian targets in Kashmir.This recommendation
was opposed by the State Department’s South Asia bureau, which was
concerned that it would damage already RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL
ASSAULTS 123sensitive relations with Pakistan in the wake of the May
1998 nuclear tests by both Pakistan and India. Secretary Albright
rejected the recommendation on August 5,1998,just two days before the
embassy bombings.72 She told us that, in general,putting the Pakistanis
on the terrorist list would eliminate any influence the United States
had over them.73 In October, an NSC counterterror-ism official noted
that Pakistan’s pro-Taliban military intelligence service had been
training Kashmiri jihadists in one of the camps hit by U.S. missiles,
leading to the death of Pakistanis.74After flying to Nairobi and
bringing home the coffins of the American dead, Secretary Albright
increased the department’s focus on counterterrorism. According to
Ambassador Milam, the bombings were a "wake-up call," and he soon found
himself spending 45 to 50 percent of his time working the Taliban–Bin
Ladin portfolio.75 But Pakistan’s military intelligence service, known
as the ISID (Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate),was the Taliban’s
primary patron, which made progress difficult.Additional pressure on the
Pakistanis—beyond demands to press theTaliban on Bin Ladin—seemed
unattractive to most officials of the State Department. Congressional
sanctions punishing Pakistan for possessing nuclear arms pre-vented the
administration from offering incentives to Islamabad.76 In the words of
Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott,Washington’s Pakistan policy
was "stick-heavy."Talbott felt that the only remaining sticks were
additional sanctions that would have bankrupted the Pakistanis, a
dangerous move that could have brought "total chaos"to a nuclear-armed
country with a significant number of Islamic radicals.77The Saudi
government,which had a long and close relationship with Pakistan and
provided it oil on generous terms, was already pressing Sharif with
regard to the Taliban and Bin Ladin.A senior State Department official
concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah put "a tremendous amount of
heat" on the Pakistani prime minister during the prince’s October 1998
visit to Pakistan.78The State Department urged President Clinton to
engage the Pakistanis. Accepting this advice, President Clinton invited
Sharif to Washington, where they talked mostly about India but also
discussed Bin Ladin.After Sharif went home, the President called him and
raised the Bin Ladin subject again.This effort elicited from Sharif a
promise to talk with the Taliban.79 Mullah
Omar’s position showed no sign of softening. One intelligence report
passed to Berger by the NSC staff quoted Bin Ladin as saying that Mullah
Omar had given him a completely free hand to act in any country, though
asking that he not claim responsibility for attacks in Pakistan or Saudi
Arabia. Bin Ladin was described as grabbing his beard and saying
emotionally, "By Allah, by God, the Americans will still be amazed.The
so-called United States will suffer the same fate as the Russians.Their
state will collapse, too."80Debate in the State Department intensified
after December 1998, when Michael Sheehan became counterterrorism
coordinator. A onetime special 124 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT forces
officer, he had worked with Albright when she was ambassador to the
United Nations and had served on the NSC staff with Clarke. He shared
Clarke’s obsession with terrorism,and had little hesitation about
locking horns with the regional bureaus.Through every available channel,
he repeated the earlier warning to the Taliban of the possible dire
consequences—including military strikes—if Bin Ladin remained their
guest and conducted additional attacks.Within the department,he argued
for designating the Taliban regime a state sponsor of terrorism.This was
technically difficult to do, for calling it a state would be tantamount
to diplomatic recognition,which the United States had thus far withheld.
But Sheehan urged the use of any available weapon against the Taliban.
He told us that he thought he was regarded in the department as "a
one-note Johnny nutcase."81In early 1999, the State Department’s
counterterrorism office proposed a comprehensive diplomatic strategy for
all states involved in the Afghanistan problem, including Pakistan. It
specified both carrots and hard-hitting sticks— among them,certifying
Pakistan as uncooperative on terrorism.Albright said the original
carrots and sticks listed in a decision paper for principals may not
have been used as "described on paper"but added that they were used in
other ways or in varying degrees.But the paper’s author,Ambassador
Sheehan,was frustrated and complained to us that the original plan "had
been watered down to the point that nothing was then done with it."82The
cautiousness of the South Asia bureau was reinforced when, in May 1999,
Pakistani troops were discovered to have infiltrated into an especially
mountainous area of Kashmir. A limited war began between India and
Pakistan, euphemistically called the "Kargil crisis," as India tried to
drive the Pakistani forces out.Patience with Pakistan was wearing
thin,inside both the State Department and the NSC. Bruce Riedel, the NSC
staff member responsible for Pakistan,wrote Berger that Islamabad was
"behaving as a rogue state in two areas—backing Taliban/UBL terror and
provoking war with India."83Discussion within the Clinton administration
on Afghanistan then concentrated on two main alternatives.The first,
championed by Riedel and Assistant Secretary of State Karl Inderfurth,
was to undertake a major diplomatic effort to end the Afghan civil war
and install a national unity government.The second,favored by
Sheehan,Clarke,and the CIA,called for labeling the Taliban a terrorist
group and ultimately funneling secret aid to its chief foe, the
North-ern Alliance.This dispute would go back and forth throughout 1999
and ultimately become entangled with debate about enlisting the Northern
Alliance as an ally for covert action.84 Another
diplomatic option may have been available:nurturing Afghan exile groups
as a possible moderate governing alternative to theTaliban.In late 1999,
Washington provided some support for talks among the leaders of exile
Afghan groups, including the ousted Rome-based King Zahir Shah and Hamid
Karzai, about bolstering anti-Taliban forces inside Afghanistan and
linking the RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 125Northern
Alliance with Pashtun groups. One U.S. diplomat later told us that the
exile groups were not ready to move forward and that coordinating
fractious groups residing in Bonn,Rome,and Cyprus proved extremely
difficult.85
Frustrated by the Taliban’s resistance, two senior State Department
officials suggested asking the Saudis to offer the Taliban $250 million
for Bin Ladin. Clarke opposed having the United States facilitate a
"huge grant to a regime as heinous as the Taliban" and suggested that
the idea might not seem attractive to either Secretary Albright or First
Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton—both critics of the Taliban’s record on
women’s rights.86The proposal seems to have quietly died.Within the
State Department, some officials delayed Sheehan and Clarke’s push
either to designateTaliban-controlled Afghanistan as a state sponsor of
terrorism or to designate the regime as a foreign terrorist organization
(thereby avoiding the issue of whether to recognize the Taliban as
Afghanistan’s government). Sheehan and Clarke prevailed in July 1999,
when President Clinton issued an executive order effectively declaring
the Taliban regime a state sponsor of terrorism.87 In October, a UN
Security Council Resolution championed by the United States added
economic and travel sanctions.88With UN sanctions set to come into
effect in November, Clarke wrote Berger that "the Taliban appear to be
up to something."89 Mullah Omar had shuffled his "cabinet"and hinted at
Bin Ladin’s possible departure.Clarke’s staff thought his most likely
destination would be Somalia; Chechnya seemed less appealing with Russia
on the offensive.Clarke commented that Iraq and Libya had previously
discussed hosting Bin Ladin, though he and his staff had their doubts
that Bin Ladin would trust secular Arab dictators such as Saddam Hussein
or Muammar Qadhafi. Clarke also raised the "remote possibility" of
Yemen, which offered vast uncontrolled spaces. In November, the CSG
discussed whether the sanctions had rattled the Taliban,who seemed "to
be looking for a face-saving way out of the Bin Ladin issue."90In fact
none of the outside pressure had any visible effect on Mullah Omar, who
was unconcerned about commerce with the outside world.Omar had virtually
no diplomatic contact with theWest,since he refused to meet with
non-Muslims.The United States learned that at the end of 1999,theTaliban
Council of Ministers unanimously reaffirmed that their regime would
stick by Bin Ladin.Relations between Bin Ladin and theTaliban leadership
were sometimes tense, but the foundation was deep and personal.91
Indeed, Mullah Omar had executed at least one subordinate who opposed
his pro–Bin Ladin policy.92The United States would try tougher sanctions
in 2000.Working with Russia (a country involved in an ongoing campaign
against Chechen separatists, some of whom received support from Bin
Ladin),the United States persuaded the United Nations to adopt Security
Council Resolution 1333, which included an embargo on arms shipments to
the Taliban, in December 2000.93 The aim of the resolution was to hit
the Taliban where it was most sensitive— 126 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORTon the battlefield against the Northern Alliance—and criminalize
giving them arms and providing military "advisers," which Pakistan had
been doing.94 Yet the passage of the resolution had no visible effect on
Omar, nor did it halt the flow of Pakistani military assistance to the
Taliban.95U.S. authorities had continued to try to get cooperation from
Pakistan in pressing the Taliban to stop sheltering Bin Ladin. President
Clinton contacted Sharif again in June 1999,partly to discuss the crisis
with India but also to urge Sharif, "in the strongest way I can," to
persuade the Taliban to expel Bin Ladin.96 The President suggested that
Pakistan use its control over oil supplies to the Taliban and over
Afghan imports through Karachi. Sharif suggested instead that Pakistani
forces might try to capture Bin Ladin themselves. Though no one in
Washington thought this was likely to happen, President Clinton gave the
idea his blessing.97 The
President met with Sharif in Washington in early July. Though the
meeting’s main purpose was to seal the Pakistani prime minister’s
decision to withdraw from the Kargil confrontation in Kashmir, President
Clinton complained about Pakistan’s failure to take effective action
with respect to the Taliban and Bin Ladin. Sharif came back to his
earlier proposal and won approval for U.S. assistance in training a
Pakistani special forces team for an operation against Bin Ladin.
Then,in October 1999,Sharif was deposed by General Pervez Musharraf, and
the plan was terminated.98At first,the Clinton administration hoped that
Musharraf’s coup might create an opening for action on Bin Ladin. A
career military officer, Musharraf was thought to have the political
strength to confront and influence the Pakistani military intelligence
service, which supported the Taliban. Berger speculated that the new
government might use Bin Ladin to buy concessions from Washington, but
neither side ever developed such an initiative.99By late 1999,more than
a year after the embassy bombings,diplomacy with Pakistan, like the
efforts with the Taliban, had, according to Under Secretary of State
Thomas Pickering,"borne little fruit."100 4.4
COVERT ACTION As part
of the response to the embassy bombings, President Clinton signed a
Memorandum of Notification authorizing the CIA to let its tribal assets
use force to capture Bin Ladin and his associates. CIA officers told the
tribals that the plan to capture Bin Ladin,which had been "turned
off"three months earlier,was back on.The memorandum also authorized the
CIA to attack Bin Ladin in other ways. Also, an executive order froze
financial holdings that could be linked to Bin Ladin.101 The
counterterrorism staff at CIA thought it was gaining a better
under-standing of Bin Ladin and his network. In preparation for briefing
the Senate RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 127Select Committee
on Intelligence on September 2,Tenet was told that the intelligence
community knew more about Bin Ladin’s network"than about any other top
tier terrorist organization."102The CIA was using this knowledge to
disrupt a number of Bin Ladin–associated cells.Working with Albanian
authorities, CIA operatives had raided an al Qaeda forgery operation and
another terrorist cell in Tirana.These operations may have disrupted a
planned attack on the U.S.embassy in Tirana,and did lead to the
rendition of a number of al Qaeda–related terrorist operatives.After the
embassy bombings, there were arrests in Azerbaijan, Italy, and Britain.
Several terrorists were sent to an Arab country.The CIA described
working with FBI operatives to prevent a planned attack on the U.S.
embassy in Uganda, and a number of suspects were arrested. On September
16, Abu Hajer, one of Bin Ladin’s deputies in Sudan and the head of his
computer operations and weapons procurement, was arrested in Germany. He
was the most important Bin Ladin lieutenant captured thus far.Clarke
commented to Berger with satisfaction that August and September had
brought the "greatest number of terrorist arrests in a short period of
time that we have ever arranged/facilitated."103Given the President’s
August Memorandum of Notification, the CIA had already been working on
new plans for using the Afghan tribals to capture Bin Ladin.During
September and October,the tribals claimed to have tried at least four
times to ambush Bin Ladin. Senior CIA officials doubted whether any of
these ambush attempts had actually occurred. But the tribals did seem to
have success in reporting where Bin Ladin was.104This information was
more useful than it had been in the past; since the August missile
strikes, Bin Ladin had taken to moving his sleeping place frequently and
unpredictably and had added new bodyguards. Worst of all, al Qaeda’s
senior leadership had stopped using a particular means of communication
almost immediately after a leak to the Washington Times.105This made it
much more difficult for the National Security Agency to intercept his
conversations. But since the tribals seemed to know where Bin Ladin was
or would be, an alternative to capturing Bin Ladin would be to mark his
location and call in another round of missile strikes.On November 3, the
Small Group met to discuss these problems, among other topics. Preparing
Director Tenet for a Small Group meeting in mid-November,the
Counterterrorist Center stressed,"At this point we cannot predict when
or if a capture operation will be executed by our assets."106
U.S.counterterrorism officials also worried about possible domestic
attacks. Several intelligence reports,some of dubious sourcing,mentioned
Washington as a possible target. On October 26, Clarke’s CSG took the
unusual step of holding a meeting dedicated to trying "to evaluate the
threat of a terrorist attack in the United States by the Usama bin Ladin
network."107The CSG members were "urged to be as creative as possible in
their thinking" about preventing a Bin Ladin attack on U.S. territory.
Participants noted that while the FBI had 128 THE 9/11 COMMISSION
REPORTbeen given additional resources for such efforts,both it and the
CIA were having problems exploiting leads by tracing U.S. telephone
numbers and translating documents obtained in cell disruptions abroad.
The Justice Department reported that the current guidelines from the
Attorney General gave sufficient legal authority for domestic
investigation and surveillance.108 Though
intelligence gave no clear indication of what might be afoot, some
intelligence reports mentioned chemical weapons, pointing toward work at
a camp in southern Afghanistan called Derunta.On November 4,1998,the
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York unsealed
its indictment of Bin Ladin,charging him with conspiracy to attack
U.S.defense installations.The indictment also charged that al Qaeda had
allied itself with Sudan, Iran, and Hezbollah.The original sealed
indictment had added that al Qaeda had "reached an understanding with
the government of Iraq that al Qaeda would not work against that
government and that on particular projects,specifically including
weapons development, al Qaeda would work cooperatively with the
Government of Iraq."109 This passage led Clarke, who for years had read
intelligence reports on Iraqi-Sudanese cooperation on chemical weapons,
to speculate to Berger that a large Iraqi presence at chemical
facilities in Khartoum was "probably a direct result of the Iraq–Al Qida
agreement." Clarke added that VX precursor traces found near al Shifa
were the "exact formula used by Iraq."110This language about al Qaeda’s
"understanding"with Iraq had been dropped, however, when a superseding
indictment was filed in November 1998.111On Friday, December 4, 1998,
the CIA included an article in the Presidential Daily Brief describing
intelligence, received from a friendly government, about a threatened
hijacking in the United States.This article was declassified at our
request. The
same day, Clarke convened a meeting of his CSG to discuss both the The
following is the text of an item from the Presidential Daily Brief
received by PresidentWilliam J.Clinton on December 4,1998.Redacted
material is indicated in brackets.
SUBJECT: Bin Ladin Preparing to Hijack US Aircraft and Other Attacks 1.
Reporting [—] suggests Bin Ladin and his allies are preparing for
attacks in the US, including an aircraft hijacking to obtain the release
of Shaykh ‘Umar ‘Abd al-Rahman, Ramzi Yousef, and Muhammad Sadiq
‘Awda.One source quoted a senior member of the Gama’at al-Islamiyya (IG)
saying that, as of late October, the IG had completed planning
forRESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 129an operation in the US on
behalf of Bin Ladin, but that the operation was on hold.A senior Bin
Ladin operative from Saudi Arabia was to visit IG counterparts in the US
soon thereafter to discuss options—perhaps including an aircraft
hijacking.• IG leader Islambuli in late September was planning to hijack
a US airliner during the "next couple of weeks" to free ‘Abd al-Rahman
and the other prisoners, according to what may be a different source.•
The same source late last month said that Bin Ladin might implement
plans to hijack US aircraft before the beginning of Ramadan on 20
December and that two members of the operational team had evaded
security checks during a recent trial run at an unidentified New York
airport.[—]2. Some members of the Bin Ladin network have received hijack
training,according to various sources,but no group directly tied to Bin
Ladin’s al-Qa’ida organization has ever carried out an aircraft
hijacking.Bin Ladin could be weighing other types of operations against
US aircraft.According to [—] the IG in October obtained SA-7 missiles
and intended to move them from Yemen into Saudi Arabia to shoot down an
Egyptian plane or, if unsuccessful, a US military or civilian aircraft.•
A [—] in October told us that unspecified "extremist elements" in Yemen
had acquired SA-7s.[—]3. [—] indicate the Bin Ladin organization or its
allies are moving closer to implementing anti-US attacks at unspecified
locations, but we do not know whether they are related to attacks on
aircraft.A Bin Ladin associate in Sudan late last month told a colleague
in Kandahar that he had shipped a group of containers to Afghanistan.
Bin Ladin associates also talked about the movement of containers to
Afghanistan before the East Africa bombings.• In other [—] Bin Ladin
associates last month discussed picking up a package in Malaysia. One
told his colleague in Malaysia that "they" were in the "ninth month [of
pregnancy]."• An alleged Bin Ladin supporter in Yemen late last month
remarked to his mother that he planned to work in "commerce" from abroad
and said his impending "marriage," which would take place soon,would be
a "surprise.""Commerce"and "marriage" often are codewords for terrorist
attacks. [—]130 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT
hijacking concern and the antiaircraft missile threat.To address the
hijacking warning, the group agreed that New York airports should go to
maxi-mum security starting that weekend.They agreed to boost security at
other East coast airports.The CIA agreed to distribute versions of the
report to the FBI and FAA to pass to the New York Police Department and
the air-lines. The FAA issued a security directive on December 8, with
specific requirements for more intensive air carrier screening of
passengers and more oversight of the screening process, at all three
NewYork City area airports.112 The
intelligence community could learn little about the source of the
information. Later in December and again in early January 1999, more
information arrived from the same source, reporting that the planned
hijacking had been stalled because two of the operatives, who were
sketchily described, had been arrested near Washington,D.C.or
NewYork.After investigation,the FBI could find no information to support
the hijack threat; nor could it verify any arrests like those described
in the report.The FAA alert at the NewYork area airports ended on
January 31, 1999.113 On
December 17, the day after the United States and Britain began their
Desert Fox bombing campaign against Iraq, the Small Group convened to
discuss intelligence suggesting imminent Bin Ladin attacks on the U.S.
embassies in Qatar and Ethiopia.The next day, Director Tenet sent a memo
to the President, the cabinet, and senior officials throughout the
government describing reports that Bin Ladin planned to attack U.S.
targets very soon, possibly over the next few days, before Ramadan
celebrations began. Tenet said he was "greatly concerned."114 With
alarms sounding,members of the Small Group considered ideas about how to
respond to or prevent such attacks. Generals Shelton and Zinni came up
with military options. Special Operations Forces were later told that
they might be ordered to attempt very high-risk in-and-out raids either
in Khartoum, to capture a senior Bin Ladin operative known as Abu Hafs
the Mauritanian—who appeared to be engineering some of the plots—or in
Kandahar, to capture Bin Ladin himself. Shelton told us that such
operations are not risk free, invoking the memory of the 1993 "Black
Hawk down" fiasco in Mogadishu.115The CIA reported on December 18 that
Bin Ladin might be traveling to Kandahar and could be targeted there
with cruise missiles. Vessels with Tomahawk cruise missiles were on
station in the Arabian Sea, and could fire within a few hours of
receiving target data.116 On
December 20,intelligence indicated Bin Ladin would be spending the night
at the Haji Habash house, part of the governor’s residence in
Kandahar.The chief of the Bin Ladin unit,"Mike," told us that he
promptly briefed Tenet and his deputy, John Gordon. From the field, the
CIA’s Gary Schroen advised:"Hit him tonight—we may not get another
chance."An urgent teleconference of principals was arranged.117
RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 131The principals considered a
cruise missile strike to try to kill Bin Ladin.One issue they discussed
was the potential collateral damage—the number of innocent bystanders
who would be killed or wounded. General Zinni predicted a number well
over 200 and was concerned about damage to a nearby mosque. The senior
intelligence officer on the Joint Staff apparently made a different
calculation, estimating half as much collateral damage and not
predicting dam-age to the mosque. By the end of the meeting, the
principals decided against recommending to the President that he order a
strike.A few weeks later,in January 1999, Clarke wrote that the
principals had thought the intelligence only half reliable and had
worried about killing or injuring perhaps 300 people. Tenet said he
remembered doubts about the reliability of the source and concern about
hitting the nearby mosque."Mike"remembered Tenet telling him that the
military was concerned that a few hours had passed since the last
sighting of Bin Ladin and that this persuaded everyone that the chance
of failure was too great.118Some lower-level officials were
angry."Mike"reported to Schroen that he had been unable to sleep after
this decision."I’m sure we’ll regret not acting last night," he wrote,
criticizing the principals for "worrying that some stray shrapnel might
hit the Habash mosque and ‘offend’ Muslims." He commented that they had
not shown comparable sensitivity when deciding to bomb Muslims in
Iraq.The principals, he said, were "obsessed" with trying to get
others—Saudis,Pakistanis,Afghan tribals—to "do what we won’t do."Schroen
was disappointed too."We should have done it last night," he wrote."We
may well come to regret the decision not to go ahead."119 The Joint
Staff’s deputy director for operations agreed, even though he told us
that later intelligence appeared to show that Bin Ladin had left his
quarters before the strike would have occurred. Missing Bin Ladin, he
said,"would have caused us a hell of a problem, but it was a shot we
should have taken, and we would have had to pay the price."120The
principals began considering other, more aggressive covert alternatives
using the tribals. CIA officers suggested that the tribals would prefer
to try a raid rather than a roadside ambush because they would have
better control, it would be less dangerous, and it played more to their
skills and experience. But everyone knew that if the tribals were to
conduct such a raid, guns would be blazing.The current Memorandum of
Notification instructed the CIA to capture Bin Ladin and to use lethal
force only in self-defense.Work now began on a new memorandum that would
give the tribals more latitude.The intention was to say that they could
use lethal force if the attempted capture seemed impossible to complete
successfully.121 Early
drafts of this highly sensitive document emphasized that it authorized
only a capture operation.The tribals were to be paid only if they
captured Bin Ladin, not if they killed him. Officials throughout the
government approved this draft. But on December 21, the day after
principals decided not to launch 132 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT the
cruise missile strike against Kandahar, the CIA’s leaders urged
strengthening the language to allow the tribals to be paid whether Bin
Ladin was captured or killed. Berger and Tenet then worked together to
take this line of thought even further.122They finally agreed, as Berger
reported to President Clinton, that an extraordinary step was necessary.
The new memorandum would allow the killing of Bin Ladin if the CIA and
the tribals judged that capture was not feasible (a judgment it already
seemed clear they had reached). The Justice Department lawyer who worked
on the draft told us that what was envisioned was a group of tribals
assaulting a location, leading to a shoot-out. Bin Ladin and others
would be captured if possible, but probably would be killed.The
administration’s position was that under the law of armed conflict,
killing a person who posed an imminent threat to the United States would
be an act of self-defense,not an assassination.On Christmas Eve
1998,Berger sent a final draft to President Clinton, with an explanatory
memo. The President approved the document.123Because the White House
considered this operation highly sensitive,only a tiny number of people
knew about this Memorandum of Notification. Berger arranged for the
NSC’s legal adviser to inform Albright, Cohen, Shelton, and Reno.None
was allowed to keep a copy.Congressional leaders were briefed,as
required by law. Attorney General Reno had sent a letter to the
President expressing her concern: she warned of possible retaliation,
including the targeting of U.S. officials. She did not pose any legal
objection. A copy of the final document, along with the carefully
crafted instructions that were to be sent to the tribals, was given to
Tenet.124A message from Tenet to CIA field agents directed them to
communicate to the tribals the instructions authorized by the President:
the United States preferred that Bin Ladin and his lieutenants be
captured,but if a successful capture operation was not feasible, the
tribals were permitted to kill them.The instructions added that the
tribals must avoid killing others unnecessarily and must not kill or
abuse Bin Ladin or his lieutenants if they surrendered. Finally, the
tribals would not be paid if this set of requirements was not met.125 The
field officer passed these instructions to the tribals word for word.
But he prefaced the directions with a message:"From the American
President down to the average man in the street,we want him [Bin Ladin]
stopped."If the tribals captured Bin Ladin, the officer assured them
that he would receive a fair trial under U.S. law and be treated
humanely.The CIA officer reported that the tribals said they "fully
understand the contents, implications and the spirit of the message"and
that that their response was,"We will try our best to capture Bin Ladin
alive and will have no intention of killing or harming him on
purpose."The tribals explained that they wanted to prove that their
standards of behavior were more civilized than those of Bin Ladin and
his band of terrorists.In an additional note addressed to Schroen,the
tribals noted that if they were to adopt Bin Ladin’s ethics,"we would
have finished the job long before," RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL
ASSAULTS 133but they had been limited by their abilities and "by our
beliefs and laws we have to respect."126 Schroen
and "Mike"were impressed by the tribals’reaction.Schroen cabled that the
tribals were not in it for the money but as an investment in the future
of Afghanistan. "Mike" agreed that the tribals’ reluctance to kill was
not a "showstopper." "From our view," he wrote, "that seems in character
and fair enough."127Policymakers in the Clinton administration,
including the President and his national security advisor, told us that
the President’s intent regarding covert action against Bin Ladin was
clear: he wanted him dead.This intent was never well communicated or
understood within the CIA.Tenet told the Commission that except in one
specific case (discussed later), the CIA was authorized to kill Bin
Ladin only in the context of a capture operation. CIA senior
managers,operators,and lawyers confirmed this understanding."We always
talked about how much easier it would have been to kill him," a former
chief of the Bin Ladin unit said.128In February 1999,another draft
Memorandum of Notification went to President Clinton. It asked him to
allow the CIA to give exactly the same guidance to the Northern Alliance
as had just been given to the tribals: they could kill Bin Ladin if a
successful capture operation was not feasible. On this occasion,
however, President Clinton crossed out key language he had approved in
December and inserted more ambiguous language. No one we interviewed
could shed light on why the President did this.President Clinton told
the Commission that he had no recollection of why he rewrote the
language.129 Later
in 1999, when legal authority was needed for enlisting still other
collaborators and for covering a wider set of contingencies, the lawyers
returned to the language used in August 1998, which authorized force
only in the con-text of a capture operation. Given the closely held
character of the document approved in December 1998,and the subsequent
return to the earlier language, it is possible to understand how the
former White House officials and the CIA officials might disagree as to
whether the CIA was ever authorized by the President to kill Bin
Ladin.130 The
dispute turned out to be somewhat academic, as the limits of available
legal authority were not tested. Clarke commented to Berger that
"despite ‘expanded’ authority for CIA’s sources to engage in direct
action, they have shown no inclination to do so." He added that it was
his impression that the CIA thought the tribals unlikely to act against
Bin Ladin and hence relying on them was "unrealistic."131 Events seemed
to bear him out, since the tribals did not stage an attack on Bin Ladin
or his associates during 1999.The tribals remained active collectors of
intelligence, however, providing good but not predictive information
about Bin Ladin’s whereabouts.The CIA also tried to improve its
intelligence reporting on Bin Ladin by what Tenet’s assistant director
for collection, the indefatigable Charles Allen, called an "all-out,
all-agency, seven-days-a-week" effort.132 The effort might have had an
134 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTeffect. On January 12, 1999, Clarke wrote
Berger that the CIA’s confidence in the tribals’ reporting had
increased. It was now higher than it had been on December 20.133In
February 1999,Allen proposed flying a U-2 mission over Afghanistan to
build a baseline of intelligence outside the areas where the tribals had
coverage.Clarke was nervous about such a mission because he continued to
fear that Bin Ladin might leave for someplace less accessible.He wrote
Deputy National Security Advisor Donald Kerrick that one reliable source
reported Bin Ladin’s having met with Iraqi officials, who "may have
offered him asylum." Other intelligence sources said that some Taliban
leaders, though not Mullah Omar, had urged Bin Ladin to go to Iraq. If
Bin Ladin actually moved to Iraq, wrote Clarke,his network would be at
Saddam Hussein’s service,and it would be "virtually impossible" to find
him. Better to get Bin Ladin in Afghanistan, Clarke declared.134 Berger
suggested sending one U-2 flight,but Clarke opposed even this. It would
require Pakistani approval, he wrote; and "Pak[istan’s] intel[ligence
service] is in bed with" Bin Ladin and would warn him that the United
States was getting ready for a bombing campaign: "Armed with that
knowledge,old wily Usama will likely boogie to Baghdad."135Though told
also by Bruce Riedel of the NSC staff that Saddam Hussein wanted Bin
Ladin in Baghdad,Berger conditionally authorized a single U-2
flight.Allen meanwhile had found other ways of getting the information
he wanted. So the U-2 flight never occurred.1364.5 SEARCHING FOR FRESH
OPTIONS "Boots
on the Ground?"
Starting on the day the August 1998 strikes were launched, General
Shelton had issued a planning order to prepare follow-on strikes and
think beyond just using cruise missiles.137 The initial strikes had been
called Operation Infinite Reach. The follow-on plans were given the code
name Operation Infinite Resolve. At the
time, any actual military action in Afghanistan would have been carried
out by General Zinni’s Central Command.This command was therefore the
locus for most military planning. Zinni was even less enthusiastic than
Cohen and Shelton about follow-on cruise missile strikes. He knew that
the Tomahawks did not always hit their targets.After the August 20
strikes,President Clinton had had to call Pakistani Prime Minister
Sharif to apologize for a wayward missile that had killed several people
in a Pakistani village. Sharif had been understanding, while commenting
on American "overkill."138Zinni feared that Bin Ladin would in the
future locate himself in cities, where U.S. missiles could kill
thousands of Afghans. He worried also lest Pakistani authorities not get
adequate warning,think the missiles came from India, RESPONSES TO AL
QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 135and do something that everyone would later
regret.Discussing potential repercussions in the region of his military
responsibility,Zinni said,"It was easy to take the shot from Washington
and walk away from it.We had to live there."139 Zinni’s
distinct preference would have been to build up counterterrorism
capabilities in neighboring countries such as Uzbekistan. But he told us
that he could not drum up much interest in or money for such a purpose
from Washington,partly,he thought,because these countries had
dictatorial govern-ments.140After the decision—in which fear of
collateral damage was an important factor—not to use cruise missiles
against Kandahar in December 1998, Shelton and officers in the Pentagon
developed plans for using an AC-130 gunship instead of cruise missile
strikes. Designed specifically for the special forces, the version of
the AC-130 known as "Spooky"can fly in fast or from high altitude,
undetected by radar; guided to its zone by extraordinarily complex
electronics, it is capable of rapidly firing precision-guided 25, 40,
and 105 mm projectiles. Because this system could target more precisely
than a salvo of cruise missiles, it had a much lower risk of causing
collateral damage. After giving Clarke a briefing and being encouraged
to proceed, Shelton formally directed Zinni and General Peter
Schoomaker, who headed the Special Operations Command, to develop plans
for an AC-130 mission against Bin Ladin’s head-quarters and
infrastructure in Afghanistan.The Joint Staff prepared a decision paper
for deployment of the Special Operations aircraft.141Though Berger and
Clarke continued to indicate interest in this option,the AC-130s were
never deployed. Clarke wrote at the time that Zinni opposed their
use,and John Maher,the Joint Staff’s deputy director of
operations,agreed that this was Zinni’s position.Zinni himself does not
recall blocking the option. He told us that he understood the Special
Operations Command had never thought the intelligence good enough to
justify actually moving AC-130s into position.Schoomaker says,on the
contrary,that he thought the AC-130 option feasible.142The most likely
explanation for the two generals’ differing recollections is that both
of them thought serious preparation for any such operations would
require a long-term redeployment of Special Operations forces to the
Middle East or South Asia.The AC-130s would need bases because the
aircraft’s unrefueled range was only a little over 2,000 miles.They
needed search-and-rescue backup, which would have still less range.Thus
an AC-130 deployment had to be embedded in a wider political and
military concept involving Pakistan or other neighboring countries to
address issues relating to basing and overflight. No one ever put such
an initiative on the table.Zinni therefore cautioned about simply
ordering up AC-130 deployments for a quick strike; Schoomaker planned
for what he saw as a practical strike option; and the underlying issues
were not fully engaged.The Joint Staff decision paper was never turned
into an interagency policy paper. 136 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTThe same
was true for the option of using ground units from the Special
Operations Command. Within the command, some officers—such as
Schoomaker—wanted the mission of "putting boots on the ground" to get at
Bin Ladin and al Qaeda. At the time, Special Operations was designated
as a "supporting command," not a "supported command": that is, it
supported a theater commander and did not prepare its own plans for
dealing with al Qaeda. Schoomaker proposed to Shelton and Cohen that
Special Operations become a supported command, but the proposal was not
adopted. Had it been accepted,he says,he would have taken on the al
Qaeda mission instead of defer-ring to Zinni. Lieutenant General William
Boykin, the current deputy under secretary of defense for intelligence
and a founding member of Delta Force, told us that "opportunities were
missed because of an unwillingness to take risks and a lack of vision
and understanding."143President Clinton relied on the advice of General
Shelton, who informed him that without intelligence on Bin Ladin’s
location, a commando raid’s chance of failure was high. Shelton told
President Clinton he would go for-ward with "boots on the ground" if the
President ordered him to do so; how-ever, he had to ensure that the
President was completely aware of the large logistical problems inherent
in a military operation.144The Special Operations plans were apparently
conceived as another quick strike option—an option to insert forces
after the United States received actionable intelligence.President
Clinton told the Commission that "if we had had really good intelligence
about . . . where [Usama Bin Ladin] was, I would have done it." Zinni
and Schoomaker did make preparations for possible very high risk
in-and-out operations to capture or kill terrorists. Cohen told the
Commission that the notion of putting military personnel on the ground
with-out some reasonable certitude that Bin Ladin was in a particular
location would have resulted in the mission’s failure and the loss of
life in a fruitless effort.145 None of these officials was aware of the
ambitious plan developed months earlier by lower-level Defense
officials.In our interviews, some military officers repeatedly invoked
the analogy of Desert One and the failed 1980 hostage rescue mission in
Iran.146 They were dubious about a quick strike approach to using
Special Operations Forces, which they thought complicated and risky.
Such efforts would have required bases in the region,but all the options
were unappealing.Pro-Taliban elements of Pakistan’s military might warn
Bin Ladin or his associates of pending operations.With nearby basing
options limited, an alternative was to fly from ships in the Arabian Sea
or from land bases in the Persian Gulf, as was done after 9/11. Such
operations would then have to be supported from long distances,
overflying the airspace of nations that might not have been supportive
or aware of U.S. efforts.147However, if these hurdles were addressed,
and if the military could then operate regularly in the region for a
long period,perhaps clandestinely,it might RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S
INITIAL ASSAULTS 137attempt to gather intelligence and wait for an
opportunity. One Special Operations commander said his view of
actionable intelligence was that if you "give me the action, I will give
you the intelligence."148 But this course would still be risky, in light
both of the difficulties already mentioned and of the danger that
U.S.operations might fail disastrously.We have found no evidence that
such a long-term political-military approach for using Special
Operations Forces in the region was proposed to or analyzed by the Small
Group, even though such capability had been honed for at least a decade
within the Defense Department.
Therefore the debate looked to some like bold proposals from civilians
meeting hypercaution from the military.Clarke saw it this way.Of the
military, he said to us,"They were very,very,very reluctant."149But from
another perspective, poorly informed proposals for bold action were
pitted against experienced professional judgment. That was how Secretary
of Defense Cohen viewed it.He said to us:"I would have to place my
judgment call in terms of, do I believe that the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, former commander of Special Forces command, is in a better
position to make a judgment on the feasibility of this than, perhaps,
Mr. Clarke?"150 Beyond
a large-scale political-military commitment to build up a covert or
clandestine capability using American personnel on the ground,either
military or CIA,there was a still larger option that could have been
considered—invading Afghanistan itself. Every official we questioned
about the possibility of an invasion of Afghanistan said that it was
almost unthinkable, absent a provocation such as 9/11,because of poor
prospects for cooperation from Pakistan and other nations and because
they believed the public would not support it.Cruise missiles were and
would remain the only military option on the table.The Desert Camp,
February 1999 Early
in 1999, the CIA received reporting that Bin Ladin was spending much of
his time at one of several camps in the Afghan desert south of
Kandahar.At the beginning of February, Bin Ladin was reportedly located
in the vicinity of the Sheikh Ali camp, a desert hunting camp being used
by visitors from a Gulf state. Public sources have stated that these
visitors were from the United Arab Emirates.151
Reporting from the CIA’s assets provided a detailed description of the
hunting camp, including its size, location, resources, and security, as
well as of Bin Ladin’s smaller, adjacent camp.152 Because this was not
in an urban area, missiles launched against it would have less risk of
causing collateral damage. On February 8, the military began to ready
itself for a possible strike.153 The next day, national technical
intelligence confirmed the location and description of the larger camp
and showed the nearby presence of an official aircraft of the United
Arab Emirates. But the location of Bin Ladin’s quarters could not be
pinned down so precisely.154The CIA did its best to answer a host of
questions 138 THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTabout the larger camp and its
residents and about Bin Ladin’s daily schedule and routines to support
military contingency planning. According to reporting from the tribals,
Bin Ladin regularly went from his adjacent camp to the larger camp where
he visited the Emiratis;the tribals expected him to be at the hunting
camp for such a visit at least until midmorning on February 11.155
Clarke wrote to Berger’s deputy on February 10 that the military was
then doing targeting work to hit the main camp with cruise missiles and
should be in position to strike the following morning.156 Speaker of the
House Dennis Hastert appears to have been briefed on the situation.157No
strike was launched. By February 12 Bin Ladin had apparently moved on,
and the immediate strike plans became moot.158 According to CIA and
Defense officials, policymakers were concerned about the danger that a
strike would kill an Emirati prince or other senior officials who might
be with Bin Ladin or close by.Clarke told us the strike was called off
after consultations with Director Tenet because the intelligence was
dubious, and it seemed to Clarke as if the CIA was presenting an option
to attack America’s best counterterror-ism ally in the Gulf.The lead CIA
official in the field, Gary Schroen, felt that the intelligence
reporting in this case was very reliable;the Bin Ladin unit chief,
"Mike," agreed. Schroen believes today that this was a lost opportunity
to kill Bin Ladin before 9/11.159Even after Bin Ladin’s departure from
the area,CIA officers hoped he might return, seeing the camp as a magnet
that could draw him for as long as it was still set up.The military
maintained readiness for another strike opportunity.160 On March 7,
1999, Clarke called a UAE official to express his concerns about
possible associations between Emirati officials and Bin Ladin.Clarke
later wrote in a memorandum of this conversation that the call had been
approved at an interagency meeting and cleared with the CIA.161When the
former Bin Ladin unit chief found out about Clarke’s call, he questioned
CIA officials, who denied having given such a clearance.162 Imagery
confirmed that less than a week after Clarke’s phone call the camp was
hurriedly dismantled, and the site was deserted.163 CIA officers,
including Deputy Director for Operations Pavitt,were irate."Mike"thought
the dismantling of the camp erased a possible site for targeting Bin
Ladin.164The United Arab Emirates was becoming both a valued
counterterrorism ally of the United States and a persistent
counterterrorism problem.From 1999 through early 2001,the United
States,and President Clinton personally,pressed the UAE, one of the
Taliban’s only travel and financial outlets to the outside world, to
break off its ties and enforce sanctions, especially those relating to
flights to and from Afghanistan.165 These efforts achieved little before
9/11.In July 1999, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hamdan bin
Zayid threatened to break relations with the Taliban over Bin Ladin.166
The Taliban did not take him seriously, however. Bin Zayid later told an
American diplo-RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 139mat that the
UAE valued its relations with the Taliban because the Afghan radicals
offered a counterbalance to "Iranian dangers" in the region, but he also
noted that the UAE did not want to upset the United States.167 Looking
for New Partners
Although not all CIA officers had lost faith in the tribals’
capabilities—many judged them to be good reporters—few believed they
would carry out an ambush of Bin Ladin.The chief of the Counterterrorist
Center compared relying on the tribals to playing the lottery.168 He and
his associates, supported by Clarke, pressed for developing a
partnership with the Northern Alliance, even though doing so might bring
the United States squarely behind one side in Afghanistan’s long-running
civil war.The Northern Alliance was dominated by Tajiks and drew its
strength mainly from the northern and eastern parts of Afghanistan. In
contrast,Taliban members came principally from Afghanistan’s most
numerous ethnic group,the Pashtuns, who are concentrated in the southern
part of the country, extending into the North-West Frontier and
Baluchistan provinces of Pakistan.169Because of the Taliban’s behavior
and its association with Pakistan, the Northern Alliance had been able
at various times to obtain assistance from Russia, Iran, and India.The
alliance’s leader was Afghanistan’s most renowned military
commander,Ahmed Shah Massoud.Reflective and charismatic,he had been one
of the true heroes of the war against the Soviets. But his bands had
been charged with more than one massacre, and the Northern Alliance was
widely thought to finance itself in part through trade in heroin. Nor
had Massoud shown much aptitude for governing except as a ruthless
warlord. Nevertheless,Tenet told us Massoud seemed the most interesting
possible new ally against Bin Ladin.170In February 1999,Tenet sought
President Clinton’s authorization to enlist Massoud and his forces as
partners. In response to this request, the President signed the
Memorandum of Notification whose language he personally altered.Tenet
says he saw no significance in the President’s changes. So far as he was
concerned, it was the language of August 1998, expressing a preference
for capture but accepting the possibility that Bin Ladin could not be
brought out alive."We were plowing the same ground,"Tenet said.171CIA
officers described Massoud’s reaction when he heard that the United
States wanted him to capture and not kill Bin Ladin. One characterized
Massoud’s body language as "a wince."Schroen recalled Massoud’s response
as "You guys are crazy—you haven’t changed a bit." In Schroen’s opinion,
the capture proviso inhibited Massoud and his forces from going after
Bin Ladin but did not completely stop them.172 The idea, however, was a
long shot. Bin Ladin’s usual base of activity was near Kandahar,far from
the front lines ofTaliban operations against the Northern Alliance. 140
THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORTKandahar, May 1999 It was
in Kandahar that perhaps the last, and most likely the best, opportunity
arose for targeting Bin Ladin with cruise missiles before 9/11. In May
1999, CIA assets in Afghanistan reported on Bin Ladin’s location in and
around Kandahar over the course of five days and nights.The reporting
was very detailed and came from several sources. If this intelligence
was not "actionable," working-level officials said at the time and
today,it was hard for them to imagine how any intelligence on Bin Ladin
in Afghanistan would meet the standard.Communications were good,and the
cruise missiles were ready."This was in our strike zone," a senior
military officer said. "It was a fat pitch, a home run."He expected the
missiles to fly.When the decision came back that they should stand down,
not shoot, the officer said,"we all just slumped." He told us he knew of
no one at the Pentagon or the CIA who thought it was a bad gamble. Bin
Ladin "should have been a dead man" that night, he said.173Working-level
CIA officials agreed.While there was a conflicting intelligence report
about Bin Ladin’s whereabouts,the experts discounted it.At the time, CIA
working-level officials were told by their managers that the strikes
were not ordered because the military doubted the intelligence and
worried about collateral damage.Replying to a frustrated colleague in
the field,the Bin Ladin unit chief wrote:"having a chance to get [Bin
Ladin] three times in 36 hours and foregoing the chance each time has
made me a bit angry.... [T]he DCI finds himself alone at the table, with
the other princip[als] basically saying ‘we’ll go along with your
decision Mr. Director,’ and implicitly saying that the Agency will hang
alone if the attack doesn’t get Bin Ladin."174 But the military officer
quoted earlier recalled that the Pentagon had been willing to act. He
told us that Clarke informed him and others that Tenet assessed the
chance of the intelligence being accurate as 50–50.This officer believed
that Tenet’s assessment was the key to the decision.175Tenet told us he
does not remember any details about this episode, except that the
intelligence came from a single uncorroborated source and that there was
a risk of collateral damage. The story is further complicated by Tenet’s
absence from the critical principals meeting on this strike (he was
apparently out of town); his deputy, John Gordon, was representing the
CIA. Gordon recalled having presented the intelligence in a positive
light, with appropriate caveats, but stating that this intelligence was
about as good as it could get.176Berger remembered only that in all such
cases, the call had been Tenet’s. Berger felt sure that Tenet was eager
to get Bin Ladin.In his view,Tenet did his job responsibly."George would
call and say,‘We just don’t have it,’" Berger said.177The decision not
to strike in May 1999 may now seem hard to understand. In fairness, we
note two points: First, in December 1998, the principals’ wariness about
ordering a strike appears to have been vindicated: Bin Ladin left his
room unexpectedly, and if a strike had been ordered he would not have
been RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S INITIAL ASSAULTS 141hit. Second, the
administration, and the CIA in particular, was in the midst of intense
scrutiny and criticism in May 1999 because faulty intelligence had just
led the United States to mistakenly bomb the Chinese embassy in Belgrade
during the NATO war against Serbia. This episode may have made officials
more cautious than might otherwise have been the case.178 From
May 1999 until September 2001, policymakers did not again actively
consider a missile strike against Bin Ladin.179The principals did give
some further consideration in 1999 to more general strikes,reviving
Clarke’s "Delenda" notion of hitting camps and infrastructure to disrupt
al Qaeda’s organization. In the first months of 1999,the Joint Staff had
developed broader target lists to undertake a "focused campaign" against
the infrastructure of Bin Ladin’s net-work and to hit Taliban government
sites as well. General Shelton told us that the Taliban targets were
"easier" to hit and more substantial.180Part of the context for
considering broader strikes in the summer of 1999 was renewed worry
about Bin Ladin’s ambitions to acquire weapons of mass destruction. In
May and June, the U.S. government received a flurry of ominous reports,
including more information about chemical weapons training or
development at the Derunta camp and possible attempts to amass nuclear
mate-rial at Herat.181By late June, U.S. and other intelligence services
had concluded that al Qaeda was in pre-attack mode, perhaps again
involving Abu Hafs the Mauritanian. On June 25, at Clarke’s request,
Berger convened the Small Group in his office to discuss the alert, Bin
Ladin’s WMD programs, and his location. "Should we pre-empt by attacking
UBL facilities?"Clarke urged Berger to ask his colleagues.182In his
handwritten notes on the meeting paper,Berger jotted down the presence
of 7 to 11 families in the Tarnak Farms facility,which could mean 60–65
casualties. Berger noted the possible "slight impact" on Bin Ladin and
added, "if he responds, we’re blamed."183 The NSC staff raised the
option of waiting until after a terrorist attack, and then retaliating,
including possible strikes on the Taliban. But Clarke observed that Bin
Ladin would probably empty his camps after an attack.184The military
route seemed to have reached a dead end. In December 1999, Clarke urged
Berger to ask the principals to ask themselves:"Why have there been no
real options lately for direct US military action?"185There are no notes
recording whether the question was discussed or,if it was,how it was
answered. Reports
of possible attacks by Bin Ladin kept coming in throughout 1999. They
included a threat to blow up the FBI building in Washington, D.C. In
September, the CSG reviewed a possible threat to a flight out of Los
Angeles or New York.186These warnings came amid dozens of others that
flooded in. With
military and diplomatic options practically exhausted by the summer of
1999, the U.S. government seemed to be back where it had been in the
summer of 1998—relying on the CIA to find some other option.That 142 THE
9/11 COMMISSION REPORTpicture also seemed discouraging. Several
disruptions and renditions aimed against the broader al Qaeda network
had succeeded.187 But covert action efforts in Afghanistan had not been
fruitful. In
mid-1999, new leaders arrived at the Counterterrorist Center and the Bin
Ladin unit.The new director of CTC, replacing "Jeff," was Cofer Black.
The new head of the section that included the Bin Ladin unit was
"Richard." Black, "Richard," and their colleagues began working on a new
operational strategy for attacking al Qaeda; their starting point was to
get better intelligence, relying more on the CIA’s own sources and less
on the tribals.188In July 1999, President Clinton authorized the CIA to
work with several governments to capture Bin Ladin, and extended the
scope of efforts to Bin Ladin’s principal lieutenants.The President
reportedly also authorized a covert action under carefully limited
circumstances which, if successful, would have resulted in Bin Ladin’s
death.189 Attorney General Reno again expressed concerns on policy
grounds. She was worried about the danger of retaliation.The CIA also
developed the short-lived effort to work with a Pakistani team that we
discussed earlier, and an initiative to work with Uzbekistan.The Uzbeks
needed basic equipment and training. No action could be expected before
March 2000, at the earliest.190In fall 1999, DCI Tenet unveiled the
CIA’s new Bin Ladin strategy. It was called, simply,"the Plan."The Plan
proposed continuing disruption and rendition operations worldwide.It
announced a program for hiring and training better officers with
counterterrorism skills, recruiting more assets, and trying to penetrate
al Qaeda’s ranks.The Plan aimed to close gaps in technical intelligence
collection (signal and imagery) as well. In addition, the CIA would
increase contacts with the Northern Alliance rebels fighting the
Taliban.191With a new operational strategy,the CIA evaluated its capture
options.None scored high marks.The CIA had no confidence in the
Pakistani effort. In the event that Bin Ladin traveled to the Kandahar
region in southern Afghanistan, the tribal network there was unlikely to
attack a heavily guarded Bin Ladin; the Counterterrorist Center rated
the chance of success at less than 10 percent.To the northwest, the
Uzbeks might be ready for a cross-border sortie in six months; their
chance of success was also rated at less than 10 percent.192 In the
northeast were Massoud’s Northern Alliance forces—perhaps the CIA’s best
option. In late October, a group of officers from the Counterterrorist
Center flew into the Panjshir Valley to meet up with Massoud, a
hazardous journey in rickety helicopters that would be repeated several
times in the future. Massoud appeared committed to helping the United
States collect intelligence on Bin Ladin’s activities and whereabouts
and agreed to try to capture him if the opportunity arose. The Bin Ladin
unit was satisfied that its reporting on Bin Ladin would now have a
second source.But it also knew that Massoud would act against Bin Ladin
only if his own interests and those of the RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA’S
INITIAL ASSAULTS 143United States intersected. By early December, the
CIA rated this possibility at less than 15 percent.193 Finally, the CIA considered the possibility of putting U.S. personnel on the ground in Afghanistan.The CIA had been discussing this option with Special Operations Command and found enthusiasm on the working level but reluctance at higher levels. CIA saw a 95 percent chance of Special Operations Command forces capturing Bin Ladin if deployed—but less than a 5 percent chance of such a deployment. Sending CIA officers into Afghanistan was to be considered "if the gain clearly outweighs the risk"—but at this time no such gains presented themselves to warrant the risk.194As mentioned earlier, such a protracted deployment of U.S. Special Operations Forces into Afghanistan,perhaps as part of a team joined to a deployment of the CIA’s own officers, would have required a major policy initiative (probably combined with efforts to secure the support of at least one or two neigh-boring countries) to make a long-term commitment, establish a durable presence on the ground, and be prepared to accept the associated risks and costs. Such a military plan was never developed for interagency consideration before 9/11.As 1999 came to a close,the CIA had a new strategic plan in place for capturing Bin Ladin,but no option was rated as having more than a 15 per-cent chance of achieving that objective. Credit: The 911 Commision Report |