9/11 Attack Likely Was Moved Up

Documents found in the remnants of this al-Qaida camp in southern Afghanistan provide a window on al-Qaida's operations before Sept. 11

by Preston Mendenhall
MSNBC
January 30, 2002
http://www.msnbc.com/news/696825.asp



KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Jan. 30 — Osama bin Laden’s terrorist organization may have moved up the Sept.11 attacks on New York and Washington because law enforcement agencies were closing in on al-Qaida operatives in America, according to documents uncovered by MSNBC.com and NBC News.

More than four months into the Sept. 11 investigation, al-Qaida’s original attack plans are drawing intense focus from U.S. intelligence officials, who have long believed that the terror network wanted the plane hijackings to be part of a larger assault on even more targets.

The documents — notebooks written by al-Qaida students during lessons from the terror organization’s senior members — were uncovered at a training camp in southern Afghanistan. They were written in Arabic and translated by MSNBC.com and NBC News.
Among the most intriguing revelations in these documents are references to the Sept. 11 attacks being staged earlier than planned. In one notebook, a student quotes an official as saying that “we accomplished the work before the date which was fixed,” suggesting that the day of the attack was moved forward.

“We very quickly targeted Washington (and) the trade place,” the al-Qaida official is quoted as saying in the student’s notebook.
The training camp, called Meivand by U.S. intelligence officials because of its proximity to a village of the same name, was one of the terror organization’s largest. Up to 700 al-Qaida fighters and officials lived at the complex, which had its own electricity and water supply.

The information gathered by MSNBC.com and NBC News interests investigators trying to piece together al-Qaida’s planning before Sept. 11, senior U.S. government officials say.

PLAN MOVED UP?

U.S. officials say there are several possible reasons al-Qaida could have moved to initiate the Sept. 11 attack ahead of other terror acts:

On Aug. 17, Zacarias Moussaoui, a French-born Moroccan, was arrested after drawing the attention of instructors at a flight school in Minnesota. Moussaoui is believed to have been training as a hijacker for one of the flights commandeered on Sept. 11, and he has since been charged with a role in the attacks. Moussaoui’s arrest, U.S. officials say, may have put pressure on al-Qaida to move forward with a scaled-back assault. The other hijackers bought their airline tickets soon after Moussaoui’s detention.

On Oct. 14, the day the air war began, al-Qaida’s spokesman, Abu Ghaith, was seen with bin Laden in a videotape released to the Arabic news network al-Jazeera. In the video, he suggested that the Sept. 11. attacks were part of a larger conspiracy that involved dozens of airliners. Gaith warned Muslims to stay away from tall buildings and flying. “The storms of planes will not stop,” he said.
In a December video that shows bin Laden speaking about the terror attacks, the al-Qaida chief says that on “the previous Thursday” — Sept. 6 — he ordered the attack to take place the following Tuesday. That decision came just weeks after Moussaoui’s arrest.

SHOE-BOMBER TIES

U.S. officials also speculate that the pressure on al-Qaida to launch the attack early could have links to Richard Reid, the alleged shoe-bomber, arrested after passengers on his flight caught him trying to set off explosives contained in his shoe in December. Reid and Moussaoui, U.S. officials now believe, knew each other from a mosque in a London suburb and may have trained together in Afghanistan.

There has been speculation in U.S. government circles that the type of attack allegedly planned by Reid — destroying an airliner in flight — was originally meant to coincide with the attacks on New York and Washington.

 

© 2002 MSNBC

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