 |
|
December
9, 2002, 8:30 a.m.
Interview
with a Plotter
A
9/11 confession.
|
 |
itting
on the floor of his Karachi apartment, Ramzi bin al-Shieb laid out in
stunning detail the anatomy of the 9/11 attacks. As one of the masterminds
of September 11, he had a lot to share. Talking this June with a reporter
from al-Jazeera the Arab-language network of choice for Qaeda terrorists
bin al-Shieb discussed everything from the "conquests and
heroism of Islam" to America's support for Israel, in addition, of
course, to the particulars of 9/11. And what he laid out something
not covered in-depth in the American press until now can be read
in full in the
issue of National Review hitting newsstands today.
With close ties to
both Mohammed Atta, the ringleader of the 9/11 hijackers, and Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, believed to be the new operational leader of al Qaeda, bin al
Shieb has emerged as a central figure in the September 11 attacks. But
because he couldn't get a visa in any of his four attempts two
in Germany, two in his native Yemen, but none in Saudi Arabia he
reverted to the role of primary coordinator and paymaster. Acting as the
middleman between Atta in America and Mohammed in Afghanistan, bin al
Shieb who was in Germany until September 5, 2001 was in
a unique position with full knowledge of al Qaeda's activities in the
United States, Afghanistan, and around the world.
In the interview,
there's a lot of what one might expect religious fervor, hatred
of America and Israel, and vague threats of future attacks but
bin al Shieb's statement, on the whole, provides insight into the inner
workings of the planning and execution of a terrorist attack. Bouncing
around from topic to topic without any distinct thought process, he nonetheless
spells out in chilling detail the preparations for the attacks,
including how the date was selected and how the hijackers selected their
seats on the doomed flights, and the manner in which the hijackings were
carried out.
Although most of
what he says is in line with the publicly available record, bin al Shieb
does make some claims that contradict previous reports. He says at one
point that "all those brothers were aware of the fact that they were
going to carry out martyrdom operations, ...and they were not too bothered
about the details."
Bin al shieb also
claims that Marwan al-Shehhi (pilot of the flight that crashed into the
south tower of the World Trade Center) and Zyad Jarrah (pilot of Flight
93, which crashed in a Pennsylvania field) were tailed by "American
intelligence officers" when they were making dry runs on flights
from New York to California. If true, that would mean that two other 9/11
terrorists besides Nawaf al Hamzi and Khalid al Mihdhar
were under the FBI's watchful eye before September. But it is clear that
most of the terrorists' activities were not.
The 9/11 coordinator
was alive to tell the tale to the reporter because he couldn't get a visa
to join his comrades in the United States although he is no position
to speak with reporters today, because he was arrested by Pakistani police
in his Karachi apartment on the anniversary of 9/11. Likely based in large
part on bin al Shieb's difficulties obtaining a visa in Germany and Yemen,
al Qaeda decided to recruit all but one of the non-pilots from a country
that did not "hassle" visa applicants. It was hardly coincidental
that the 14 9/11 terrorists who came to the United States between April
2001 and July 2001 arrived from the country where the State Department
provided an open door: Saudi Arabia.
Ramzi bin al-Shibh
certainly knew the importance of easy visas: "The remaining 14 brothers
[from Saudi Arabia] entered without any hindrances or problems, thank
Allah."
Joel Mowbray is an NRO contributor and a Townhall.com
columnist.
|