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High-Fivers and Art Student Spies
What Did Israel Know in
Advance of the 9/11 Attacks?
By CHRISTOPHER KETCHAM
03/07/07 "Counterpunch"
-- -- On the afternoon of September 11, 2001, an FBI
bulletin known as a BOLO - "be on lookout" -- was issued with
regard to three suspicious men who that morning were seen
leaving the New Jersey waterfront minutes after the first plane
hit World Trade Center 1. Law enforcement officers across the
New York-New Jersey area were warned in the radio dispatch to
watch for a "vehicle possibly related to New York terrorist
attack":
White, 2000 Chevrolet van
with 'Urban Moving Systems' sign on back seen at Liberty
State Park, Jersey City, NJ, at the time of first impact of
jetliner into World Trade Center Three individuals with van
were seen celebrating after initial impact and subsequent
explosion. FBI Newark Field Office requests that, if the van
is located, hold for prints and detain individuals.
At 3:56 p.m., twenty-five
minutes after the issuance of the FBI BOLO, officers with the
East Rutherford Police Department stopped the commercial moving
van through a trace on the plates. According to the police
report, Officer Scott DeCarlo and Sgt. Dennis Rivelli approached
the stopped van, demanding that the driver exit the vehicle. The
driver, 23-year-old Sivan Kurzberg, refused and "was asked
several more times [but] appeared to be fumbling with a black
leather fanny pouch type of bag". With guns drawn, the police
then "physically removed" Kurzberg, while four other men - two
more men had apparently joined the group since the morning -
were also removed from the van, handcuffed, placed on the grass
median and read their Miranda rights.
They had not been told the
reasons for their arrest. Yet, according to DeCarlo's report,
"this officer was told without question by the driver [Sivan
Kurzberg],'We are Israeli. We are not your problem.Your problems
are our problems. The Palestinians are the problem.'" Another of
the five Israelis, again without prompting, told Officer DeCarlo
- falsely - that "we were on the West Side Highway in New York
City during the incident". From inside the vehicle the officers,
who were quickly joined by agents from the FBI, retrieved
multiple passports and $4,700 in cash stuffed in a sock.
According to New Jersey's Bergen Record, which on September 12
reported the arrest of the five Israelis, an investigator high
up in the Bergen County law enforcement hierarchy stated that
officers had also discovered in the vehicle "maps of the city
with certain places highlighted. It looked like they're hooked
in with this", the source told the Record, referring to the 9/11
attacks. "It looked like they knew what was going to happen when
they were at Liberty State Park."
The five men were indeed Israeli
citizens. They claimed to be in the country working as movers
for Urban Moving Systems Inc., which maintained a warehouse and
office in Weehawken, New Jersey. They were held for 71 days in a
federal detention center in Brooklyn, New York, during which
time they were repeatedly interrogated by FBI and CIA
counterterrorism teams, who referred to the men as the
"high-fivers" for their celebratory behavior on the New Jersey
waterfront. Some were placed in solitary confinement for at
least forty days; some were given as many as seven liedetector
tests. One of the Israelis, Paul Kurzberg, brother of Sivan,
refused to take a lie-detector test for ten weeks. Then he
failed it.
Meanwhile, two days after the
men were picked up, the owner of Urban Moving Systems, Dominik
Suter, a 31- year-old Israeli national, abandoned his business
and fled the United States for Israel. Suter's departure was
abrupt, leaving behind coffee cups, sandwiches, cell phones and
computers strewn on office tables and thousands of dollars of
goods in storage. Suter was later placed on the same FBI suspect
list as 9/11 lead hijacker Mohammed Atta and other hijackers and
suspected al-Qaeda sympathizers, suggesting that U.S.
authorities felt Suter may have known something about the
attacks. The suspicion, as the investigation unfolded, was that
the men working for Urban Moving Systems were spies. Who exactly
was handling them, and who or what they were targeting, was as
yet uncertain.
It was New York's venerable
Jewish weekly The Forward that broke this story in the spring of
2002, after months of footwork. The Forward reported that the
FBI had finally concluded that at least two of the men were
agents working for the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency,
and that Urban Moving Systems, the ostensible employer of the
five Israelis, was a front operation. Two former CIA officers
confirmed this to me, noting that movers' vans are a common
intelligence cover. The Forward also noted that the Israeli
government itself admitted that the men were spies. A "former
high-ranking American intelligence official", who said he was
"regularly briefed on the investigation by two separate law
enforcement officials", told reporter Marc Perelman that after
American authorities confronted Jerusalem at the end of 2001,
the Israeli government "acknowledged the operation and
apologized for not coordinating it with Washington". Today,
Perelman stands by his reporting. I asked him if his sources in
the Mossad denied the story. "Nobody stopped talking to me", he
said.
In June 2002, ABC News' 20/20
followed up with its own investigation into the matter, coming
to the same conclusion as The Forward. Vincent Cannistraro,
former chief of operations for counterterrorism with the CIA,
told 20/20 that some of the names of the five men appeared as
hits in searches of an FBI national intelligence database.
Cannistraro told me that the question that most troubled FBI
agents in the weeks and months after 9/11 was whether the
Israelis had arrived at the site of their "celebration" with
foreknowledge of the attack to come. From the beginning, "the
FBI investigation operated on the premise that the Israelis had
foreknowledge", according to Cannistraro. A second former CIA
counterterrorism officer who closely followed the case, but who
spoke on condition of anonymity, told me that investigators were
pursuing two theories. "One story was that [the Israelis]
appeared at Liberty State Park very quickly after the first
plane hit. The other was that they were at the park location
already". Either way, investigators wanted to know exactly what
the men were expecting when they got there.
Before such issues had been
fully explored, however, the investigation was shut down.
Following what ABC News reported were "high-level negotiations
between Israeli and U.S. government officials", a settlement was
reached in the case of the five Urban Moving Systems suspects.
Intense political pressure apparently had been brought to bear.
The reputable Israeli daily Ha'aretz reported that by the last
week of October 2001, some six weeks after the men had been
detained, Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage and two
unidentified "prominent New York congressmen" were lobbying
heavily for their release. According to a source at ABC News
close to the 20/20 report, high-profile criminal lawyer Alan
Dershowitz also stepped in as a negotiator on behalf of the men
to smooth out differences with the U.S. government. (Dershowitz
declined to comment for this article.) And so, at the end of
November 2001, for reasons that only noted they had been working
in the country illegally as movers, in violation of their visas,
the men were flown home to Israel.
Today, the crucial questions
raised by this matter remain unanswered. There is sufficient
reason - from news reports, statements by former intelligence
officials, an array of circumstantial evidence, and the reported
acknowledgment by the Israeli government - to believe that in
the months before 9/11, Israel was running an active spy network
inside the United States, with Muslim extremists as the target.
Given Israel's concerns about Islamic terrorism as well as its
long history of spying on U.S. soil, this does not come entirely
as a shock. What's incendiary is the idea - supported, though
not proven, by several pieces of evidence - that the Israelis
did learn something about 9/11 in advance but failed to share
all of what they knew with American officials. The questions are
disturbing enough to warrant a Congressional investigation.
Yet none of this information
found its way into Congress's joint committee report on the
attacks, and it was not even tangentially referenced in the
nearly 600 pages of the 9/11 Commission's final report. Nor
would a single major media outlet track the revelations of The
Forward and ABC News to investigate further. "There weren't even
stories saying it was bullshit", says The Forward's Perelman.
"Honestly, I was surprised". Instead, the story disappeared into
the welter of anti-Israel 9/11 conspiracy theories.
It's no small boon to the U.S.
government that the story of 9/11-related Israeli espionage has
been thus relegated: the story doesn't fit in the clean lines of
the official narrative of the attacks. It brings up concerns not
only about Israel's obligation not to spy inside the borders of
the United States, its major benefactor, but about its possible
failure to have provided the U.S. adequate warning of an
impending devastating attack on American soil. Furthermore, the
available evidence undermines the carefully cultivated image of
sanctity that defines the U.S.- Israel relationship. These are
all factors that help explain the story's disappearance, and
they are compelling reasons to revisit it now.
Torpedoing the FBI Probe
All five future hijackers of
American Airlines Flight 77, which rammed the Pentagon,
maintained addresses or were active within a six-mile radius of
towns associated with the Israelis employed at Urban Moving
Systems. Hudson and Bergen counties, the areas where the
Israelis were allegedly conducting surveillance, were a central
staging ground for the hijackers of Flight 77 and their fellow
al-Qaeda operatives. Mohammed Atta maintained a mail-drop
address and visited friends in northern New Jersey; his contacts
there included Hani Hanjour, the suicide pilot for Flight 77,
and Majed Moqed, one of the strongmen who backed Hanjour in the
seizing of the plane. Could the Israelis, with or without
knowledge of the terrorists' plans, have been tracking the men
who were soon to hijack Flight 77?
In public statements, both the
Israeli government and the FBI have denied that the Urban Moving
Systems men were involved in an intelligence operation in the
United States. "No evidence recovered suggested any of these
Israelis had prior knowledge of the 9/11 attack, and these
Israelis are not suspected of working for Mossad", FBI spokesman
Jim Margolin told me. (The Israeli embassy did not respond to
questions for this article.) According to the source at ABC
News, FBI investigators chafed at the denials from their
higher-ups. "There is a lot of frustration inside the bureau
about this case", the source told me. "They feel the higher
echelons torpedoed the investigation into the Israeli New Jersey
cell. Leads were not fully investigated". Among those lost leads
was the figure of Dominik Suter, whom the U.S. authorities
apparently never attempted to contact. Intelligence expert and
author James Bamford told me there was similar frustration
within the CIA: "People I've talked to at the CIA were outraged
at what was going on. They thought it was outrageous that there
hadn't been a real investigation, that the facts were hanging
out there without any conclusion."
However, what was "absolutely
certain", according to Vincent Cannistraro, was that the five
Israelis formed part of a surveillance network in the New York-
New Jersey area. The network's purpose was to track radical
Islamic extremists and/or supporters of militant Palestinian
groups like Hamas and Islamic Jihad. The former CIA
counterterrorism officer who spoke anonymously told me that FBI
investigators determined that the suspect Israelis were serving
as Arabic-speaking linguists "running technical operations" in
northern New Jersey's extensive Muslim communities. The former
CIA officer said the operations included taps on telephones,
placement of microphones in rooms and mobile surveillance. The
source at ABC News agreed: "Our conclusion was that they were
Arab linguists involved in monitoring operations, i.e.,
electronic surveillance. People at FBI concur with this". The
ABC News source added, "What we heard was that the Israelis may
have picked up chatter that something was going to happen on the
morning of 9/11".
The former CIA counterterrorism
officer told me: "There was no question but that [the order to
close down the investigation] came from the White House. It was
immediately assumed at CIA headquarters that this basically was
going to be a cover-up so that the Israelis would not be
implicated in any way in 9/11. Bear in mind that this was a
political issue, not a law enforcement or intelligence issue. If
somebody says we don't want the Israelis implicated in this -
we know that they've been spying the hell out of us, we know
that they possibly had information in advance of the attacks,
but this would be a political nightmare to deal with."
The Israeli "Art Student" Spies
There is a second piece of
evidence that suggests Israeli operatives were spying on
al-Qaeda in the United States. It is writ in the peculiar tale
of the Israeli "art students", detailed by this reporter for
Salon.com in 2002, following the leaking of an internal memo
circulated by the Drug Enforcement Administration's Office of
Security Programs. The June 2001 memo, issued three months
before the 9/11 attacks, reported that more than 120 young
Israeli citizens, posing as art students and peddling cheap
paintings, had been repeatedly - and seemingly inexplicably -
attempting to penetrate DEA offices and other law enforcement
and Defense Department offices across the country. The DEA
report stated that the Israelis may have been engaged in "an
organized intelligence gathering activity", but to what end,
U.S. investigators, in June 2001, could not determine. The memo
briefly floated the possibility that the Israelis were engaged
in trafficking the drug ecstasy. According to the memo, "the
most activity [was] reported in the state of Florida" during the
first half of 2001, where the town of Hollywood appeared to be
"a central point for these individuals with several having
addresses in this area".
In retrospect, the fact that a
large number of "art students" operated out of Hollywood is
intriguing, to say the least. During 2001, the city, just north
of Miami, was a hotbed of al-Qaeda activity and served as one of
the chief staging grounds for the hijacking of the World Trade
Center planes and the Pennsylvania plane; it was home to fifteen
of the nineteen future hijackers, nine in Hollywood and six in
the surrounding area. Among the 120 suspected Israeli spies
posing as art students, more than thirty lived in the Hollywood
area, ten in Hollywood proper. As noted in the DEA report, many
of these young men and women had training as intelligence and
electronic intercept officers in the Israeli military -
training and experience far beyond the compulsory service
mandated by Israeli law. Their "traveling in the U.S. selling
art seem[ed] not to fit their background", according to the DEA
report.
One "art student" was a former
Israeli military intelligence officer named Hanan Serfaty, who
rented two Hollywood apartments close to the mail drop and
apartment of Mohammed Atta and four other hijackers. Serfaty was
moving large amounts of cash: he carried bank slips showing more
than $100,000 deposited from December 2000 through the first
quarter of 2001; other bank slips showed withdrawals for about
$80,000 during the same period. Serfaty's apartments, serving as
crash pads for at least two other "art students", were located
at 4220 Sheridan Street and 701 South 21st Avenue. Lead hijacker
Mohammed Atta's mail drop was at 3389 Sheridan
Street--approximately 2,700 feet from Serfaty's Sheridan Street
apartment. Both Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi, the suicide pilot on
United Airlines Flight 175, which smashed into World Trade
Center 2, lived in a rented apartment at 1818 Jackson Street,
some 1,800 feet from Serfaty's South 21st Avenue apartment.
In fact, an improbable series of
coincidences emerges from a close reading of the 2001 DEA memo,
the 9/11 Commission's staff statements and final report, FBI and
Justice Department watch lists, hijacker timelines compiled by
major media and statements by local, state and federal law
enforcement personnel. In at least six urban centers, suspected
Israeli spies and 9/11 hijackers and/or al-Qaedaconnected
suspects lived and operated near one another, in some cases less
than half a mile apart, for various periods during 200001 in
the run-up to the attacks. In addition to northern New Jersey
and Hollywood, Florida, these centers included Arlington and
Fredericksburg, Virginia; Atlanta; Oklahoma City; Los Angeles;
and San Diego.
Israeli "art students" also
lived close to terror suspects in and around Dallas, Texas. A
25-year-old "art student" named Michael Calmanovic, arrested and
questioned by Texas-based DEA officers in April 2001, maintained
a mail drop at 3575 North Beltline Road, less than a thousand
feet from the 4045 North Beltline Road apartment of Ahmed
Khalefa, an FBI terror suspect. Dallas and its environs,
especially the town of Richardson, Texas, throbbed with "art
student" activity. Richardson is notable as the home of the Holy
Land Foundation, an Islamic charity designated as a terrorist
funder by the European Union and U.S. government in December
2001. Sources in 2002 told The Forward, in a report unrelated to
the question of the "art students", that "Israeli intelligence
played a key role in helping the Bush administration to crack
down on Islamic charities suspected of funneling money to
terrorist groups, most notably the Richardson, Texas-based Holy
Land Foundation, last December [2001]". It's plausible that the
intelligence prompting the shutdown of the Holy Land Foundation
came from "art student" spies in the Richardson area.
Others among the "art students"
had specific backgrounds in electronic surveillance or military
intelligence, or were associated with Israeli wiretapping and
surveillance firms, which prompted further concerns among U.S.
investigators. DEA agents described Michael Calmanovic, for
example, as "a recently discharged electronic intercept operator
for the Israeli military". Lior Baram, questioned near
Hollywood, Fla., in January 2001, said he had served two years
in Israeli intelligence "working with classified information".
Hanan Serfaty, who maintained the Hollywood apartments near Atta
and his cohorts, served in the Israeli military between the ages
of 18 and 21. Serfaty refused to disclose his activities between
the ages of 21 and 24, including his activities since arriving
in the U.S.A. in 2000. The French daily Le Monde meanwhile
reported that six "art students" were apparently using cell
phones that had been purchased by a former Israeli vice consul
in the U.S.A.
Suspected Israeli spy Tomer Ben
Dor, questioned at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport in May 2001, worked
for the Israeli wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping company
NICE Systems Ltd. (NICE Systems' American subsidiary, NICE
Systems Inc., is located in Rutherford, New Jersey, not far from
the East Rutherford site where the five Israeli "movers" were
arrested on the afternoon of September 11.) Ben Dor carried in
his luggage a print-out of a computer file that referred to "DEA
Groups". How he acquired information about so-called "DEA
Groups" - via, for example, his own employment with an Israeli
wiretapping company - was never determined, according to DEA
documents.
"Art student" Michal Gal,
arrested by DEA investigators in Irving, Texas, in the spring of
2001, was released on a $10,000 cash bond posted by Ophir Baer,
an employee of the Israeli telecommunications software company
Amdocs Inc., which provides phone-billing technology to clients
that include some of the largest phone companies in the United
States as well as U.S. government agencies. Amdocs, whose
executive board has been heavily stocked with retired and
current members of the Israeli government and military, has been
investigated at least twice in the last decade by U.S.
authorities on charges of espionage-related leaks of data that
the company assured was secure. (The company strenuously denies
any wrong-doing.)
According to the former CIA
counterterrorism officer with knowledge of investigations into
9/11-related Israeli espionage, when law enforcement officials
examined the "art students" phenomenon, they came to the
tentative conclusion that "the Israelis likely had a huge spy
operation in the U.S. and that they had succeeded in identifying
a number of the hijackers". The German daily Die Zeit reached
the same conclusion in 2002, reporting that "Mossad agents in
the U.S. were in all probability surveilling at least four of
the 19 hijackers". The
Fox News
Channel also reported
that U.S. investigators suspected
that Israelis were spying on Muslim militants in the United
States. "There is no indication that the Israelis were involved
in the 9/11 attacks, but investigators suspect that the Israelis
may have gathered intelligence about the attacks in advance, and
not shared it", Fox correspondent Carl Cameron reported in a
December 2001 series that was the first major exposé of
allegations of 9/11-related Israeli espionage. "A highly placed
investigator said there are 'tie-ins'. But when asked for
details, he flatly refused to describe them, saying, 'evidence
linking these Israelis to 9/11 is classified. I cannot tell you
about evidence that has been gathered. It's classified
information.'"
One element of the allegations
has never been clearly understood: if the "art students" were
indeed spies targeting Muslim extremists that included al-Qaeda,
why would they also be surveilling DEA agents in such a
compromising manner? Why, in other words, would foreign spies
bumble into federal offices by the scores and risk exposing
their operation? An explanation is that a number of the art
students were, in fact, young Israelis engaged in a mere art
scam and unknowingly provided cover for real spies.
Investigative journalist John Sugg, who as senior editor for the
Creative Loafing newspaper chain reported on the "art students"
in 2002, told me that investigators he spoke to within FBI felt
the "art student" ring functioned as a wide-ranging cover that
was counterintuitive in its obviousness. DEA investigators, for
example, uncovered evidence connecting the Israeli "art
students" to known ecstasy trafficking operations in New York
and Florida. This was, according to Sugg, planted information.
"The explanation was that when our FBI guys started getting
interested in these folks [the art students] - when they got
too close to what the real purpose was - the Israelis threw in
an ecstasy angle", Sugg told me. "The argument being that if our
guys thought the Israelis were involved in a smuggling ring,
then they wouldn't see the real purpose of the operation". Sugg,
who is writing a book that explores the tale of the "art
students", told me that several sources within the FBI, and at
least one source formerly with Israeli intelligence, suggested
that "the bumbling aspect of the art student thing was
intentional."
When I reported on the matter
for Salon.com in 2002, a veteran U.S. intelligence operative
with experience subcontracting both for the CIA and the NSA
suggested a similar possibility. "It was a noisy operation", the
veteran intelligence operative said. The operative referred me
to the film Victor, Victoria. "It was about a woman
playing a man playing a woman. Perhaps you should think about
this from that aspect and ask yourself if you wanted to have
something that was in your face, that didn't make sense, that
couldn't possibly be them". The intelligence operative added,
"Think of it this way: how could the experts think this could
actually be something of any value? Wouldn't they dismiss what
they were seeing?" U.S. and Israeli officials, dismissing
charges of espionage as an "urban myth", have publicly claimed
that the Israeli "art students" were guilty only of working on
U.S. soil without proper credentials. The stern denials issued
by the Justice Department were widely publicized in the
Washington Post and elsewhere, and the endnote from officialdom
and in establishment media by the spring of 2002 was that the
"art students" had been rounded up and deported simply because
of harmless visa violations. The FBI, for its part, refused to
confirm or deny the "art students" espionage story. "Regarding
FBI investigations into Israeli art students", spokesman Jim
Margolin told me, "the FBI cannot comment on any of those
investigations." As with the New Jersey Israelis, the
investigation into the Israeli "art students" appears to have
been halted by orders from on high. The veteran CIA/NSA
intelligence operative told me in 2002 that there was "a great
press to discredit the story, discredit the connections, prevent
[investigators] from going any further. People were told to
stand down. You name the agency, they were told to stand down".
The operative added, "People who were perceived to be gumshoes
on [this matter] suddenly found themselves hammered from all
different directions. The interest from the middle bureaucracy
was not that there had been a security breach but that someone
had bothered to investigate the breach. That was where the
terror was".
Choking off the press coverage
There was similar pressure
brought against the media venues that ventured to report out the
allegations of 9/11- related Israeli espionage. A former ABC
News employee high up in the network newsroom told me that when
ABC News ran its June 2002 exposé on the celebratory New Jersey
Israelis, "Enormous pressure was brought to bear by pro-Israeli
organizations"--and this pressure began months before the piece
was even close to airing. The source said that ABC News
colleagues wondered, "how they [the pro-Israel organizations]
found out we were doing the story. Pro- Israeli people were
calling the president of ABC News. Barbara Walters was getting
bombarded by calls. The story was a hard sell but ABC News came
through the management insulated [reporters] from the pressure".
The experience of Carl Cameron,
chief Washington correspondent at Fox News Channel and the first
mainstream U.S. reporter to present the allegations of Israeli
surveillance of the 9/11 hijackers, was perhaps more typical,
both in its particulars and aftermath. The attack against
Cameron and Fox News was spearheaded by a pro-Israel lobby group
called the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in
America (CAMERA), which operated in tandem with the two most
highly visible powerhouse Israel lobbyists, the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL) and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(itself currently embroiled in a spy scandal connected to the
Defense Department and Israeli Embassy). "CAMERA pep- pered the
shit out of us", Carl Cameron told me in 2002, referring to an
e-mail bombardment that eventually crashed the Fox News.com
servers. Cameron himself received 700 pages of almost identical
e-mail messages from hundreds of citizens (though he suspected
these were spam identities). CAMERA spokesman Alex Safian later
told me that Cameron's upbringing in Iran, where his father
traveled as an archeologist, had rendered the reporter "very
sympathetic to the Arab side". Safian added, "I think Cameron,
personally, has a thing about Israel"--coded language implying
that Cameron was an anti-Semite. Cameron was outraged at the
accusation.
According to a source at Fox
News Channel, the president of the ADL, Abraham Foxman,
telephoned executives at Fox News' parent, News Corp., to demand
a sit-down in the wake of the Cameron reportage. The source said
that Foxman told the News Corp. executives, "Look, you guys have
generally been pretty fair to Israel. What are you doing putting
this stuff out there? You're killing us". The Fox News source
continued, "As good old boys will do over coffee in Manhattan,
it was like, well, what can we do about this? Finally, Fox News
said, 'Stop the e-mailing. Stop slamming us. Stop being in our
face, and we'll stop being in your face--by way of taking our
story down off the web. We will not retract it; we will not
disavow it; we stand by it. But we will at least take it off the
web.'" Following this meeting, within four days of the posting
of Cameron's series on Fox News.com, the transcripts
disappeared, replaced by the message, "This story no longer
exists".
What did Mossad know and tell
the U.S.?
Whether or not Israeli spies had
detailed foreknowledge of the 9/11 attacks, the Israeli
authorities knew enough to warn the U.S. government in the
summer of 2001 that an attack was on the horizon. The British
Sunday Telegraph reported on September 16, 2001, that two senior
agents with the Mossad were dispatched to Washington in August
2001 "to alert the CIA and FBI to the existence of a cell of as
many as 200 terrorists said to be preparing a big operation".
The Telegraph quoted a "senior Israeli security official" as
saying the Mossad experts had "no specific information about
what was being planned". Still, the official told the Telegraph,
the Mossad contacts had "linked the plot to Osama bin Laden".
Likewise, Die Zeit correspondent Oliver Schröm reported that on
August 23, 2001, the Mossad "handed its American counterpart a
list of names of terrorists who were staying in the U.S. and
were presumably planning to launch an attack in the foreseeable
future". Fox News' Carl Cameron, in May 2002, also reported
warnings by Israel: "Based on its own intelligence, the Israeli
government provided 'general' information to the United States
in the second week of August that an al-Qaeda attack was
imminent". The U.S. government later claimed these warnings were
not specific enough to allow any mitigating action to be taken.
Mossad expert Gordon Thomas, author of Gideon's Spies, says
German intelligence sources told him that as late as August 2001
Israeli spies in the United States had made surveillance
contacts with "known supporters of bin Laden in the U.S.A. It
was those surveillance contacts that later raised the question:
how much prior knowledge did Mossad have and at what stage?"
According to Die Zeit, the
Mossad did provide the U.S. government with the names of
suspected terrorists Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, who
would eventually hijack the Pentagon plane. It is worth noting
that Mihdhar and Hazmi were among the hijackers who operated in
close proximity to Israeli "art students" in Hollywood, Florida,
and to the Urban Moving Systems Israelis in northern New Jersey.
Moreover, Hazmi and at least three "art students" visited
Oklahoma City on almost the same dates, from April 1 through
April 4, 2001. On August 24, 2001, a day after the Mossad's
briefing, Mihdhar and Hazmi were placed by the CIA on a
terrorist watch list; additionally, it was only after the Mossad
warning, as reported by Die Zeit, that the CIA, on August 27,
informed the FBI of the presence of the two terrorists. But by
then the cell was already in hiding, preparing for attack.
The CIA, along with the 9/11
Commission in its adoption of the CIA story, claims that Mihdhar
and Hazmi were placed on the watch list solely due to the
agency's own efforts, with no help from Mossad. Their
explanation of how the pair came to be placed on the watch list,
however, is far from credible and may have served as a cover
story to obscure the Mossad briefing [See Ketcham's sidebar
story -- "The Kuala Lumpur Deceit"]. This brings up the
possibility that the CIA may have known about the existence of
the alleged Israeli agents and their mission, but sought,
naturally, to keep it quiet. A second, more troubling scenario,
is that the CIA may have subcontracted to Mossad, given that the
agency was both prohibited by law from conducting intelligence
operations on U.S. soil, and lacked a pool of competent
Arabic-fluent field officers. In such a scenario, the CIA would
either have worked actively with the Israelis or quietly abetted
an independent operation on U.S. soil. In his 9/11 investigative
book, The Looming Tower, author Lawrence Wright notes that FBI
counterterrorism agents, infuriated at the CIA's failure to
fully share information about Mihdhar and Hazmi, speculated that
"the agency was shielding Mihdhar and Hazmi because it hoped to
recruit them". The two al-Qaeda men, Wright notes, "must have
seemed like attractive opportunities; however, once they entered
the United States they were the province of the FBI..." Wright
further observes that the CIA's reticence to share its
information was due to a fear "that prosecutions resulting from
specific intelligence might compromise its relationship with
foreign services". When in the spring of 2002 the scenario of
CIA's domestic subcontracting to foreign intelligence was posed
to the veteran CIA/NSA intelligence operative, with whom I spoke
extensively, the operative didn't reject it out of hand. The
operative noted that in recent years the CIA's human
intelligence assets, known as "humint" - spooks on the ground
who conduct surveillances, make contacts, and infiltrate the
enemy - had been "eviscerated" in favor of the NSA's far less
perilous "sigint", or signals intelligence program, the remote
interception of electronic communications. As a result, "U.S.
intelligence finds itself going back to sources that you may not
necessarily like to go back to, but are required to", the
veteran intelligence operative said. "We don't like the fact,
but our humint structures are gone. Israeli intel's humint is as
strong as ever. If you have an intel gap, those gaps are not
closed overnight. It takes years and years of diligent work, a
high degree of security, talented and dedicated people, willing
management and a steady hand. It is not a fun business, and it's
certainly not one without its dangers. If you lose that
capability, well organizations find themselves having to make a
pact with the devil. The problem [in U.S. intel] is very great".
If such an understanding did
exist between CIA and Mossad with regard to al-Qaeda's U.S.
operatives, the complicity would explain a number of oddities:
it would explain the CIA's nearly incoherent, and perhaps
purposely deceptive, reconstruction of events as to how Mihdhar
and Hazmi joined the watch list; it might even explain the
apparent brazenness of the Israeli New Jersey cell celebrating
on the morning of 9/11 (protected under the CIA wing, they were
free to behave as they pleased). It would also explain the
assertion in one of the leading Israeli dailies, Yedioth
Ahronoth, that in the months prior to 9/11, when the Israeli
"art students" were being identified and rounded up, the CIA
"actively promoted their expulsion". The implication in the
Yedioth Ahronoth article was that the CIA was simply being
careless, not trying to spirit the Israelis safely out of the
country. At this point we cannot be certain.
Israeli spying against the U.S.
is of course hotly denied by both governments. In 2002,
responding to my own questions about the "art students", Israeli
embassy spokesman Mark Regev issued a blanket denial. "Israel
does not spy on the United States", Regev told me. The
pronouncements from officialdom are strictly pro forma, as it is
no secret that spying by Israel on the United States has been
wide-ranging and unabashed. A 1996 General Accounting Office
report, for example, found that Israel "conducts the most
aggressive espionage operation against the United States of any
U.S. ally". More recently, a former intelligence official told
the Los Angeles Times in 2004 that "[t]here is a huge,
aggressive, ongoing set of Israeli activities directed against
the United States". It is also routine that Israeli spying is
ignored or downplayed by the U.S. government (the case of
convicted spy Jonathan Pollard, sentenced to life in prison in
1986, is a dramatic exception). According to the American
Prospect, over the last 20 years at least six sealed indictments
have been issued against individuals allegedly spying "on
Israel's behalf", but the cases were resolved "through
diplomatic and intelligence channels" rather than a public
airing in the courts. Career Justice Department and intelligence
officials who track Israeli espionage told the Prospect of
"long-standing frustration among investigators and prosecutors
who feel that cases that could have been made successfully
against Israeli spies were never brought to trial, or that the
investigations were shut down prematurely".
The Questions That Await
Answers
Remarkably, the Urban Moving
Systems Israelis, when interrogated by the FBI, explained their
motives for "celebration" on the New Jersey waterfront a
celebration that consisted of cheering, smiling, shooting film
with still and video cameras and, according to the FBI,
"high-fiving" - in the Machiavellian light of geopolitics.
"Their explanation of why they were happy", FBI spokesman
Margolin told me, "was that the United States would now have to
commit itself to fighting [Middle East] terrorism, that
Americans would have an understanding and empathy for Israel's
circumstances, and that the attacks were ultimately a good thing
for Israel". When reporters on the morning of 9/11 asked former
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the effect the
attacks would have on Israeli- American relations, he responded
with a similar gut analysis: "It's very good", he remarked. Then
he amended the statement: "Well, not very good, but it will
generate immediate sympathy [for Israel from Americans]".
What is perhaps most damning is
that the Israelis' celebration on the New Jersey waterfront
occurred in the first sixteen minutes after the initial crash,
when no one was aware this was a terrorist attack. In other
words, from the time the first plane hit the north tower, at
8:46 a.m., to the time the second plane hit the south tower, at
9:02 a.m., the overwhelming assumption of news outlets and
government officials was that the plane's impact was simply a
terrible accident. It was only after the second plane hit that
suspicions were aroused. Yet if the men were cheering for
political reasons, as they reportedly told the FBI, they
obviously believed they were witnessing a terrorist act, and not
an accident.
After returning safely to Israel
in the late autumn of 2001, three of the five New Jersey
Israelis spoke on a national talk show that winter. Oded Ellner,
who on the afternoon of September 11 had, like his compatriots,
protested to arresting officer Sgt. Dennis Rivelli that "we're
Israeli", admitted to the interviewer: "We are coming from a
country that experiences terror daily. Our purpose was to
document the event". By his own admission, then, Ellner stood on
the New Jersey waterfront documenting with film and video a
terrorist act before anyone knew it was a terrorist act.
One obvious question among many
comes to mind: If these men were trained as professional spies,
why did they exhibit such outright oafishness at the moment of
truth on the waterfront? The ABC network source close to the
20/20 report noted one of the more disturbing explanations
proffered by counterintelligence investigators at the FBI: "The
Israelis felt that in some way their intelligence had worked out
- i.e., they were celebrating their own acumen and ability as
intelligence agents".
The questions abound: Did the
Urban Moving Systems Israelis, ready to "document the event",
arrive at the waterfront before the first plane came in from the
north? And if they arrived right after, why did they believe it
was a terrorist attack? What about the strange tale of the "art
students"? Could they have been mere hustlers, as they claimed,
who ended up repeatedly crossing paths with federal agents and
living next door to most of the 9/11 hijackers by coincidence?
Did the Israeli authorities find out more about the impending
attacks than they shared with their U.S. counterparts? Or did
the Israeli spies on the ground only intercept vague chatter
that, in their view, did not warrant breaking cover to share the
information? On the other hand, did the U.S. government receive
more advance information about the attacks from Israeli
authorities than it is willing to admit? What about the 9/11
Commission's eliding of reported Israeli warnings that may have
led to the watch- listing of Mihdhar and Hazmi? Were the Israeli
warnings purposely washed from the historical record? Did the
CIA know more about pre-9/11 Israeli spying than it has
admitted?
The unfortunate fact is that the
truth may never be uncovered, not by officialdom, and certainly
not by a passive press. James Bamford, who in a coup of
reporting during the 1980s revealed the inner workings of the
NSA in The Puzzle Palace, points to the "key problem": "The
Israelis were all sent out of the country", he says. "There's no
nexus left. The FBI just can't go knocking on doors in Israel.
They need to work with the State Department. They need letters
rogatory, where you ask a government of a foreign country to get
answers from citizens in that country". The Israeli government
will not likely comply. So any investigation "is now that much
more complicated", says Bamford. He recalls a story he produced
for ABC News concerning two murder suspects -- U.S. citizens -
who fled to Israel and fought extradition for ten years. "The
Israelis did nothing about it until I went to Israel, knocking
on doors, and finally found the two suspects. I think it'd be a
great idea to go over and knock on their doors", says Bamford.
The suspects are gone. The trail
is cold. Yet many of the key facts and promising leads sit
freely on the web, in the archives, safe in the news-morgues at
20/20 and The Forward and Die Zeit. An investigator close to the
matter says it reminds him of the Antonioni film "Blow-Up", a
movie about a photographer who discovers the evidence of a
covered-up murder hidden before his very eyes in the frame of an
enlarged photograph. It's a mystery that no one appears eager to
solve.
See Also:
The Kuala Lumpur Deceit: a CIA
Cover Up by
Christopher Ketcham
Ketcham's Story: Coming in From
the Cold by
Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair
Christopher Ketcham
is a freelance journalist who has written for Harper's and
Salon. Many of his writings, including his groundbreaking story
on the Israeli art students, can be read on his website
www.christopherketcham.com. He can be reached at:
cketcham99@mindspring.com
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