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In reply to the discussion: FBI Agent: The CIA Could Have Stopped 9/11 [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)BY JEFF STEIN
Newsweek / JANUARY 14, 2015
EXCERPT...
(Mark) Rossini is well placed to do just that. Hes been at the center of one of the enduring mysteries of 9/11: Why the CIA refused to share information with the FBI (or any other agency) about the arrival of at least two well-known Al-Qaeda operatives in the United States in 2000, even though the spy agency had been tracking them closely for years.
That the CIA did block him and Doug Miller, a fellow FBI agent assigned to the Alec Station, the cover name for CIAs Osama bin Laden unit, from notifying bureau headquarters about the terrorists has been told before, most notably in a 2009 Nova documentary on PBS, The Spy Factory. Rossini and Miller related how they learned earlier from the CIA that one of the terrorists (and future hijacker), Khalid al-Mihdhar, had multi-entry visas on a Saudi passport to enter the United States. When Miller drafted a report for FBI headquarters, a CIA manager in the top-secret unit told him to hold off. Incredulous, Miller and Rossini had to back down. The stations rules prohibited them from talking to anyone outside their top-secret group.
All these years later, Rossini still regrets complying with that command. If he had disobeyed the gag order, the nearly 3,000 Americans slaughtered on 9/11 would probably still be alive. This is the pain that never escapes me, that haunts me each and every day of my life, he wrote in the draft of a book he shared with me. I feel like I failed, even though I know it was the system and the intelligence community on the whole that failed.
I Finally Broke Down
The various commissions and internal agency reviews that examined the intelligence failure of 9/11 blamed institutional habits and personal rivalries among CIA, FBI and National Security Agency (NSA) officials for preventing them from sharing information. Out of those reviews came the creation of a new directorate of national intelligence, which stripped the CIA of its coordinating authority. But blaming the system sidesteps the issue of why one CIA officer in particular, Michael Anne Casey, ordered Rossinis cohort, Miller, not to alert the FBI about al-Mihdhar. Or why the CIAs Alec Station bosses failed to alert the FBIor any other law enforcement agencyabout the arrival of Nawaf al-Hazmi, another key Al-Qaeda operative (and future hijacker) the agency had been tracking to and from a terrorist summit in Malaysia.
Because Casey remains undercover at the CIA, Rossini does not name her in his unfinished manuscript. But he wrote, When I confronted this person...she told me that this was not a matter for the FBI. The next al-Qaeda attack is going to happen in Southeast Asia and their visas for America are just a diversion. You are not to tell the FBI about it. When and if we want the FBI to know about it, we will.
CONTINUED...
http://www.newsweek.com/2015/01/23/information-could-have-stopped-911-299148.html
Sounds like Stein's on top of the story. Thanks for the heads-up, grasswire! On DU1, this'd have 100 comments, most of them ADDING information. Now, it's avoided like people are afraid of being labeled "Truther" by Amazing Randi's J-REF Flock.