Panel Finds Officials Could Have Prevented 9/11 Attacks
For
the past two years, US officials have contended that immigration officials had
no reason to suspect the September 11 hijackers, who legally entered and resided
in the US. However, in the seventh
hearing held by the September 11th Commission, the body found that the US
government repeatedly missed opportunities to prevent thirteen of the September
11 hijackers from entering the US. The
report issued by the panel found that immigration agents missed false passports,
none of the hijackers filled out their visa forms correctly and that at least
three lied on their forms.
The
passports belonging to eight of the nineteen hijackers had evidence of
“fraudulent manipulation” and five had “suspicious indicators.”
The report also said that six hijackers, including Mohammad Atta,
violated immigration laws either while residing in the US or when entering the
US. Five of these were individually
questioned by officials, but were eventually allowed to enter the US.
Atta was admitted to the US on a tourist visa, despite informing an
inspection officer that he was a student in the US.
Six of the hijackers had overstayed their visas.
The
panel was informed that the hijackers had an easy time entering the country
because consular and inspection officials were trying to identify those
individuals who might try to settle in the US.
Identifying terrorists was not a priority.
The
report did point out that at least five suspected al Qaeda members were
prevented from joining the 9/11 plot. Four
were denied visas, and a fifth, Mohamed al Qahtani, was sent back to Saudi
Arabia. Al Qahtani made his way to
Afghanistan, where he was captured; he is now being held in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.
Jose
Melendez-Perez, the Orlando, FL official who inspected al Qahtani testified that
al Qahtani had no return ticket or hotel reservations, and also refused to
identify a friend who would provide him with money and assistance on his trip.
Melendez-Perez stated that al Qahtani reminded him of a ‘hit man’,
because “a ‘hit man' doesn’t know where he is going because if he is
caught, that way he doesn’t have any information to bargain with.”
Officials believe al Qahtani’s ‘friend’ to be Atta, who was caught
on an airport security camera complaining because his friend had been refused
entry to the US.
Officials
believe that al Qahtani was the “twentieth” hijacker – a theory that
explains why one of the planes had four hijackers, while the others had five on
board. Officials theorize that
because Flight 93 had only four hijackers, the passengers were able to overcome
their attackers and crash the plane in Pennsylvania, instead of a suspected
target in Washington, DC.
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