In a video taped interview of Richard Clark said that George - TopicsExpress



          

In a video taped interview of Richard Clark said that George Tenet, Cofer Black and/or Richard Blee -- knowingly withheld key information on the alleged hijackers from the White House, the FBI, Immigration and the State and Defense Departments. Richard Clark was the White House guy in charge of counter terrorism and everyday he received 100 to 150 CIA reports on his computer. Someone high up in the CIA chain of Command had to have intentional intervened and prevented Clark from getting the message about these two bad boys in route to LA. For 12 months none of the top CIA leadership told Clark about these two bad boys living in the US. DCIA had habitually called Clark several times a day. Here is what the CIA knew. NSA had been intercepted a call involving the hijackers was in early 1999, when the call involved Al Mihdhar and his fellow Flight 77 hijacker Nawaf al Hazmi. The NSA did not disseminate a report on this call, although the heavily redacted text of the Congressional Inquiry’s 9/11 report indicates it should have. The NSA continued to intercept Al Mihdhar’s calls throughout 1999, when he apparently spoke to al-Qaeda leader Khallad bin Attash, American prosecutors at the Guantanamo military commissions allege that bin Attash helped in the preparation of the 1998 East Africa Embassy bombings and the USS Cole bombing. He is now in jail at Guantanamo Bay. In late December 1999 from this signal intercept, the NSA learned about a planned al-Qaeda summit meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The NSA alerted both the CIA, and they latter of which monitored Khalid al Mihdhar, Nawaf al Hazmi and other associates and followed them afterwards. CIA lost them in Bangkok. The Bangkok CIA officers send an email to CIA, HQ, stating that these bad boys have arrived in LA and this message was sent to 50 CIA officials. On July 10, 2001 Director Tenet called an emergency meeting of the National Security Council (NSC) which Clark attended. This meeting was to get authorization to take some kind of action against terrorists. But Tenet, Black and Blee never mentioned this key threat intelligence about the two bad boys living within the US. On August 21, 2001 the CIA finally tells FBI about the two bad boys. Al Hazmi and Al Mihdhar had been in the San Diego, California for the past 15 months. It is unclear to me when Richard Clark eventually learned about these guys, but he as stated had he learn about this earlier he would have started an investigation as to why he had not been informed as soon as they entered the US. LTC Anthony Shaffer later claimed that he alerted the FBI in September 2000 and three meetings with the FBI were set up, but US Army lawyers blocked them. He tried to tell the FBI that Able Danger had identified two of the three terrorists cells before the 9/11 attacks occurred. Navy Captain Scott Phillport claimed that Able Danger was “discouraged from looking further into Atta.” Phillport and three other people confirmed LTC Shaffer’s statements. A civilian contractor James D. Smith stated that Able Dangers analyzed data from 20 to 30 individuals and confirmed that Able Danger had identified Mohammed Atta. youtube/watch?v=1d-RGkYpXCg&feature=relmfu Planted evidence linking alleged 19 hijackers: At Boston Logan airport where American Airlines flight 11 departed, two pieces of luggage did not get loaded onto this airplane and they were to alleged hijacker Mohammed Atta. According to FBI Special Agent James M. Fitzgerald, who testified at the trial of Zacarias Moussaoui, the connecting flight from Portland which brought Mohammed Atta and his alleged co-hijacker Abdul Aziz Alomari to Boston, had arrived too late for the luggage to be loaded onto Flight 11. But according to the 9/11 Commission the flight arrived on time one hour before the scheduled departure of Flight AA11. It has never been revealed who was responsible for the mistake in not loading the luggage. The contents of the luggage allegedly enabled FBI agents to swiftly unravel the mystery of who carried out the attacks and the connection to al Qaeda. Among the items reportedly found in Attas bags were: a hand-held electronic flight computer, a simulator procedures manual for Boeing 757 and 767 aircraft, a slide-rule flight calculator, a copy of the Quran and a handwritten testament written in Arabic. According to later testimonies by former FBI agents, the luggage also contained the identities of all 19 suspects involved in the four hijackings, information on their plans, backgrounds, motives, al Qaeda connections and [a] folding knife and pepper spray. According to FBI Special Agent Fitzgerald, Abdul Aziz Alomaris passport was also found in one the bags. The text of Attas, five-page document found in Mohamed Attas luggage is made public. [Observer, 9/30/2001] The next day, the Independent strongly questions if the note is genuine and pointed out the note suggests an almost Christian view of what the hijackers might have felt. The note is filled with weird comments that Muslims would never say, such as the time of fun and waste is gone. If the note is genuine, then the [hijackers] believed in a very exclusive version of Islam--or were surprisingly unfamiliar with their religion. [Independent, 9/29/2001] Another copy of the document was discovered in a vehicle parked at Washingtons Dulles airport by another alleged hijacker. A Toyota Corolla registered to alleged hijacker Nawaf al Hazmi was discovered at Washingtons Dulles Airport on 12 September. It contained a four-page letter written in Arabic that was identical to the one recovered from the luggage of Mohammed Atta at Logan Airport, a cashiers check made out to a flight school in Phoenix, four drawings of the cockpit of a 757 jet, a box cutter-type knife, maps of Washington and New York, and a page with notes and phone numbers.
Posted on: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 21:40:16 +0000

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