-Caveat Lector-

CAVEAT LECTOR - FROM MOSSAD:

Updates: http://www.ecologynews.com/cuenews43.html

London Telegraph
                     Israeli security issued urgent warning
                    to CIA of large-scale terror attacks
                    By David Wastell in Washington and Philip
                    Jacobson in Jerusalem
                    (Filed: 16/09/2001)

                    ISRAELI intelligence officials say that they warned
                    their counterparts in the United States last month
                    that large-scale terrorist attacks on highly visible
                    targets on the American mainland were imminent.

                    The attacks on the World Trade Centre's twin
                    towers and the Pentagon were humiliating blows to
                    the intelligence services, which failed to foresee
                    them, and to the defence forces of the most
                    powerful nation in the world, which failed to deflect
                    them.

                    The Telegraph has learnt that two senior experts
                    with Mossad, the Israeli military intelligence service,
                    were sent to Washington in August to alert the CIA
                    and FBI to the existence of a cell of as many of 200
                    terrorists said to be preparing a big operation.

                    "They had no specific information about what was
                    being planned but linked the plot to Osama bin
                    Laden and told the Americans that there were
                    strong grounds for suspecting Iraqi involvement,"
                    said a senior Israeli security official.

                    The CIA has said that it had no hard information that
                    would have led to the prevention of the hijacking,
                    but the FBI said it believed that cells operating
                    within America and totalling at least 50 terrorists
                    were behind last week's devastating hijacks; the
                    names of new suspects are being added to the list
                    daily.

                    America's intelligence agencies are being widely
                    blamed for their failure to predict the attacks, or
                    anything like them, and for not discovering any of
                    the terrorist cells before the hijackings on Tuesday.
                    Some of those who took part had lived in the US for
                    months, or even years.

                    Evidence that a clear Israeli warning was delivered
                    to American authorities, but ignored, would be a
                    further blow to the reputation of the CIA, which is
                    under fire for its failure last week.

                    An administration official in Washington said: "If this
                    is true then the refusal to take it seriously will mean
                    heads will roll. It is quite credible that the CIA might
                    not heed a Mossad warning: it has a history of being
                    overcautious about Israeli information."

                    For years, staff at the Pentagon joked that they
                    worked at "Ground Zero", the spot at which an
                    incoming nuclear missile aimed at America's defences
                    would explode. There is even a snack bar of that
                    name in the central courtyard of the five-sided
                    building, America's most obvious military bullseye.

                    This weekend, five days after that target was struck
                    with devastating effect by a hijacked plane, the
                    joking has stopped.

                    It is far from certain that any military commander
                    would have had the courage to recommend shooting
                    down a passenger airliner, even in the
                    unprecedented circumstances of last Tuesday.

                    For three of the four airliners hijacked last week,
                    however, the question did not even arise. Two pairs
                    of combat fighters were scrambled into action but
                    did not get near enough to shoot any of them down.

                    Norad, the command headquarters in Colorado
                    responsible for defending all of North America from
                    air attack, was notified of the first hijack at 8.38am
                    and six minutes later two F-15 fighter jets were
                    ordered into the air from Otis airforce base on Cape
                    Cod.

                    Before they could take off, however, the first
                    hijacked airliner crashed into the World Trade
                    Centre's north tower at 8.46am. Six minutes later
                    the two military jets were airborne, but when the
                    second hijacked airliner hit the south tower shortly
                    after 9am they were still 70 miles from Manhattan.

                    The only successful action against the hijackers was
                    taken by passengers of the fourth airliner, whose
                    heroic decision to fight back led to its crashing into
                    the fields of Pennsylvania.

                    The reason lies in the strict distinction America
                    draws between civil and military power, combined
                    with the fact that until last week nobody had
                    confronted the possibility that a terrorist hijacker
                    might turn kamikaze pilot.

                    Although Norad has its own radar system to track
                    aircraft over the US, its prime task is to watch for
                    hostile aircraft approaching America from outside.
                    "We assume anything originating in US airspace is
                    friendly," said a spokesman.

                    For the same reason, the 20 or so American fighter
                    planes on permanent full alert in case of a suspect
                    intruder, were deployed at half a dozen bases in the
                    likeliest flightpaths of an attack from the former
                    Soviet Union, several hundred miles from New York
                    or Washington DC.

                    All aircraft flying over American airspace are
                    monitored and controlled by a network of 20
                    regional Federal Aviation Authority air traffic control
                    centres, backed up by individual airport control
                    towers. Military aircraft under Norad control can
                    intervene with domestic traffic only if called on for
                    help by their civilian colleagues.

                    That is what happened on Tuesday, but in no case
                    was there apparently enough time after the FAA's
                    warning for fighter planes to reach the hijacked
                    airliners.

                    More puzzling, there were 45 minutes between air
                    traffic controllers losing contact with the third
                    airliner, which took off from Dulles airport just
                    outside Washington, and its crash on to the
                    Pentagon.

                    At that point, however, the aircraft was still flying on
                    its intended course westwards. It may not have
                    been until later, possibly after a passenger's mobile
                    phone call to the Justice Department, that the civil
                    authorities finally twigged what was happening.

                    It was not the military but civilian air traffic
                    controllers at Washington's Reagan National Airport
                    - tipped off by their colleagues at Dulles - who
                    alerted the White House to the fact that an
                    unauthorised jet was flying at full throttle towards it.

                    As shaken White House staff began a frantic
                    evacuation, the aircraft banked, performed a 270
                    degree turn and sailed past lines of aghast drivers
                    on expressways to crash explosively into the west
                    side of the Pentagon.

                    If the airliner had approached much nearer to the
                    White House it might have been shot down by the
                    Secret Service, who are believed to have a battery
                    of ground-to-air Stinger missiles ready to defend the
                    president's home.

                    The Pentagon is not similarly defended. "We are an
                    open society," said a military official. "We don't have
                    soldiers positioned on the White House lawn and we
                    don't have the Pentagon ringed with bunkers and
                    tanks."

                    It emerged last night that two F-16 fighters took off
                    from Langley airforce base in Virginia just two
                    minutes before the American Airlines Boeing 767
                    crashed into the Pentagon, again too late to have a
                    chance of intercepting.

                    Only the fourth hijacked airliner, which was less than
                    30 minutes from Washington when it crashed, might
                    have been successfully intercepted: air traffic
                    controllers at a regional centre in Nashua, New
                    Hampshire, told a Boston newspaper that at least
                    one F-16 fighter was in hot pursuit, and defence
                    officials confirmed that the fighters already launched
                    from Langley were on their way to intercept the
                    flight when passengers apparently took matters into
                    their own hands.

                    Deep inside the Pentagon, in the hardened bunkers
                    of the National Military Joint Intelligence Centre,
                    senior officials were said to be "stunned" by the
                    terrorists' achievement.

                    Within minutes of the attack American forces around
                    the world were put on one of their highest states of
                    alert - Defcon 3, just two notches short of all-out
                    war - and F-16s from Andrews Air Force Base were
                    in the air over Washington DC.

                    A flotilla of warships was deployed along the east
                    coast from bases in Virginia and Florida, with two
                    aircraft-carriers to help protect the airspace around
                    New York and Washington DC. Off the west coast, a
                    further 10 ships put to sea to take up station close
                    to the shore.

                    Extra Awacs aerial reconnaissance aircraft were sent
                    aloft to ensure that nothing other than military
                    aircraft flew in American airspace - a home-grown
                    version of the "no-fly zones" enforced for many
                    years over Iraq. For much of the rest of the week,
                    the unsettling roar of F-15 and F-16 fighters
                    patrolling the skies high above America's biggest
                    cities replaced the usual rumble of commercial
                    airliners.

                    On Friday, in a tacit admission that America must in
                    future be better prepared, Donald Rumsfeld, the
                    Defence Secretary, announced that fighters were
                    being put on a 15-minute "strip" alert at 26 bases
                    nationwide.

                    There was anger among politicians at what many
                    saw as the failure of the intelligence services, and
                    some officials on Capitol Hill began canvassing
                    support for a move to force George Tenet, the
                    director of the Central Intelligence Agency, originally
                    appointed by Clinton, to step aside.

                    James Traficant, a Democratic congressman from
                    Pennsylvania, said that for years Congress had
                    poured billions of dollars of largely unscrutinised
                    funding into America's intelligence services, "yet we
                    learnt of every one of these tragedies from Fox
                    News and CNN"- two television channels. Senator
                    Richard Shelby, a Republican member of the Senate
                    intelligence committee, said it was "a failure of great
                    dimension".

                    There are moves to address one severe shortcoming
                    noted by many critics: the CIA's reliance on
                    technological rather than "human" means to gather
                    information, and its weakness as a means of finding
                    out what Osama bin Laden is up to.

                    During the Clinton administration, Congress banned
                    the CIA from recruiting as a paid informer anyone
                    with a criminal record or who was guilty of human
                    rights violations. James Woolsey, another former CIA
                    director, said: "Inside bin Laden's organisation there
                    are only people who want to be human rights
                    violators. If you don't recruit them then you don't
                    recruit anyone."


                     14 September 2001: Sloppy CIA likes its home comforts

                     14 September 2001: FBI tracks down the Florida lair of
flying
                     school terrorists

                     14 September 2001: Hijacked passengers 'go down
fighting'

                     13 September 2001: Intelligence agencies under fire for
not
                     predicting attack

                     12 September 2001: America on war footing

_____
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http://portal.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/09/16/wcia16.xml&;

sSheet=/news/2001/09/

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