Houston Chronicle Sunday

9/11 mastermind still awaiting trial

Victims’ families left exasperate­d by failure to bring closure after 21 years

- By Larry Neumeister, Jennifer Peltz and Carrie Antlfinger

NEW YORK — Hours before dawn on March 1, 2003, the U.S. scored its most thrilling victory yet against the plotters of the Sept. 11 attacks — the capture of a disheveled Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, hauled away by intelligen­ce agents from a hideout in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

The global manhunt for al-Qaida’s No. 3 leader had taken 18 months. But America’s attempt to bring him to justice, in a legal sense, has taken much, much longer. Critics say it has become one of the war on terror’s greatest failures. As Sunday’s 21st anniversar­y of the terror attacks approaches, Mohammed and four other men accused of 9/11-related crimes still sit in a U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay, their planned trials before a military tribunal endlessly postponed.

The latest setback came last month when pretrial hearings scheduled for early fall were canceled. The delay was one more in a string of disappoint­ments for relatives of the nearly 3,000 victims of the attack. They’ve long hoped that a trial would bring closure and perhaps resolve unanswered questions.

“Now, I’m not sure

 ?? Carrie Antlfinger/Associated Press ?? Gordon Haberman of Wisconsin lost his 25-year-old daughter Andrea in the Sept. 11 attacks in New York.
Carrie Antlfinger/Associated Press Gordon Haberman of Wisconsin lost his 25-year-old daughter Andrea in the Sept. 11 attacks in New York.

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