The Columbus Dispatch

FBI releases record about 9/11 attacks

Document details 2 hijackers’ associates in US

- Eric Tucker

“This document, together with the public evidence gathered to date, provides a blueprint for how (al-qaida) operated inside the US with the active, knowing support of the Saudi government.” Jim Kreindler A lawyer for the victims’ relatives

WASHINGTON – A declassified FBI document related to logistical support given to two of the Saudi hijackers in the run-up to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks details contacts the men had with Saudi associates in the United States but does not provide proof that senior kingdom officials were complicit in the plot.

The document released Saturday, on the 20th anniversar­y of the attacks, is the first investigat­ive record to be disclosed since President Joe Biden ordered a declassification review of materials that for years have remained out of public view.

Biden ordered the Justice Department and other agencies to conduct a declassification review and release what documents they can over the next six months. He was under pressure from victims’ families, who have long sought the records as they pursue a lawsuit in New York alleging that Saudi government officials supported the hijackers.

The 16-page document is a summary of an FBI interview done in 2015 with a man who had frequent contact with Saudi nationals in the U.S. who supported the first hijackers to arrive in the country before the attacks.

The heavily blacked-out document was released hours after Biden attended Sept. 11 memorial events. Victims’ relatives had said they would object to Biden’s presence at those remembranc­es as long as the documents remained classified.

The Saudi government has long denied any involvemen­t in the attacks. The Saudi Embassy in Washington has said it supported the full declassification of all records as a way to “end the baseless allegation­s against the Kingdom once and for all.”

Victims’ relatives said the document’s release was a significant step in their effort to connect the attacks to Saudi Arabia. Brett Eagleson, whose father, Bruce, was killed in the World Trade Center attack, said the release of the FBI material “accelerate­s our pursuit of truth and justice.”

Jim Kreindler, a lawyer for the victims’ relatives, said in a statement that “the findings and conclusion­s in this FBI investigat­ion validate the arguments we have made in the litigation regarding the

Saudi government’s responsibi­lity for the 9/11 attacks.

“This document, together with the public evidence gathered to date, provides a blueprint for how (al-qaida) operated inside the US with the active, knowing support of the Saudi government,” he said.

That includes, he said, Saudi officials exchanging phone calls among themselves and al-qaida operatives and then having “accidental meetings” with the hijackers while providing them with assistance to get settled and find flight schools.

Regarding Sept.11, there has been speculatio­n of official involvemen­t since shortly after the attacks, when it was revealed that 15 of the 19 attackers were Saudis. Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-qaida at the time, was from a prominent family in the kingdom.

The U.S. investigat­ed some Saudi diplomats and others with Saudi government ties who knew hijackers after they arrived in the U.S., according to previously declassified documents.

Still, the 9/11 Commission report in 2004 found “no evidence that the Saudi government as an institutio­n or senior Saudi officials individual­ly funded” the attacks that al-qaida mastermind­ed, though it noted Saudi-linked charities could have diverted money to the group.

Particular scrutiny has centered on the first two hijackers to arrive in the U.S., Nawaf al-hazmi and Khalid almihdhar, and support they received.

In February 2000, shortly after their arrival in Southern California, they encountere­d at a halal restaurant a Saudi national named Omar al-bayoumi who helped them find and lease an apartment in San Diego. He had ties to the Saudi government and had earlier attracted FBI scrutiny.

Bayoumi has described his restaurant meeting with Hazmi and Mihdhar as a “chance encounter,” and the FBI during its interview made multiple attempts to ascertain if that characteri­zation was accurate or if the meeting had actually been arranged in advance, according to the document.

The 2015 interview that forms the basis of the FBI document was of a man who was applying for U.S. citizenshi­p and who years earlier had repeated contacts with Saudi nationals who, investigat­ors said, provided “significant logistical support” to several of the hijackers. Among the man’s contacts was Bayoumi, according to the document.

The man’s identity is blacked out throughout the document, but he is described as having worked at the Saudi consulate in Los Angeles.

Also referenced in the document is Fahad al-thumairy, at the time an accredited diplomat at the Saudi Consulate in Los Angeles who investigat­ors say led an extremist faction at his mosque. The document says analysis identified a seven-minute phone call in 1999 from Thumairy’s phone to the Saudi Arabian family home phone of two brothers who later were detained at the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Joe Biden, under pressure from families of Sept. 11, 2001, victims, ordered the Justice Department and other agencies to conduct a declassification review of documents related to the attacks and release what they can over the next six months.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Joe Biden, under pressure from families of Sept. 11, 2001, victims, ordered the Justice Department and other agencies to conduct a declassification review of documents related to the attacks and release what they can over the next six months.

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