discovering what everyone never remembered
by Douglas Messerli
Lawrence Wright The
Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
2006)
Perhaps no book more clearly details the US's determination to keep history a secret than The Looming Tower, Lawrence Wright's brilliant post-9/11 study of the Muslim terrorist world and its interaction with the American FBI, CIA, and other government organizations.
Even the sport
of football "confirmed Qutb's ideas of American primitiveness," since
he felt it less a team sport, like soccer, than a game in which one player
attempts to run with the ball, while others try "kicking him in the
stomach, or violently breaking his arms and legs...." Women teachers
outraged him. Accordingly, he returned to Egypt more radicalized in relation to
his religion than he left it. Qutb went on to establish the Muslim Brothers,
the first of a series of radical reactionary groups against what they felt was
Egypt's failure to keep the tenants of the Muslim faith.
The pattern was
to become a quite typical one, with many of the well-educated and often wealthy
young radicals receiving their educations in the West, opening them to
experiences that only hardened them in their beliefs. The fascinating story of
Ayman Al-Zawahiri, who grew up in a planned community, Maadi, Egypt—that in its
conception, at least, was not so very different from Greeley, Colorado—is a
high point of the book. With his father working as a doctor and his mother a
professor of pharmacology at Ain Shams University, Al-Zawahiri was raised in
one of the most liberal and prominent families in Egypt. But as he grew older,
Al-Zawahiri, influenced, in part, by Sayyid Qutb's writings, became more and
more dissatisfied with the Egyptian government, ultimately creating, along with
others, the Al-Jihad movement, and involving himself, if only through his
friendships, with the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Al-Sadat.
Through his friendship with Abdullah Azzam, Al-Zawahiri was ultimately drawn to
Afghanistan, there befriending the charismatic Osama bin Laden.
Through hundreds of interviews gathered over a five-year-period, Wright brilliantly puts all the pieces of the puzzle together, so that the reader can discover that what seems to be a myriad of terrifyingly unrelated events grew, as the millennium approached, into an interwoven skein with the aim of strangling what all Muslim radicals began to see as the cause of all their misfortunes.
Of course,
hindsight is always a superior position than that of suffering blindly through
history. But how one wishes that minds like Wrights might have been employed in
the very organizations whose function it was to piece these threats together!
Instead, we are shown that American fact gathering organizations such as the
CIA, the FBI, and the White House itself, began by doubting any real threat,
and later, when it was almost too late to change course, deliberately withheld
information from each other. Given a directory intended to protect later court
hearings, the various organizations perceived the so-called "wall" as
a barrier to any shared knowledge. FBI Chief of Counterterrorism, John O'Neill
was perhaps the one man who had the tenacity and intelligence to bring the data
together that might have saved the nation from the events of September 11,
2001. However, his own often dictatorial methods, his far-flung affairs with
various women, and even his dashing way of dressing made for many enemies, including
coworkers in the FBI and, in particular, the director, Michael Scheuer, of the
so-called Alec Station in the CIA, which was also attempting to track the
activities of Osama bin Laden and Al-Queda.
In the rivalry
between the two, O'Neill ultimately won, with Scheuer suffering a psychological
breakdown. But O'Neill's breaches of security—at one point he had brought one
of his mistresses into FBI headquarters and, at another event, his computer,
filled with sensitive information, was temporarily stolen—also brought
reprimands and the possible termination of his job. Yet, even in those
difficult days, had the CIA reported to other organizations that Nawaf al-Hazmi
and Khaled al-Mihdhar, both Al-Queda operatives, had entered the US on January
2001, and lived for a while in San Diego, O'Neill likely could have acted,
spoiling bin Laden's plans.
O'Neill's
abilities are outlined throughout Wright's book, capsulized, perhaps, in his
clever extraction of information from figures involved with the bombing of the U.S. Cole without any torture, tracing,
with the help of his Yemeni specialist Ali Soufan, the first real connection
between the Cole and Al-Queda. But
even in Yemen, O'Neill was dogged by personality differences, in this case with
US ambassador to Yemen, Barbara Bodine, who forced him to exit the country.
Even as O'Neill
was scheduled to leave the FBI to become—in one of the most ironic situations
in American history—head of security for the World Trade Center, he sensed
Only a week
before O'Neill's retirement, a report from a flight school in Minnesota to the
FBI noted that one of their students, Zacarias Moussaoui, was asking suspicious
questions about flight patterns and locked cockpit doors. When the agent in
Minnesota asked permission to search Moussaoui's computer, he was told he was
"trying to get people 'spun up.'" His answer: "I am trying to
keep someone from taking a plane and crashing into the World Trade
Center."
Wright asks
several of his interviewees why the CIA had been so determined to keep the
crucial information that two Al-Queda operatives had been in the country
secretly, particularly since the men had been discovered on US soil, where the
CIA had no jurisdiction. The answers range from the belief in CIA plans to use
them as potential informants to the often stated argument that for legal
reasons they simply could not share that knowledge. But the truth, perhaps, is
what Wright describes simply as the radically different make-up of the two
major information-gathering organizations, the CIA consisting of
internationally-seasoned individuals who often gathered information as a kind
of protective act, using it only behind-the-scenes, so to speak, to influence
the actions of other countries. That is not say that the CIA has not been
involved in the deaths of others or has not stood behind many covert coups. But
the FBI persona had long been symbolized by their direct and, often, public
response. The agency, Wright suggests, was made up primarily of Italo-American
and Irish-American men, who, much like the immigrant communities out of which
they came, believed in information as a justification to act; from the earliest
Hoover days, as Michael Mann's recent film, Public
Enemies, reiterates, they were men of action. Each organization highly
suspected (and perhaps still does suspect) the other as being ineffectual.
Their failures to work together, however, along with a weak grasp of the
situations by the Bush administration—which clearly led to thousands of
deaths—should be repeatedly retold and remembered by all.
O'Neill survived
the original attack, running, as bodies fell from the towers into the plaza
below, to assess the damage. He reentered the South Tower, which, a short while
later, collapsed, entombing him within.
Los Angeles,
July 4, 2009
Reprinted from Green
Integer Blog (July 2009).
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