BILAL
QABALAN / AFP
A
general view of the US Embassy in the Saudi capital Riyadh.
From the Magazine | Nation
Who Blew the Leads?
The Saudis get blamed for not revealing more after 9/11.
Maybe they said more than the FBI took in By ADAM ZAGORIN
Posted Monday, Jun 20, 2005 In
the wake of 9/11, Saudi authorities came under criticism in the U.S. for
sluggishness in investigating the attacks, in which 15 of the 19 hijackers
were Saudi citizens. Now it appears that the U.S. bears some
responsibility for the slackness with which leads were pursued. According
to several former employees of the U.S. embassy in Riyadh, the FBI legal
attaché's office housed within the embassy was often in disarray during
the months that followed 9/11. When an FBI supervisor arrived to clean up
the mess, she found a mountain of paper and, for security reasons, ordered
wholesale shredding that resulted in the destruction of unprocessed
documents relating to the 9/11 investigations. A letter obtained by Time
confirms that the Senate Judiciary Committee is investigating the
matter.
In 2001 the FBI's Saudi office comprised a secretary and two
agents--Wilfred Rattigan and his lieutenant, Egyptian-American Gamal
Abdel-Hafiz. They also oversaw six nearby countries. The FBI sent
reinforcements within two weeks of 9/11, but it appears that the bureau's
team never got on top of the thousands of leads flowing in from the U.S.
and Saudi governments. In a June 6 letter to FBI Director Robert Mueller,
the Senate Judiciary Committee renewed a request for information about
allegations that the FBI's Riyadh office was "delinquent in pursuing
thousands of leads" related to 9/11.
When the senior FBI supervisor was sent to the Riyadh office nearly a
year after 9/11, she found secret documents literally falling out of file
drawers, stacked in binders on tables and wedged behind cabinets,
according to an FBI briefing to Congress. The process of sending
classified material to the U.S. had fallen so far behind that a backlog of
boxes, each filled with three feet of paper containing secret,
time-sensitive leads, had built up. Since embassies must be prepared for
the possibility of a hostile takeover, the rule is that officials should
need no more than 15 minutes to destroy all their sensitive documents.
Accordingly, the supervisor ordered the shredding of hundreds, perhaps
thousands of pages, many of them related directly to the ongoing 9/11
investigation, an FBI briefer told Congress.
In a statement to Time last week, the FBI said the shredded material
was "duplicative" or "only informational." But the Judiciary Committee's
letter cites reports that some of the documents "had not been translated
or reviewed." Or copied, according to several former Riyadh embassy
employees. The result, they say, was that over two or more months, agents
had to go back to Saudi security officials to try to obtain copies of what
had been destroyed. "It was leads, suspicious-activity material,
information on airline pilots," says an employee. In a deposition for a
lawsuit filed by Bassem Youssef, the FBI's previous No. 1 in Riyadh,
Mueller conceded that there were problems in the office after 9/11.
Page 1 of 2 1 | 2 Next >> From the Jun. 27,
2005 issue of TIME magazine |