OKC Bombing: Precursor
to 9-11? by William F. Jasper
Evidence links the OKC bombing to Middle
Eastern terrorists, and the failure of officials to examine this evidence in
1995 may have set the stage for the September 11th attacks.
The Black Tuesday terror attacks on America
have prompted some journalists to take a look at the abundant evidence of
Middle Eastern terrorist involvement in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and
the possible connection of that event to the more recent 9-11 attacks. A
recent example is Insight magazine. A December 3rd article by Kelly
Patricia O’Meara reports that Timothy McVeigh’s convicted co-conspirator
Terry Nichols "reportedly attended a meeting in the early 1990s on the
predominantly Muslim island of Mindanao, a hotbed of fundamentalist
activities, at which Ramzi Yousef, Abdul Hakim Murad and Wali Khan Amin Shah
were present. The themes of the meeting were ‘bombing activities, providing
firearms and ammunition, training in making and handling bombs.’ Yousef was
the mastermind of the World Trade Center bombing in 1993; Murad and Shah
were convicted in a 1996 conspiracy to blow up 12 U.S. jetliners."
O’Meara interviewed Iraq expert Dr. Laurie
Mylroie, author of the newly released book, The War Against America:
Saddam Hussein and The World Trade Center Attacks. A consultant to the
McVeigh defense team, Mylroie told Insight that "the connection of
Terry Nichols, the Philippines and Ramzi Yousef is a very important point
that neither the FBI nor the press pursued." Mylroie added, "I doubt that
Nichols has ever been asked about his connections to Yousef because the
government didn’t want to know. It wanted to say, ‘Here are the
perpetrators; we arrested them and we brought them to justice. Case
closed.’"
Dr. Mylroie’s book marshals convincing
evidence that Ramzi Yousef was acting as an agent for Saddam Hussein. The
foreword to her book was penned by former CIA Director R. James Woolsey two
weeks after the September 11th attacks. In that piece and other articles
since Black Tuesday, Woolsey has expressed his support for her thesis and
stated his belief that Hussein was behind both the 1993 and the 2001 attacks
on the World Trade Center Towers. He scorches the Clinton administration
(under which he served) for an unwillingness to look at the evidence of
state sponsorship of these acts of terrorism.
Familiar Ground
All of this is familiar ground to regular
readers of this magazine. For nearly seven years THE
NEW AMERICAN
has been publishing stories concerning evidence pointing directly toward
Iraqi involvement with McVeigh and Nichols in the bombing (see
www.thenewamerican.com/focus/okc/). In "A
Tale of Intrigue," in our December 25, 1995 issue, for instance, we
reported on the evidence pointing toward a possible connection between Terry
Nichols and Ramzi Yousef in the Philippines. It is a theme we have returned
to many times, as additional supporting evidence has developed.
In our October 16, 1995 issue ("Startling
OKC Developments"), we reported on the series of stories by Jayna Davis,
an investigative reporter for the Oklahoma City NBC affiliate, KFOR-TV. Mrs.
Davis had interviewed eyewitnesses who had seen individuals identified as
being of Middle Eastern extraction speeding away from the Murrah Federal
Building in a pickup truck immediately before the blast. Her investigative
reports pointed to at least one Iraqi "refugee," a former soldier in Saddam
Hussein’s army, who was living in Oklahoma City. He had come to the U.S.
under a controversial Clinton program that had brought several thousand
Iraqis here for resettlement — without screening and security checks to weed
out Saddam’s agents posing as refugees. Mrs. Davis also located credible
witnesses who placed this Iraqi in the company of Timothy McVeigh in the
days prior to the bombing.
KFOR aired several stories with video footage
of the Iraqi bombing "suspect," but digitally blurred his face and did not
identify him by name. They identified him only as a "possible John Doe No.
2," presented the considerable evidence pointing to him as a prime suspect,
and asked why federal authorities were completely uninterested in
questioning him or looking at the evidence. The Iraqi suspect, Hussain Al-Hussaini,
identified himself publicly when he launched a defamation lawsuit against
Davis and KFOR.
Rather than looking objectively at Jayna
Davis’ excellent research, virtually all of the Oklahoma City and national
media adopted the Bill Clinton-Janet Reno thesis that the OKC bombing was a
domestic "right-wing" attack, and rejected out of hand any evidence of
foreign ties to the bombing. A careful review of Davis’ extensive evidence
and our own parallel investigation quickly convinced this writer that Davis
was on solid ground.
O’Meara’s Insight item singles out as
a prime co-conspirator suspect an individual whom this magazine has reported
on extensively. O’Meara points directly at a notorious leader of the Ku Klux
Klan and White Aryan Resistance, Dennis Mahon, who, she says, was "long
suspected of being a player in the conspiracy to bomb the Murrah building."
The story notes — as we have reported several times in the past — that "the
Iraqi government has given Dennis Mahon thousands of dollars over the past
six years, and Mahon has been banned from entering Canada and the United
Kingdom and is classified by Interpol as an international terrorist." "The
FBI did not bother to interview Mahon in connection to the Oklahoma City
bombing," notes O’Meara. That is true; while the Clinton/Reno Justice
Department and FBI bragged about the thousands of agents involved in the OKC
investigation and the tens of thousands of interviews they conducted, the
government never explained why obvious suspects like Mahon and Al-Hussaini
were never questioned.
New Evidence
Last October, Paul Bedard, a writer for
U.S. News & World Report, dropped a potential bombshell when he reported
that top Pentagon officials believe that Timothy McVeigh was an Iraqi agent
and claimed that McVeigh was in possession of Iraqi telephone numbers. In a
short item entitled "McVeigh’s ghost" that appeared in Bedard’s
Washington Whispers column on October 29th, U.S. News reported:
Some dismiss it as being akin to Elvis
sightings, but a few top Defense officials think Oklahoma City bomber Tim
McVeigh was an Iraqi agent. The theory stems from a never-before-reported
allegation that McVeigh had allegedly collected Iraqi telephone numbers.
Why haven’t we heard this before about the case of the executed McVeigh?
Conspiracy theorists in the Pentagon think it’s part of a coverup.
Mr. Bedard subsequently appeared on Fox TV’s
Fox and Friends show, where he stated that McVeigh "had information
about Iraq which has led some officials to think that he was an Iraqi agent
and maybe was doing Saddam Hussein’s business in Oklahoma City." Mr.
Bedard’s reports were the first ever to allege that Timothy McVeigh
possessed Iraqi telephone numbers. If true, this would mean that highly
significant information had been covered up; nothing of this sort came out
during the McVeigh or Nichols trials.
On September 13th, two days after the 9-11
attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., listeners to WRRK in Pittsburgh,
Pa., were stunned to hear Chicago attorney David Schippers state that he had
attempted to warn Attorney General John Ashcroft and other federal officials
about the catastrophic attack weeks before it occurred. Schippers, the
author of Sellout: The Inside Story of President Clinton’s Impeachment,
gained international fame as the chief investigative counsel for the
Judiciary Committee in the House of Representatives’ successful impeachment
of President Bill Clinton. According to Mr. Schippers, he had received
information from intelligence sources, including FBI agents, that a massive
terrorist attack was being planned for lower Manhattan (where the World
Trade Center was located). Schippers said that he began trying to get this
information to Ashcroft six weeks before the Black Tuesday attacks.
Currently representing Jayna Davis, Schippers
had attempted even earlier to get her information concerning the OKC-Iraq
connection to the attorney general. In both cases, he said, he had been
stymied by lower-level Department of Justice officials who would not give
him access to Mr. Ashcroft or any of his top lieutenants. Mr. Schippers
repeated these charges in several other radio and print interviews.
On March 20, 2001, Fox TV’s Bill O’Reilly
interviewed Jayna Davis, providing the first major national coverage of her
OKC-Mideast research. Subsequently, Mr. O’Reilly has focused his program,
"The O’Reilly Factor," on a related aspect of the OKC-Mideast connection,
achieving some very positive results. His September 26th broadcast entitled
"What is Going On at the University of South Florida?" asked some piercing
questions of USF Professor Sami Al-Arian and his connections to the Islamic
Jihad terrorist group. We had asked similar questions in a detailed article
("America
the Vulnerable," September 14, 1998) about Al-Arian, Ramadan Shallah,
Khalil Shikaki, and others at USF connected to Islamic Jihad and Hamas. That
article pointed out that Al-Arian and company were operating through USF-affiliated
"think tanks" such as the World Islam Studies Enterprise (WISE) and the
Islamic Committee for Palestine (ICP) to give terrorist leaders access to
the U.S. and to radicalize American Muslims for recruitment into the
extremist networks. We noted therein that an ICP/WISE speaker, Kamal Helbawi,
a Hamas leader based in Pakistan, was one of several militants who had
addressed Muslims in a very inflammatory speech at a conference in Oklahoma
City.
"Oklahoma City has played host to other
leaders associated with Hamas, ICP, WISE, and other suspected terrorist
fronts," we reported. "And evidence developed by this magazine and other
investigators indicates that locally based and foreign individuals
associated with these long-established terrorist networks were involved in
the April 19, 1995 bombing. Unless officials are pressured to conduct an
honest and thorough investigation, more atrocities and tragedies are sure to
follow."
Thanks to Bill O’Reilly’s coverage on Fox,
USF announced last December 19th that Dr. Al-Arian was being dismissed from
employment at USF. That will be a rather empty victory, however, if federal
immigration, intelligence, and law enforcement officials do not follow up
with an intensive investigation into the vast terrorist support network
within this country, of which Al-Arian’s USF band appears to be a
significant part.
Many people held high hopes that the
important OKC-Mideast evidence that the Clinton-Reno regime had suppressed
would be acted on under the new Bush-Ashcroft management. But the Department
of Justice under Ashcroft is thus far following the Reno script on OKC. On
October 29th, Oklahoma Judge Ray Dean Linder ruled that, because of
objections from the Bush-Ashcroft Justice Department, retired FBI Agent Dan
Vogel would not be allowed to testify about evidence he had received
concerning Mideast connections to the OKC bombing. Vogel, an Oklahoma City
FBI Special Agent, had volunteered to testify in the upcoming state trial of
Terry Nichols, who has already been convicted on federal charges as an
accomplice with Timothy McVeigh in the bombing. Among the things that Mr.
Vogel could testify about is that he received 22 affidavits and more than 30
witness statements describing sightings of Middle Easterners with McVeigh.
The information was transmitted to him at the FBI’s Oklahoma City office on
January 28, 1999 by reporter Jayna Davis, accompanied by her husband, Drew
Davis, and her attorney, Dan Nelson. Mr. Vogel has said that he is willing
to testify before a congressional committee if he is subpoenaed to do so.
Last November 17th, Indianapolis Star
writer James Patterson wrote a story on the Davis-Vogel-OKC-Ashcroft
developments that was picked up nationally by the Associated Press. In the
article, entitled "Missing evidence from Oklahoma City," Patterson wrote:
"The FBI doesn’t want to talk about it, but the evidence keeps mounting.
Critical evidence that several Middle Eastern men may have been connected to
the Oklahoma City bombing appears to have been kept from the public by the
FBI."
"Officially, the FBI has dismissed the
possibility of a John Doe No. 2, an olive-skinned man whose sketch they
released immediately after the bombing, or other suspects," said Patterson.
"But current and former FBI agents in Oklahoma City say they received
documents pointing to another person or even a cell of Middle Eastern
operatives. At a minimum, Congress should question one former FBI agent who
says he obtained 22 affidavits and more than 30 witness statements
describing sightings of Middle Easterners with McVeigh."
The Star article states that FBI
"agents believe if that evidence had not been suppressed by the FBI, it
could have helped uncover plans leading to the Sept. 11 attacks on the World
Trade Center and Pentagon." Patterson quotes an unnamed former FBI agent as
stating: "We did have some Oklahoma connections to the events in Washington,
D.C., and New York City. We did find out that one of these individuals was
trying to take flight training at a Norman [Okla.] flight instruction
school."
Why do the Bush administration and Congress
continually avoid looking at this evidence, especially the more recent
evidence Mr. Schippers claims to have about forewarning of the 9-11 attacks?
It is absolutely imperative that Congress and the White House be held
accountable for this gross dereliction of duty and obstruction of justice.
How many more attacks must we suffer and how many more lives must be lost
before this very reasonable, common-sense request to investigate prime
suspects and examine available, credible evidence is finally acted upon by
officials in Washington?