Iraq Link To September
11 Hijacker Debunked
Prague meeting-one of many lies
By Bill Vann
WSWS.org
10-23-2
The  much publicized allegation that the man named as the ringleader of the   September 11 terrorist attacks met with an Iraqi intelligence official in  Prague was a lie, and the Czech president told the Bush administration so,   according to an article appearing in the New York Times October 21. Yet top   administration officials have continued to insist upon this phony Iraqi-Al   Qaeda connection in order to bolster their case for war.
According   to the Times report, Czech President Vaclav Havel warned the Bush administration early this year that there existed no evidence that Mohamed  Atta, who piloted one of the passenger airliners into the World Trade Center,   met with Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani, an official at Baghdad's embassy in   Prague.
The conduit for the purported Czech intelligence report was the country's former   Prime Minister Milos Zeman, a politician known more for bluster and demagogy  than intelligence. He provoked outrage earlier this year by comparing  Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat to Adolph Hitler and urging the Israelis to deal with the Palestinians the way Czechoslovakia dealt with the Sudeten   Germans after World War II, when 3 million of them were expelled.
Dubious   reports of the alleged meeting first surfaced approximately one month after   the terrorist attacks, with leading Czech political figures quickly relaying   them to the Bush administration as fact. According to Czech intelligence,   their source was a single Arab émigré, who came forward with the information   only after photographs of Atta had appeared in the local press along with a   report that he had previously been in Prague.
The   claim was that Atta and the Iraqi official had met in Prague on April 9,   2001. The meeting was cast by the Bush administration as a final planning   session before the September 11 attacks.
Problems   with the story quickly emerged, however. US intelligence agencies pored over   records of Atta's travels and concluded that during the period in question he   was in Virginia Beach, not in Prague. An earlier trip that he had made to the   Czech capital in 2000 was apparently for the purpose of obtaining a cheap   airfare to the US.
We ran down literally hundreds of thousands of leads and checked every record we  could get our hands on, FBI Director Robert Mueller said in a little  reported speech in April. The conclusion: Atta was never in Prague on the day   of the alleged meeting and there was no evidence that he ever met with Iraqi   intelligence.
Czech  intelligence officials attributed the report to a restaurant owner anxious to  discredit a rival by claiming he catered to terrorists. They likewise found   that the Iraqi diplomat in question regularly met with a friend, a used car  dealer, who bore some physical resemblance to Atta.
None of this has dissuaded those who have played the most direct role in crafting  the Bush administration's strategy of preemptive war as a means  of asserting US world hegemony. Even after the Czech government warned  Washington that the Prague meeting never happened, these officials continued   to raise it as a justification for war.
Typical  of the method employed by these officials were the lies and innuendo offered   up by Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Defense Secretary and a key advocate of a  war to establish US domination of Iraq. In an interview with the San   Francisco Chronicle in February, he was asked about allegations of a link  between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Wolfowitz replied:
We  also know there are things that haven't been explained ... like the meeting  of Mohammed Atta with Iraqi officials in Prague ...
Q:   Which now is alleged, right? There is some doubt to that
Wolfowitz: Now this gets you into classified areas again. I think the point which  I do think is fundamental is that, the premise of your question seems to be,  we wait for proof beyond a reasonable doubt. I think the premise of a policy   has to be we can't afford to wait for proof beyond a reasonable doubt. That   is a way in which any number of terrorist regimes have, over the last 20   years, gotten away with doing things that I think encourage more behavior of   that kind.
What   is perhaps most significant about Wolfowitz's comments was the way in which   he upheld the veracity of a report that by then he and the entire  administration knew to be a lie. First, he cited classified  information that cannot be shared with the American people. One can rest assured   that if such classified areas existed, they would quickly be  declassified and plastered onto every newspaper front page and television  screen in the country. The claim that it is classified means simply that it   does not exist.
Then   Wolfowitz ridiculed those asking for such information as lawyerly pedants who  want proof beyond a reasonable doubt when the nation is facing   imminent danger of terrorist attack.
Precisely   the same arguments and even phrases have been used by Vice President Richard  Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, National Security Advisor  Condoleezza Rice and others in the administration when defending  unsubstantiated charges that Iraq has developed weapons of mass destruction, the other major pretext for a US war against the Arab   country.
A  report in Newsweek cited a meeting in which Wolfowitz berated agents in  charge of the Atta investigation over their failure to provide evidence substantiating the non-existent meeting in Prague. When  one agent insisted that no such evidence existed, Wolfowitz continued  pressing him until he would admit that such an encounter was  technically possible, as the FBI could not provide a full account  of Atta's whereabouts on April 9.
Evidence  of a meeting in Prague between a senior Iraqi intelligence agent and Mohamed   Atta, the Sept. 11 ringleader, is convincing, wrote Richard Perle, the chairman of the Defense Policy Board and a key figure in the administration's   war planning, in an Op-Ed published by the Times last December.
Perle  went even further last month, telling Italy's business daily Il Sole 24 Ore   that Atta had gone to Baghdad before September 11 and met with Saddam Hussein. We have proof of that, and we are sure he wasn't just there   for a holiday,declared the defense official, adding that, the  meeting is one of the motives for an American attack on Iraq.Perle's proof, like the convincing evidence" of the meeting in  Prague, has yet to be disclosed. Curiously, this smoking gun of a  meeting between Atta and the Iraqi president has been mentioned nowhere else.
Meanwhile,  the Los Angeles Times on August 5 cited an unnamed senior Bush  administration official as saying that evidence of the phantom meeting in Prague holds up. He added that the administration intended  to talk more about this case.
Similarly,  in May, William Safire, the right-wing New York Times columnist who has waged  a relentless crusade to portray the fictional Prague meeting as fact, also  cited an unnamed senior Bush administration official.
You  cannot say the Czech report about a meeting in 2001 between Atta and the   Iraqi is discredited or disproven in any way, the official told Safire.  The Czechs stand by it and we're still in the process of pursuing it and   sorting out the timing and venue.
By   the time this statement was made, the Czech president had formally told   Washington that the report was false. Czech intelligence officials had long   before discounted it; and the FBI and CIA had concluded after an exhaustive   investigation that there was no evidence whatsoever to back it up.
Safire   improbably attributes the debunking of the alleged Prague meeting to a joint   CIA-Justice Department plot aimed at covering up their own intelligence   failures. He also explains why he and top administration officials continue  to peddle the story, despite all the evidence that it is a fabrication: If the report proves accurate, a connection would exist between Al  Qaeda's murder of 3,000 Americans and Iraq's Saddam. That would clearly be a  casus belli, calling for our immediate military response ...
In  other words, faced with mounting skepticism over its claims that the regime   in Baghdad poses a grave threat to the US and growing popular opposition to  an unprovoked war on Iraq, the administration has desperately sought to   utilize the phony Atta-Iraqi connection as a means to stampede the American  people into supporting military action. It is cynically attempting to exploit   the grief, fear and anger engendered by the September 11 attacks in order to   further long-standing strategic plans for a second US war in the Persian Gulf  aimed at securing control of the region's rich oil reserves.
The  Prague story has now been publicly exposed as a fraudulent piece of war  propaganda. It is, however, only one of many lies. Just as the tale of   Mohamed Atta and the Iraqi diplomat was conclusively proven a fraud, it can  be anticipated that other pretexts that are now being advanced for war on  Iraq will be similarly debunked.
Should   the US military, as now appears virtually inevitable, invade Iraq and subject  its people to a bloody slaughter, one can predict that within a year or so it  will emerge somewhere in the press that the imminent threat of Iraqi weapons  of mass destruction-now being cited by the White House and the US media to  whip up popular fears and terrify the public into supporting war-is another   cynical concoction by the Bush administration.
See   Also:
Wall   Street/Washington insider spills the dirty secret of Iraq war:
Getting   control of that oil will make a vast difference
[16   October 2002]
The   war against Iraq and America's drive for world domination
[4   October 2002]
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