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In the days immediately following 9/11, Gail Sheehy went to Middletown,
New Jersey, a community that lost more people in the World
Trade Center than any other outside New York City. For the
better part of two years, Sheehy followed the women, men and
children who remained after the devastation and who continue
to put their lives back together. Sheehy's Middletown, America: One
Town's Passage from Trauma to Hope , was published by Random
House in September 2003 and received wide critical acclaim.
Yet for Sheehy, the Middletown community and the nation, the
story continues and threat remains.
In her book, and later in a series of articles for the New York
Observer, Sheehy continues to tell the story of four widowed moms
from New Jersey who turned their sorrow into action and became
formidable witnesses to the failures of the country’s leaders
to connect the dots before September 11. Sheehy follows the four
moms as they fight White House attempts to thwart the 9/11 Commission.
In addition to her articles for the New York Observer, Sheehy is
regularly featured on radio and television coverage about the failures
before and the aftermath of September 11.
Here is a sampling of her work:
This concerns the refusal of the country's leadership
to be held accountable for the failure to execute its most fundamental
responsibility.
by Gail Sheehy
In
mid-June, F.B.I. director Robert Mueller III and several senior
agents in the bureau received a group of about 20 visitors in a
briefing room of the J. Edgar Hoover Building in Washington, D.C.
The director himself narrated a PowerPoint presentation that summarized
the numbers of agents and leads and evidence he and his people
had collected in the 18-month course of their ongoing investigation
of Penttbom, the clever neologism the bureau had invented to reduce
the sites of devastation on 9/11 to one word: Pent for Pentagon,
Pen for Pennsylvania, tt for the Twin Towers and bom for the four
planes that the government had been forewarned could be used as
weapons-even bombs-but chose to ignore.
After the formal meeting, senior
agents in the room faced a grilling by Kristen Breitweiser, a 9/11
widow whose cohorts are three other widowed moms from New Jersey.
"I don't understand, with all
the warnings about the possibilities of Al Qaeda using planes as
weapons, and the Phoenix Memo from one of your own agents warning
that Osama bin Laden was sending operatives to this country for
flight-school training, why didn't you check out flight schools
before Sept. 11?"
"Do you know how many flight
schools there are in the U.S.? Thousands," a senior agent
protested. "We couldn't have investigated them all and found
these few guys."
"Wait, you just told me there
were too many flight schools and that prohibited you from investigating
them before 9/11," Kristen persisted. "How is it that
a few hours after the attacks, the nation is brought to its knees,
and miraculously F.B.I. agents showed up at Embry-Riddle flight
school in Florida where some of the terrorists trained?"
"We got lucky," was the
reply.
Kristen then asked the agent how
the F.B.I. had known exactly which A.T.M. in Portland, Me., would
yield a videotape of Mohammed Atta, the leader of the attacks.
The agent got some facts confused, then changed his story. When
Kristen wouldn't be pacified by evasive answers, the senior agent
parried, "What are you getting at?"
"I think you had open investigations
before Sept. 11 on some of the people responsible for the terrorist
attacks," she said.
"We did not," the agent
said unequivocally.
A month later, on the morning of
July 24, before the scathing Congressional report on intelligence
failures was released, Kristen and the three other moms from New
Jersey with whom she'd been in league sat impassively at a briefing
by staff director Eleanor Hill: In fact, they learned, the F.B.I.
had open investigations on 14 individuals who had contact with
the hijackers while they were in the United States. The flush of
pride in their own research passed quickly. This was just another
confirmation that the federal government continued to obscure the
facts about its handling of suspected terrorists leading up to
the Sept. 11 attacks.
So afraid is the Bush administration
of what could be revealed by inquiries into its failures to protect
Americans from terrorist attack, it is unabashedly using Kremlin
tactics to muzzle members of Congress and thwart the current federal
commission investigating the failures of Sept. 11. But there is
at least one force that the administration cannot scare off or
shut up. They call themselves "Just Four Moms from New Jersey," or
simply "the girls."
Kristen and the three other housewives
who also lost their husbands in the attack on the World Trade Center
started out knowing virtually nothing about how their government
worked. For the last 20 months they have clipped and Googled, rallied
and lobbied, charmed and intimidated top officials all the way
to the White House. In the process, they have made themselves arguably
the most effective force in dancing around the obstacle course
by which the administration continues to block a transparent investigation
of what went wrong with the country's defenses on Sept. 11 and
what we should be doing about it. They have no political clout,
no money, no powerful husbands-no husbands at all since Sept. 11-and
they are up against a White House, an Attorney General, a Defense
Secretary, a National Security Advisor and an F.B.I. director who
have worked out an ingenious bait-and-switch game to thwart their
efforts and those of any investigative body.
The Mom Cell
The four moms-Kristen Breitweiser, Patty Casazza, Mindy Kleinberg
and Lorie van Auken-use tactics more like those of a leaderless cell.
They have learned how to deposit their assorted seven children with
select grandmothers before dawn and rocket down the Garden State
Parkway to Washington. They have become experts at changing out of
pedal-pushers and into proper pantsuits while their S.U.V. is stopped
in traffic, so they can hit the Capitol rotunda running. They have
talked strategy with Senator John McCain and Senate Minority Leader
Tom Daschle. They once caught Congressman Porter Goss hiding behind
his office door to avoid them. And they maintain an open line of
communication with the White House.
But after the razzle-dazzle of their
every trip to D.C., the four moms dissolve on the hot seats of
Kristen's S.U.V., balance take-out food containers on their laps
and grow quiet. Each then retreats into a private chamber of longing
for the men whose lifeless images they wear on tags around their
necks. After their first big rally, Patty's soft voice floated
a wish that might have been in the minds of all four moms:
"O.K., we did the rally, now
can our husbands come home?"
Last September, Kristen was singled
out by the families of 9/11 to testify in the first televised public
hearing before the Joint Intelligence Committee Inquiry (JICI)
in Washington. She drew high praise from the leadership, made up
of members from both the House and Senate. But the JICI, as the
moms called it, was mandated to go out of business at the end of
2003, and their questions for the intelligence agencies were consistently
blocked: The Justice Department has forbidden intelligence officials
to be interviewed without "minders" among their bosses
being present, a tactic clearly meant to intimidate witnesses.
When the White House and the intelligence agencies held up the
Congressional report month after month by demanding that much of
it remain classified, the moms' rallying cry became "Free
the JICI!"
They believed the only hope for getting
at the truth would be with an independent federal commission with
a mandate to build on the findings of the Congressional inquiry
and broaden it to include testimony from all the other relevant
agencies. Their fight finally overcame the directive by Vice President
Dick Cheney to Congressman Goss to "keep negotiating" and,
in January 2003, the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon
the United States-known as the 9/11 Commission-met for the first
time. It is not only for their peace of mind that the four moms
continue to fight to reveal the truth, but because they firmly
believe that, nearly two years after the attacks, the country is
no safer now than it was on Sept. 11.
"O.K., there's the House and
the Senate-which one has the most members?"
Lorie laughed at herself. It was
April 2002, seven months after she had lost her husband, Kenneth. "I
must have slept through that civics class." Her friend Mindy
couldn't help her; Mindy hadn't read The New York Times since she
stopped commuting to Manhattan, where she'd worked as a C.P.A.
until her husband, Alan, took over the family support. Both women's
husbands had worked as securities traders for Cantor Fitzgerald
until they were incinerated in the World Trade Center.
Mindy and Lorie had thought themselves
exempt from politics, by virtue of the constant emergency of motherhood.
Before Sept. 11, Mindy could have been described as a stand-in
for Samantha on Sex and the City. But these days she felt more
like one of the Golden Girls. Lorie, who was 46 and beautiful when
her husband, Kenneth van Auken, was murdered, has acquired a fierceness
in her demeanor. The two mothers were driving home to East Brunswick
after attending a support group for widows of 9/11. They had been
fired up by a veteran survivor of a previous terrorist attack against
Americans, Bob Monetti, president of Families of Pan Am 103/Lockerbie. "You
can't sit back and let the government treat you like shit," he
had challenged them. That very night they called up Patty Casazza,
another Cantor Fitzgerald widow, in Colt's Neck. "We have
to have a rally in Washington."
Patty, a sensitive woman who was
struggling to find the right balance of prescriptions to fight
off anxiety attacks, groaned, "Oh God, this is huge, and it's
going to be painful." Patty said she would only go along if
Kristen was up for it.
Kristen Breitweiser was only 30 years
old when her husband, Ron, a vice president at Fiduciary Trust,
called her one morning to say he was fine, not to worry. He had
seen a huge fireball out his window, but it wasn't his building.
She tuned into the Today show just in time to see the South Tower
explode right where she knew he was sitting-on the 94th floor.
For months thereafter, finding it impossible to sleep, Kristen
went back to the nightly ritual of her married life: She took out
her husband's toothbrush and slowly, lovingly squeezed the toothpaste
onto it. Then she would sit down on the toilet and wait for him
to come home.
The Investigation
Kristen was somewhat better-informed than the others. The tall, blond
former surfer girl had graduated from Seton Hall law school, practiced
all of three days, hated it and elected to be a full-time mom. Her
first line of defense against despair at the shattering of her life
dreams was to revert to thinking like a lawyer.
Lorie was the network's designated
researcher, since she had in her basement what looked like a NASA
command module; her husband had been an amateur designer. Kristen
had told her to focus on the timeline: Who knew what, when did
they know it, and what did they do about it?
Once Lorie began surfing the Web,
she couldn't stop. She found a video of President Bush's reaction
on the morning of Sept. 11. According to the official timeline
provided by his press secretary, the President arrived at an elementary
school in Sarasota, Fla., at 9 a.m. and was told in the hallway
of the school that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center.
This was 14 minutes after the first attack. The President went
into a private room and spoke by phone with his National Security
Advisor, Condoleezza Rice, and glanced at a TV in the room. "That's
some bad pilot," the President said. Bush then proceeded to
a classroom, where he drew up a little stool to listen to second
graders read. At 9:04 a.m., his chief of staff, Andrew Card, whispered
in his ear that a second plane had struck the towers. "We
are under attack," Mr. Card informed the President.
"Bush's sunny countenance went
grim," said the White House account. "After Card's whisper,
Bush looked distracted and somber but continued to listen to the
second graders read and soon was smiling again. He joked that they
read so well, they must be sixth graders."
Lorie checked the Web site of the
Federal Aviation Authority. The F.A.A. and the Secret Service,
which had an open phone connection, both knew at 8:20 a.m. that
two planes had been hijacked in the New York area and had their
transponders turned off. How could they have thought it was an
accident when the first plane slammed into the first tower 26 minutes
later? How could the President have dismissed this as merely an
accident by a "bad pilot"? And how, after he had been
specifically told by his chief of staff that "We are under
attack," could the Commander in Chief continue sitting with
second graders and make a joke? Lorie ran the video over and over.
"I couldn't stop watching the
President sitting there, listening to second graders, while my
husband was burning in a building," she said.
Mindy pieced together the actions
of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. He had been in his Washington
office engaged in his "usual intelligence briefing." After
being informed of the two attacks on the World Trade Center, he
proceeded with his briefing until the third hijacked plane struck
the Pentagon. Mindy relayed the information to Kristen:
"Can you believe this? Two planes
hitting the Twin Towers in New York City did not rise to the level
of Rumsfeld's leaving his office and going to the war room to check
out just what the hell went wrong." Mindy sounded scared. "This
is my President. This is my Secretary of Defense. You mean to tell
me Rumsfeld had to get up from his desk and look out his window
at the burning Pentagon before he knew anything was wrong? How
can that be?"
"It can't be," said Kristen
ominously. Their network being a continuous loop, Kristen immediately
passed on the news to Lorie, who became even more agitated.
Lorie checked out the North American
Aerospace Defense Command, whose specific mission includes a response
to any form of an air attack on America. It was created to provide
a defense of critical command-and-control targets. At 8:40 a.m.
on 9/11, the F.A.A. notified NORAD that Flight No. 11 had been
hijacked. Three minutes later, the F.A.A. notified NORAD that Flight
No. 175 was also hijacked. By 9:02 a.m., both planes had crashed
into the World Trade Center, but there had been no action by NORAD.
Both agencies also knew there were two other hijacked planes in
the air that had been violently diverted from their flight pattern.
All other air traffic had been ordered grounded. NORAD operates
out of Andrews Air Force Base, which is within sight of the Pentagon.
Why didn't NORAD scramble planes in time to intercept the two other
hijacked jetliners headed for command-and-control centers in Washington?
Lorie wanted to know. Where was the leadership?
"I can't look at these timelines
anymore," Lorie confessed to Kristen. "When you pull
it apart, it just doesn't reconcile with the official storyline." She
hunched down in her husband's swivel chair and began to tremble,
thinking, There's no way this could be. Somebody is not telling
us the whole story.
The Commission
The 9/11 Commission wouldn't have happened without the four moms.
At the end of its first open hearing, held last spring at the
U.S. Customs House close to the construction pit of Ground Zero,
former Democratic Congressman Tim Roemer said as much and praised
them and other activist 9/11 families.
"At a time when many Americans
don't even take the opportunity to cast a ballot, you folks went
out and made the legislative system work," he said.
Jamie Gorelick, former Deputy Attorney
General of the United States, said at the same hearing, "I'm
enormously impressed that laypeople with no powers of subpoena,
with no access to insider information of any sort, could put together
a very powerful set of questions and set of facts that are a road
map for this commission. It is really quite striking. Now, what's
your secret?"
Mindy, who had given a blistering
testimony at that day's hearing, tossed her long corkscrew curls
and replied in a voice more Tallulah than termagant, "Eighteen
months of doing nothing but grieving and connecting the dots."
Eleanor Hill, the universally respected
staff director of the JICI investigation, shares the moms' point
of view.
"One of our biggest concerns
is our finding that there were people in this country assisting
these hijackers," she said later in an interview with this
writer. "Since the F.B.I. was in fact investigating all these
people as part of their counterterroism effort, and they knew some
of them had ties to Al Qaeda, then how good was their investigation
if they didn't come across the hijackers?"
President Bush, who was notified
in the President's daily briefing on Aug. 6, 2001, that "a
group of [Osama] bin Laden supporters was planning attacks in the
United States with explosives," insisted after the Congressional
report was made public: "My administration has transformed
our government to pursue terrorists and prevent terrorist attacks."
Kristen, Mindy, Patty and Lorie are not impressed.
"We were told that, prior to 9/11, the F.B.I. was only responsible
for going in after the fact to solve a crime and prepare a criminal
case," Kristen said. "Here we are, 22 months after the
fact, the F.B.I. has received some 500,000 leads, they have thousands
of people in custody, they're seeking the death penalty for one terrorist,
[Zacarias] Moussaoui, but they still haven't solved the crime and
they don't have any of the other people who supported the hijackers." Ms.
Hill echoes their frustration. "Is this support network for
Al Qaeda still in the United States? Are they still operating, planning
the next attack?"
Civil Defense
The hopes of the four moms that the current 9/11 Commission could
broaden the inquiry beyond the intelligence agencies are beginning
to fade. As they see it, the administration is using a streamlined
version of the tactics they successfully employed to stall and suppress
much of the startling information in the JICI report. The gaping
hole of 28 pages concerning the Saudi royal family's financial support
for the terrorists of 9/11 was only the tip of the 900-page iceberg.
"We can't get any information
about the Port Authority's evacuation procedures or the response
of the City of New York," complains Kristen. "We're always
told we can't get answers or documents because the F.B.I. is holding
them back as part of an ongoing investigation. But when Director
Mueller invited us back for a follow-up meeting-on the very morning
before that damning report was released-we were told the F.B.I.
isn't pursuing any investigations based on the information we are
blocked from getting. The only thing they are looking at is the
hijackers. And they're all dead."
It's more than a clever Catch-22.
Members of the 9/11 Commission are being denied access even to
some of the testimony given to the JICI-on which at least two of
its members sat!
This is a stonewalling job of far
greater importance than Watergate. This concerns the refusal of
the country's leadership to be held accountable for the failure
to execute its most fundamental responsibility: to protect its
citizens against foreign attack.
Critical information about two of
the hijackers, Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, lay dormant
within the intelligence community for as long as 18 months, at
the very time when plans for the Sept. 11 attacks were being hatched.
The JICI confirmed that these same two hijackers had numerous contacts
with a longtime F.B.I. counterterrorism informant in California.
As the four moms pointed out a year ago, their names were in the
San Diego phone book.
What's more, the F.B.I.'s Minneapolis
field office had in custody in August 2001 one Zacarias Moussaoui,
a French national who had enrolled in flight training in Minnesota
and who F.B.I. agents suspected was involved in a hijacking plot.
But nobody at the F.B.I. apparently connected the Moussaoui investigation
with intelligence information on the immediacy of the threat level
in the spring and summer of 2001, or the illegal entry of al-Mihdhar
and al-Hazmi into the United States.
How have these lapses been corrected
24 months later? The F.B.I. is seeking the death penalty for Mr.
Moussaoui, and uses the need to protect their case against him
as the rationale for refusing to share any of the information they
have obtained from him. In fact, when Director Mueller tried to
use the same excuse to duck out of testifying before the Joint
Committee, the federal judge in the Moussaoui trial dismissed his
argument, and he and his agents were compelled to testify.
"At some point, you have to
do a cost-benefit analysis," says Kristen. "Which is
more important-one fried terrorist, or the safety of the nation?" Patty
was even more blunt in their second meeting with the F.B.I. brass. "I
don't give a rat's ass about Moussaoui," she said. "Why
don't you throw him into Guantanamo and squeeze him for all he's
worth, and get on with finding his cohorts?"
The four moms are demanding that the independent commission hold
a completely transparent investigation, with open hearings and cross-examination.
What it looks like they'll get is an incomplete and sanitized report,
if it's released in time for the commission's deadline next May.
Or perhaps another fight over declassification of the most potent
revelations, which will serve to hold up the report until after the
2004 Presidential election. Some believe that this is the administration's
end game.
Kristen sees the handwriting on the wall: "If we have an executive
branch that holds sole discretion over what information is released
to the public and what is hidden, the public will never get the full
story of why there was an utter failure to protect them that day,
and who should be held accountable." |