How the FBI Blew the Case The inside story of the FBI whistle-blower who accuses
her bosses of ignoring warnings of 9/11. A reading of her entire
memo suggests a bracing blueprint for change BY ROMESH RATNESAR
AND MICHAEL WEISSKOPF/ WASHINGTON
STEPHEN JAFFE/AFP
MUELLER Rowley says the Director twisted
the truth to protect FBI
Saturday, May. 25, 2002 Few Americans
love anything about their government as much as Coleen Rowley loved
the FBI. When she was in the fifth grade, Rowley wrote a letter to
the bureau's headquarters in Washington and got back a booklet
called 100 Facts About the FBI. From that point on, she dreamed of
becoming an agent. Friends say she protested when her dean at the
University of Iowa Law School refused to let an FBI recruiter on
campus; she lost the battle but applied for a job on her own and was
hired as a special agent after earning her law degree in 1980. She
took pride in being a pioneer, part of the first wave of women
fighting to be taken seriously in the bureau's male-dominated,
button-down culture. She worked her way up the ladder as an FBI
lawyer — handling applications for searches and wiretaps, working
organized-crime cases in New York City and becoming, in 1995, chief
counsel in the Minneapolis field office. She won a reputation as a
highly disciplined professional, opinionated, principled and
supremely devoted to her job. For seven years in the 1990s, she
doubled as chief spokeswoman for the Minneapolis office, fending off
the media hordes during big cases like the 1999 arrest of St. Paul
housewife Sara Jane Olson, a former member of the Symbionese
Liberation Army who had been on the lam for two decades. Despite the
stress and the risks, Rowley, a suburban mother of four, has never
worked anywhere else. She is the family breadwinner, a competitive
long-distance runner, a person, by all accounts, of substance.
All of which helps explain why friends and colleagues of Rowley
were impressed but not altogether surprised when she put her career
on the line last week to blow the whistle on the terrible failings
of her beloved FBI. "She is the kind of person who always does what
is right when nobody's watching," says one friend. "That is why she
came out." American life seems uniquely capable of producing stories
like hers — a loyal public servant who clings to her belief in the
system until a betrayal of that faith makes it impossible to stay
silent. Rowley, unable to sleep at 3 a.m. one night in early May,
drove to the office and wrote the first draft of a memo. She spent a
week fine-tuning it, setting it aside for days, anguishing and at
times doubting whether she could go through with it. Summoning her
courage last Tuesday, she at last fired off the 13-page letter
("from the heart," she writes) to her ultimate boss, FBI Director
Robert Mueller, and flew to Washington to hand-deliver copies to two
members of the Senate Intelligence Committee and meet with committee
staffers. The letter accuses the bureau of deliberately obstructing
measures that could have helped disrupt the Sept. 11 attacks. The
FBI responded by marking the letter classified.
The product of months of gathering frustration, Rowley's memo —
a full copy of which was obtained by Time —
unspools in furious detail how, in the weeks leading up to the
hijackings, officials at FBI headquarters systematically dismissed
and undermined requests from Rowley's Minneapolis field office for
permission to obtain a warrant to wiretap and search the computer
and belongings of Zacarias Moussaoui, the French-Moroccan operative
arrested in Minnesota last August and facing trial this fall as the
sole person charged with conspiring in the attacks. Rowley asserts
that the FBI didn't "do much" to share information about Moussaoui
with other government agencies or to match the evidence that
Moussaoui took pilot lessons with an earlier report from a Phoenix
field agent raising suspicions about Middle Eastern men enrolled in
flight school. In Rowley's view, bureaucratic incompetence stalled
an investigation that may have led closer to the black heart of
Osama bin Laden's plot. "It's at least possible we could have gotten
lucky and uncovered one or two more of the terrorists in flight
training prior to Sept. 11," Rowley writes. "There is at least some
chance that ... may have limited the Sept. 11th attacks and
resulting loss of life."
Like no other document to emerge from the current firestorm over
the mistakes and missed signals that led to Sept. 11, the Rowley
memo casts a searing light into the depths of government ineptitude.
In Washington, where the FBI and CIA may be criticized but are
allowed to clean up their own messes as they see fit, the memo sent
shudders through the establishment for a simple reason: it came from
within. If Rowley's account is accurate — and colleagues say she's
not one for shading the truth — her letter amounts to a colossal
indictment of our chief law-enforcement agency's neglect in the face
of the biggest terrorist operation ever mounted on U.S. soil. It
raises serious doubts about whether the FBI is capable of protecting
the public — and whether it still deserves the public's trust. While
saying she does not believe the FBI director engaged in a post-9/11
cover-up, Rowley accuses Mueller and senior aides of having
"omitted, downplayed, glossed over and or/mischaracterized" her
office's investigation of Moussaoui. After Sept. 11, top FBI
officials decided to "circle the wagons," as she puts it, and deny —
as Mueller did immediately after the attacks — that the FBI had any
knowledge that Islamic terrorists might be planning an attack
involving hijacked airplanes. "I have deep concerns," she writes,
"that a delicate shading/ skewing of facts by you and others at the
highest levels of FBI management has occurred and is occurring."
Just 21/2 years from retirement, Rowley is now fretting about
reprisals, friends say. She closes her letter by acknowledging "the
frankness with which I have expressed myself" and asking for federal
whistle-blower protection.
Her words had an unintended resonance last week as the country
tried to make sense of chilling warnings from Mueller and other top
officials who rattled off a litany of "inevitable" terrorist attacks
against the U.S. as if they had all just been to a screening of The
Sum of All Fears. By now, most Americans know better than to feel
safe, but last week the Bush Administration helpfully reminded us
just how frightened we're supposed to be. Coupled with an FBI
advisory about possible al-Qaeda attacks on the Statue of Liberty
and the Brooklyn Bridge, the stream of official doomsaying caused a
new round of jitters in time for summer vacation.
Though uncorroborated and vague, the terror alerts were a
political godsend for an Administration trying to fend off a
bruising bipartisan inquiry into its handling of the terrorist
chatter last summer. After the wave of warnings, the Democratic
clamor for an investigation into the government's mistakes subsided,
but Rowley's memo had members of both parties turning up the heat
again. Senate majority leader Tom Daschle seized on the document as
reason to appoint an independent commission to examine intelligence
failures prior to Sept. 11, an idea the White House intensely
opposes. Daschle says he will bring a bill to the floor of the
Senate next week, when Congress returns from recess. The chairmen of
the joint panel of the House and Senate Intelligence committees,
which is investigating the attacks, said they will begin hearings
next week. As the inquiry moves forward, Rowley is likely to become
a star witness. Last week Iowa Republican Charles Grassley offered
Rowley written assurance that her job won't be jeopardized if she
cooperates with the Senate's investigations. Grassley warned Mueller
to ensure that "there is no retaliation" against her.
In a star-obsessed culture, Rowley is a healthy reminder that
it's often people who shun the limelight — strong-willed people with
more guts than glamour — who force themselves to step up and speak
out when everyone else is keeping quiet. She dresses simply and
wears large spectacles that have a habit of sliding down her nose.
She takes her lunch to work every day and often arrives long before
any of her co-workers. "She goes the extra mile on everything," says
Larry Brubaker, a retired agent and former colleague. "Coleen always
looks stressed. She is very high energy." In her letter, she comes
off as passionate and informed, and her controlled legal arguments
are punctuated by piquant asides, dark humor and bursts of deep
feeling. As her name rolled off the tongues of every politician and
talking head in Washington last Friday, she remained on the job in
Minneapolis and at home in a tree-shrouded cul-de-sac in Apple
Valley, where she lives with her husband, four kids and 14-year-old
Newfoundland. On Friday evening she made a brief appearance at the
door of her home. "The situation is, I can't make any comment at
all. It'll just be counterproductive," she told reporters from Time
and the Associated Press. "I don't want any publicity. The whole
point is that it will be completely undercut if there is any."
As the Minneapolis field-office lawyer, Rowley had a supporting
part in the drama that ended with the December indictment of
Moussaoui. But she was ready the moment agents phoned her on the
night of Aug. 15, 2001. Instructors at the Pan Am flight school near
Minneapolis-St. Paul had phoned the FBI the previous day, reporting
that a student with bad English had showed up asking for instruction
in how to fly a 747. Federal agents arrived at Moussaoui's hotel on
the 15th and asked for his immigration papers; when the documents
showed evidence of a possible visa violation, agents from the
Immigration and Naturalization Service arrested Moussaoui on charges
of overstaying his visa.
With Moussaoui in custody, the Minneapolis FBI agents began
hunting for information on the suspect's past. In the late 1990s, it
turns out, French police had placed Moussaoui on a watch list: using
London as his base, Moussaoui shuttled in and out of Kuwait, Turkey
and Continental Europe, forming ties with radical Islamist groups
and recruiting young men to train and fight the jihad in Chechnya.
French intelligence officials also believed Moussaoui spent time in
Afghanistan, and his last trip before arriving in the U.S. last
February was to Pakistan. A French justice official says the
government gave the FBI "everything we had" on Moussaoui, "enough to
make you want to check this guy out every way you can. Anyone paying
attention would have seen he was not only operational in the
militant Islamist world but had some autonomy and authority as
well."
The Minneapolis agents agreed. Within days of receiving the
French intelligence report, Rowley writes, they "became desperate"
to probe the laptop computer they seized from Moussaoui and "conduct
a more thorough search of his personal effects." As Rowley describes
it, the agents then encountered the first in the series of
"roadblocks" thrown up by their superiors in Washington that, she
says, ultimately scuttled their attempts to investigate Moussaoui.
They wanted to obtain a search warrant for the laptop under the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act; under the law, the bureau had
to prove Moussaoui was an agent of a terrorist group or a foreign
power. In her memo, Rowley maintains that before Sept. 11, the
Minneapolis agents had "certainly established," based on French
sources and other intelligence, that Moussaoui "had affiliations
with radical fundamentalist groups and activities connected to Osama
bin Laden."
But officials in Washington disagreed. Rowley blasts the FBI for
failing to team up with other federal agencies, such as the cia,
that could have gathered more intelligence to buttress the case
against Moussaoui. But a senior Administration official told Time
last week that the bureau did go to the CIA "and asked for what it
had"; in late August, the agency passed along reports from Paris
that "this guy did have extremist views, but it didn't say al-Qaeda
or anything like that." French intelligence sources concede that in
the pre-9/11 world, explicit references to bin Laden might not have
been made. Believing the evidence against Moussaoui was
insufficient, the bureau supervisors rebuffed the Minneapolis effort
to search the laptop.
Rowley and her colleagues continued to plead their case. Her memo
rails against but doesn't name a handful of midlevel officials who
"almost inexplicably" blocked "Minneapolis' by now desperate efforts
to obtain a FASA search warrant ... HQ personnel brought up almost
ridiculous questions in their apparent efforts to undermine the
probable cause." One supervisor complained that there might be
plenty of men named Zacarias Moussaoui in France; how did the agents
know this was the same man? (The agents checked the Paris phone
books and found but one Moussaoui.) At another point the field
office tried to bypass their bosses altogether and alert the CIA's
Counterterrorism Center; Rowley says FBI officials chastised the
agents for going behind their backs. She reserves her toughest words
for a supervisor who repeatedly belittled the French intelligence on
the case. Rowley claims that in late August the supervisor did
forward the FASA request to lawyers at the National Security Law
Unit, an FBIHQ office that vets warrant proposals before passing
them on to the Justice Department. But the supervisor "deliberately
further undercut" the request by withholding "intelligence
information he promised to add and making several changes in the
wording of the information." The resistance from Washington got so
bad, she writes, that agents in her office joked that some FBI
officials "had to be spies or moles, like Robert Hansen [sic], who
were actually working for Osama bin Laden."
On Aug. 28, the NSLU turned down the Minnesotans' FISA request.
Rowley's letter does not provide any specifics to back up the
allegation that the supervisor altered or withheld evidence. (Only
after Sept. 11 did the FBI successfully obtain a warrant to search
Moussaoui's belongings; among other things, the search turned up
crop-dusting information, a letter to Moussaoui from an al-Qaeda
operative in Malaysia and a notebook that contained an alias
eventually traced to the roommate of hijacker Mohamed Atta.)
According to Rowley, the supervisor has since been promoted. FBI
officials refused to comment on the tampering charge last week;
Mueller also demurred, passing the contents of the memo to the
Justice Department's inspector general.
Rowley admits that she is outspoken — "those who know me would
probably describe me as, by nature, overly opinionated and sometimes
not as discreet as I should be" — but her memo is bound to strike a
nerve with other FBI agents, who have long complained about the
careerist, risk-averse approach of the desk jockeys in the Hoover
Building. It's hard not to conclude after reading her account that
the FBI's sprawling bureaucracy is hopeless. "Career enhancement,"
she writes, supersedes law-enforcement concerns at the headquarters,
which is staffed by agents with little field expertise serving
short, 18-month terms and others so eager to rotate out to the field
that they keep their heads down. Among field agents, the bureau's
byzantine process of reviewing FISA requests is notorious. Says one
retired field officer: "You send your application to headquarters,
and they'll sit on it so long and keep it for weeks and weeks ...
then you have to do it all over again. It's like a catch-22."
As Washington's cycle of blame spun up again last week, the
official caught in the blades was Robert Mueller, who until now has
impressed many critics with his intelligence, energy and commitment
to reform. Though the director did not comment on the specifics of
the Rowley memo, he issued a statement that signaled he is serious
about fixing his broken institution. "I am convinced that a
different approach is required," he said. "There is no room for the
types of problems and attitudes that could inhibit our efforts." One
of his ideas is to create a new "flying squad" of terrorist
specialists based in Washington — but longtime field agents, like
Rowley herself, are appalled by the plan. In their view, anything
that shifts more power to the Hoover Building will only reinforce
the culture of fear and indecision that the hijackers managed to
exploit. Rowley wrote to Mueller, "Your plans for an FBI
headquarters' 'super squad' simply fly in the face of an honest
appraisal of the FBI's pre-September 11 failures."
It's likely Mueller will have plenty more accounting to do. He
has already been pressed to explain why the FBI did not investigate
Moussaoui more aggressively; on May 8, he told members of the Senate
Judiciary Committee that the lead Minnesota case agent "did a
terrific job in pushing as hard as we possibly could with Moussaoui.
But did we discern that there was a plot that would have led us to
Sept. 11? No. Could we have? I doubt it." But in its most searching
passage, Rowley's letter lays out the case that the FBI made fateful
miscalculations by failing to see a possible connection between the
Minneapolis investigation of flight student Moussaoui and the hunch
of Phoenix agent Kenneth Williams — posited in a report to HQ two
months earlier — that al-Qaeda operatives were attending U.S. flight
schools. Law-enforcement and congressional sources told Time that
both reports landed on the desk of Dave Frasca, the head of the
FBI's radical-fundamentalist unit. The Phoenix memo was buried; the
Moussaoui warrant request was denied.
In Rowley's admittedly speculative view, more decisive action
might have enabled the authorities to put the pieces together in
time. FBI counterterrorism officials continue to dispute that line
of reasoning. They doubt Moussaoui was the 20th hijacker: there is
no hard evidence that any of the 19 hijackers communicated with
Moussaoui, and he showed up for flight school months after the
others had completed their training. (They have a darker worry: that
he was on an entirely different suicide mission and that his cell
mates are still at large.) And the survey of flight schools proposed
by Williams would have had a hard time identifying Atta and his
cadre, who were done with school and gearing up for Sept. 11.
"No one will ever know what impact, if any, the FBI's following
up of these requests might have had," Rowley writes. In a way, she's
right — for every American, what might have been will be
maddeningly, eternally unknowable. But Rowley has at least forced
the FBI and the Administration to confront their failures directly
and publicly, rather than sweep them under a self-stitched rug of
wartime immunity. The congressional investigations may yet get
bogged down in finger pointing and political grandstanding, but for
now they represent the main opportunity to learn the lessons that
could help guard against the next 9/11. Before Rowley came along,
the Administration had succeeded in derailing such inquiries by
calling them unproductive and suggesting that its critics might be
unpatriotic. Last week a patriot came forward to help steer the
country back toward the truth.
— With reporting by Michael Duffy and Elaine
Shannon/Washington, Maggie Sieger/ Minneapolis and Bruce
Crumley/Paris
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