FAA Received Warnings About
Possible Hijackings
Voice of America
9/11 Commission Says US Aviation Officials Received Warnings
About Possible Hijackings
10 February 2005
The independent commission that investigated the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks says in the months before the strike, the
U.S. agency that oversees aviation failed to respond to dozens of
warnings about possible terrorist action on U.S. airliners.
The information is contained in a previously undisclosed
report by the September 11 Commission.
The report says the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
received 52 intelligence reports between April and September of
2001 that warned of potential terrorist action by al-Qaida and
its leader, Osama bin Laden.
Five of the security warnings mentioned al-Qaida training for
airline hijacking and suicide attacks. However, an FAA
spokeswoman says there was no specific warning about the deadly
September 11 strikes on Washington and New York.
The report concludes that prior to the attacks, aviation
officials were "lulled into a false sense of security," despite
intelligence pointing to a growing terrorist threat.
Some information for this report provided by AP.
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